* fix(codex): isolate app-server home per agent * fix(codex): isolate native Codex assets per agent * fix(channels): mark inbound system events untrusted * fix(doctor): warn on personal Codex agent skills * test(doctor): cover personal Codex agent skills warning * fix(codex): forward auth profiles to harness runs * fix(codex): preserve auto auth for harness runs * fix(codex): auto-select harness auth profiles * test(codex): type harness auth mock * feat(codex): select migrated skills * fix(codex): satisfy migration selection lint * docs: add codex isolation changelog
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summary, read_when, title, sidebarTitle
| summary | read_when | title | sidebarTitle | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agent workspace: location, layout, and backup strategy |
|
Agent workspace | Agent workspace |
The workspace is the agent's home. It is the only working directory used for file tools and for workspace context. Keep it private and treat it as memory.
This is separate from ~/.openclaw/, which stores config, credentials, and sessions.
When sandboxing is enabled and workspaceAccess is not "rw", tools operate inside a sandbox workspace under ~/.openclaw/sandboxes, not your host workspace.
Default location
- Default:
~/.openclaw/workspace - If
OPENCLAW_PROFILEis set and not"default", the default becomes~/.openclaw/workspace-<profile>. - Override in
~/.openclaw/openclaw.json:
{
agents: {
defaults: {
workspace: "~/.openclaw/workspace",
},
},
}
openclaw onboard, openclaw configure, or openclaw setup will create the workspace and seed the bootstrap files if they are missing.
If you already manage the workspace files yourself, you can disable bootstrap file creation:
{ agents: { defaults: { skipBootstrap: true } } }
Extra workspace folders
Older installs may have created ~/openclaw. Keeping multiple workspace directories around can cause confusing auth or state drift, because only one workspace is active at a time.
openclaw doctor warns when it detects extra workspace directories.
Workspace file map
These are the standard files OpenClaw expects inside the workspace:
Operating instructions for the agent and how it should use memory. Loaded at the start of every session. Good place for rules, priorities, and "how to behave" details. Persona, tone, and boundaries. Loaded every session. Guide: [SOUL.md personality guide](/concepts/soul). Who the user is and how to address them. Loaded every session. The agent's name, vibe, and emoji. Created/updated during the bootstrap ritual. Notes about your local tools and conventions. Does not control tool availability; it is only guidance. Optional tiny checklist for heartbeat runs. Keep it short to avoid token burn. Optional startup checklist run automatically on gateway restart (when [internal hooks](/automation/hooks) are enabled). Keep it short; use the message tool for outbound sends. One-time first-run ritual. Only created for a brand-new workspace. Delete it after the ritual is complete. Daily memory log (one file per day). Recommended to read today + yesterday on session start. Curated long-term memory. Only load in the main, private session (not shared/group contexts). See [Memory](/concepts/memory) for the workflow and automatic memory flush. Workspace-specific skills. Highest-precedence skill location for that workspace. Overrides project agent skills, personal agent skills, managed skills, bundled skills, and `skills.load.extraDirs` when names collide. Canvas UI files for node displays (for example `canvas/index.html`). If any bootstrap file is missing, OpenClaw injects a "missing file" marker into the session and continues. Large bootstrap files are truncated when injected; adjust limits with `agents.defaults.bootstrapMaxChars` (default: 12000) and `agents.defaults.bootstrapTotalMaxChars` (default: 60000). `openclaw setup` can recreate missing defaults without overwriting existing files.What is NOT in the workspace
These live under ~/.openclaw/ and should NOT be committed to the workspace repo:
~/.openclaw/openclaw.json(config)~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/agent/auth-profiles.json(model auth profiles: OAuth + API keys)~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/agent/codex-home/(per-agent Codex runtime account, config, skills, plugins, and native thread state)~/.openclaw/credentials/(channel/provider state plus legacy OAuth import data)~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/sessions/(session transcripts + metadata)~/.openclaw/skills/(managed skills)
If you need to migrate sessions or config, copy them separately and keep them out of version control.
Git backup (recommended, private)
Treat the workspace as private memory. Put it in a private git repo so it is backed up and recoverable.
Run these steps on the machine where the Gateway runs (that is where the workspace lives).
If git is installed, brand-new workspaces are initialized automatically. If this workspace is not already a repo, run:```bash
cd ~/.openclaw/workspace
git init
git add AGENTS.md SOUL.md TOOLS.md IDENTITY.md USER.md HEARTBEAT.md memory/
git commit -m "Add agent workspace"
```
1. Create a new **private** repository on GitHub.
2. Do not initialize with a README (avoids merge conflicts).
3. Copy the HTTPS remote URL.
4. Add the remote and push:
```bash
git branch -M main
git remote add origin <https-url>
git push -u origin main
```
</Tab>
<Tab title="GitHub CLI (gh)">
```bash
gh auth login
gh repo create openclaw-workspace --private --source . --remote origin --push
```
</Tab>
<Tab title="GitLab web UI">
1. Create a new **private** repository on GitLab.
2. Do not initialize with a README (avoids merge conflicts).
3. Copy the HTTPS remote URL.
4. Add the remote and push:
```bash
git branch -M main
git remote add origin <https-url>
git push -u origin main
```
</Tab>
</Tabs>
```bash
git status
git add .
git commit -m "Update memory"
git push
```
Do not commit secrets
Even in a private repo, avoid storing secrets in the workspace:- API keys, OAuth tokens, passwords, or private credentials.
- Anything under
~/.openclaw/. - Raw dumps of chats or sensitive attachments.
If you must store sensitive references, use placeholders and keep the real secret elsewhere (password manager, environment variables, or ~/.openclaw/).
Suggested .gitignore starter:
.DS_Store
.env
**/*.key
**/*.pem
**/secrets*
Moving the workspace to a new machine
Clone the repo to the desired path (default `~/.openclaw/workspace`). Set `agents.defaults.workspace` to that path in `~/.openclaw/openclaw.json`. Run `openclaw setup --workspace ` to seed any missing files. If you need sessions, copy `~/.openclaw/agents//sessions/` from the old machine separately.Advanced notes
- Multi-agent routing can use different workspaces per agent. See Channel routing for routing configuration.
- If
agents.defaults.sandboxis enabled, non-main sessions can use per-session sandbox workspaces underagents.defaults.sandbox.workspaceRoot.
Related
- Heartbeat — HEARTBEAT.md workspace file
- Sandboxing — workspace access in sandboxed environments
- Session — session storage paths
- Standing orders — persistent instructions in workspace files