Tool plugins add agent-callable tools to OpenClaw without adding a channel, model provider, hook, service, or setup backend. UseDocumentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.openclaw.ai/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
defineToolPlugin when the
plugin owns a fixed list of tools and you want OpenClaw to generate the manifest
metadata that keeps those tools discoverable without loading runtime code.
The recommended flow is:
- Scaffold a package with
openclaw plugins init. - Write tools with
defineToolPlugin. - Build JavaScript.
- Generate
openclaw.plugin.jsonandpackage.jsonmetadata withopenclaw plugins build. - Validate the generated metadata before publishing or installing.
Requirements
- Node >= 22.
- TypeScript ESM package output.
typeboxfor config and tool parameter schemas.openclaw >=2026.5.17, the first OpenClaw version that exportsopenclaw/plugin-sdk/tool-plugin.- A package root that can ship
dist/,openclaw.plugin.json, andpackage.json.
typebox at runtime, so keep typebox in
dependencies, not only devDependencies.
Quickstart
Create a new plugin package:src/index.ts: adefineToolPluginentry with anechotool.src/index.test.ts: a small metadata test.tsconfig.json: NodeNext TypeScript output todist/.package.json: scripts, runtime dependencies, andopenclaw.extensions: ["./dist/index.js"].openclaw.plugin.json: generated manifest metadata for the initial tool.
Write a tool
defineToolPlugin takes plugin identity, an optional config schema, and a
static list of tools. Parameter and config types are inferred from TypeBox
schemas.
Optional and factory tools
Setoptional: true when users should explicitly allowlist the tool before it
is sent to a model:
openclaw plugins build writes the matching toolMetadata.<tool>.optional
manifest entry, so OpenClaw can discover the tool without loading plugin
runtime code.
Use factory when a tool needs the runtime tool context before it can be
created. The factory keeps metadata static while letting the tool opt out for a
specific run, inspect sandbox state, or bind runtime helpers.
definePluginEntry directly when
the plugin computes tool names dynamically or combines tools with hooks,
services, providers, commands, or other runtime surfaces.
Return values
defineToolPlugin wraps plain return values into the OpenClaw tool-result
format:
- Return a string when the model should see that exact text.
- Return a JSON-compatible value when you want the model to see formatted JSON
and OpenClaw to keep the original value in
details.
AgentToolResult or reuse
an existing api.registerTool implementation. Use definePluginEntry instead
of defineToolPlugin when you need fully dynamic tools or mixed plugin
capabilities.
Configuration
configSchema is optional. If you omit it, OpenClaw uses a strict empty object
schema and the generated manifest still includes configSchema.
configSchema, the second execute argument is typed from the
schema:
Generated metadata
OpenClaw discovers installed plugins from cold metadata. It must be able to read the plugin manifest before importing plugin runtime code.defineToolPlugin
therefore exposes static metadata, and openclaw plugins build writes that
metadata into the package.
Run the generator after changing plugin id, name, description, config schema,
activation, or tool names:
contracts.tools is the important discovery contract. It tells OpenClaw which
plugin owns each tool without loading every installed plugin runtime. If the
manifest is stale, the tool may be missing from discovery or the wrong plugin
may be blamed for a registration error.
Package metadata
For the simple tool-plugin workflow,openclaw plugins build aligns
package.json to the selected single runtime entry:
./dist/index.js for installed packages. Source
entries are useful in workspace development, but published packages should not
depend on TypeScript runtime loading.
Validate in CI
Useplugins build --check to fail CI when generated metadata is stale without
rewriting files:
plugins validate checks that:
openclaw.plugin.jsonexists and passes the normal manifest loader.- The current entry exports
defineToolPluginmetadata. - Generated manifest fields match the entry metadata.
contracts.toolsmatches the declared tool names.package.jsonpointsopenclaw.extensionsat the selected runtime entry.
Install and inspect locally
From a separate OpenClaw checkout or installed CLI, install the package path:Publish
Publish through ClawHub when the package is ready:Troubleshooting
plugin entry not found: ./dist/index.js
The selected entry file does not exist. Run npm run build, then rerun
openclaw plugins build --entry ./dist/index.js or
openclaw plugins validate --entry ./dist/index.js.
plugin entry does not expose defineToolPlugin metadata
The entry did not export a value created by defineToolPlugin. Check that the
module default export is the defineToolPlugin(...) result, or pass the correct
entry with --entry.
openclaw.plugin.json generated metadata is stale
The manifest no longer matches the entry metadata. Run:
openclaw.plugin.json and package.json changes.
package.json openclaw.extensions must include ./dist/index.js
The package metadata points at a different runtime entry. Run
openclaw plugins build --entry ./dist/index.js so the generator aligns the
package metadata with the entry you intend to ship.
Cannot find package 'typebox'
The built plugin imports typebox at runtime. Keep typebox in
dependencies, reinstall package dependencies, rebuild, and rerun validation.
Tool does not appear after install
Check these in order:openclaw plugins inspect <plugin-id> --runtimeopenclaw plugins validate --root <plugin-root> --entry ./dist/index.jsopenclaw.plugin.jsonhascontracts.toolswith the expected tool names.package.jsonhasopenclaw.extensions: ["./dist/index.js"].- The Gateway was restarted or reloaded after installing the plugin.