Files
openclaw/docs/plugins/manage-plugins.md
Peter Steinberger 401f278f11 feat: add Control UI plugin management (#103176)
* feat(ui): add plugin catalog management

* feat(gateway): add plugins.uninstall and richer plugin catalog metadata

Adds a plugins.uninstall gateway method (operator.admin, control-plane write)
backed by a lock-guarded uninstallManagedPlugin that mirrors the CLI flow:
config cleanup, install-record removal, managed file deletion, and registry
refresh. Bundled plugins stay disable-only. Catalog entries now carry a
manifest-derived category and a removable flag; ClawHub search results expose
download counts and verification tiers.

* feat(ui): redesign plugins page with inventory, store shelves, and cover art

Rebuilds /settings/plugins around three tabs: Installed (category-grouped
inventory with overview stats, state filters, uninstall for external plugins,
and inline MCP server management through the shared config seam), Discover
(featured/official shelves plus one-click MCP connectors and curated ClawHub
searches), and ClawHub (search with download counts and verification badges).
Every catalog entry renders bundled cover art or a deterministic gradient
monogram tile - no more empty boxes. Artwork generated with Codex CLI, shipped
as 512px WebP under ui/public/plugin-art.

* chore(ui): regenerate locale bundles for plugins manager strings

* docs: describe plugins manager tabs, uninstall, and MCP connectors

* fix(plugins): human catalog labels and un-pinned hosted fallback ids

listManagedPlugins now prefers manifest names over registry package-name
backfill, falls back to channel catalog labels and blurbs, and stops pinning
expectedPluginId when a hosted feed entry only exposes its package name
(which rejected every legitimate install of that package). Found via live
gateway testing against ClawHub.

* fix(ui): send minimal RFC 7396 merge patches for MCP server edits

config.patch merges rather than replaces, so key removal needs an explicit
null; sending the full config back made MCP server removal a no-op. Found
via live gateway testing.

* fix(ui): write explicit MCP transports for URL servers

The MCP runtime defaults URL-only servers to SSE, so streamable HTTP
endpoints saved by the add form or connector templates would fail at
connect time. Connector templates now declare their transport and the
add form infers streamable-http unless the URL follows the /sse
convention. Flagged by autoreview against the transport resolver.

* test(ui): wait for deferred plugin requests before resolving in e2e

* feat(ui): plugins detail view, action menus, and unified ClawHub search

Reworks the plugins page from PR #103176 feedback: merges the ClawHub tab into
Discover (typing searches ClawHub inline and appends a quiet From ClawHub
section, with Browse ClawHub demoted to a header text link), makes every row and
store card open a plugin detail overlay (hero art, primary enable/install
action, metadata table), and replaces enable/disable switches with a state chip
plus an overflow menu (Enable/Disable, Remove for external plugins, View
details) matching the ChatGPT-store install+menu pattern. MCP rows use the same
menu; refresh is now icon-only.

* chore(ui): regenerate locale bundles for plugins UI iteration

* feat(ui): vetted, grouped connector catalog for the plugins store

Expands Connect your world to 28 connectors organized into use-case shelves
(Work & productivity, Coding & infrastructure, Home & media, Everyday life).
Every entry passed a three-stage subagent review: official-docs verification
plus live endpoint probes for MCP servers, ClawHub result-quality and
malware/typosquat screening for curated searches, and an adversarial pass
that dynamically registered OAuth clients to prove one-click viability.

That review removed Figma (registration allowlisted, 403) and Atlassian
(OAuth issuer-mismatch bug upstream), downgraded GitHub to PAT-based setup
(no dynamic client registration upstream), fixed Linear (/sse retired) and
Home Assistant (/api/mcp, streamable HTTP) endpoints, retargeted poisoned or
dead searches (youtube, finance, hue dropped; calendar -> google calendar;
stocks replaces finance), and added Todoist, Airtable, Canva, Stripe,
Context7, DeepWiki, Hugging Face one-click MCP servers plus Jira, PDF,
transcription, Kubernetes, Reddit, maps, translation, and notes searches.
Keyless servers get a ready-to-use success message; new cover art included.

* chore(ui): regenerate locale bundles for connector groups

* fix(plugins): suppress hosted catalog rows once their package is installed

Hosted feed entries without a declared runtime id fall back to their package
name as catalog id, which never matches the installed runtime id, so the
Discover shelf kept offering an already-installed package. Installed package
names now also suppress official rows. Flagged by autoreview.

* fix(plugins): pin declared runtime ids and surface connector errors in place

The runtime-id pin now keys off explicitly declared catalog ids (plugin,
channel, or provider) instead of string-comparing against the package name,
so declared ids that equal their package name stay enforced while entry-id
fallbacks stay unpinned. Connector add failures on Discover now render on the
triggering card instead of the Installed tab's MCP section. Both flagged by
autoreview; regression tests included.

* feat(ui): full inventory artwork, pulse header, and two-column plugin list

Every bundled plugin now ships distinctive cover art (113 new Codex CLI
illustrations; 172 total, ~2.1MB WebP), so inventory rows and detail views
never fall back to monogram tiles. The four stat cards give way to a compact
inventory pulse: a segmented enabled/disabled/issues meter whose legend and
counts live inside the filter chips. Inventory, MCP, and search rows flow
into two columns when the panel is wide enough.

* chore(ui): regenerate locale bundles for pulse header

* fix(ui): omit stdio args from the MCP server row target

Stdio MCP args routinely carry tokens, and the inventory is visible to
read-only operators; mirror the config page and show only the command.
Flagged by autoreview; regression test included.

* fix(merge): point crestodian setup at relocated plugin commit/refresh modules

* fix(merge): add bootstrapToken to plugins page test gateway harness

* fix(plugins): name catalog install-action branches so Swift emits the union

* fix(ui): satisfy strict lint on plugins page form parsing and mocks

* chore(build): regen docs map, raise plugin-sdk declaration budget for new protocol surface

* fix(ui): type the plugins page patch mock with its real call signature
2026-07-10 11:56:44 +01:00

11 KiB

summary, read_when, title, sidebarTitle, doc-schema-version
summary read_when title sidebarTitle doc-schema-version
Manage OpenClaw plugins from the Control UI or CLI
You want to browse, install, enable, or disable plugins in the Control UI
You want quick plugin list, install, update, inspect, or uninstall examples
You want to choose a plugin install source
You want the right reference for publishing plugin packages
Manage plugins Manage plugins 1

The Control UI covers the common discovery, install, enable, and disable workflow. The CLI adds update, uninstall, advanced configuration, and explicit install-source controls. For its full command contract, flags, source-selection rules, and edge cases, see openclaw plugins.

Typical CLI workflow: find a package, install it from ClawHub, npm, git, or a local path, let the managed Gateway auto-restart (or restart it manually), then verify the plugin's runtime registrations.

Use the Control UI

Open Plugins in the Control UI, or use /settings/plugins relative to the configured Control UI base path. For example, a base path of /openclaw uses /openclaw/settings/plugins. The page has two tabs:

  • Installed shows the full local inventory grouped by category (channels, model providers, memory, tools). Each row opens a detail view; its overflow () menu enables or disables the plugin and, for externally installed plugins, offers Remove. The tab also lists the configured MCP servers with the same menu-driven enable, disable, and remove actions, editing mcp.servers in the Gateway configuration.
  • Discover is the store: featured plugins included with OpenClaw, official external plugins, and a curated connector shelf. Connector cards either add a hosted MCP server in one click (GitHub, Notion, Linear, Sentry, Home Assistant) or jump into a prefilled ClawHub search. Typing in the search box queries ClawHub inline and appends a From ClawHub section with download counts and source-verification badges.

Included plugins do not need a package install. Their menu action is Enable or Disable. Workboard, for example, is included with OpenClaw and disabled by default, so choose Enable to turn it on. Bundled plugins cannot be removed, only disabled.

Catalog and search access require operator.read. Install, enable, disable, remove, and MCP server changes require operator.admin. A ClawHub install is performed by the Gateway and preserves its trust, integrity, and plugin-install policy checks.

Installing or removing plugin code requires a Gateway restart. Enablement changes can be applied without a restart when the installed plugin and current Gateway runtime support it; otherwise the UI tells you a restart is required. OAuth-backed MCP connectors still need a one-time openclaw mcp login <name> from the CLI after they are added.

The Control UI does not install from arbitrary npm, git, or local-path sources, update plugins, or expose rich plugin configuration. Use the CLI workflows below for those operations.

List and search plugins

openclaw plugins list
openclaw plugins list --enabled
openclaw plugins list --verbose
openclaw plugins list --json
openclaw plugins search "calendar"

--json for scripts:

openclaw plugins list --json \
  | jq '.plugins[] | {id, enabled, format, source, dependencyStatus}'

plugins list is a cold inventory check: what OpenClaw can discover from config, manifests, and the persisted plugin registry. It does not prove an already-running Gateway imported the plugin runtime. JSON output includes registry diagnostics and each plugin's dependencyStatus (whether declared dependencies/optionalDependencies resolve on disk).

plugins search queries ClawHub for installable plugin packages and prints an install hint (openclaw plugins install clawhub:<package>) per result.

Enable and disable plugins

openclaw plugins enable <plugin-id>
openclaw plugins disable <plugin-id>

Toggles a plugin's config entry without touching installed files. Some bundled plugins (bundled model/speech providers, the bundled browser plugin) are enabled by default; others require enable after install.

Install plugins

# Search ClawHub for plugin packages.
openclaw plugins search "calendar"

# Install from ClawHub.
openclaw plugins install clawhub:<package>
openclaw plugins install clawhub:<package>@1.2.3
openclaw plugins install clawhub:<package>@beta

# Install from npm.
openclaw plugins install npm:<package>
openclaw plugins install npm:@scope/openclaw-plugin@1.2.3
openclaw plugins install npm:@openclaw/codex

# Install from a local npm-pack artifact.
openclaw plugins install npm-pack:<path.tgz>

# Install from git or a local development checkout.
openclaw plugins install git:github.com/acme/openclaw-plugin@v1.0.0
openclaw plugins install ./my-plugin
openclaw plugins install --link ./my-plugin

Bare package specs install from npm during the launch cutover, unless the name matches a bundled or official plugin id, in which case OpenClaw uses that local/official copy instead. Use clawhub:, npm:, git:, or npm-pack: for deterministic source selection.

Use --force only to overwrite an existing install target from a different source. For routine upgrades of a tracked npm, ClawHub, or hook-pack install, use openclaw plugins update instead; --force is not supported with --link.

Restart and inspect

A running managed Gateway with config reload enabled restarts automatically after installing, updating, or uninstalling plugin code. If the Gateway is unmanaged or reload is disabled, restart it yourself before checking live runtime surfaces:

openclaw gateway restart
openclaw plugins inspect <plugin-id> --runtime --json

inspect --runtime loads the plugin module and proves it registered runtime surfaces (tools, hooks, services, Gateway methods, HTTP routes, plugin-owned CLI commands). Plain inspect and list are cold manifest/config/registry checks only.

Update plugins

openclaw plugins update <plugin-id>
openclaw plugins update <npm-package-or-spec>
openclaw plugins update --all
openclaw plugins update <plugin-id> --dry-run

Passing a plugin id reuses its tracked install spec: stored dist-tags (@beta) and exact pinned versions carry over to later update <plugin-id> runs.

openclaw plugins update --all is the bulk maintenance path. It still respects ordinary tracked install specs, but trusted official OpenClaw plugin records sync to the current official catalog target instead of staying pinned to a stale exact official package; when update.channel is beta, that sync prefers the beta release line. Use a targeted update <plugin-id> to keep an exact or tagged official spec untouched.

For npm installs, pass an explicit package spec to switch the tracked record:

openclaw plugins update @scope/openclaw-plugin@beta
openclaw plugins update @scope/openclaw-plugin

The second command moves a plugin back to the registry's default release line when it was previously pinned to an exact version or tag.

See openclaw plugins for the exact fallback and pinning rules.

Uninstall plugins

openclaw plugins uninstall <plugin-id> --dry-run
openclaw plugins uninstall <plugin-id>
openclaw plugins uninstall <plugin-id> --keep-files

Uninstall removes the plugin's config entry, persisted plugin index record, allow/deny list entries, and linked plugins.load.paths entries when applicable. The managed install directory is removed unless you pass --keep-files. A running managed Gateway restarts automatically when the uninstall changes plugin source.

In Nix mode (OPENCLAW_NIX_MODE=1), plugin install, update, uninstall, enable, and disable are all disabled; manage those choices in the Nix source for the install instead.

Choose a source

Source Use when Example
ClawHub You want OpenClaw-native discovery, scan summaries, versions, and hints openclaw plugins install clawhub:<package>
git You want a branch, tag, or commit from a repository openclaw plugins install git:github.com/<owner>/<repo>@<ref>
local path You are developing or testing a plugin on the same machine openclaw plugins install --link ./my-plugin
marketplace You are installing a Claude-compatible marketplace plugin openclaw plugins install <plugin> --marketplace <source>
npm pack You are proving a local package artifact through npm install semantics openclaw plugins install npm-pack:<path.tgz>
npmjs.com You already ship JavaScript packages or need npm dist-tags/private registry openclaw plugins install npm:@acme/openclaw-plugin

Managed local path installs must be plugin directories or archives. Put standalone plugin files in plugins.load.paths instead of installing them with plugins install.

Publish plugins

ClawHub is the primary public discovery surface for OpenClaw plugins. Publish there when you want users to find plugin metadata, version history, registry scan results, and install hints before they install.

npm i -g clawhub
clawhub login
clawhub package publish your-org/your-plugin --dry-run
clawhub package publish your-org/your-plugin
clawhub package publish your-org/your-plugin@v1.0.0

Native npm plugins must ship a plugin manifest (openclaw.plugin.json) plus package.json metadata before publishing:

{
  "name": "@acme/openclaw-plugin",
  "version": "1.0.0",
  "type": "module",
  "openclaw": {
    "extensions": ["./dist/index.js"]
  }
}
npm publish --access public
openclaw plugins install npm:@acme/openclaw-plugin
openclaw plugins install npm:@acme/openclaw-plugin@beta
openclaw plugins install npm:@acme/openclaw-plugin@1.0.0

Use these pages for the full publishing contract instead of treating this page as the publishing reference:

  • ClawHub publishing explains owners, scopes, releases, review, package validation, and package transfer.
  • Building plugins shows the full plugin package shape (including openclaw.plugin.json) and first publish workflow.
  • Plugin manifest defines native plugin manifest fields.

If the same package is available on both ClawHub and npm, use the explicit clawhub: or npm: prefix to force one source.