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openclaw/docs/concepts/multi-agent.md

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---
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summary: "Multi-agent routing: isolated agents, channel accounts, and bindings"
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title: Multi-Agent Routing
read_when: "You want multiple isolated agents (workspaces + auth) in one gateway process."
status: active
---
# Multi-Agent Routing
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Goal: multiple *isolated* agents (separate workspace + `agentDir` + sessions), plus multiple channel accounts (e.g. two WhatsApps) in one running Gateway. Inbound is routed to an agent via bindings.
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## What is “one agent”?
An **agent** is a fully scoped brain with its own:
- **Workspace** (files, AGENTS.md/SOUL.md/USER.md, local notes, persona rules).
- **State directory** (`agentDir`) for auth profiles, model registry, and per-agent config.
- **Session store** (chat history + routing state) under `~/.clawdbot/agents/<agentId>/sessions`.
Auth profiles are **per-agent**. Each agent reads from its own:
```
~/.clawdbot/agents/<agentId>/agent/auth-profiles.json
```
Main agent credentials are **not** shared automatically. Never reuse `agentDir`
across agents (it causes auth/session collisions). If you want to share creds,
copy `auth-profiles.json` into the other agent's `agentDir`.
Skills are per-agent via each workspaces `skills/` folder, with shared skills
available from `~/.clawdbot/skills`. See [Skills: per-agent vs shared](/tools/skills#per-agent-vs-shared-skills).
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The Gateway can host **one agent** (default) or **many agents** side-by-side.
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**Workspace note:** each agents workspace is the **default cwd**, not a hard
sandbox. Relative paths resolve inside the workspace, but absolute paths can
reach other host locations unless sandboxing is enabled. See
[Sandboxing](/gateway/sandboxing).
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## Paths (quick map)
- Config: `~/.clawdbot/clawdbot.json` (or `CLAWDBOT_CONFIG_PATH`)
- State dir: `~/.clawdbot` (or `CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR`)
- Workspace: `~/clawd` (or `~/clawd-<agentId>`)
- Agent dir: `~/.clawdbot/agents/<agentId>/agent` (or `agents.list[].agentDir`)
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- Sessions: `~/.clawdbot/agents/<agentId>/sessions`
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### Single-agent mode (default)
If you do nothing, Clawdbot runs a single agent:
- `agentId` defaults to **`main`**.
- Sessions are keyed as `agent:main:<mainKey>`.
- Workspace defaults to `~/clawd` (or `~/clawd-<profile>` when `CLAWDBOT_PROFILE` is set).
- State defaults to `~/.clawdbot/agents/main/agent`.
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## Agent helper
Use the agent wizard to add a new isolated agent:
```bash
clawdbot agents add work
```
Then add `bindings` (or let the wizard do it) to route inbound messages.
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Verify with:
```bash
clawdbot agents list --bindings
```
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## Multiple agents = multiple people, multiple personalities
With **multiple agents**, each `agentId` becomes a **fully isolated persona**:
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- **Different phone numbers/accounts** (per channel `accountId`).
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- **Different personalities** (per-agent workspace files like `AGENTS.md` and `SOUL.md`).
- **Separate auth + sessions** (no cross-talk unless explicitly enabled).
This lets **multiple people** share one Gateway server while keeping their AI “brains” and data isolated.
## One WhatsApp number, multiple people (DM split)
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You can route **different WhatsApp DMs** to different agents while staying on **one WhatsApp account**. Match on sender E.164 (like `+15551234567`) with `peer.kind: "dm"`. Replies still come from the same WhatsApp number (no peragent sender identity).
Important detail: direct chats collapse to the agents **main session key**, so true isolation requires **one agent per person**.
Example:
```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{ id: "alex", workspace: "~/clawd-alex" },
{ id: "mia", workspace: "~/clawd-mia" }
]
},
bindings: [
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{ agentId: "alex", match: { channel: "whatsapp", peer: { kind: "dm", id: "+15551230001" } } },
{ agentId: "mia", match: { channel: "whatsapp", peer: { kind: "dm", id: "+15551230002" } } }
],
channels: {
whatsapp: {
dmPolicy: "allowlist",
allowFrom: ["+15551230001", "+15551230002"]
}
}
}
```
Notes:
- DM access control is **global per WhatsApp account** (pairing/allowlist), not per agent.
- For shared groups, bind the group to one agent or use [Broadcast groups](/broadcast-groups).
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## Routing rules (how messages pick an agent)
Bindings are **deterministic** and **most-specific wins**:
1. `peer` match (exact DM/group/channel id)
2. `guildId` (Discord)
3. `teamId` (Slack)
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4. `accountId` match for a channel
5. channel-level match (`accountId: "*"`)
6. fallback to default agent (`agents.list[].default`, else first list entry, default: `main`)
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## Multiple accounts / phone numbers
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Channels that support **multiple accounts** (e.g. WhatsApp) use `accountId` to identify
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each login. Each `accountId` can be routed to a different agent, so one server can host
multiple phone numbers without mixing sessions.
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## Concepts
- `agentId`: one “brain” (workspace, per-agent auth, per-agent session store).
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- `accountId`: one channel account instance (e.g. WhatsApp account `"personal"` vs `"biz"`).
- `binding`: routes inbound messages to an `agentId` by `(channel, accountId, peer)` and optionally guild/team ids.
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- Direct chats collapse to `agent:<agentId>:<mainKey>` (per-agent “main”; `session.mainKey`).
## Example: two WhatsApps → two agents
`~/.clawdbot/clawdbot.json` (JSON5):
```js
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "home",
default: true,
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name: "Home",
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workspace: "~/clawd-home",
agentDir: "~/.clawdbot/agents/home/agent",
},
{
id: "work",
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name: "Work",
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workspace: "~/clawd-work",
agentDir: "~/.clawdbot/agents/work/agent",
},
],
},
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// Deterministic routing: first match wins (most-specific first).
bindings: [
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{ agentId: "home", match: { channel: "whatsapp", accountId: "personal" } },
{ agentId: "work", match: { channel: "whatsapp", accountId: "biz" } },
// Optional per-peer override (example: send a specific group to work agent).
{
agentId: "work",
match: {
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channel: "whatsapp",
accountId: "personal",
peer: { kind: "group", id: "1203630...@g.us" },
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},
},
],
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// Off by default: agent-to-agent messaging must be explicitly enabled + allowlisted.
tools: {
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agentToAgent: {
enabled: false,
allow: ["home", "work"],
},
},
channels: {
whatsapp: {
accounts: {
personal: {
// Optional override. Default: ~/.clawdbot/credentials/whatsapp/personal
// authDir: "~/.clawdbot/credentials/whatsapp/personal",
},
biz: {
// Optional override. Default: ~/.clawdbot/credentials/whatsapp/biz
// authDir: "~/.clawdbot/credentials/whatsapp/biz",
},
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},
},
},
}
```
## Example: WhatsApp daily chat + Telegram deep work
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Split by channel: route WhatsApp to a fast everyday agent and Telegram to an Opus agent.
```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "chat",
name: "Everyday",
workspace: "~/clawd-chat",
model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5"
},
{
id: "opus",
name: "Deep Work",
workspace: "~/clawd-opus",
model: "anthropic/claude-opus-4-5"
}
]
},
bindings: [
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{ agentId: "chat", match: { channel: "whatsapp" } },
{ agentId: "opus", match: { channel: "telegram" } }
]
}
```
Notes:
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- If you have multiple accounts for a channel, add `accountId` to the binding (for example `{ channel: "whatsapp", accountId: "personal" }`).
- To route a single DM/group to Opus while keeping the rest on chat, add a `match.peer` binding for that peer; peer matches always win over channel-wide rules.
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## Example: same channel, one peer to Opus
Keep WhatsApp on the fast agent, but route one DM to Opus:
```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{ id: "chat", name: "Everyday", workspace: "~/clawd-chat", model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5" },
{ id: "opus", name: "Deep Work", workspace: "~/clawd-opus", model: "anthropic/claude-opus-4-5" }
]
},
bindings: [
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{ agentId: "opus", match: { channel: "whatsapp", peer: { kind: "dm", id: "+15551234567" } } },
{ agentId: "chat", match: { channel: "whatsapp" } }
]
}
```
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Peer bindings always win, so keep them above the channel-wide rule.
## Family agent bound to a WhatsApp group
Bind a dedicated family agent to a single WhatsApp group, with mention gating
and a tighter tool policy:
```json5
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "family",
name: "Family",
workspace: "~/clawd-family",
identity: { name: "Family Bot" },
groupChat: {
mentionPatterns: ["@family", "@familybot", "@Family Bot"]
},
sandbox: {
mode: "all",
scope: "agent"
},
tools: {
allow: ["exec", "read", "sessions_list", "sessions_history", "sessions_send", "sessions_spawn", "session_status"],
deny: ["write", "edit", "apply_patch", "browser", "canvas", "nodes", "cron"]
}
}
]
},
bindings: [
{
agentId: "family",
match: {
channel: "whatsapp",
peer: { kind: "group", id: "120363999999999999@g.us" }
}
}
]
}
```
Notes:
- Tool allow/deny lists are **tools**, not skills. If a skill needs to run a
binary, ensure `exec` is allowed and the binary exists in the sandbox.
- For stricter gating, set `agents.list[].groupChat.mentionPatterns` and keep
group allowlists enabled for the channel.
## Per-Agent Sandbox and Tool Configuration
Starting with v2026.1.6, each agent can have its own sandbox and tool restrictions:
```js
{
agents: {
list: [
{
id: "personal",
workspace: "~/clawd-personal",
sandbox: {
mode: "off", // No sandbox for personal agent
},
// No tool restrictions - all tools available
},
{
id: "family",
workspace: "~/clawd-family",
sandbox: {
mode: "all", // Always sandboxed
scope: "agent", // One container per agent
docker: {
// Optional one-time setup after container creation
setupCommand: "apt-get update && apt-get install -y git curl",
},
},
tools: {
allow: ["read"], // Only read tool
deny: ["exec", "write", "edit", "apply_patch"], // Deny others
},
},
],
},
}
```
Note: `setupCommand` lives under `sandbox.docker` and runs once on container creation.
Per-agent `sandbox.docker.*` overrides are ignored when the resolved scope is `"shared"`.
**Benefits:**
- **Security isolation**: Restrict tools for untrusted agents
- **Resource control**: Sandbox specific agents while keeping others on host
- **Flexible policies**: Different permissions per agent
Note: `tools.elevated` is **global** and sender-based; it is not configurable per agent.
If you need per-agent boundaries, use `agents.list[].tools` to deny `exec`.
For group targeting, use `agents.list[].groupChat.mentionPatterns` so @mentions map cleanly to the intended agent.
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See [Multi-Agent Sandbox & Tools](/multi-agent-sandbox-tools) for detailed examples.