activityclaw-usageMonitors and reports agent activities including file operations, command executions, web actions, messages, and sub-agent sessions via dashboard and status c...
Install via ClawdBot CLI:
clawdbot install rmruss2022/activityclaw-usageUse this skill when the user asks about:
The ActivityClaw plugin must be installed:
npm install -g @rmruss2022/activityclaw
openclaw plugins install @rmruss2022/activityclaw
Check if ActivityClaw is installed and running:
openclaw activityclaw status
Open the visual activity dashboard in browser:
openclaw activityclaw dashboard
This opens http://localhost:18796 with real-time activity feed.
Show current status and configuration:
openclaw activityclaw status
Manually control the service:
openclaw activityclaw start
openclaw activityclaw stop
Reconfigure port or database location:
openclaw activityclaw setup
The dashboard at http://localhost:18796 provides:
User asks: "What files have I been working on today?"
Response:
openclaw activityclaw dashboard
Then check the "📝 Create" and "✏️ Edit" filters in the dashboard to see recent file operations.
User asks: "Show me recent command executions"
Response:
openclaw activityclaw dashboard
Filter by "⚡ Exec" to see command history.
User asks: "What has the agent been doing?"
Response:
openclaw activityclaw status
This shows a summary, then suggest opening the dashboard for details:
openclaw activityclaw dashboard
If activities aren't showing:
openclaw plugins listopenclaw activityclaw statusopenclaw activityclaw startIf port is in use:
openclaw activityclaw setup
# Choose a different port
~/.openclaw/activity-tracker/activities.dbtool_result_persist hookGitHub: https://github.com/rmruss2022/ActivityClaw
npm: @rmruss2022/activityclaw
Generated Feb 24, 2026
Development teams can use ActivityClaw to track all agent activities during coding sessions, such as file edits, command executions, and web searches for debugging. This helps in auditing code changes, ensuring compliance with workflows, and providing transparency for collaborative projects. It's especially useful in agile environments where real-time visibility into automated tasks is needed.
IT departments can deploy ActivityClaw to monitor agent actions for security audits, tracking file operations, command executions, and message sends to detect unauthorized activities. This supports compliance with regulations like GDPR or HIPAA by maintaining a local log of all automated interactions, enabling quick incident response and forensic analysis.
Content teams can utilize ActivityClaw to oversee agent activities in generating and editing documents, tracking file reads, writes, and web fetches for research. This ensures version control, monitors productivity, and provides insights into content pipelines, helping streamline editorial processes and maintain quality standards.
Support centers can integrate ActivityClaw to monitor agent interactions, such as message sends and command executions during automated ticket handling. This allows supervisors to review agent performance, ensure accurate responses, and identify areas for improvement in customer service workflows, enhancing efficiency and accountability.
Researchers can use ActivityClaw to track agent activities in data collection, including web searches, file operations, and sub-agent spawning for parallel tasks. This provides a detailed history of automated research steps, facilitating reproducibility, collaboration, and documentation of methodologies in academic or corporate settings.
Offer ActivityClaw as a paid subscription for teams, providing enhanced features like advanced analytics, cloud backups, and team dashboards. Revenue is generated through monthly or annual fees, targeting small to medium businesses that need reliable activity tracking without upfront costs. This model ensures recurring income and scalability as user bases grow.
Sell enterprise licenses for ActivityClaw with custom integrations, priority support, and on-premise deployment options. Revenue comes from one-time license fees and ongoing support contracts, catering to large organizations with strict security and compliance needs. This model leverages high-value deals and long-term client relationships.
Provide ActivityClaw as a free open-source tool with basic tracking, then monetize through premium add-ons like extended history storage, advanced filters, and API access. Revenue is generated from users upgrading for additional features, appealing to individual developers and small teams who start free and scale up as needs increase.
💬 Integration Tip
Ensure the ActivityClaw plugin is installed and running via npm and openclaw commands before use; start with the dashboard command to visualize activities and adjust configurations as needed for port conflicts.
Automatically update Clawdbot and all installed skills once daily. Runs via cron, checks for updates, applies them, and messages the user with a summary of what changed.
Full desktop computer use for headless Linux servers. Xvfb + XFCE virtual desktop with xdotool automation. 17 actions (click, type, scroll, screenshot, drag,...
Essential Docker commands and workflows for container management, image operations, and debugging.
Tool discovery and shell one-liner reference for sysadmin, DevOps, and security tasks. AUTO-CONSULT this skill when the user is: troubleshooting network issues, debugging processes, analyzing logs, working with SSL/TLS, managing DNS, testing HTTP endpoints, auditing security, working with containers, writing shell scripts, or asks 'what tool should I use for X'. Source: github.com/trimstray/the-book-of-secret-knowledge
Deploy applications and manage projects with complete CLI reference. Commands for deployments, projects, domains, environment variables, and live documentation access.
Monitor topics of interest and proactively alert when important developments occur. Use when user wants automated monitoring of specific subjects (e.g., product releases, price changes, news topics, technology updates). Supports scheduled web searches, AI-powered importance scoring, smart alerts vs weekly digests, and memory-aware contextual summaries.