Bonjour / mDNS discovery
OpenClaw uses Bonjour (mDNS / DNS‑SD) as a LAN‑only convenience to discover
an active Gateway (WebSocket endpoint). It is best‑effort and does not replace SSH or
Tailnet-based connectivity.
Wide-area Bonjour (Unicast DNS-SD) over Tailscale
If the node and gateway are on different networks, multicast mDNS won’t cross the
boundary. You can keep the same discovery UX by switching to unicast DNS‑SD
(“Wide‑Area Bonjour”) over Tailscale.
High‑level steps:
- Run a DNS server on the gateway host (reachable over Tailnet).
- Publish DNS‑SD records for
_openclaw-gw._tcp under a dedicated zone
(example: openclaw.internal.).
- Configure Tailscale split DNS so your chosen domain resolves via that
DNS server for clients (including iOS).
OpenClaw supports any discovery domain; openclaw.internal. is just an example.
iOS/Android nodes browse both local. and your configured wide‑area domain.
Gateway config (recommended)
{
gateway: { bind: "tailnet" }, // tailnet-only (recommended)
discovery: { wideArea: { enabled: true } }, // enables wide-area DNS-SD publishing
}
One-time DNS server setup (gateway host)
openclaw dns setup --apply
This installs CoreDNS and configures it to:
- listen on port 53 only on the gateway’s Tailscale interfaces
- serve your chosen domain (example:
openclaw.internal.) from ~/.openclaw/dns/<domain>.db
Validate from a tailnet‑connected machine:
dns-sd -B _openclaw-gw._tcp openclaw.internal.
dig @<TAILNET_IPV4> -p 53 _openclaw-gw._tcp.openclaw.internal PTR +short
Tailscale DNS settings
In the Tailscale admin console:
- Add a nameserver pointing at the gateway’s tailnet IP (UDP/TCP 53).
- Add split DNS so your discovery domain uses that nameserver.
Once clients accept tailnet DNS, iOS nodes can browse
_openclaw-gw._tcp in your discovery domain without multicast.
Gateway listener security (recommended)
The Gateway WS port (default 18789) binds to loopback by default. For LAN/tailnet
access, bind explicitly and keep auth enabled.
For tailnet‑only setups:
- Set
gateway.bind: "tailnet" in ~/.openclaw/openclaw.json.
- Restart the Gateway (or restart the macOS menubar app).
What advertises
Only the Gateway advertises _openclaw-gw._tcp.
Service types
_openclaw-gw._tcp — gateway transport beacon (used by macOS/iOS/Android nodes).
TXT keys (non-secret hints)
The Gateway advertises small non‑secret hints to make UI flows convenient:
role=gateway
displayName=<friendly name>
lanHost=<hostname>.local
gatewayPort=<port> (Gateway WS + HTTP)
gatewayTls=1 (only when TLS is enabled)
gatewayTlsSha256=<sha256> (only when TLS is enabled and fingerprint is available)
canvasPort=<port> (only when the canvas host is enabled; currently the same as gatewayPort)
sshPort=<port> (defaults to 22 when not overridden)
transport=gateway
cliPath=<path> (optional; absolute path to a runnable openclaw entrypoint)
tailnetDns=<magicdns> (optional hint when Tailnet is available)
Security notes:
- Bonjour/mDNS TXT records are unauthenticated. Clients must not treat TXT as authoritative routing.
- Clients should route using the resolved service endpoint (SRV + A/AAAA). Treat
lanHost, tailnetDns, gatewayPort, and gatewayTlsSha256 as hints only.
- TLS pinning must never allow an advertised
gatewayTlsSha256 to override a previously stored pin.
- iOS/Android nodes should treat discovery-based direct connects as TLS-only and require explicit user confirmation before trusting a first-time fingerprint.
Debugging on macOS
Useful built‑in tools:
-
Browse instances:
dns-sd -B _openclaw-gw._tcp local.
-
Resolve one instance (replace
<instance>):
dns-sd -L "<instance>" _openclaw-gw._tcp local.
If browsing works but resolving fails, you’re usually hitting a LAN policy or
mDNS resolver issue.
Debugging in Gateway logs
The Gateway writes a rolling log file (printed on startup as
gateway log file: ...). Look for bonjour: lines, especially:
bonjour: advertise failed ...
bonjour: ... name conflict resolved / hostname conflict resolved
bonjour: watchdog detected non-announced service ...
Debugging on iOS node
The iOS node uses NWBrowser to discover _openclaw-gw._tcp.
To capture logs:
- Settings → Gateway → Advanced → Discovery Debug Logs
- Settings → Gateway → Advanced → Discovery Logs → reproduce → Copy
The log includes browser state transitions and result‑set changes.
Common failure modes
- Bonjour doesn’t cross networks: use Tailnet or SSH.
- Multicast blocked: some Wi‑Fi networks disable mDNS.
- Sleep / interface churn: macOS may temporarily drop mDNS results; retry.
- Browse works but resolve fails: keep machine names simple (avoid emojis or
punctuation), then restart the Gateway. The service instance name derives from
the host name, so overly complex names can confuse some resolvers.
Escaped instance names (\032)
Bonjour/DNS‑SD often escapes bytes in service instance names as decimal \DDD
sequences (e.g. spaces become \032).
- This is normal at the protocol level.
- UIs should decode for display (iOS uses
BonjourEscapes.decode).
Disabling / configuration
OPENCLAW_DISABLE_BONJOUR=1 disables advertising (legacy: OPENCLAW_DISABLE_BONJOUR).
gateway.bind in ~/.openclaw/openclaw.json controls the Gateway bind mode.
OPENCLAW_SSH_PORT overrides the SSH port advertised in TXT (legacy: OPENCLAW_SSH_PORT).
OPENCLAW_TAILNET_DNS publishes a MagicDNS hint in TXT (legacy: OPENCLAW_TAILNET_DNS).
OPENCLAW_CLI_PATH overrides the advertised CLI path (legacy: OPENCLAW_CLI_PATH).
Last modified on March 22, 2026