add-discord
Add Discord bot channel integration via Chat SDK.
适合你,如果需要在应用中添加 Discord 机器人消息通道。
用别的 agent?下载 .zip 解压,把文件夹放进它的技能目录
~/.claude/skills/(项目级 .claude/skills/)~/.codex/skills/npx oh-my-skill add nanocoai/nanoclaw/add-discordcurl -fsSL https://oh-my-skill.com/install.sh | bash -s -- nanocoai/nanoclaw/add-discordnpx oh-my-skill verify nanocoai/nanoclaw/add-discord怎么用
技能原文 SKILL.md
Add Discord Channel
Adds Discord bot support via the Chat SDK bridge. NanoClaw doesn't ship channels in trunk — this skill copies the Discord adapter in from the channels branch.
The mechanical steps under Apply carry nc: directive fences: an agent reads the prose and applies them, and a parser can apply them deterministically from the same document. Every directive is idempotent, so the whole skill is safe to re-run; anything a parser can't apply falls back to the prose beside it.
Apply
1. Copy the adapter and its registration test
Fetch the channels branch and copy the Discord adapter and its registration test into src/channels/ (overwrite — the branch is canonical):
src/channels/discord.ts src/channels/discord-registration.test.ts
2. Register the adapter
Append the self-registration import to the channel barrel (skipped if the line is already present). This one line is the skill's only reach-in into core:
import './discord.js';
3. Install the adapter package
Pinned to an exact version — the supply-chain policy rejects ranges and latest:
@chat-adapter/discord@4.29.0
4. Build and validate
Build first: it guards the typed createChatSdkBridge(...) core call and proves the dependency is installed. Then run the one integration test.
pnpm run build
pnpm exec vitest run src/channels/discord-registration.test.ts
discord-registration.test.ts imports the real channel barrel and asserts the registry contains discord. It goes red if the import line is deleted or drifts, if the barrel fails to evaluate, or if @chat-adapter/discord isn't installed (the import throws) — so it also covers the dependency from step 3. End-to-end delivery against a real server is verified manually once the service runs.
Credentials
Discord app setup is human and interactive — no parser can click through the Discord Developer Portal. The adapter is installed and registered, but it can't receive a message until the bot exists, has Message Content Intent, and shares a server with you. Tell the user:
Create the Discord bot: 1. Go to https://discord.com/developers/applications → New Application. Name it (e.g. "NanoClaw Assistant"). 2. Bot tab → Add Bot if needed → Reset Token, then copy the Bot Token (it's shown only once). 3. Bot tab → Privileged Gateway Intents → enable Message Content Intent. 4. OAuth2 → URL Generator → Scopes: bot; Bot Permissions: Send Messages, Read Message History, Add Reactions, Attach Files, Use Slash Commands. 5. Open the generated URL and invite the bot to a server you're also in (a personal server is fine) — the bot can only DM you once you share a server.
Paste the Bot Token (it's shown only once). You don't paste the Application ID or the Public Key by hand — the bot's own application record carries both, so a single call derives them from the token:
Paste the Bot Token — Bot tab. Click `Reset Token` if you need a new one.
Read the application's own record. GET /oauth2/applications/@me returns the Application ID (id), the Public Key (verify_key), and your own account as the app's owner (owner.id) — so the App ID, the Public Key, and your Discord user ID all come from this one call instead of being copied by hand. A bad token fails here, before the restart, rather than silently later:
curl -sf https://discord.com/api/v10/oauth2/applications/@me -H "Authorization: Bot {{bot_token}}"
Store the token and the two derived credentials — the adapter reads them from .env and fails to start without DISCORD_PUBLIC_KEY and DISCORD_APPLICATION_ID (set-if-absent, so a value you've already filled in is never overwritten):
DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN={{bot_token}}
DISCORD_APPLICATION_ID={{application_id}}
DISCORD_PUBLIC_KEY={{public_key}}
Restart
Restart the service so it loads the Discord adapter and the credentials you just stored, and wait for its CLI socket before resolving:
bash setup/lib/restart.sh
Invite the bot to a shared server
The bot can only DM you once it shares a server with you. If you didn't already invite it via the OAuth2 URL Generator while setting up the app, do it now: add the bot to a server you're also in (a personal server is fine). Tell the user:
Open the invite link — https://discord.com/oauth2/authorize?client_id={{application_id}}&scope=bot&permissions=2147584064 — and add the bot to a server you're also in (a personal server works fine); the bot can only DM you once you share a server. If you already invited it while setting up the app, you can skip this.
Resolve your DM channel
The agent talks to you in your direct-message channel with the bot. Your Discord user ID was already derived as the application's owner (owner_handle), so all that's left is to open the DM and read back its channel id.
Open the DM with POST /users/@me/channels and take the channel id it returns as the conversation address discord:@me:<channelId> (if Discord refuses, the bot doesn't share a server with you yet — invite it, then retry):
curl -s -X POST https://discord.com/api/v10/users/@me/channels -H "Authorization: Bot {{bot_token}}" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"recipient_id":"{{owner_handle}}"}' | jq -er '"discord:@me:" + .id'
owner_handle and platform_id are what the owner-wiring step needs. The greeting goes out over the DM channel, which works as soon as the bot shares a server with you.
Next Steps
If you're in the middle of /setup, return to the setup flow now. Otherwise wire this channel with /init-first-agent (or /manage-channels).
Channel Info
- type:
discord - terminology: Discord has "servers" (also called "guilds") containing "channels." Text channels start with #. The bot can also receive direct messages.
- platform-id-format:
discord:@me:{dmChannelId}for the owner DM (e.g.discord:@me:1399...),discord:{guildId}:{channelId}for server channels — both IDs required for channels. - how-to-find-id: Enable Developer Mode in Discord (Settings > App Settings > Advanced > Developer Mode). Then right-click a server and select "Copy Server ID" for the guild ID, and right-click the text channel and select "Copy Channel ID." The platform ID format used in registration is
discord:{guildId}:{channelId}— both IDs are required. - supports-threads: yes
- typical-use: Interactive chat — server channels or direct messages
- default-isolation: Same agent group for your personal server. Separate agent group for servers with different communities or where different members have different information boundaries.
Troubleshooting
The Bot Token paste is rejected. The token must be at least 50 characters of letters, digits, dots, underscores, and hyphens — a real Bot Token has two . separators. It lives under Bot → Reset Token in the Developer Portal and is shown only once; reset to get a fresh one. The short numeric Application ID and the OAuth2 Client Secret are different values and won't pass.
applications/@me returns 401. The token was reset since you copied it, or a stray space/newline came along with the paste. Reset the token in the Bot tab and re-run the check — it fails here on purpose, before the restart, while the credential is still cheap to fix.
The bot is online but never sees your messages. Two usual causes: Message Content Intent is off (Bot tab → Privileged Gateway Intents), so message bodies arrive empty and nothing triggers; or the bot doesn't share a server with you — in which case POST /users/@me/channels also refuses. Open the invite URL and add the bot to a server you're in, then retry.
Adapter looks installed but Discord never connects. Run pnpm exec vitest run src/channels/discord-registration.test.ts — red means the barrel import or the @chat-adapter/discord install drifted, so re-run the Apply steps. If it's green, the service probably hasn't restarted since the credentials were stored: bash setup/lib/restart.sh, then check logs/nanoclaw.error.log for missing DISCORD_PUBLIC_KEY / DISCORD_APPLICATION_ID complaints.