21 KiB
summary, title, sidebarTitle, read_when, status
| summary | title | sidebarTitle | read_when | status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-agent routing: isolated agents, channel accounts, and bindings | Multi-agent routing | Multi-agent routing | You want multiple isolated agents (workspaces + auth) in one gateway process. | active |
Run multiple isolated agents — each with its own workspace, state directory (agentDir), and session history — plus multiple channel accounts (e.g. two WhatsApps) in one running Gateway. Inbound messages are routed to the right agent through bindings.
An agent here is the full per-persona scope: workspace files, auth profiles, model registry, and session store. agentDir is the on-disk state directory that holds this per-agent config at ~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/. A binding maps a channel account (e.g. a Slack workspace or a WhatsApp number) to one of those agents.
What is "one agent"?
An agent is a fully scoped brain with its own:
- Workspace (files, AGENTS.md/SOUL.md/USER.md, local notes, persona rules).
- State directory (
agentDir) for auth profiles, model registry, and per-agent config. - Session store (chat history + routing state) under
~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/sessions.
Auth profiles are per-agent. Each agent reads from its own:
~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/agent/auth-profiles.json
Skills are loaded from each agent workspace plus shared roots such as ~/.openclaw/skills, then filtered by the effective agent skill allowlist when configured. Use agents.defaults.skills for a shared baseline and agents.list[].skills for per-agent replacement. See Skills: per-agent vs shared and Skills: agent skill allowlists.
The Gateway can host one agent (default) or many agents side-by-side.
**Workspace note:** each agent's workspace is the **default cwd**, not a hard sandbox. Relative paths resolve inside the workspace, but absolute paths can reach other host locations unless sandboxing is enabled. See [Sandboxing](/gateway/sandboxing).Paths (quick map)
- Config:
~/.openclaw/openclaw.json(orOPENCLAW_CONFIG_PATH) - State dir:
~/.openclaw(orOPENCLAW_STATE_DIR) - Workspace:
~/.openclaw/workspace(or~/.openclaw/workspace-<agentId>) - Agent dir:
~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/agent(oragents.list[].agentDir) - Sessions:
~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/sessions
Single-agent mode (default)
If you do nothing, OpenClaw runs a single agent:
agentIddefaults tomain.- Sessions are keyed as
agent:main:<mainKey>. - Workspace defaults to
~/.openclaw/workspace(or~/.openclaw/workspace-<profile>whenOPENCLAW_PROFILEis set). - State defaults to
~/.openclaw/agents/main/agent.
Agent helper
Use the agent wizard to add a new isolated agent:
openclaw agents add work
Then add bindings (or let the wizard do it) to route inbound messages.
Verify with:
openclaw agents list --bindings
Quick start
Use the wizard or create workspaces manually:```bash
openclaw agents add coding
openclaw agents add social
```
Each agent gets its own workspace with `SOUL.md`, `AGENTS.md`, and optional `USER.md`, plus a dedicated `agentDir` and session store under `~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>`.
Create one account per agent on your preferred channels:
- Discord: one bot per agent, enable Message Content Intent, copy each token.
- Telegram: one bot per agent via BotFather, copy each token.
- WhatsApp: link each phone number per account.
```bash
openclaw channels login --channel whatsapp --account work
```
See channel guides: [Discord](/channels/discord), [Telegram](/channels/telegram), [WhatsApp](/channels/whatsapp).
Add agents under `agents.list`, channel accounts under `channels..accounts`, and connect them with `bindings` (examples below).
```bash
openclaw gateway restart
openclaw agents list --bindings
openclaw channels status --probe
```
Multiple agents = multiple people, multiple personalities
With multiple agents, each agentId becomes a fully isolated persona:
- Different phone numbers/accounts (per channel
accountId). - Different personalities (per-agent workspace files like
AGENTS.mdandSOUL.md). - Separate auth + sessions (no cross-talk unless explicitly enabled).
This lets multiple people share one Gateway server while keeping their AI "brains" and data isolated.
Cross-agent QMD memory search
If one agent should search another agent's QMD session transcripts, add extra collections under agents.list[].memorySearch.qmd.extraCollections. Use agents.defaults.memorySearch.qmd.extraCollections only when every agent should inherit the same shared transcript collections.
{
agents: {
defaults: {
workspace: "~/workspaces/main",
memorySearch: {
qmd: {
extraCollections: [{ path: "~/agents/family/sessions", name: "family-sessions" }],
},
},
},
list: [
{
id: "main",
workspace: "~/workspaces/main",
memorySearch: {
qmd: {
extraCollections: [{ path: "notes" }], // resolves inside workspace -> collection named "notes-main"
},
},
},
{ id: "family", workspace: "~/workspaces/family" },
],
},
memory: {
backend: "qmd",
qmd: { includeDefaultMemory: false },
},
}
The extra collection path can be shared across agents, but the collection name stays explicit when the path is outside the agent workspace. Paths inside the workspace remain agent-scoped so each agent keeps its own transcript search set.
One WhatsApp number, multiple people (DM split)
You can route different WhatsApp DMs to different agents while staying on one WhatsApp account. Match on sender E.164 (like +15551234567) with peer.kind: "direct". Replies still come from the same WhatsApp number (no per-agent sender identity).
Example:
{
agents: {
list: [
{ id: "alex", workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-alex" },
{ id: "mia", workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-mia" },
],
},
bindings: [
{
agentId: "alex",
match: { channel: "whatsapp", peer: { kind: "direct", id: "+15551230001" } },
},
{
agentId: "mia",
match: { channel: "whatsapp", peer: { kind: "direct", id: "+15551230002" } },
},
],
channels: {
whatsapp: {
dmPolicy: "allowlist",
allowFrom: ["+15551230001", "+15551230002"],
},
},
}
Notes:
- DM access control is global per WhatsApp account (pairing/allowlist), not per agent.
- For shared groups, bind the group to one agent or use Broadcast groups.
Routing rules (how messages pick an agent)
Bindings are deterministic and most-specific wins:
Exact DM/group/channel id. Thread inheritance. Discord role routing. Discord. Slack. Per-account fallback. `accountId: "*"`. Fallback to `agents.list[].default`, else first list entry, default: `main`. - If multiple bindings match in the same tier, the first one in config order wins. - If a binding sets multiple match fields (for example `peer` + `guildId`), all specified fields are required (`AND` semantics). - A binding that omits `accountId` matches the default account only. - Use `accountId: "*"` for a channel-wide fallback across all accounts. - If you later add the same binding for the same agent with an explicit account id, OpenClaw upgrades the existing channel-only binding to account-scoped instead of duplicating it.Multiple accounts / phone numbers
Channels that support multiple accounts (e.g. WhatsApp) use accountId to identify each login. Each accountId can be routed to a different agent, so one server can host multiple phone numbers without mixing sessions.
If you want a channel-wide default account when accountId is omitted, set channels.<channel>.defaultAccount (optional). When unset, OpenClaw falls back to default if present, otherwise the first configured account id (sorted).
Common channels supporting this pattern include:
whatsapp,telegram,discord,slack,signal,imessageirc,line,googlechat,mattermost,matrix,nextcloud-talkbluebubbles,zalo,zalouser,nostr,feishu
Concepts
agentId: one "brain" (workspace, per-agent auth, per-agent session store).accountId: one channel account instance (e.g. WhatsApp account"personal"vs"biz").binding: routes inbound messages to anagentIdby(channel, accountId, peer)and optionally guild/team ids.- Direct chats collapse to
agent:<agentId>:<mainKey>(per-agent "main";session.mainKey).
Platform examples
Each Discord bot account maps to a unique `accountId`. Bind each account to an agent and keep allowlists per bot.```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{ id: "main", workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-main" },
{ id: "coding", workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-coding" },
],
},
bindings: [
{ agentId: "main", match: { channel: "discord", accountId: "default" } },
{ agentId: "coding", match: { channel: "discord", accountId: "coding" } },
],
channels: {
discord: {
groupPolicy: "allowlist",
accounts: {
default: {
token: "DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN_MAIN",
guilds: {
"123456789012345678": {
channels: {
"222222222222222222": { allow: true, requireMention: false },
},
},
},
},
coding: {
token: "DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN_CODING",
guilds: {
"123456789012345678": {
channels: {
"333333333333333333": { allow: true, requireMention: false },
},
},
},
},
},
},
},
}
```
- Invite each bot to the guild and enable Message Content Intent.
- Tokens live in `channels.discord.accounts.<id>.token` (default account can use `DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN`).
```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{ id: "main", workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-main" },
{ id: "alerts", workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-alerts" },
],
},
bindings: [
{ agentId: "main", match: { channel: "telegram", accountId: "default" } },
{ agentId: "alerts", match: { channel: "telegram", accountId: "alerts" } },
],
channels: {
telegram: {
accounts: {
default: {
botToken: "123456:ABC...",
dmPolicy: "pairing",
},
alerts: {
botToken: "987654:XYZ...",
dmPolicy: "allowlist",
allowFrom: ["tg:123456789"],
},
},
},
},
}
```
- Create one bot per agent with BotFather and copy each token.
- Tokens live in `channels.telegram.accounts.<id>.botToken` (default account can use `TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN`).
Link each account before starting the gateway:
```bash
openclaw channels login --channel whatsapp --account personal
openclaw channels login --channel whatsapp --account biz
```
`~/.openclaw/openclaw.json` (JSON5):
```js
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "home",
default: true,
name: "Home",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-home",
agentDir: "~/.openclaw/agents/home/agent",
},
{
id: "work",
name: "Work",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-work",
agentDir: "~/.openclaw/agents/work/agent",
},
],
},
// Deterministic routing: first match wins (most-specific first).
bindings: [
{ agentId: "home", match: { channel: "whatsapp", accountId: "personal" } },
{ agentId: "work", match: { channel: "whatsapp", accountId: "biz" } },
// Optional per-peer override (example: send a specific group to work agent).
{
agentId: "work",
match: {
channel: "whatsapp",
accountId: "personal",
peer: { kind: "group", id: "1203630...@g.us" },
},
},
],
// Off by default: agent-to-agent messaging must be explicitly enabled + allowlisted.
tools: {
agentToAgent: {
enabled: false,
allow: ["home", "work"],
},
},
channels: {
whatsapp: {
accounts: {
personal: {
// Optional override. Default: ~/.openclaw/credentials/whatsapp/personal
// authDir: "~/.openclaw/credentials/whatsapp/personal",
},
biz: {
// Optional override. Default: ~/.openclaw/credentials/whatsapp/biz
// authDir: "~/.openclaw/credentials/whatsapp/biz",
},
},
},
},
}
```
Common patterns
Split by channel: route WhatsApp to a fast everyday agent and Telegram to an Opus agent.```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "chat",
name: "Everyday",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-chat",
model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-6",
},
{
id: "opus",
name: "Deep Work",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-opus",
model: "anthropic/claude-opus-4-6",
},
],
},
bindings: [
{ agentId: "chat", match: { channel: "whatsapp" } },
{ agentId: "opus", match: { channel: "telegram" } },
],
}
```
Notes:
- If you have multiple accounts for a channel, add `accountId` to the binding (for example `{ channel: "whatsapp", accountId: "personal" }`).
- To route a single DM/group to Opus while keeping the rest on chat, add a `match.peer` binding for that peer; peer matches always win over channel-wide rules.
Keep WhatsApp on the fast agent, but route one DM to Opus:
```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "chat",
name: "Everyday",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-chat",
model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-6",
},
{
id: "opus",
name: "Deep Work",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-opus",
model: "anthropic/claude-opus-4-6",
},
],
},
bindings: [
{
agentId: "opus",
match: { channel: "whatsapp", peer: { kind: "direct", id: "+15551234567" } },
},
{ agentId: "chat", match: { channel: "whatsapp" } },
],
}
```
Peer bindings always win, so keep them above the channel-wide rule.
Bind a dedicated family agent to a single WhatsApp group, with mention gating and a tighter tool policy:
```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "family",
name: "Family",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-family",
identity: { name: "Family Bot" },
groupChat: {
mentionPatterns: ["@family", "@familybot", "@Family Bot"],
},
sandbox: {
mode: "all",
scope: "agent",
},
tools: {
allow: [
"exec",
"read",
"sessions_list",
"sessions_history",
"sessions_send",
"sessions_spawn",
"session_status",
],
deny: ["write", "edit", "apply_patch", "browser", "canvas", "nodes", "cron"],
},
},
],
},
bindings: [
{
agentId: "family",
match: {
channel: "whatsapp",
peer: { kind: "group", id: "120363999999999999@g.us" },
},
},
],
}
```
Notes:
- Tool allow/deny lists are **tools**, not skills. If a skill needs to run a binary, ensure `exec` is allowed and the binary exists in the sandbox.
- For stricter gating, set `agents.list[].groupChat.mentionPatterns` and keep group allowlists enabled for the channel.
Per-agent sandbox and tool configuration
Each agent can have its own sandbox and tool restrictions:
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "personal",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-personal",
sandbox: {
mode: "off", // No sandbox for personal agent
},
// No tool restrictions - all tools available
},
{
id: "family",
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace-family",
sandbox: {
mode: "all", // Always sandboxed
scope: "agent", // One container per agent
docker: {
// Optional one-time setup after container creation
setupCommand: "apt-get update && apt-get install -y git curl",
},
},
tools: {
allow: ["read"], // Only read tool
deny: ["exec", "write", "edit", "apply_patch"], // Deny others
},
},
],
},
}
Benefits:
- Security isolation: restrict tools for untrusted agents.
- Resource control: sandbox specific agents while keeping others on host.
- Flexible policies: different permissions per agent.
See Multi-agent sandbox and tools for detailed examples.
Related
- ACP agents — running external coding harnesses
- Channel routing — how messages route to agents
- Presence — agent presence and availability
- Session — session isolation and routing
- Sub-agents — spawning background agent runs