Use when adding new error messages to React, or seeing "unknown error code" warnings.
npx skills add brentkearney/nanoclaw-signal --skill "add-slack"
Install specific skill from multi-skill repository
# Description
Add Slack as a channel. Can replace WhatsApp entirely or run alongside it. Uses Socket Mode (no public URL needed).
# SKILL.md
name: add-slack
description: Add Slack as a channel. Can replace WhatsApp entirely or run alongside it. Uses Socket Mode (no public URL needed).
Add Slack Channel
This skill adds Slack support to NanoClaw, then walks through interactive setup.
Phase 1: Pre-flight
Check if already applied
Check if src/channels/slack.ts exists. If it does, skip to Phase 3 (Setup). The code changes are already in place.
Ask the user
Do they already have a Slack app configured? If yes, collect the Bot Token and App Token now. If no, we'll create one in Phase 3.
Phase 2: Apply Code Changes
Ensure channel remote
git remote -v
If slack is missing, add it:
git remote add slack https://github.com/qwibitai/nanoclaw-slack.git
Merge the skill branch
git fetch slack main
git merge slack/main || {
git checkout --theirs package-lock.json
git add package-lock.json
git merge --continue
}
This merges in:
- src/channels/slack.ts (SlackChannel class with self-registration via registerChannel)
- src/channels/slack.test.ts (46 unit tests)
- import './slack.js' appended to the channel barrel file src/channels/index.ts
- @slack/bolt npm dependency in package.json
- SLACK_BOT_TOKEN and SLACK_APP_TOKEN in .env.example
If the merge reports conflicts, resolve them by reading the conflicted files and understanding the intent of both sides.
Validate code changes
npm install
npm run build
npx vitest run src/channels/slack.test.ts
All tests must pass (including the new Slack tests) and build must be clean before proceeding.
Phase 3: Setup
Create Slack App (if needed)
If the user doesn't have a Slack app, share SLACK_SETUP.md which has step-by-step instructions with screenshots guidance, troubleshooting, and a token reference table.
Quick summary of what's needed:
1. Create a Slack app at api.slack.com/apps
2. Enable Socket Mode and generate an App-Level Token (xapp-...)
3. Subscribe to bot events: message.channels, message.groups, message.im
4. Add OAuth scopes: chat:write, channels:history, groups:history, im:history, channels:read, groups:read, users:read
5. Install to workspace and copy the Bot Token (xoxb-...)
Wait for the user to provide both tokens.
Configure environment
Add to .env:
SLACK_BOT_TOKEN=xoxb-your-bot-token
SLACK_APP_TOKEN=xapp-your-app-token
Channels auto-enable when their credentials are present β no extra configuration needed.
Sync to container environment:
mkdir -p data/env && cp .env data/env/env
The container reads environment from data/env/env, not .env directly.
Build and restart
npm run build
launchctl kickstart -k gui/$(id -u)/com.nanoclaw
Phase 4: Registration
Get Channel ID
Tell the user:
- Add the bot to a Slack channel (right-click channel β View channel details β Integrations β Add apps)
- In that channel, the channel ID is in the URL when you open it in a browser:
https://app.slack.com/client/T.../C0123456789β theC...part is the channel ID- Alternatively, right-click the channel name β Copy link β the channel ID is the last path segment
The JID format for NanoClaw is:
slack:C0123456789
Wait for the user to provide the channel ID.
Register the channel
The channel ID, name, and folder name are needed. Use npx tsx setup/index.ts --step register with the appropriate flags.
For a main channel (responds to all messages):
npx tsx setup/index.ts --step register -- --jid "slack:<channel-id>" --name "<channel-name>" --folder "slack_main" --trigger "@${ASSISTANT_NAME}" --channel slack --no-trigger-required --is-main
For additional channels (trigger-only):
npx tsx setup/index.ts --step register -- --jid "slack:<channel-id>" --name "<channel-name>" --folder "slack_<channel-name>" --trigger "@${ASSISTANT_NAME}" --channel slack
Phase 5: Verify
Test the connection
Tell the user:
Send a message in your registered Slack channel:
- For main channel: Any message works
- For non-main:@<assistant-name> hello(using the configured trigger word)The bot should respond within a few seconds.
Check logs if needed
tail -f logs/nanoclaw.log
Troubleshooting
Bot not responding
- Check
SLACK_BOT_TOKENandSLACK_APP_TOKENare set in.envAND synced todata/env/env - Check channel is registered:
sqlite3 store/messages.db "SELECT * FROM registered_groups WHERE jid LIKE 'slack:%'" - For non-main channels: message must include trigger pattern
- Service is running:
launchctl list | grep nanoclaw
Bot connected but not receiving messages
- Verify Socket Mode is enabled in the Slack app settings
- Verify the bot is subscribed to the correct events (
message.channels,message.groups,message.im) - Verify the bot has been added to the channel
- Check that the bot has the required OAuth scopes
Bot not seeing messages in channels
By default, bots only see messages in channels they've been explicitly added to. Make sure to:
1. Add the bot to each channel you want it to monitor
2. Check the bot has channels:history and/or groups:history scopes
"missing_scope" errors
If the bot logs missing_scope errors:
1. Go to OAuth & Permissions in your Slack app settings
2. Add the missing scope listed in the error message
3. Reinstall the app to your workspace β scope changes require reinstallation
4. Copy the new Bot Token (it changes on reinstall) and update .env
5. Sync: mkdir -p data/env && cp .env data/env/env
6. Restart: launchctl kickstart -k gui/$(id -u)/com.nanoclaw
Getting channel ID
If the channel ID is hard to find:
- In Slack desktop: right-click channel β Copy link β extract the C... ID from the URL
- In Slack web: the URL shows https://app.slack.com/client/TXXXXXXX/C0123456789
- Via API: curl -s -H "Authorization: Bearer $SLACK_BOT_TOKEN" "https://slack.com/api/conversations.list" | jq '.channels[] | {id, name}'
After Setup
The Slack channel supports:
- Public channels β Bot must be added to the channel
- Private channels β Bot must be invited to the channel
- Direct messages β Users can DM the bot directly
- Multi-channel β Can run alongside WhatsApp or other channels (auto-enabled by credentials)
Known Limitations
- Threads are flattened β Threaded replies are delivered to the agent as regular channel messages. The agent sees them but has no awareness they originated in a thread. Responses always go to the channel, not back into the thread. Users in a thread will need to check the main channel for the bot's reply. Full thread-aware routing (respond in-thread) requires pipeline-wide changes: database schema,
NewMessagetype,Channel.sendMessageinterface, and routing logic. - No typing indicator β Slack's Bot API does not expose a typing indicator endpoint. The
setTyping()method is a no-op. Users won't see "bot is typing..." while the agent works. - Message splitting is naive β Long messages are split at a fixed 4000-character boundary, which may break mid-word or mid-sentence. A smarter split (on paragraph or sentence boundaries) would improve readability.
- No file/image handling β The bot only processes text content. File uploads, images, and rich message blocks are not forwarded to the agent.
- Channel metadata sync is unbounded β
syncChannelMetadata()paginates through all channels the bot is a member of, but has no upper bound or timeout. Workspaces with thousands of channels may experience slow startup. - Workspace admin policies not detected β If the Slack workspace restricts bot app installation, the setup will fail at the "Install to Workspace" step with no programmatic detection or guidance. See SLACK_SETUP.md troubleshooting section.
# Supported AI Coding Agents
This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:
Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.