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Deploy a lightweight status API that exposes your OpenClaw bot's runtime health, service connectivity, cron jobs, skills, system metrics, and more. Use when setting up a monitoring dashboard, health e

v1.0.0
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Description


name: bot-status-api description: "Deploy a lightweight status API that exposes your OpenClaw bot's runtime health, service connectivity, cron jobs, skills, system metrics, and more. Use when setting up a monitoring dashboard, health endpoint, or status page for an OpenClaw agent. Supports any services via config (HTTP checks, CLI commands, file checks). Zero dependencies — Node.js only."

Bot Status API

A configurable HTTP service that exposes your OpenClaw bot's operational status as JSON. Designed for dashboard integration, monitoring, and transparency.

What It Provides

  • Bot Core: Online status, model, context usage, uptime, heartbeat timing
  • Services: Health checks for any HTTP endpoint, CLI tool, or file path
  • Email: Unread counts from any email provider (himalaya, gog, etc.)
  • Cron Jobs: Reads directly from OpenClaw's cron/jobs.json
  • Docker: Container health via Portainer API
  • Dev Servers: Auto-detects running dev servers by process grep
  • Skills: Lists installed and available OpenClaw skills
  • System: CPU, RAM, Disk metrics from /proc

Setup

1. Copy the service files

Copy server.js, collectors/, and package.json to your desired location.

2. Create config.json

Copy config.example.json to config.json and customize:

{
  "port": 3200,
  "name": "MyBot",
  "workspace": "/path/to/.openclaw/workspace",
  "openclawHome": "/path/to/.openclaw",
  "cache": { "ttlMs": 10000 },
  "model": "claude-sonnet-4-20250514",
  "skillDirs": ["/path/to/openclaw/skills"],
  "services": [
    { "name": "myservice", "type": "http", "url": "http://...", "healthPath": "/health" }
  ]
}

Service Check Types

Type Description Config
http Fetch URL, check HTTP 200 url, healthPath, method, headers, body
command Run shell command, check exit 0 command, timeout
file-exists Check path exists path

3. Run

node server.js

4. Persist (systemd user service)

# ~/.config/systemd/user/bot-status.service
[Unit]
Description=Bot Status API
After=network.target

[Service]
Type=simple
WorkingDirectory=/path/to/bot-status
ExecStart=/usr/bin/node server.js
Restart=always
RestartSec=5
Environment=PORT=3200
Environment=HOME=/home/youruser
Environment=PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin

[Install]
WantedBy=default.target
systemctl --user daemon-reload
systemctl --user enable --now bot-status
loginctl enable-linger $USER  # survive logout

5. Context/Vitals from OpenClaw

The bot should periodically write vitals to heartbeat-state.json in its workspace:

{
  "vitals": {
    "contextPercent": 62,
    "contextUsed": 124000,
    "contextMax": 200000,
    "model": "claude-opus-4-5",
    "updatedAt": 1770304500000
  }
}

Add this to your HEARTBEAT.md so the bot updates it each heartbeat cycle.

Endpoints

Endpoint Description
GET /status Full status JSON (cached)
GET /health Simple {"status":"ok"}

Architecture

  • Zero dependencies — Node.js built-ins only (http, fs, child_process)
  • Non-blocking — All shell commands use async exec, never execSync
  • Background refresh — Cache refreshes on interval, requests always served from cache instantly (~10ms)
  • Config-driven — Everything in config.json, no hardcoded values

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Compatible Platforms

Pricing

Free

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