Platforms overview

Windows

OpenClaw ships a native Windows Hub companion app plus Windows CLI support. Use Windows Hub when you want a desktop app with setup, tray status, chat, Command Center diagnostics, and Windows node capabilities. Use the PowerShell installer when you want the CLI/Gateway directly. Use WSL2 when you want the most Linux-compatible Gateway runtime.

Recommended: Windows Hub

Windows Hub is the native WinUI companion app for Windows 10 20H2+ and Windows 11. It installs without administrator privileges and is published with signed x64 and ARM64 installers on OpenClaw releases.

Download the latest stable installer:

After install, launch OpenClaw Companion from the Start menu or the system tray. The installer also adds shortcuts for Gateway Setup, Chat, Settings, Check for Updates, and uninstall.

What Windows Hub includes

  • system tray status and launch-at-login
  • first-run setup for a local app-owned WSL Gateway
  • connection settings for local, remote, and SSH-tunneled Gateways
  • native chat window plus access to the browser Control UI
  • Command Center diagnostics for sessions, usage, channels, nodes, pairing, and repair commands
  • Windows node mode for agent-controlled canvas, screen, camera, notifications, device status, text-to-speech, speech-to-text, and controlled system.run
  • local MCP server mode for MCP clients such as Claude Desktop, Claude Code, and Cursor

First launch

On first launch, Windows Hub opens setup when there is no usable saved Gateway. The fastest path is Set up locally, which provisions an app-owned OpenClawGateway WSL distro, installs the Gateway inside it, and pairs the app. This does not export or mutate your existing Ubuntu distro.

Choose Advanced setup or open the Connections tab when you already have a Gateway. You can connect to:

  • a local Gateway on this PC
  • a WSL Gateway on this PC
  • a remote Gateway by URL and token or setup code
  • a Gateway reached through an SSH tunnel

When setup finishes, the tray icon turns green. Open Command Center from the tray to confirm connection, pairing, node status, and channel health.

Windows node mode

Windows Hub can register as a first-class OpenClaw node. The agent can then use declared Windows-native capabilities through the Gateway.

Common commands include:

  • canvas.present, canvas.hide, canvas.navigate, canvas.eval, canvas.snapshot
  • screen.snapshot and, with explicit opt-in, screen.record
  • camera.list and, with explicit opt-in, camera.snap, camera.clip
  • system.notify, system.run, system.run.prepare, system.which
  • location.get, device.info, device.status
  • stt.transcribe, tts.speak

Node mode requires Gateway pairing. If the app shows a pairing request, approve it from the Gateway host:

powershell
openclaw devices listopenclaw devices approve <request-id>openclaw nodes status

The Gateway only forwards commands that the node declares and server policy allows. Privacy-sensitive commands such as screen.record, camera.snap, and camera.clip require explicit gateway.nodes.allowCommands opt-in.

Local MCP mode

Windows Hub can expose the same Windows-native capability registry as a local MCP server on loopback. This is useful when you want local MCP clients to drive Windows capabilities without a running OpenClaw Gateway.

Enable it in Windows Hub Settings under the developer/advanced section. The app shows the loopback endpoint and bearer token after the server is enabled.

Mode matrix:

Node mode MCP server Behavior
off off Operator-only desktop app
on off Gateway-connected Windows node
off on Local MCP server only
on on Gateway node plus local MCP server

Native Windows CLI and Gateway

For terminal-first use, install OpenClaw from PowerShell:

powershell
iwr -useb https://openclaw.ai/install.ps1 | iex

Verify:

powershell
openclaw --versionopenclaw doctoropenclaw gateway status --json

Native Windows CLI and Gateway flows are supported and continue to improve. Managed startup uses Windows Scheduled Tasks when available and falls back to a per-user Startup-folder login item if task creation is denied.

To install the Gateway service:

powershell
openclaw gateway installopenclaw gateway status --json

If you only want CLI use without a managed Gateway service:

powershell
openclaw onboard --non-interactive --skip-healthopenclaw gateway run

WSL2 Gateway

WSL2 remains the most Linux-compatible Gateway runtime on Windows. Windows Hub can set up an app-owned WSL Gateway for you, or you can install manually inside your own distro.

Manual setup:

powershell
wsl --install# Or pick a distro explicitly:wsl --list --onlinewsl --install -d Ubuntu-24.04

Enable systemd inside WSL:

bash
sudo tee /etc/wsl.conf >/dev/null <<'EOF'[boot]systemd=trueEOF

Restart WSL from PowerShell:

powershell
wsl --shutdown

Then install OpenClaw inside WSL with the Linux quickstart:

bash
curl -fsSL https://openclaw.ai/install.sh | bashopenclaw gateway status

Gateway auto-start before Windows login

For headless WSL setups, ensure the full boot chain runs even when no one logs into Windows.

Inside WSL:

bash
sudo loginctl enable-linger "$(whoami)"openclaw gateway install

In PowerShell as Administrator:

powershell
schtasks /create /tn "WSL Boot" /tr "wsl.exe -d Ubuntu --exec /bin/true" /sc onstart /ru SYSTEM

Replace Ubuntu with your distro name from:

powershell
wsl --list --verbose

After reboot, verify from WSL:

bash
systemctl --user is-enabled openclaw-gateway.servicesystemctl --user status openclaw-gateway.service --no-pager

Expose WSL services over LAN

WSL has its own virtual network. If another machine must reach a service inside WSL, forward a Windows port to the current WSL IP. The WSL IP can change after restarts, so refresh the forwarding rule when needed.

Example in PowerShell as Administrator:

powershell
$Distro = "Ubuntu-24.04"$ListenPort = 2222$TargetPort = 22 $WslIp = (wsl -d $Distro -- hostname -I).Trim().Split(" ")[0]if (-not $WslIp) { throw "WSL IP not found." } netsh interface portproxy add v4tov4 listenaddress=0.0.0.0 listenport=$ListenPort `  connectaddress=$WslIp connectport=$TargetPort New-NetFirewallRule -DisplayName "WSL SSH $ListenPort" -Direction Inbound `  -Protocol TCP -LocalPort $ListenPort -Action Allow

Notes:

  • SSH from another machine targets the Windows host IP, for example ssh user@windows-host -p 2222.
  • Remote nodes must point at a reachable Gateway URL, not 127.0.0.1.
  • Use listenaddress=0.0.0.0 for LAN access. Use 127.0.0.1 for local-only access.

Troubleshooting

The tray icon does not appear

Check Task Manager for OpenClaw.Tray.WinUI.exe. If it is running, open the hidden tray-icons area and pin it. If it is not running, launch OpenClaw Companion from the Start menu.

Local setup fails

Open the setup log from Windows Hub or inspect:

powershell
notepad "$env:LOCALAPPDATA\OpenClawTray\Logs\Setup\easy-setup-latest.txt"

Common causes are disabled WSL, blocked virtualization, stale app-owned WSL state, or a network failure while installing the Gateway package.

The app says pairing is required

Approve the operator or node request from the Gateway:

powershell
openclaw devices listopenclaw devices approve <request-id>

If the device already had a token, reconnect from the Connections tab after approval.

Web chat cannot reach a remote Gateway

Remote web chat needs HTTPS or localhost. For self-signed certificates, trust the certificate in Windows, or use an SSH tunnel to a localhost URL.

screen.snapshot, camera, or audio commands fail

Confirm Windows permissions for camera, microphone, screen capture, and notifications. Packaged installs declare the protected capabilities, but Windows may still prompt the first time a command uses them.

Git or GitHub connectivity fails

Some networks block or throttle HTTPS to GitHub. If git clone or gh auth login fails, try another network, a VPN, or an HTTP/HTTPS proxy.

For token-based gh auth in the current session:

powershell
$env:GH_TOKEN="<your-token>"gh auth statusgh auth setup-git

Never commit tokens or paste them into issues or pull requests.

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