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nanoclaw/.claude/skills/manage-channels/SKILL.md
Koshkoshinsk f60b42666f docs(skills): surface telegram pairing code outside bash output
Claude Code's UI folds bash tool results by default, hiding the 4-digit
pairing code from the user. Instruct the skill to echo the CODE as plain
text in the reply so it's always visible.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-15 08:42:39 +00:00

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name, description
name description
manage-channels Wire channels to agent groups, manage isolation levels, add new channel groups. Use after adding a channel, during setup, or standalone to reconfigure.

Manage Channels

Wire messaging channels to agent groups. See docs/v2-isolation-model.md for the full isolation model.

Privilege is a user-level concept, not a channel-level one (see src/db/user-roles.ts, src/access.ts). There is no "main channel" / "main group" — any user can be granted owner or admin (global or scoped to an agent group) via grantRole(), and messages from unknown senders are gated per-messaging-group by unknown_sender_policy (strict | request_approval | public).

Assess Current State

Read the v2 central DB (data/v2.db) — query agent_groups, messaging_groups, messaging_group_agents, users, and user_roles tables. Also check .env for channel tokens and src/channels/index.ts for uncommented imports.

Categorize channels as: wired (has DB entities + messaging_group_agents row), configured but unwired (has credentials + barrel import, no DB entities), or not configured.

If the instance has no owner yet (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM user_roles WHERE role='owner' AND agent_group_id IS NULL returns 0), tell the user they should run /init-first-agent first — it stands up the first agent group, promotes the operator to owner, and verifies delivery end-to-end by having the agent DM them. Then return here for any additional channels/groups.

First Channel (No Agent Groups Exist)

Delegate to /init-first-agent. It handles: channel choice, operator identity lookup, DM platform id resolution (with cold-DM or pair-code fallback), agent group creation, wiring, and the welcome DM. Return here afterward for any additional channels.

Wire New Channel

For each unwired channel:

  1. Read its SKILL.md ## Channel Info for terminology, how-to-find-id, typical-use, and default-isolation
  2. Ask for the platform ID using the platform's terminology
  3. Ask the isolation question (see below)
  4. Register with the appropriate flags

Isolation Question

Present a multiple-choice with a contextual recommendation. The three options:

  • Same conversation (--session-mode "agent-shared" + existing folder) — all messages land in one session. Recommend for webhook + chat combos (GitHub + Slack).
  • Same agent, separate conversations (--session-mode "shared" + existing folder) — shared workspace/memory, independent threads. Recommend for same user across platforms.
  • Separate agent (new --folder) — full isolation. Recommend when different people are involved.

Use the channel's typical-use and default-isolation fields to pick the recommendation. Offer to explain more if the user is unsure — reference docs/v2-isolation-model.md for the detailed explanation.

Register Command

npx tsx setup/index.ts --step register -- \
  --platform-id "<id>" --name "<name>" \
  --folder "<folder>" --channel "<type>" \
  --session-mode "<shared|agent-shared|per-thread>" \
  --assistant-name "<name>"

The register step creates the agent group (reusing it if the folder already exists), the messaging group, and the wiring row. createMessagingGroupAgent auto-creates the companion agent_destinations row so the agent can address the channel by name — no separate destination step needed.

For separate agents, also ask for a folder name and optionally a different assistant name.

Add Channel Group

When adding another group/chat on an already-configured platform (e.g. a second Telegram group):

  1. Telegram: ask the isolation question first to determine intent (wire-to:<folder> for an existing agent, new-agent:<folder> for a fresh one). Run npx tsx setup/index.ts --step pair-telegram -- --intent <intent>, show the CODE as plain text in your reply (e.g. "Your pairing code is 1234") — do not rely on the user expanding the bash tool result, Claude Code's UI folds it by default — and tell the user to post @<botname> CODE in the target group (or DM the bot for a private chat). Wait for the PAIR_TELEGRAM block. The inbound interceptor has already created the messaging_groups row with unknown_sender_policy = 'strict' and upserted the paired user — register only needs to add the wiring:

    npx tsx setup/index.ts --step register -- \
      --platform-id "<PLATFORM_ID>" --name "<group-name>" \
      --folder "<folder>" --channel "telegram" \
      --session-mode "<shared|agent-shared|per-thread>" \
      --assistant-name "<name>"
    
  2. Other channels: read the channel's SKILL.md ## Channel Info for terminology and how-to-find-id. Ask for the new group/chat ID, ask the isolation question, then register. No package or credential changes needed.

Change Wiring

  1. Show current wiring (agent_groups × messaging_group_agents)
  2. Ask which channel to move and to which agent group
  3. Delete the old messaging_group_agents entry, create a new one
  4. Note: existing sessions stay with the old agent group; new messages route to the new one. The agent_destinations row created for the old wiring is NOT automatically removed — if you want the old agent to stop seeing the channel as a named target, delete it from agent_destinations manually.

Show Configuration

Display a readable summary showing:

  • Agent groups with their wired channels (from messaging_group_agents)
  • Configured-but-unwired channels (credentials present, no DB entities)
  • Unconfigured channels
  • Privileged users: SELECT user_id, role, agent_group_id FROM user_roles ORDER BY role='owner' DESC