Files
devclaw-gitea/docs/ONBOARDING.md
Lauren ten Hoor aa8e8dbd1b feat: refactor model selection to use developer tiers
- Replaced raw model aliases with developer tiers (junior, medior, senior, qa) in dispatch and model selection logic.
- Updated `dispatchTask` to resolve models based on tiers and plugin configuration.
- Modified `selectModel` to return tier names instead of model aliases based on task description.
- Implemented migration logic for transitioning from old model aliases to new tier names in worker state.
- Added setup logic for agent creation and model configuration in `setup.ts`.
- Created shared templates for workspace files and instructions for DEV/QA workers.
- Enhanced project registration to scaffold role files based on developer tiers.
- Updated task management tools to reflect changes in model selection and tier assignment.
- Introduced a new `devclaw_setup` tool for agent-driven setup and configuration.
- Updated plugin configuration schema to support model mapping per developer tier.
2026-02-09 13:41:22 +08:00

7.4 KiB

DevClaw — Onboarding Guide

What you need before starting

Requirement Why How to check
OpenClaw installed DevClaw is an OpenClaw plugin openclaw --version
Node.js >= 20 Runtime for plugin node --version
glab or gh CLI Issue tracker provider (auto-detected from remote) glab --version or gh --version
CLI authenticated Plugin calls glab/gh for every label transition glab auth status or gh auth status
A GitLab/GitHub repo with issues The task backlog lives in the issue tracker glab issue list or gh issue list from your repo

Setup

1. Install the plugin

# Copy to extensions directory (auto-discovered on next restart)
cp -r devclaw ~/.openclaw/extensions/

Verify:

openclaw plugins list
# Should show: DevClaw | devclaw | loaded

2. Run setup

openclaw devclaw setup

The setup wizard walks you through:

  1. Agent — Create a new orchestrator agent or configure an existing one
  2. Developer team — Choose which LLM model powers each developer tier:
    • Junior (fast, cheap tasks) — default: anthropic/claude-haiku-4-5
    • Medior (standard tasks) — default: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
    • Senior (complex tasks) — default: anthropic/claude-opus-4-5
    • QA (code review) — default: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
  3. Workspace — Writes AGENTS.md, HEARTBEAT.md, role templates, and initializes memory

Non-interactive mode:

# Create new agent with default models
openclaw devclaw setup --new-agent "My Dev Orchestrator" --non-interactive

# Configure existing agent with custom models
openclaw devclaw setup --agent my-orchestrator \
  --junior "anthropic/claude-haiku-4-5" \
  --senior "anthropic/claude-opus-4-5"

3. Add the agent to the Telegram group

Add your orchestrator bot to the Telegram group for the project. The agent will now receive messages from this group and can operate on the linked project.

4. Register your project

Tell the orchestrator agent to register a new project:

"Register project my-project at ~/git/my-project for group -1234567890 with base branch development"

The agent calls project_register, which atomically:

  • Validates the repo and auto-detects GitHub/GitLab from remote
  • Creates all 8 state labels (idempotent)
  • Scaffolds role instruction files (roles/<project>/dev.md and qa.md)
  • Adds the project entry to projects.json with autoChain: false
  • Logs the registration event
{
  "projects": {
    "-1234567890": {
      "name": "my-project",
      "repo": "~/git/my-project",
      "groupName": "Dev - My Project",
      "deployUrl": "",
      "baseBranch": "development",
      "deployBranch": "development",
      "autoChain": false,
      "dev": {
        "active": false,
        "issueId": null,
        "startTime": null,
        "model": null,
        "sessions": { "junior": null, "medior": null, "senior": null }
      },
      "qa": {
        "active": false,
        "issueId": null,
        "startTime": null,
        "model": null,
        "sessions": { "qa": null }
      }
    }
  }
}

Manual fallback: If you prefer CLI control, you can still create labels manually with glab label create and edit projects.json directly. See the Architecture docs for label names and colors.

Finding the Telegram group ID: The group ID is the numeric ID of your Telegram supergroup (a negative number like -1234567890). You can find it via the Telegram bot API or from message metadata in OpenClaw logs.

5. Create your first issue

Issues can be created in multiple ways:

  • Via the agent — Ask the orchestrator in the Telegram group: "Create an issue for adding a login page" (uses task_create)
  • Via workers — DEV/QA workers can call task_create to file follow-up bugs they discover
  • Via CLIcd ~/git/my-project && glab issue create --title "My first task" --label "To Do" (or gh issue create)
  • Via web UI — Create an issue and add the "To Do" label

6. Test the pipeline

Ask the agent in the Telegram group:

"Check the queue status"

The agent should call queue_status and report the "To Do" issue. Then:

"Pick up issue #1 for DEV"

The agent calls task_pickup, which assigns a developer tier, transitions the label to "Doing", creates or reuses a worker session, and dispatches the task — all in one call. The agent just posts the announcement.

Adding more projects

Tell the agent to register a new project (step 3) and add the bot to the new Telegram group (step 4). That's it — project_register handles labels and state setup.

Each project is fully isolated — separate queue, separate workers, separate state.

Developer tiers

DevClaw assigns tasks to developer tiers instead of raw model names. This makes the system intuitive — you're assigning a "junior dev" to fix a typo, not configuring model parameters.

Tier Role Default model When to assign
junior Junior developer anthropic/claude-haiku-4-5 Typos, single-file fixes, CSS changes
medior Mid-level developer anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5 Features, bug fixes, multi-file changes
senior Senior developer anthropic/claude-opus-4-5 Architecture, migrations, system-wide refactoring
qa QA engineer anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5 Code review, test validation

Change which model powers each tier in openclaw.json:

{
  "plugins": {
    "entries": {
      "devclaw": {
        "config": {
          "models": {
            "junior": "anthropic/claude-haiku-4-5",
            "medior": "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5",
            "senior": "anthropic/claude-opus-4-5",
            "qa": "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

What the plugin handles vs. what you handle

Responsibility Who Details
Plugin installation You (once) cp -r devclaw ~/.openclaw/extensions/
Agent + workspace setup Plugin (devclaw setup) Creates agent, configures models, writes workspace files
Label setup Plugin (project_register) 8 labels, created idempotently via IssueProvider
Role file scaffolding Plugin (project_register) Creates roles/<project>/dev.md and qa.md from defaults
Project registration Plugin (project_register) Entry in projects.json with empty worker state
Telegram group setup You (once per project) Add bot to group
Issue creation Plugin (task_create) Orchestrator or workers create issues from chat
Label transitions Plugin Atomic label transitions via issue tracker CLI
Developer assignment Plugin LLM-selected tier by orchestrator, keyword heuristic fallback
State management Plugin Atomic read/write to projects.json
Session management Plugin Creates, reuses, and dispatches to sessions via CLI. Agent never touches session tools.
Task completion Plugin (task_complete) Workers self-report. Auto-chains if enabled.
Role instructions Plugin (task_pickup) Loaded from roles/<project>/<role>.md, appended to task message
Audit logging Plugin Automatic NDJSON append per tool call
Zombie detection Plugin session_health checks active vs alive
Queue scanning Plugin queue_status queries issue tracker per project