--- summary: "What experimental flags mean in OpenClaw and which ones are currently documented" title: "Experimental features" read_when: - You see an `.experimental` config key and want to know whether it is stable - You want to try preview runtime features without confusing them with normal defaults - You want one place to find the currently documented experimental flags --- Experimental features in OpenClaw are **opt-in preview surfaces**. They are behind explicit flags because they still need real-world mileage before they deserve a stable default or a long-lived public contract. Treat them differently from normal config: - Keep them **off by default** unless the related doc tells you to try one. - Expect **shape and behavior to change** faster than stable config. - Prefer the stable path first when one already exists. - If you are rolling OpenClaw out broadly, test experimental flags in a smaller environment before baking them into a shared baseline. ## Currently documented flags | Surface | Key | Use it when | More | | ------------------------ | --------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Local model runtime | `agents.defaults.experimental.localModelLean` | A smaller or stricter local backend chokes on OpenClaw's full default tool surface | [Local Models](/gateway/local-models) | | Memory search | `agents.defaults.memorySearch.experimental.sessionMemory` | You want `memory_search` to index prior session transcripts and accept the extra storage/indexing cost | [Memory configuration reference](/reference/memory-config#session-memory-search-experimental) | | Structured planning tool | `tools.experimental.planTool` | You want the structured `update_plan` tool exposed for multi-step work tracking in compatible runtimes and UIs | [Gateway configuration reference](/gateway/config-tools#toolsexperimental) | ## Local model lean mode `agents.defaults.experimental.localModelLean: true` is a pressure-release valve for weaker local-model setups. When it is on, OpenClaw drops three default tools — `browser`, `cron`, and `message` — from the agent's tool surface for every turn. Nothing else changes. ### Why these three tools These three tools have the largest descriptions and the most parameter shapes in the default OpenClaw runtime. On a small-context or stricter OpenAI-compatible backend that is the difference between: - Tool schemas fitting cleanly in the prompt vs. crowding out conversation history. - The model picking the right tool vs. emitting malformed tool calls because there are too many similar-looking schemas. - The Chat Completions adapter staying inside the server's structured-output limits vs. tripping a 400 on tool-call payload size. Removing them does not silently rewire OpenClaw — it just makes the tool list shorter. The model still has `read`, `write`, `edit`, `exec`, `apply_patch`, web search/fetch (when configured), memory, and session/agent tools available. ### When to turn it on Enable lean mode when you have already proved the model can talk to the Gateway but full agent turns misbehave. The typical signal chain is: 1. `openclaw infer model run --gateway --model --prompt "Reply with exactly: pong"` succeeds. 2. A normal agent turn fails with malformed tool calls, oversized prompts, or the model ignoring its tools. 3. Toggling `localModelLean: true` clears the failure. ### When to leave it off If your backend handles the full default runtime cleanly, leave this off. Lean mode is a workaround, not a default. It exists because some local stacks need a smaller tool surface to behave; hosted models and well-resourced local rigs do not. Lean mode also does not replace `tools.profile`, `tools.allow`/`tools.deny`, or the model `compat.supportsTools: false` escape hatch. If you need a permanent narrower tool surface for a specific agent, prefer those stable knobs over the experimental flag. ### Enable ```json5 { agents: { defaults: { experimental: { localModelLean: true, }, }, }, } ``` Restart the Gateway after changing the flag, then confirm the trimmed tool list with: ```bash openclaw status --deep ``` The deep status output lists the active agent tools; `browser`, `cron`, and `message` should be absent when lean mode is on. ## Experimental does not mean hidden If a feature is experimental, OpenClaw should say so plainly in docs and in the config path itself. What it should **not** do is smuggle preview behavior into a stable-looking default knob and pretend that is normal. That's how config surfaces get messy. ## Related - [Features](/concepts/features) - [Release channels](/install/development-channels)