LobsterLAN
/install lobsterlan
LobsterLAN — Agent-to-Agent Communication
Talk to other OpenClaw agents on your LAN.
Setup
- Copy
config/peers.example.jsontoconfig/peers.json - Fill in peer hostnames, ports, and tokens
- Ensure target agents have the required APIs enabled (see below)
- Set up a secure transport (see Network Transport below)
Required Config on Target Agent
For sync ask (chat completions):
// Target agent's openclaw.json — keep bind as "loopback"!
{
"gateway": {
"http": {
"endpoints": {
"chatCompletions": { "enabled": true }
}
}
}
}
⚠️ Do NOT set
gateway.bindto"lan"— OpenClaw will refuse to start if the gateway is exposed on a non-loopback address without TLS. Use a secure transport instead (see below).
For async delegate (webhooks):
{
"hooks": {
"enabled": true,
"token": "a-secure-shared-secret"
}
}
Network Transport
OpenClaw gateways default to bind: loopback and will not start with plaintext on non-loopback addresses. You need a secure transport layer for cross-host communication:
| Approach | Complexity | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| SSH Tunnel ⭐ | Low | Home LANs, simple setups |
| Reverse Proxy (TLS) | Medium | Environments with existing Caddy/nginx |
| Tailscale Serve | Medium | Multi-site or remote agents |
For simple LANs, SSH tunneling is recommended. Both gateways stay on loopback, the SSH tunnel provides encryption, and no gateway config changes are needed.
SSH Tunnel Example
Forward a local port to the remote agent's loopback gateway:
ssh -N -L 18790:127.0.0.1:18790 user@remote-agent-host
Then in peers.json, point the peer to 127.0.0.1:18790 (the local tunnel endpoint).
For persistence, use a systemd user service with Restart=always. See the full setup guide in docs/setup.md.
Commands
Ask (synchronous — wait for reply)
scripts/lobsterlan.sh ask scotty "What is the CPU temperature?"
Use for quick questions where you need the answer now.
Delegate (async — fire and forget)
scripts/lobsterlan.sh delegate scotty "Generate 5 zen wallpapers and push to the file share"
Use for long-running tasks. The peer processes independently.
Status check
scripts/lobsterlan.sh status scotty
List peers
scripts/lobsterlan.sh peers
Agent Usage (from within OpenClaw)
Run via exec tool:
cd ~/.openclaw/workspace/skills/lobsterlan && scripts/lobsterlan.sh ask scotty "status report"
Security
Three layers protect communication:
- Network: LAN-only (firewall blocks external access to gateway port)
- Gateway token: Bearer auth on every request
- Agent ID header (optional):
X-LobsterLAN-Agentsent with self-ID
The gateway token is the real security boundary. The agent ID header is defense-in-depth for environments where you want explicit identity verification.
Environment Variables
LOBSTERLAN_CONFIG— path to peers.json (default:../config/peers.jsonrelative to script)
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install lobsterlan - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/lobsterlan - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is LobsterLAN?
Communicate with other OpenClaw agents on your local network. Use when you need to ask another agent a question (sync), delegate a task (async), or check if... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 409 downloads so far.
How do I install LobsterLAN?
Run "/install lobsterlan" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is LobsterLAN free?
Yes, LobsterLAN is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does LobsterLAN support?
LobsterLAN is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created LobsterLAN?
It is built and maintained by Daniel Thomas (@danielithomas); the current version is v1.0.1.