Files
nanoclaw/.claude/skills/add-slack/SKILL.md
gavrielc c37609ffc8 docs(skills): drop "v2" from skill content + src/index.ts log lines
Cleans up the prose-level v2 references that the rename commit didn't
touch. Skills now describe themselves and the codebase without "v2"
versioning language. /add-X-v2 cross-references in setup, init-first-agent,
and manage-channels updated to /add-X.

Runtime path identifiers (data/v2.db, data/v2-sessions/, container name
nanoclaw-v2) deliberately left as-is — renaming them breaks live installs
without commensurate benefit.

Verified: pnpm run build clean, 326 host tests pass.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-17 14:42:55 +03:00

113 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown

---
name: add-slack
description: Add Slack channel integration via Chat SDK.
---
# Add Slack Channel
Adds Slack support via the Chat SDK bridge.
## Install
NanoClaw doesn't ship channels in trunk. This skill copies the Slack adapter in from the `channels` branch.
### Pre-flight (idempotent)
Skip to **Credentials** if all of these are already in place:
- `src/channels/slack.ts` exists
- `src/channels/index.ts` contains `import './slack.js';`
- `@chat-adapter/slack` is listed in `package.json` dependencies
Otherwise continue. Every step below is safe to re-run.
### 1. Fetch the channels branch
```bash
git fetch origin channels
```
### 2. Copy the adapter
```bash
git show origin/channels:src/channels/slack.ts > src/channels/slack.ts
```
### 3. Append the self-registration import
Append to `src/channels/index.ts` (skip if the line is already present):
```typescript
import './slack.js';
```
### 4. Install the adapter package (pinned)
```bash
pnpm install @chat-adapter/slack@4.26.0
```
### 5. Build
```bash
pnpm run build
```
## Credentials
### Create Slack App
1. Go to [api.slack.com/apps](https://api.slack.com/apps) and click **Create New App** > **From scratch**
2. Name it (e.g., "NanoClaw") and select your workspace
3. Go to **OAuth & Permissions** and add Bot Token Scopes:
- `chat:write`, `channels:history`, `groups:history`, `im:history`, `channels:read`, `groups:read`, `users:read`, `reactions:write`
4. Click **Install to Workspace** and copy the **Bot User OAuth Token** (`xoxb-...`)
5. Go to **Basic Information** and copy the **Signing Secret**
### Enable DMs
6. Go to **App Home** and enable the **Messages Tab**
7. Check **"Allow users to send Slash commands and messages from the messages tab"**
### Event Subscriptions
8. Go to **Event Subscriptions** and toggle **Enable Events**
9. Set the **Request URL** to `https://your-domain/webhook/slack` — Slack will send a verification challenge; it must pass before you can save
10. Under **Subscribe to bot events**, add:
- `message.channels`, `message.groups`, `message.im`, `app_mention`
11. Click **Save Changes**
12. Slack will show a banner asking you to **reinstall the app** — click it to apply the new event subscriptions
### Configure environment
Add to `.env`:
```bash
SLACK_BOT_TOKEN=xoxb-your-bot-token
SLACK_SIGNING_SECRET=your-signing-secret
```
Sync to container: `mkdir -p data/env && cp .env data/env/env`
### Webhook server
The Chat SDK bridge automatically starts a shared webhook server on port 3000 (configurable via `WEBHOOK_PORT` env var). The server handles `/webhook/slack` for Slack and other webhook-based adapters. This port must be publicly reachable from the internet for Slack to deliver events.
If running locally, discuss options for exposing the server — e.g. ngrok (`ngrok http 3000`), Cloudflare Tunnel, or a reverse proxy on a VPS. The resulting public URL becomes the base for `https://your-domain/webhook/slack`.
## Next Steps
If you're in the middle of `/setup`, return to the setup flow now.
Otherwise, run `/manage-channels` to wire this channel to an agent group.
## Channel Info
- **type**: `slack`
- **terminology**: Slack has "workspaces" containing "channels." Channels can be public (#general) or private. The bot can also receive direct messages.
- **platform-id-format**: `slack:{channelId}` for channels (e.g., `slack:C0123ABC`), `slack:{dmId}` for DMs (e.g., `slack:D0ARWEBLV63`)
- **how-to-find-id**: Right-click a channel name > "View channel details" — the Channel ID is at the bottom (starts with C). For DMs, the ID starts with D. Or copy the channel link — the ID is the last segment of the URL.
- **supports-threads**: yes
- **typical-use**: Interactive chat — team channels or direct messages
- **default-isolation**: Same agent group for channels where you're the primary user. Separate agent group for channels with different teams or sensitive contexts.