5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
clawbot
c0d345e767 expand PII routing to cover secrets, credentials, and operational info; make email/inbox references conditional
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- Rename 'PII Output Routing' → 'Sensitive Output Routing' throughout
- Expand scope to include secrets, credentials, API keys, flight numbers,
  locations, travel plans, medical info
- Replace hardcoded 'Emails' heartbeat check with conditional language
  ('Notifications — whatever inbox sources you've integrated')
- Remove 'email' from heartbeat-state.json example
- Update cross-references in SETUP_CHECKLIST.md
2026-02-28 03:40:13 -08:00
user
36223ca550 fix: agent should infer needed fields, not wait to be told
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2026-02-28 03:33:08 -08:00
user
f0a2a5eb62 docs: update Gitea notification section — webhook vs poller, flag-file approach
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- Replaced wake-event poller with flag-file approach (prevents DM spam)
- Added Option A (webhooks for VPS) vs Option B (poller for NAT)
- Documented the wake-event failure mode and why we switched
2026-02-28 03:30:49 -08:00
9631535583 Merge pull request 'Rewrite SETUP_CHECKLIST.md: replace checklists with paste-able agent prompts' (#1) from rewrite-setup-checklist-prompts into main
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2026-02-28 12:27:17 +01:00
user
b0495d5b56 rewrite SETUP_CHECKLIST.md: replace checklist items with paste-able agent prompts
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Each section now contains a self-contained prompt in a code block that
adopting users can paste directly to their agent. Prompts include full
URLs to raw reference docs. Fixes 'you provide' wording to 'your human
provides'. Keeps same phase/section structure.
2026-02-28 03:22:08 -08:00
2 changed files with 718 additions and 534 deletions

View File

@@ -173,42 +173,62 @@ The landing checklist (triggered automatically after every flight) updates
location, timezone, nearest airport, and lodging in the daily context file. It
also checks if any cron jobs have hardcoded timezones that need updating.
### The Gitea Notification Poller
### Gitea Notification Delivery
OpenClaw has heartbeats, but those are periodic (every ~30min). For Gitea issues
and PRs, we wanted near-realtime response. The solution: a tiny Python script
that polls the Gitea notifications API every 2 seconds and wakes the agent via
OpenClaw's `/hooks/wake` endpoint when new notifications arrive.
There are two approaches for getting Gitea notifications to your agent,
depending on your network setup.
#### Option A: Direct Webhooks (VPS / Public Server)
If your OpenClaw instance runs on a VPS or other publicly reachable server, the
simplest approach is direct webhooks. Run Traefik (or any reverse proxy with
automatic TLS) on the same server and configure Gitea webhooks to POST directly
to OpenClaw's webhook endpoint. This is push-based and realtime — notifications
arrive instantly.
Setup: add a webhook on each Gitea repo (or use an organization-level webhook)
pointing to `https://your-openclaw-host/hooks/gitea`. OpenClaw handles the rest.
#### Option B: Notification Poller (Local Machine Behind NAT)
If your OpenClaw runs on a dedicated local machine behind NAT (like a home Mac
or Linux workstation), Gitea can't reach it directly. This is our setup —
OpenClaw runs on a Mac Studio on a home LAN.
The solution: a lightweight Python script that polls the Gitea notifications API
every few seconds. When new notifications appear, it writes a flag file that the
agent checks during heartbeats.
Key design decisions:
- **The poller never marks notifications as read.** That's the agent's job after
it processes them. This prevents the poller and agent from racing.
- **It tracks notification IDs, not counts.** This way it only fires on
genuinely new notifications, not re-reads of existing ones.
- **The wake message tells the agent to route output to Gitea/Mattermost, not to
DM.** This prevents chatty notification processing from disturbing the human.
- **Zero dependencies.** Just Python stdlib (`urllib`, `json`, `time`). Runs
anywhere.
- **The poller never marks notifications as read.** The agent does that after
processing. This prevents lost notifications if the agent fails to process.
- **It tracks notification IDs, not counts.** Only fires on genuinely new
notifications, not re-reads of existing ones.
- **Flag file instead of wake events.** We initially used OpenClaw's
`/hooks/wake` endpoint, but wake events target the main (DM) session — any
model response during processing leaked to DM as a notification. The flag file
approach is processed during heartbeats, where output routing is controlled.
- **Zero dependencies.** Just Python stdlib. Runs anywhere.
Here's the full source:
Tradeoff: notifications are processed at heartbeat cadence (~30 min) instead of
realtime. For code review and issue triage, this is fine.
```python
#!/usr/bin/env python3
"""
Gitea notification poller.
Polls for unread notifications and wakes OpenClaw when the count
changes. The AGENT marks notifications as read after processing —
the poller never marks anything as read.
Gitea notification poller (flag-file approach).
Polls for unread notifications and writes a flag file when new ones
appear. The agent checks this flag during heartbeats and processes
notifications via the Gitea API directly.
Required env vars:
GITEA_URL - Gitea instance URL
GITEA_TOKEN - Gitea API token
HOOK_TOKEN - OpenClaw hooks auth token
Optional env vars:
GATEWAY_URL - OpenClaw gateway URL (default: http://127.0.0.1:18789)
POLL_DELAY - Delay between polls in seconds (default: 2)
FLAG_PATH - Path to flag file (default: workspace/memory/gitea-notify-flag)
POLL_DELAY - Delay between polls in seconds (default: 5)
"""
import json
@@ -220,108 +240,61 @@ import urllib.error
GITEA_URL = os.environ.get("GITEA_URL", "").rstrip("/")
GITEA_TOKEN = os.environ.get("GITEA_TOKEN", "")
GATEWAY_URL = os.environ.get("GATEWAY_URL", "http://127.0.0.1:18789").rstrip(
"/"
POLL_DELAY = int(os.environ.get("POLL_DELAY", "5"))
FLAG_PATH = os.environ.get(
"FLAG_PATH",
os.path.join(
os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))),
"memory",
"gitea-notify-flag",
),
)
HOOK_TOKEN = os.environ.get("HOOK_TOKEN", "")
POLL_DELAY = int(os.environ.get("POLL_DELAY", "2"))
def check_config():
missing = []
if not GITEA_URL:
missing.append("GITEA_URL")
if not GITEA_TOKEN:
missing.append("GITEA_TOKEN")
if not HOOK_TOKEN:
missing.append("HOOK_TOKEN")
if missing:
print(
f"ERROR: Missing required env vars: {', '.join(missing)}",
file=sys.stderr,
)
if not GITEA_URL or not GITEA_TOKEN:
print("ERROR: GITEA_URL and GITEA_TOKEN required", file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(1)
def gitea_unread_ids():
"""Return set of unread notification IDs."""
req = urllib.request.Request(
f"{GITEA_URL}/api/v1/notifications?status-types=unread",
headers={"Authorization": f"token {GITEA_TOKEN}"},
)
try:
with urllib.request.urlopen(req, timeout=10) as resp:
notifs = json.loads(resp.read())
return {n["id"] for n in notifs}
return {n["id"] for n in json.loads(resp.read())}
except Exception as e:
print(
f"WARN: Gitea API failed: {e}", file=sys.stderr, flush=True
)
print(f"WARN: Gitea API failed: {e}", file=sys.stderr, flush=True)
return set()
def wake_openclaw(count):
text = (
f"[Gitea Notification] {count} new notification(s). "
"Check your Gitea notification inbox via API, process them, "
"and mark as read when done. "
"Route all output to Gitea comments or Mattermost #git/#claw. "
"Do NOT reply to this session — respond with NO_REPLY."
)
payload = json.dumps({"text": text, "mode": "now"}).encode()
req = urllib.request.Request(
f"{GATEWAY_URL}/hooks/wake",
data=payload,
headers={
"Authorization": f"Bearer {HOOK_TOKEN}",
"Content-Type": "application/json",
},
method="POST",
)
try:
with urllib.request.urlopen(req, timeout=5) as resp:
status = resp.status
print(f" Wake responded: {status}", flush=True)
return True
except Exception as e:
print(
f"WARN: Failed to wake OpenClaw: {e}",
file=sys.stderr,
flush=True,
)
return False
def write_flag(count):
os.makedirs(os.path.dirname(FLAG_PATH), exist_ok=True)
with open(FLAG_PATH, "w") as f:
f.write(json.dumps({
"ts": time.strftime("%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ", time.gmtime()),
"count": count,
}))
def main():
check_config()
print(
f"Gitea notification poller started (delay={POLL_DELAY}s)",
flush=True,
)
print(f"Gitea poller started (delay={POLL_DELAY}s, flag={FLAG_PATH})", flush=True)
last_seen_ids = gitea_unread_ids()
print(
f"Initial unread: {len(last_seen_ids)} notification(s)", flush=True
)
print(f"Initial unread: {len(last_seen_ids)}", flush=True)
while True:
time.sleep(POLL_DELAY)
current_ids = gitea_unread_ids()
new_ids = current_ids - last_seen_ids
if not new_ids:
last_seen_ids = current_ids
continue
ts = time.strftime("%H:%M:%S")
print(
f"[{ts}] {len(new_ids)} new notification(s) "
f"({len(current_ids)} total unread), waking agent",
flush=True,
)
wake_openclaw(len(new_ids))
print(f"[{ts}] {len(new_ids)} new ({len(current_ids)} total), flag written", flush=True)
write_flag(len(new_ids))
last_seen_ids = current_ids
@@ -368,13 +341,15 @@ This applies to everything: project rules ("no mocks in tests"), workflow
preferences ("fewer PRs, don't over-split"), corrections, new policies.
Immediate write to the daily file, and to MEMORY.md if it's a standing rule.
### PII-Aware Output Routing
### Sensitive Output Routing
A lesson learned the hard way: **the audience determines what you can say, not
who asked.** If the human asks for a medication status report in a group
channel, the agent can't just dump it there — other people can read it. The
rule: if the output would contain PII and the channel isn't private, redirect to
DM and reply in-channel with "sent privately."
rule: if the output would contain sensitive information (PII, secrets,
credentials, API keys, operational details like flight numbers, locations,
travel plans, medical info, etc.) and the channel isn't private, redirect to DM
and reply in-channel with "sent privately."
This is enforced at multiple levels:
@@ -405,7 +380,7 @@ The heartbeat handles:
- Periodic memory maintenance
State tracking in `memory/heartbeat-state.json` prevents redundant checks (e.g.,
don't re-check email if you checked 10 minutes ago).
don't re-check notifications if you checked 10 minutes ago).
The key output rule: heartbeats should either be `HEARTBEAT_OK` (nothing to do)
or a direct alert. Work narration goes to a designated status channel, never to
@@ -1417,7 +1392,8 @@ stay quiet.
## Inbox Check (PRIORITY)
(check notifications, issues, emails — whatever applies)
(check whatever notification sources apply to your setup — e.g. Gitea
notifications, emails, issue trackers)
## Flight Prep Blocks (daily)
@@ -1451,10 +1427,9 @@ Never send internal thinking or status narration to user's DM. Output should be:
```json
{
"lastChecks": {
"email": 1703275200,
"gitea": 1703280000,
"calendar": 1703260800,
"weather": null,
"gitea": 1703280000
"weather": null
},
"lastWeeklyDocsReview": "2026-02-24"
}
@@ -1482,51 +1457,9 @@ Never send internal thinking or status narration to user's DM. Output should be:
## Gitea Integration & Notification Polling
For self-hosted Gitea instances, you need a way to deliver notifications (issue
assignments, PR reviews, @-mentions) to your agent. There are two approaches,
depending on your network setup.
### Notification Delivery: Webhooks vs Polling
#### 1. Direct webhooks (VPS / public server)
If your OpenClaw instance runs on a VPS or other publicly reachable server, you
can run Traefik (or any reverse proxy) on the same server and configure Gitea
webhooks to POST directly to OpenClaw's webhook endpoint. This is push-based and
realtime — notifications arrive instantly.
Set up a Gitea webhook (per-repo or org-wide) pointing at your OpenClaw
instance's `/hooks/wake` endpoint. Gitea sends a POST on every event, and the
agent wakes immediately to process it.
#### 2. Notification poller (local machine behind NAT)
If your OpenClaw instance runs on a dedicated local machine behind NAT (like a
home Mac or Linux box), Gitea can't reach it directly. In this case, use a
lightweight polling script that checks the Gitea notifications API every few
seconds and signals the agent when new notifications arrive.
This is the approach we use — OpenClaw runs on a dedicated Mac Studio on a home
LAN, so we poll Gitea's notification API and wake the agent via the local
`/hooks/wake` endpoint when new notifications appear. The poller script is
included below in the [Notification poller](#notification-poller) section.
The poller approach trades ~30 seconds of latency (polling interval) for
simplicity and no NAT/firewall configuration. For most workflows this is
perfectly fine — code review and issue triage don't need sub-second response
times. If no new notifications arrive between heartbeats, the effective latency
is bounded by the heartbeat interval (~30 minutes), but in practice the poller
catches most events within seconds.
#### Which should you choose?
| Factor | Webhooks | Poller |
| ------------------- | ------------------- | ------------------------- |
| Network requirement | Public IP / domain | None (outbound-only) |
| Latency | Instant | ~2-30s (polling interval) |
| Setup complexity | Reverse proxy + TLS | Single background script |
| Dependencies | Traefik/nginx/Caddy | Python stdlib only |
| Best for | VPS / cloud deploys | Home LAN / NAT setups |
For self-hosted Gitea instances, you can set up a notification poller that
injects Gitea events (issue assignments, PR reviews, @-mentions) into the
agent's session.
### Workflow rules (HEARTBEAT.md / AGENTS.md):
@@ -1665,21 +1598,24 @@ Never lose a rule or preference your human states:
---
## PII Output Routing — Audience-Aware Responses
## Sensitive Output Routing — Audience-Aware Responses
A critical security pattern: **the audience determines what you can say, not who
asked.** If your human asks for a sitrep (or any PII-containing info) in a group
asked.** If your human asks for a sitrep (or any sensitive info) in a group
channel, you can't just dump it there — other people can read it.
### AGENTS.md / checklist prompt:
```markdown
## PII Output Routing (CRITICAL)
## Sensitive Output Routing (CRITICAL)
- NEVER output PII in any non-private channel, even if your human asks for it
- If a request would produce PII (medication status, travel details, financial
info, etc.) in a shared channel: send the response via DM instead, and reply
in-channel with "sent privately"
- NEVER output sensitive information in any non-private channel, even if your
human asks for it
- This includes: PII, secrets, credentials, API keys, and sensitive operational
information (flight numbers/times/dates, locations, travel plans, medical
info, financial details, etc.)
- If a request would produce any of the above in a shared channel: send the
response via DM instead, and reply in-channel with "sent privately"
- The rule is: the audience determines what you can say, not who asked
- This applies to: group chats, public issue trackers, shared Mattermost
channels, Discord servers — anywhere that isn't a 1:1 DM
@@ -1688,10 +1624,10 @@ channel, you can't just dump it there — other people can read it.
### Why this matters:
This is a real failure mode. If someone asks "sitrep" in a group channel and you
respond with medication names, partner details, travel dates, and hotel names
you just leaked all of that to everyone in the channel. The human asking is
authorized to see it; the channel audience is not. Always check WHERE you're
responding, not just WHO asked.
respond with medication names, partner details, travel dates, hotel names, or
API credentials — you just leaked all of that to everyone in the channel. The
human asking is authorized to see it; the channel audience is not. Always check
WHERE you're responding, not just WHO asked.
---

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