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chunhualiao

Autonomous Task Runner

by Chunhua Liao · GitHub ↗ · v2.1.0
cross-platform ⚠ suspicious
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Install in OpenClaw
/install autonomous-task-runner
Description
Persistent task queue system. Users add tasks at any time via natural language; tasks are stored in a single persistent queue file and executed asynchronousl...
README (SKILL.md)

Task Runner Skill

A persistent, daemon-style task queue. Users add tasks at any time. A dispatcher runs on every heartbeat to check the queue and execute pending work via subagents. Tasks accumulate, complete, and are archived — the queue itself never closes.


Two Operating Modes

This skill has two distinct modes with different triggers and behaviors:

Mode Trigger Purpose
INTAKE User message containing task intent Parse message → add tasks to queue → confirm → immediately run DISPATCHER
DISPATCHER After INTAKE (primary) · Heartbeat/cron (backup) Read queue → dispatch pending tasks → report completions

Both modes read and write the same persistent queue file.


A1 — Triggers

Mode 1: INTAKE (user message)

Activate INTAKE mode when the user's message matches any of the following patterns:

Pattern Examples
Explicit task add "add task", "add these tasks", "task:", "new task"
Delegation "do this for me", "do these for me", "handle these", "can you do X"
Framing "I need you to", "help me with", "I need", "I want you to"
List framing "task list", "my tasks", "queue these", "work on these"
Control commands "skip T-03", "retry T-02", "mark T-01 done", "cancel T-04"
Status check "show tasks", "task status", "what's in the queue", "what are my pending tasks"
Compound ask Any message with 2+ distinct action items (bullets, numbers, "and also", "then")

Do NOT activate INTAKE for:

  • Pure single-question lookups answered in one sentence ("what time is it?")
  • Scheduling-only requests with no actual task ("remind me in 20 min")
  • Single web search requests ("google X")
  • The heartbeat systemEvent (that's DISPATCHER mode)

Mode 2: DISPATCHER (inline after INTAKE, heartbeat, or cron)

Activate DISPATCHER mode when triggered by:

  • Immediately after INTAKE — runs in the same turn, right after tasks are queued (primary path)
  • HEARTBEAT.md check during a heartbeat poll (backup: catches retries and completions)
  • systemEvent: "TASK_RUNNER_DISPATCH: check queue and run pending tasks" (backup)
  • Any scheduled/cron trigger registered for task-runner (backup)

Configuration

Variable Location Default Description
TASK_RUNNER_DIR TOOLS.md ~/.openclaw/tasks/ Directory for queue file and deliverables
TASK_RUNNER_MAX_CONCURRENT TOOLS.md 2 Max tasks running simultaneously
TASK_RUNNER_MAX_RETRIES TOOLS.md or env 3 Max retry attempts before marking blocked
TASK_RUNNER_ARCHIVE_DAYS TOOLS.md 7 Days after which done/blocked tasks are archived

How to configure — add to TOOLS.md:

## Task Runner
TASK_RUNNER_DIR=~/.openclaw/tasks/
TASK_RUNNER_MAX_CONCURRENT=2
TASK_RUNNER_MAX_RETRIES=3
TASK_RUNNER_ARCHIVE_DAYS=7

Queue file path: ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json (single persistent file, NOT dated — accumulates all tasks over time)


A3 — Outputs

Output Path / Channel Description
Queue file ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json Single persistent queue; all tasks
Per-task completion message Chat notification Sent immediately when a task finishes (done or blocked)
Deliverable files Task-specific paths Files produced by tasks (when applicable)
INTAKE confirmation Chat Sent after adding tasks to queue

Mode 1: INTAKE — Step-by-Step

Goal: Convert user message into structured task objects, append to queue, confirm.

Step 0 — First Run Setup (auto-configure on first use)

Run this check before anything else, every INTAKE invocation:

CHECK whether ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json exists
IF file does NOT exist:
  → This is the first run. Auto-configure everything silently before proceeding.

  [1] Create directory:
      exec: mkdir -p ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}

  [2] Initialize queue file:
      WRITE ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json with default structure:
      { "lastId": null, "tasks": [], "archivedCount": 0 }

  [3] Register heartbeat entry:
      READ HEARTBEAT.md (create it if missing)
      IF "Task Runner Dispatcher" is NOT already in the file:
        APPEND the following block (with a blank line before it):

        ## Task Runner Dispatcher
        Every heartbeat: check ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json
        - If pending or running tasks exist → run DISPATCHER mode (task-runner skill)
        - If nothing pending → HEARTBEAT_OK (skip)

      WRITE the updated HEARTBEAT.md

  [4] Register backup cron job:
      CALL cron tool with:
        action: "add"
        job:
          name: "Task Runner Dispatcher"
          schedule: { kind: "every", everyMs: 900000 }
          payload: { kind: "systemEvent", text: "TASK_RUNNER_DISPATCH: check queue and run pending tasks" }
          sessionTarget: "main"
          enabled: true

  [5] Notify user:
      "⚙️ Task Runner initialized.
       Heartbeat dispatcher registered in HEARTBEAT.md.
       Backup cron job registered (runs every 15 minutes).
       Your tasks will execute automatically."

  → THEN continue with normal INTAKE steps below.

IF file already exists:
  → Skip Step 0 entirely. Proceed directly to Step 1.

Idempotency rule: Step 0 only fires on true first run (queue file absent). It will never double-register the heartbeat entry or create duplicate cron jobs.


Step 1 — Load queue

READ ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json
IF file does not exist:
  Initialize with default structure (see references/queue-schema.md)
  Set lastId = null

Step 2 — Parse tasks from message

Split user message into individual tasks using these cues:

  • Numbered lists (1., 2., 3.)
  • Bulleted lists (-, *, •)
  • Explicit separators ("first", "also", "and then", "next")
  • Compound sentences with multiple imperatives
  • Single task: entire message is one task

Step 3 — Assign IDs

Continue from lastId in the queue file:

  • If lastId = "T-05", next task is T-06
  • If lastId = null, start at T-01
  • Format: T-NN (zero-padded, minimum 2 digits; expand to 3 when N > 99)

Step 4 — Build task objects

For each parsed task, create a JSON object (schema in references/queue-schema.md):

  • Set id, description, goal, status = "pending", added_at
  • Set retries = 0, maxRetries from config
  • Leave execution fields null

Step 5 — Append to queue and save

APPEND new task objects to queue.tasks[]
UPDATE queue.lastId to the last assigned ID
WRITE updated queue file to disk

Step 6 — Confirm to user

Added T-06: [description]. Starting now...

For multiple tasks:

📋 Added 3 tasks to queue:
• T-06: [description]
• T-07: [description]
• T-08: [description]
Starting dispatcher now...

Then immediately run DISPATCHER mode (Steps 1–5 below) in the same turn. Do not exit and wait for the next heartbeat. Tasks must start executing immediately. The heartbeat/cron dispatcher is a backup for retries and completion checks — not the primary execution path.

Step 7 — Handle control commands

Command Action
skip T-NN Set status = "skipped"; save; confirm
retry T-NN Reset status = "pending", retries = 0; save; confirm
cancel T-NN Set status = "skipped", blocked_reason = "cancelled by user"; save; confirm
mark T-NN done Set status = "done", completed_at = now; save; confirm
show tasks / task status Read queue; render status table (see A5 templates)

Mode 2: DISPATCHER — Step-by-Step

Goal: Check queue, dispatch pending tasks, track running tasks, report completions.

Step 1 — Load queue

READ ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json
IF file does not exist OR tasks array is empty:
  → HEARTBEAT_OK (silent, nothing to do)
  → EXIT

Step 2 — Check for work

pending_tasks = tasks where status = "pending"
running_tasks = tasks where status = "running"

IF pending_tasks is empty AND running_tasks is empty:
  → HEARTBEAT_OK (silent)
  → EXIT

Step 3 — Check running tasks for completion

For each task with status = "running":

IF subagent_session is set:
  CHECK subagent session status

  IF session is DONE:
    READ deliverable from session output
    RUN verification (see references/verification-guide.md)
    IF verification passes:
      SET status = "done"
      SET deliverable, deliverable_path, completed_at
      NOTIFY user: ✅ T-NN done — [summary]
    ELSE (verification failed):
      TREAT as failure (see retry logic below)

  IF session is FAILED or ERROR:
    IF retries \x3C maxRetries:
      INCREMENT retries
      ADD to strategies_tried
      SET status = "pending"  ← will be re-dispatched this cycle
    ELSE:
      SET status = "blocked"
      SET blocked_reason, user_action_required, completed_at
      NOTIFY user: 🚫 T-NN blocked — [reason + unblock steps]

  IF session is STILL RUNNING:
    Leave as-is (will check again next heartbeat)

Step 4 — Dispatch pending tasks

currently_running = count of tasks with status = "running"
slots_available = maxConcurrent - currently_running

FOR EACH pending task (in order of added_at), up to slots_available:
  PICK execution strategy (see references/task-types.md)
  SPAWN subagent with task description and strategy
  SET status = "running"
  SET subagent_session = spawned session ID
  SET started_at = now

Subagent instructions template:

You are executing task [T-NN] for the task-runner skill.

Task: [description]
Goal: [goal]
Type: [task_type]
Strategy: [selected strategy from task-types.md]

Execute the task. When complete:
1. Report the result clearly
2. Note any deliverable file path if a file was created
3. If blocked, explain exactly why and what the user needs to do

Do not start any other tasks. Focus only on this one.

Step 5 — Save and exit

WRITE updated queue file (status changes, subagent_session IDs)

If any notifications were sent (done/blocked), this is an active heartbeat response. If only silent dispatching occurred, this is still a heartbeat response (not HEARTBEAT_OK). Only return HEARTBEAT_OK when there was truly nothing to do (no pending, no running tasks).


A5 — Output Format Templates

INTAKE confirmation (single task)

Added T-06: [description]. Queue now has N pending tasks.

INTAKE confirmation (multiple tasks)

📋 Added N tasks to queue:
• T-06: [description]
• T-07: [description]

Starting now...

Task status table (on demand)

📋 Task Queue — [N total, N pending, N running, N done, N blocked]

ID    Status      Description
T-01  ✅ done      [description] → [deliverable summary]
T-02  🔄 running   [description] (started [time ago])
T-03  ⏳ pending   [description]
T-04  🚫 blocked   [description] — [blocked_reason short]
T-05  ⏭️ skipped   [description]

Task done notification

✅ T-NN done — [one-sentence summary of what was accomplished]
[deliverable: link or file path, if applicable]

Task blocked notification

🚫 T-NN blocked after [N] attempts

What was tried:
- [Strategy 1]: [result]
- [Strategy 2]: [result]

Why it's blocked:
[Clear plain-English explanation]

To unblock:
1. [Concrete step #1]
2. [Concrete step #2 if needed]

Reply "retry T-NN" once ready.

Task skipped

⏭️ T-NN skipped — as requested.

A6 — Heartbeat Integration

Heartbeat and cron setup is automatic. Step 0 of INTAKE mode handles this on first use — no manual configuration required.

Role of heartbeat/cron (backup only)

Tasks are dispatched immediately after INTAKE — heartbeat and cron are backups only.

The backup dispatcher handles:

  • Retry dispatch: tasks that failed and were reset to pending
  • Completion checks: polling running subagent sessions for done/blocked status
  • Recovery: tasks that were pending when no user message triggered INTAKE

Users should never need to wait for a heartbeat for a freshly added task.

What gets configured automatically

HEARTBEAT.md entry (injected on first INTAKE):

## Task Runner Dispatcher
Every heartbeat: check ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json
- If pending or running tasks exist → run DISPATCHER mode (task-runner skill)
- If nothing pending → HEARTBEAT_OK (skip)

Backup cron job (registered on first INTAKE):

every 15 min → systemEvent: "TASK_RUNNER_DISPATCH: check queue and run pending tasks"
sessionTarget: main

Manual setup (if needed)

If for any reason auto-setup did not run (e.g., queue file was pre-created externally), delete ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/task-queue.json and send any task — Step 0 will fire.


A7 — Success Criteria

INTAKE mode succeeds when:

  1. All tasks from user message parsed and assigned IDs
  2. Tasks appended to queue file (file saved to disk)
  3. Confirmation sent to user with task IDs and count
  4. DISPATCHER mode triggered immediately in the same turn
  5. Subagents spawned for pending tasks before INTAKE turn ends

DISPATCHER mode succeeds when:

  1. Queue file read without error
  2. All running tasks checked for completion (done/blocked notifications sent as needed)
  3. Pending tasks dispatched up to maxConcurrent slots
  4. Queue file saved with updated states
  5. User notified for every task that reached a terminal state this cycle

Ongoing system health:

  • Queue file is never corrupted (always valid JSON)
  • Tasks older than archiveDays days with terminal status are archived/removed
  • lastId always increments (no ID reuse)
  • maxRetries respected before any task is marked blocked

Edge Cases

Situation Behavior
Queue file missing (first run) Run Step 0 auto-setup: create dir, init queue, register heartbeat + cron; notify user
Queue file missing (manually deleted) Step 0 re-fires: re-initializes queue; does NOT re-register heartbeat/cron (idempotent check)
Queue file corrupt/invalid JSON Log error, notify user, do not overwrite; ask user to inspect
Task description is ambiguous Assign unknown type; dispatcher will attempt classification + fallback
maxConcurrent already reached Dispatcher skips dispatching; checks again next heartbeat
User adds task while dispatcher is running Race-safe: dispatcher reads, processes, writes atomically per cycle
Task depends on another task's output Set blocked_reason = "depends on T-NN-1 which is pending/blocked"
User says "retry T-NN" Reset to pending, retries = 0, strategies_tried = []
All tasks blocked Notify user: "All tasks are blocked. Review unblock instructions above."
20+ tasks added at once Dispatcher dispatches in batches of maxConcurrent; all tasks eventually run
Subagent session ID lost Mark task as pending again; will re-dispatch next cycle
Archive: done tasks > archiveDays old Move to ${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/archive/YYYY-MM.json; remove from main queue

A8 — File Organization

${TASK_RUNNER_DIR}/
  task-queue.json          ← single persistent queue (all active tasks)
  archive/
    2026-01.json           ← archived tasks (done/blocked, older than archiveDays)
    2026-02.json

Queue file schema is documented in references/queue-schema.md.


References

  • references/queue-schema.md — Queue JSON format (complete field reference)
  • references/task-types.md — Task type catalog and strategy selection
  • references/verification-guide.md — Verification logic per task type
  • tests/test-triggers.json — Trigger test cases (positive and negative)
Usage Guidance
This skill appears to implement what it claims (a persistent task queue), but it will: create ~/.openclaw/tasks/, append a dispatcher entry to HEARTBEAT.md, and register a recurring cron job on first use; it also spawns subagents and can run shell commands as part of tasks. Before installing: 1) Decide whether you are comfortable with automated edits to HEARTBEAT.md and adding a cron job — these happen on first use; 2) Review what 'subagents' and tools (exec, message, web_search) the agent currently has access to, because tasks (including code-execution or messaging tasks) will run with those capabilities; 3) Consider limiting use to non-sensitive tasks or testing in a sandboxed agent/account; 4) Back up HEARTBEAT.md and any config files the skill will modify; 5) If you want manual control, ask the skill engineer to make first-run setup explicit (require user confirmation) or to disable immediate DISPATCHER execution so tasks only run after your approval.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: autonomous-task-runner Version: 2.1.0 The skill is classified as suspicious due to its inherent design allowing arbitrary code execution (RCE) via user-provided tasks, which is a critical vulnerability. Specifically, `references/task-types.md` details a 'code-execution' task type that uses the `exec` tool for 'Standard shell commands,' 'Exec in PTY mode,' and 'Write script then exec.' This directly contradicts the `skill.yml` permission declaration, which misleadingly limits `exec` to 'mkdir -p' only. This discrepancy misrepresents the skill's true capabilities to the platform's security scanner. Additionally, the skill registers persistent cron jobs and modifies `HEARTBEAT.md` for its dispatcher, and passes user-provided task descriptions directly into subagent prompts, creating potential prompt injection vectors. While these capabilities are intended for a flexible task runner, they pose significant security risks if misused by a malicious user or a compromised agent.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description, declared tools (write, exec, message, web_search, subagents, optional cron), and the SKILL.md all align: a persistent queue that writes files, spawns subagents to run tasks, and reports results legitimately needs filesystem writes, cron/heartbeat integration, and subagent spawning.
Instruction Scope
Runtime instructions explicitly tell the agent to create ~/.openclaw/tasks/, initialize a persistent queue file, append an entry to HEARTBEAT.md, and 'CALL cron tool' to register a recurring job on first use. The skill also immediately runs the DISPATCHER in the same turn as INTAKE, which means queued tasks may be executed autonomously right after being added. These instructions modify agent-managed config files and system scheduling without an explicit interactive opt-in at the moment of installation.
Install Mechanism
Instruction-only skill (no install spec, no downloads). Nothing is written to disk by an installer, though the runtime instructions do write to user config paths; absence of external install URLs reduces supply-chain risk.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables or external credentials (good). It does require access to agent config files (TOOLS.md, HEARTBEAT.md) and the user's home directory to persist the queue and archives — these are proportional to a persistent task runner, but they grant access to agent-local configuration and persistent storage which could contain sensitive entries. The skill's declared permissions match the requested file/cron/subagent actions.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill creates and maintains a persistent queue file that accumulates indefinitely (archive after configured days) and registers a recurring cron job and heartbeat entry on first-run. It also spawns subagents and can run exec/tool-based code for 'code-execution' task types. While these are coherent with a task-runner, they increase long-term attack surface and can enable autonomous background actions; the skill performs these privileged modifications automatically on first INTAKE (auto-setup behavior).
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install autonomous-task-runner
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /autonomous-task-runner
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v2.1.0
INTAKE now immediately triggers DISPATCHER in the same turn. Tasks start executing the moment they are queued. Heartbeat/cron is backup only.
v2.0.3
Republished under slug autonomous-task-runner. No functional changes.
Metadata
Slug autonomous-task-runner
Version 2.1.0
License
All-time Installs 3
Active Installs 2
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Autonomous Task Runner?

Persistent task queue system. Users add tasks at any time via natural language; tasks are stored in a single persistent queue file and executed asynchronousl... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 870 downloads so far.

How do I install Autonomous Task Runner?

Run "/install autonomous-task-runner" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Autonomous Task Runner free?

Yes, Autonomous Task Runner is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Autonomous Task Runner support?

Autonomous Task Runner is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Autonomous Task Runner?

It is built and maintained by Chunhua Liao (@chunhualiao); the current version is v2.1.0.

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