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openclaw/docs/channels/twitch.md
2026-05-02 22:00:37 +01:00

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Twitch chat bot configuration and setup
Setting up Twitch chat integration for OpenClaw
Twitch Twitch

Twitch chat support via IRC connection. OpenClaw connects as a Twitch user (bot account) to receive and send messages in channels.

Bundled plugin

Twitch ships as a bundled plugin in current OpenClaw releases, so normal packaged builds do not need a separate install.

If you are on an older build or a custom install that excludes Twitch, install the npm package directly:

```bash openclaw plugins install @openclaw/twitch ``` ```bash openclaw plugins install ./path/to/local/twitch-plugin ```

Use @openclaw/twitch@beta when following the OpenClaw beta channel and npmjs shows beta ahead of latest.

Details: Plugins

Quick setup (beginner)

Current packaged OpenClaw releases already bundle it. Older/custom installs can add it manually with the commands above. Create a dedicated Twitch account for the bot (or use an existing account). Use [Twitch Token Generator](https://twitchtokengenerator.com/):
- Select **Bot Token**
- Verify scopes `chat:read` and `chat:write` are selected
- Copy the **Client ID** and **Access Token**
Use [https://www.streamweasels.com/tools/convert-twitch-username-to-user-id/](https://www.streamweasels.com/tools/convert-twitch-username-to-user-id/) to convert a username to a Twitch user ID. - Env: `OPENCLAW_TWITCH_ACCESS_TOKEN=...` (default account only) - Or config: `channels.twitch.accessToken`
If both are set, config takes precedence (env fallback is default-account only).
Start the gateway with the configured channel. Add access control (`allowFrom` or `allowedRoles`) to prevent unauthorized users from triggering the bot. `requireMention` defaults to `true`.

Minimal config:

{
  channels: {
    twitch: {
      enabled: true,
      username: "openclaw", // Bot's Twitch account
      accessToken: "oauth:abc123...", // OAuth Access Token (or use OPENCLAW_TWITCH_ACCESS_TOKEN env var)
      clientId: "xyz789...", // Client ID from Token Generator
      channel: "vevisk", // Which Twitch channel's chat to join (required)
      allowFrom: ["123456789"], // (recommended) Your Twitch user ID only - get it from https://www.streamweasels.com/tools/convert-twitch-username-to-user-id/
    },
  },
}

What it is

  • A Twitch channel owned by the Gateway.
  • Deterministic routing: replies always go back to Twitch.
  • Each account maps to an isolated session key agent:<agentId>:twitch:<accountName>.
  • username is the bot's account (who authenticates), channel is which chat room to join.

Setup (detailed)

Generate credentials

Use Twitch Token Generator:

  • Select Bot Token
  • Verify scopes chat:read and chat:write are selected
  • Copy the Client ID and Access Token
No manual app registration needed. Tokens expire after several hours.

Configure the bot

```bash OPENCLAW_TWITCH_ACCESS_TOKEN=oauth:abc123... ``` ```json5 { channels: { twitch: { enabled: true, username: "openclaw", accessToken: "oauth:abc123...", clientId: "xyz789...", channel: "vevisk", }, }, } ```

If both env and config are set, config takes precedence.

{
  channels: {
    twitch: {
      allowFrom: ["123456789"], // (recommended) Your Twitch user ID only
    },
  },
}

Prefer allowFrom for a hard allowlist. Use allowedRoles instead if you want role-based access.

Available roles: "moderator", "owner", "vip", "subscriber", "all".

**Why user IDs?** Usernames can change, allowing impersonation. User IDs are permanent.

Find your Twitch user ID: https://www.streamweasels.com/tools/convert-twitch-username-to-user-id/ (Convert your Twitch username to ID)

Token refresh (optional)

Tokens from Twitch Token Generator cannot be automatically refreshed - regenerate when expired.

For automatic token refresh, create your own Twitch application at Twitch Developer Console and add to config:

{
  channels: {
    twitch: {
      clientSecret: "your_client_secret",
      refreshToken: "your_refresh_token",
    },
  },
}

The bot automatically refreshes tokens before expiration and logs refresh events.

Multi-account support

Use channels.twitch.accounts with per-account tokens. See Configuration for the shared pattern.

Example (one bot account in two channels):

{
  channels: {
    twitch: {
      accounts: {
        channel1: {
          username: "openclaw",
          accessToken: "oauth:abc123...",
          clientId: "xyz789...",
          channel: "vevisk",
        },
        channel2: {
          username: "openclaw",
          accessToken: "oauth:def456...",
          clientId: "uvw012...",
          channel: "secondchannel",
        },
      },
    },
  },
}
Each account needs its own token (one token per channel).

Access control

```json5 { channels: { twitch: { accounts: { default: { allowFrom: ["123456789", "987654321"], }, }, }, }, } ``` ```json5 { channels: { twitch: { accounts: { default: { allowedRoles: ["moderator", "vip"], }, }, }, }, } ```
`allowFrom` is a hard allowlist. When set, only those user IDs are allowed. If you want role-based access, leave `allowFrom` unset and configure `allowedRoles` instead.
By default, `requireMention` is `true`. To disable and respond to all messages:
```json5
{
  channels: {
    twitch: {
      accounts: {
        default: {
          requireMention: false,
        },
      },
    },
  },
}
```

Troubleshooting

First, run diagnostic commands:

openclaw doctor
openclaw channels status --probe
- **Check access control:** Ensure your user ID is in `allowFrom`, or temporarily remove `allowFrom` and set `allowedRoles: ["all"]` to test. - **Check the bot is in the channel:** The bot must join the channel specified in `channel`. "Failed to connect" or authentication errors:
- Verify `accessToken` is the OAuth access token value (typically starts with `oauth:` prefix)
- Check token has `chat:read` and `chat:write` scopes
- If using token refresh, verify `clientSecret` and `refreshToken` are set
Check logs for refresh events:
```
Using env token source for mybot
Access token refreshed for user 123456 (expires in 14400s)
```

If you see "token refresh disabled (no refresh token)":

- Ensure `clientSecret` is provided
- Ensure `refreshToken` is provided

Config

Account config

Bot username. OAuth access token with `chat:read` and `chat:write`. Twitch Client ID (from Token Generator or your app). Channel to join. Enable this account. Optional: for automatic token refresh. Optional: for automatic token refresh. Token expiry in seconds. Token obtained timestamp. User ID allowlist. Role-based access control. Require @mention.

Provider options

  • channels.twitch.enabled - Enable/disable channel startup
  • channels.twitch.username - Bot username (simplified single-account config)
  • channels.twitch.accessToken - OAuth access token (simplified single-account config)
  • channels.twitch.clientId - Twitch Client ID (simplified single-account config)
  • channels.twitch.channel - Channel to join (simplified single-account config)
  • channels.twitch.accounts.<accountName> - Multi-account config (all account fields above)

Full example:

{
  channels: {
    twitch: {
      enabled: true,
      username: "openclaw",
      accessToken: "oauth:abc123...",
      clientId: "xyz789...",
      channel: "vevisk",
      clientSecret: "secret123...",
      refreshToken: "refresh456...",
      allowFrom: ["123456789"],
      allowedRoles: ["moderator", "vip"],
      accounts: {
        default: {
          username: "mybot",
          accessToken: "oauth:abc123...",
          clientId: "xyz789...",
          channel: "your_channel",
          enabled: true,
          clientSecret: "secret123...",
          refreshToken: "refresh456...",
          expiresIn: 14400,
          obtainmentTimestamp: 1706092800000,
          allowFrom: ["123456789", "987654321"],
          allowedRoles: ["moderator"],
        },
      },
    },
  },
}

Tool actions

The agent can call twitch with action:

  • send - Send a message to a channel

Example:

{
  action: "twitch",
  params: {
    message: "Hello Twitch!",
    to: "#mychannel",
  },
}

Safety and ops

  • Treat tokens like passwords — Never commit tokens to git.
  • Use automatic token refresh for long-running bots.
  • Use user ID allowlists instead of usernames for access control.
  • Monitor logs for token refresh events and connection status.
  • Scope tokens minimally — Only request chat:read and chat:write.
  • If stuck: Restart the gateway after confirming no other process owns the session.

Limits

  • 500 characters per message (auto-chunked at word boundaries).
  • Markdown is stripped before chunking.
  • No rate limiting (uses Twitch's built-in rate limits).