--- name: add-telegram-swarm description: Add Agent Swarm (Teams) support to Telegram. Each subagent gets its own bot identity in the group. Requires Telegram channel to be set up first (use /add-telegram). Triggers on "agent swarm", "agent teams telegram", "telegram swarm", "bot pool". --- # Add Agent Swarm to Telegram This skill adds Agent Teams (Swarm) support to an existing Telegram channel. Each subagent in a team gets its own bot identity in the Telegram group, so users can visually distinguish which agent is speaking. **Prerequisite**: Telegram must already be set up via the `/add-telegram` skill. If `src/telegram.ts` does not exist or `TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN` is not configured, tell the user to run `/add-telegram` first. ## How It Works - The **main bot** receives messages and sends lead agent responses (already set up by `/add-telegram`) - **Pool bots** are send-only — each gets a Grammy `Api` instance (no polling) - When a subagent calls `send_message` with a `sender` parameter, the host assigns a pool bot and renames it to match the sender's role - Messages appear in Telegram from different bot identities ``` Subagent calls send_message(text: "Found 3 results", sender: "Researcher") → MCP writes IPC file with sender field → Host IPC watcher picks it up → Assigns pool bot #2 to "Researcher" (round-robin, stable per-group) → Renames pool bot #2 to "Researcher" via setMyName → Sends message via pool bot #2's Api instance → Appears in Telegram from "Researcher" bot ``` ## Prerequisites ### 1. Create Pool Bots Tell the user: > I need you to create 3-5 Telegram bots to use as the agent pool. These will be renamed dynamically to match agent roles. > > 1. Open Telegram and search for `@BotFather` > 2. Send `/newbot` for each bot: > - Give them any placeholder name (e.g., "Bot 1", "Bot 2") > - Usernames like `myproject_swarm_1_bot`, `myproject_swarm_2_bot`, etc. > 3. Copy all the tokens > 4. Add all bots to your Telegram group(s) where you want agent teams Wait for user to provide the tokens. ### 2. Disable Group Privacy for Pool Bots Tell the user: > **Important**: Each pool bot needs Group Privacy disabled so it can send messages in groups. > > For each pool bot in `@BotFather`: > 1. Send `/mybots` and select the bot > 2. Go to **Bot Settings** > **Group Privacy** > **Turn off** > > Then add all pool bots to your Telegram group(s). ## Implementation ### Step 1: Update Configuration Read `src/config.ts` and add the bot pool config near the other Telegram exports: ```typescript export const TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL = (process.env.TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL || '') .split(',') .map((t) => t.trim()) .filter(Boolean); ``` ### Step 2: Add Bot Pool to Telegram Module Read `src/telegram.ts` and add the following: 1. **Update imports** — add `Api` to the Grammy import: ```typescript import { Api, Bot } from 'grammy'; ``` 2. **Add pool state** after the existing `let bot` declaration: ```typescript // Bot pool for agent teams: send-only Api instances (no polling) const poolApis: Api[] = []; // Maps "{groupFolder}:{senderName}" → pool Api index for stable assignment const senderBotMap = new Map(); let nextPoolIndex = 0; ``` 3. **Add pool functions** — place these before the `isTelegramConnected` function: ```typescript /** * Initialize send-only Api instances for the bot pool. * Each pool bot can send messages but doesn't poll for updates. */ export async function initBotPool(tokens: string[]): Promise { for (const token of tokens) { try { const api = new Api(token); const me = await api.getMe(); poolApis.push(api); logger.info( { username: me.username, id: me.id, poolSize: poolApis.length }, 'Pool bot initialized', ); } catch (err) { logger.error({ err }, 'Failed to initialize pool bot'); } } if (poolApis.length > 0) { logger.info({ count: poolApis.length }, 'Telegram bot pool ready'); } } /** * Send a message via a pool bot assigned to the given sender name. * Assigns bots round-robin on first use; subsequent messages from the * same sender in the same group always use the same bot. * On first assignment, renames the bot to match the sender's role. */ export async function sendPoolMessage( chatId: string, text: string, sender: string, groupFolder: string, ): Promise { if (poolApis.length === 0) { // No pool bots — fall back to main bot await sendTelegramMessage(chatId, text); return; } const key = `${groupFolder}:${sender}`; let idx = senderBotMap.get(key); if (idx === undefined) { idx = nextPoolIndex % poolApis.length; nextPoolIndex++; senderBotMap.set(key, idx); // Rename the bot to match the sender's role, then wait for Telegram to propagate try { await poolApis[idx].setMyName(sender); await new Promise((r) => setTimeout(r, 2000)); logger.info({ sender, groupFolder, poolIndex: idx }, 'Assigned and renamed pool bot'); } catch (err) { logger.warn({ sender, err }, 'Failed to rename pool bot (sending anyway)'); } } const api = poolApis[idx]; try { const numericId = chatId.replace(/^tg:/, ''); const MAX_LENGTH = 4096; if (text.length <= MAX_LENGTH) { await api.sendMessage(numericId, text); } else { for (let i = 0; i < text.length; i += MAX_LENGTH) { await api.sendMessage(numericId, text.slice(i, i + MAX_LENGTH)); } } logger.info({ chatId, sender, poolIndex: idx, length: text.length }, 'Pool message sent'); } catch (err) { logger.error({ chatId, sender, err }, 'Failed to send pool message'); } } ``` ### Step 3: Add sender Parameter to MCP Tool Read `container/agent-runner/src/ipc-mcp-stdio.ts` and update the `send_message` tool to accept an optional `sender` parameter: Change the tool's schema from: ```typescript { text: z.string().describe('The message text to send') }, ``` To: ```typescript { text: z.string().describe('The message text to send'), sender: z.string().optional().describe('Your role/identity name (e.g. "Researcher"). When set, messages appear from a dedicated bot in Telegram.'), }, ``` And update the handler to include `sender` in the IPC data: ```typescript async (args) => { const data: Record = { type: 'message', chatJid, text: args.text, sender: args.sender || undefined, groupFolder, timestamp: new Date().toISOString(), }; writeIpcFile(MESSAGES_DIR, data); return { content: [{ type: 'text' as const, text: 'Message sent.' }] }; }, ``` ### Step 4: Update Host IPC Routing Read `src/ipc.ts` and make these changes: 1. **Add imports** — add `sendPoolMessage` and `initBotPool` from the Telegram swarm module, and `TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL` from config. 2. **Update IPC message routing** — in `src/ipc.ts`, find where the `sendMessage` dependency is called to deliver IPC messages (inside `processIpcFiles`). The `sendMessage` is passed in via the `IpcDeps` parameter. Wrap it to route Telegram swarm messages through the bot pool: ```typescript if (data.sender && data.chatJid.startsWith('tg:')) { await sendPoolMessage( data.chatJid, data.text, data.sender, sourceGroup, ); } else { await deps.sendMessage(data.chatJid, data.text); } ``` Note: The assistant name prefix is handled by `formatOutbound()` in the router — Telegram channels have `prefixAssistantName = false` so no prefix is added for `tg:` JIDs. 3. **Initialize pool in `main()` in `src/index.ts`** — after creating the Telegram channel, add: ```typescript if (TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL.length > 0) { await initBotPool(TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL); } ``` ### Step 5: Update CLAUDE.md Files #### 5a. Add global message formatting rules Read `groups/global/CLAUDE.md` and add a Message Formatting section: ```markdown ## Message Formatting NEVER use markdown. Only use WhatsApp/Telegram formatting: - *single asterisks* for bold (NEVER **double asterisks**) - _underscores_ for italic - • bullet points - ```triple backticks``` for code No ## headings. No [links](url). No **double stars**. ``` #### 5b. Update existing group CLAUDE.md headings In any group CLAUDE.md that has a "WhatsApp Formatting" section (e.g. `groups/main/CLAUDE.md`), rename the heading to reflect multi-channel support: ``` ## WhatsApp Formatting (and other messaging apps) ``` #### 5c. Add Agent Teams instructions to Telegram groups For each Telegram group that will use agent teams, create or update its `groups/{folder}/CLAUDE.md` with these instructions. Read the existing CLAUDE.md first (or `groups/global/CLAUDE.md` as a base) and add the Agent Teams section: ```markdown ## Agent Teams When creating a team to tackle a complex task, follow these rules: ### CRITICAL: Follow the user's prompt exactly Create *exactly* the team the user asked for — same number of agents, same roles, same names. Do NOT add extra agents, rename roles, or use generic names like "Researcher 1". If the user says "a marine biologist, a physicist, and Alexander Hamilton", create exactly those three agents with those exact names. ### Team member instructions Each team member MUST be instructed to: 1. *Share progress in the group* via `mcp__nanoclaw__send_message` with a `sender` parameter matching their exact role/character name (e.g., `sender: "Marine Biologist"` or `sender: "Alexander Hamilton"`). This makes their messages appear from a dedicated bot in the Telegram group. 2. *Also communicate with teammates* via `SendMessage` as normal for coordination. 3. Keep group messages *short* — 2-4 sentences max per message. Break longer content into multiple `send_message` calls. No walls of text. 4. Use the `sender` parameter consistently — always the same name so the bot identity stays stable. 5. NEVER use markdown formatting. Use ONLY WhatsApp/Telegram formatting: single *asterisks* for bold (NOT **double**), _underscores_ for italic, • for bullets, ```backticks``` for code. No ## headings, no [links](url), no **double asterisks**. ### Example team creation prompt When creating a teammate, include instructions like: \``` You are the Marine Biologist. When you have findings or updates for the user, send them to the group using mcp__nanoclaw__send_message with sender set to "Marine Biologist". Keep each message short (2-4 sentences max). Use emojis for strong reactions. ONLY use single *asterisks* for bold (never **double**), _underscores_ for italic, • for bullets. No markdown. Also communicate with teammates via SendMessage. \``` ### Lead agent behavior As the lead agent who created the team: - You do NOT need to react to or relay every teammate message. The user sees those directly from the teammate bots. - Send your own messages only to comment, share thoughts, synthesize, or direct the team. - When processing an internal update from a teammate that doesn't need a user-facing response, wrap your *entire* output in `` tags. - Focus on high-level coordination and the final synthesis. ``` ### Step 6: Update Environment Add pool tokens to `.env`: ```bash TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL=TOKEN1,TOKEN2,TOKEN3,... ``` **Important**: Sync to all required locations: ```bash cp .env data/env/env ``` Also add `TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL` to the launchd plist (`~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.nanoclaw.plist`) in the `EnvironmentVariables` dict if using launchd. ### Step 7: Rebuild and Restart ```bash npm run build ./container/build.sh # Required — MCP tool changed launchctl unload ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.nanoclaw.plist launchctl load ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.nanoclaw.plist ``` Must use `unload/load` (not just `kickstart`) because the plist env vars changed. ### Step 8: Test Tell the user: > Send a message in your Telegram group asking for a multi-agent task, e.g.: > "Assemble a team of a researcher and a coder to build me a hello world app" > > You should see: > - The lead agent (main bot) acknowledging and creating the team > - Each subagent messaging from a different bot, renamed to their role > - Short, scannable messages from each agent > > Check logs: `tail -f logs/nanoclaw.log | grep -i pool` ## Architecture Notes - Pool bots use Grammy's `Api` class — lightweight, no polling, just send - Bot names are set via `setMyName` — changes are global to the bot, not per-chat - A 2-second delay after `setMyName` allows Telegram to propagate the name change before the first message - Sender→bot mapping is stable within a group (keyed as `{groupFolder}:{senderName}`) - Mapping resets on service restart — pool bots get reassigned fresh - If pool runs out, bots are reused (round-robin wraps) ## Troubleshooting ### Pool bots not sending messages 1. Verify tokens: `curl -s "https://api.telegram.org/botTOKEN/getMe"` 2. Check pool initialized: `grep "Pool bot" logs/nanoclaw.log` 3. Ensure all pool bots are members of the Telegram group 4. Check Group Privacy is disabled for each pool bot ### Bot names not updating Telegram caches bot names client-side. The 2-second delay after `setMyName` helps, but users may need to restart their Telegram client to see updated names immediately. ### Subagents not using send_message Check the group's `CLAUDE.md` has the Agent Teams instructions. The lead agent reads this when creating teammates and must include the `send_message` + `sender` instructions in each teammate's prompt. ## Removal To remove Agent Swarm support while keeping basic Telegram: 1. Remove `TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL` from `src/config.ts` 2. Remove pool code from `src/telegram.ts` (`poolApis`, `senderBotMap`, `initBotPool`, `sendPoolMessage`) 3. Remove pool routing from IPC handler in `src/index.ts` (revert to plain `sendMessage`) 4. Remove `initBotPool` call from `main()` 5. Remove `sender` param from MCP tool in `container/agent-runner/src/ipc-mcp-stdio.ts` 6. Remove Agent Teams section from group CLAUDE.md files 7. Remove `TELEGRAM_BOT_POOL` from `.env`, `data/env/env`, and launchd plist 8. Rebuild: `npm run build && ./container/build.sh && launchctl unload ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.nanoclaw.plist && launchctl load ~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.nanoclaw.plist`