Add an accordion under the Built-in provider tab describing the runtime catalog refresh from the Copilot `/models` endpoint and the `plugins.entries.github-copilot.config.discovery.enabled = false` opt-out for offline / air-gapped scenarios. Pairs with the `fetchCopilotModelCatalog` change so users know what the new behavior is and how to disable it if needed. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
7.8 KiB
summary, read_when, title
| summary | read_when | title | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sign in to GitHub Copilot from OpenClaw using the device flow or non-interactive token import |
|
GitHub Copilot |
GitHub Copilot is GitHub's AI coding assistant. It provides access to Copilot models for your GitHub account and plan. OpenClaw can use Copilot as a model provider in two different ways.
Two ways to use Copilot in OpenClaw
Use the native device-login flow to obtain a GitHub token, then exchange it for Copilot API tokens when OpenClaw runs. This is the **default** and simplest path because it does not require VS Code.<Steps>
<Step title="Run the login command">
```bash
openclaw models auth login-github-copilot
```
You will be prompted to visit a URL and enter a one-time code. Keep the
terminal open until it completes.
</Step>
<Step title="Set a default model">
```bash
openclaw models set github-copilot/claude-opus-4.7
```
Or in config:
```json5
{
agents: {
defaults: { model: { primary: "github-copilot/claude-opus-4.7" } },
},
}
```
</Step>
</Steps>
Use the **Copilot Proxy** VS Code extension as a local bridge. OpenClaw talks to
the proxy's `/v1` endpoint and uses the model list you configure there.
<Note>
Choose this when you already run Copilot Proxy in VS Code or need to route
through it. You must enable the plugin and keep the VS Code extension running.
</Note>
Optional flags
| Flag | Description |
|---|---|
--yes |
Skip the confirmation prompt |
--set-default |
Also apply the provider's recommended default model |
# Skip confirmation
openclaw models auth login-github-copilot --yes
# Login and set the default model in one step
openclaw models auth login --provider github-copilot --method device --set-default
Non-interactive onboarding
If you already have a GitHub OAuth access token for Copilot, import it during
headless setup with openclaw onboard --non-interactive:
openclaw onboard --non-interactive --accept-risk \
--auth-choice github-copilot \
--github-copilot-token "$COPILOT_GITHUB_TOKEN" \
--skip-channels --skip-health
You can also omit --auth-choice; passing --github-copilot-token infers the
GitHub Copilot provider auth choice. If the flag is omitted, onboarding falls
back to COPILOT_GITHUB_TOKEN, GH_TOKEN, then GITHUB_TOKEN. Use
--secret-input-mode ref with COPILOT_GITHUB_TOKEN set to store an env-backed
tokenRef instead of plaintext in auth-profiles.json.
The bundled static catalog stays as the visible fallback when discovery
is disabled, the user has no GitHub auth profile, the token-exchange
fails, or the `/models` HTTPS call errors. To opt out and rely entirely
on the static manifest catalog (offline / air-gapped scenarios):
```json5
{
plugins: {
entries: {
"github-copilot": {
config: { discovery: { enabled: false } },
},
},
},
}
```
Claude model IDs use the Anthropic Messages transport automatically. GPT,
o-series, and Gemini models keep the OpenAI Responses transport. OpenClaw
selects the correct transport based on the model ref.
OpenClaw sends Copilot IDE-style request headers on Copilot transports,
including built-in compaction, tool-result, and image follow-up turns. It
does not enable provider-level Responses continuation for Copilot unless
that behavior has been verified against Copilot's API.
OpenClaw resolves Copilot auth from environment variables in the following
priority order:
| Priority | Variable | Notes |
| -------- | --------------------- | -------------------------------- |
| 1 | `COPILOT_GITHUB_TOKEN` | Highest priority, Copilot-specific |
| 2 | `GH_TOKEN` | GitHub CLI token (fallback) |
| 3 | `GITHUB_TOKEN` | Standard GitHub token (lowest) |
When multiple variables are set, OpenClaw uses the highest-priority one.
The device-login flow (`openclaw models auth login-github-copilot`) stores
its token in the auth profile store and takes precedence over all environment
variables.
The login stores a GitHub token in the auth profile store and exchanges it
for a Copilot API token when OpenClaw runs. You do not need to manage the
token manually.
The device-login command requires an interactive TTY. Use non-interactive
onboarding when you need headless setup.
Memory search embeddings
GitHub Copilot can also serve as an embedding provider for memory search. If you have a Copilot subscription and have logged in, OpenClaw can use it for embeddings without a separate API key.
Auto-detection
When memorySearch.provider is "auto" (the default), GitHub Copilot is tried
at priority 15 -- after local embeddings but before OpenAI and other paid
providers. If a GitHub token is available, OpenClaw discovers available
embedding models from the Copilot API and picks the best one automatically.
Explicit config
{
agents: {
defaults: {
memorySearch: {
provider: "github-copilot",
// Optional: override the auto-discovered model
model: "text-embedding-3-small",
},
},
},
}
How it works
- OpenClaw resolves your GitHub token (from env vars or auth profile).
- Exchanges it for a short-lived Copilot API token.
- Queries the Copilot
/modelsendpoint to discover available embedding models. - Picks the best model (prefers
text-embedding-3-small). - Sends embedding requests to the Copilot
/embeddingsendpoint.
Model availability depends on your GitHub plan. If no embedding models are available, OpenClaw skips Copilot and tries the next provider.