Powered by Runta. The essential safety harness for OpenClaw's PII & Sensitive Credentials.
π Introduction
ClawShell is a security-privileged process for the OpenClaw ecosystem. It sits between OpenClaw and upstream LLM API providers (OpenAI, Anthropic), performing virtual-to-real API key mapping and DLP (Data Loss Prevention) scanning on request and response bodies.
OpenClaw never holds real API keys, only virtual keys that ClawShell swaps for real ones before forwarding requests upstream. Real keys are stored in a privileged config directory (/etc/clawshell) protected by Unix file system permissions.
Key Features
1. API Token Secure Binding
ClawShell maps virtual API keys to real provider keys so that OpenClaw never has direct access to real credentials.
- Key Isolation: Real API keys are stored in
/etc/clawshell/clawshell.toml, readable only by theclawshellsystem user. OpenClaw holds only virtual keys. - Multi-Provider Support: Maps keys to OpenAI or Anthropic, injecting the correct authentication header format (
Authorization: Bearerfor OpenAI,x-api-keyfor Anthropic).
2. PII Safety Net (DLP)
ClawShell scans HTTP request and response bodies for sensitive data using configurable regex patterns.
- Request Scanning: Detects PII (SSNs, credit card numbers, emails, etc.) in outbound requests. Patterns can be configured to either block the request or redact the matched text before forwarding.
- Response Scanning: Optionally scans upstream responses and redacts detected PII before returning to OpenClaw. Streaming (SSE) responses are passed through without scanning.
- Custom Patterns: Define sensitive data patterns using regex in the TOML config, each with a
blockorredactaction.
3. Seamless Integration
- Drop-in Sidecar: Deploys alongside OpenClaw without requiring re-install β the
clawshell onboardcommand automatically configure OpenClaw to point at ClawShell's address and it forwards all requests upstream. - No External Dependencies: Uses Unix file system permissions to protect secrets. No IdP, Vault, or external key management service required.
4. Ultra Lightweight and Scalable
- Runs in under 10MB of memory.
- Written in Rust with Tokio.
Architecture
β security boundary (Unix File System Permissions)
β
β ββββββββββββββββββββββ
β β /etc/clawshell β
β β β real API keys β
β β β DLP patterns β
β ββββββββββ¬ββββββββββββ
β reads β
β ββββββββββ΄ββββββββββββ
ββββββββββββββββ REQUEST β β β REQUEST ββββββββββββββ
β βββ(virtualββββ«ββΊβ ClawShell βββ-(real key,ββββΊβ β
β OpenClaw β key) β β β PII redacted) β OpenAI β
β β β β DLP scan β β or β
β holds only β RESPONSE β β real-key mapping β RESPONSE β Anthropic β
β virtual keys ββββββββββββββββββ€ βββββββββββββββββββ€ β
β β β β β β β
ββββββββββββββββ β ββββββββββββββββββββββ ββββββββββββββ
β
OpenClaw only holds virtual keys and cannot access the real API keys stored in the privileged config. ClawShell swaps virtual keys for real ones and scans for PII before forwarding requests upstream.
Installation
Cargo
cargo install clawshell --locked
# Requires privilege to set up the security boundary
sudo clawshell onboardNPM
npm install -g @clawshell/clawshell
# Requires privilege to set up the security boundary
sudo clawshell onboardBuild from Source
cargo build --release ls -al target/release/clawshell
Cross-compile on Linux/arm64
wget https://musl.cc/x86_64-linux-musl-cross.tgz -O /tmp/musl-cross.tgz
tar -xzf /tmp/musl-cross.tgz -C /tmp
CARGO_TARGET_X86_64_UNKNOWN_LINUX_MUSL_LINKER="/tmp/x86_64-linux-musl-cross/bin/x86_64-linux-musl-gcc" \
cargo build --release --target x86_64-unknown-linux-muslAdvanced Usage
Onboarding
The onboard command is an interactive setup wizard that must be run with sudo. It:
- Creates the
clawshellsystem user. - Creates and secures
/etc/clawshell(mode 700) and/var/log/clawshell. - Walks you through provider selection, API key entry, and virtual key generation.
- Writes the ClawShell config to
/etc/clawshell/clawshell.toml. - Updates your OpenClaw configuration to route through ClawShell.
- Starts the ClawShell daemon.
More Commands
# Start (daemonizes by default) sudo clawshell start # Start in the foreground sudo clawshell start --foreground # Start with a custom config file sudo clawshell start -c /path/to/clawshell.toml # Check status clawshell status # View logs clawshell logs clawshell logs --level error clawshell logs --follow # Restart / Stop sudo clawshell restart sudo clawshell stop # Migrate config schema to current version sudo clawshell migrate-config
By default ClawShell listens on 127.0.0.1:18790.
Customized Configuration
ClawShell reads its config from /etc/clawshell/clawshell.toml. You can view or edit it with:
sudo clawshell config # print current config sudo clawshell config --edit # open in $EDITOR
A minimal config looks like this:
version = "0.0.2" log_level = "info" [server] host = "127.0.0.1" port = 18790 [upstream] openai_base_url = "https://api.openai.com" anthropic_base_url = "https://api.anthropic.com" # Virtual-to-real API key mappings [[keys]] virtual_key = "vk-alice-001" real_key = "sk-your-real-openai-key-here" provider = "openai" [[keys]] virtual_key = "vk-claude-001" real_key = "sk-ant-your-real-anthropic-key-here" provider = "anthropic" # Data Loss Prevention (DLP) # action = "block" -> reject the request with 400 # action = "redact" -> replace matches with [REDACTED:<name>] and forward [dlp] scan_responses = false patterns = [ { name = "ssn", regex = '\b\d{3}-\d{2}-\d{4}\b', action = "redact" }, { name = "visa_card", regex = '\b4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?\b', action = "redact" }, { name = "amex_card", regex = '\b3[47][0-9]{13}\b', action = "redact" }, ]
If start, restart, stop, config --edit, onboard, or uninstall reports that migration is required, run:
sudo clawshell migrate-config --config /etc/clawshell/clawshell.toml
See clawshell.example.toml for a full example.
Uninstall
License
This project is licensed under the Apache License 2.0.
