How to integrate Fluxguard MCP with OpenClaw

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Introduction

OpenClaw is the fastest growing agent harness out there, which can work 24/7 to automate almost any kind of tasks. However, its capabilities are limited to the tools it has access to. Composio allows your OpenClaw to access Fluxguard with authentication management handled for you. You can execute actions on Fluxguard via your favorite OpenClaw interface (Telegram, WhatsApp, TUI, etc), whichever you prefer.

Why use Composio?

Apart from a managed and hosted MCP server, you will get:

  • Programmatic tool calling allows LLMs to write its code in a remote workbench to handle complex tool chaining. Reduces to-and-fro with LLMs for frequent tool calling.
  • Handling Large tool responses out of LLM context to minimize context rot.
  • Dynamic just-in-time access to 20,000 tools across 850+ other Apps for cross-app workflows. It loads the tools you need, so LLMs aren't overwhelmed by tools you don't need.

How to install Fluxguard with OpenClaw

Using Composio API Key and Setup Prompt

Copy the setup prompt from the OpenClaw dashboard
  • Run it in your OpenClaw chat interface.
  • Authenticate Fluxguard from the dashboard
  • Go back to your OpenClaw interface and start asking questions.

Using OpenClaw/Composio Plugin

1. Install OpenClaw Composio plugin

bash
openclaw plugins install @composio/openclaw-plugin

2. Copy the API Key from dashboard.composio.dev

3. Setup OpenClaw Config

openclaw config set plugins.entries.composio.config.consumerKey "ck_your_key_here"

4. Restart OpenClaw

openclaw gateway restart

5. Go to your chat interface and start asking questions.

6. When prompted, authenticate the app and you're all set.

How It Works

The plugin connects to Composio's MCP server at https://connect.composio.dev/mcp and registers all available tools directly into the OpenClaw agent. Tools are called by name — no extra search or execute steps needed.

If a tool returns an auth error, the agent will prompt you to connect that toolkit at dashboard.composio.dev.

Configuration

{
  "plugins": {
    "entries": {
      "composio": {
        "enabled": true,
        "config": {
          "consumerKey": "ck_your_key_here"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}
OptionDescriptionDefault
enabledEnable or disable the plugintrue
consumerKeyYour Composio consumer key (ck_...)
mcpUrlMCP server URL (advanced)https://connect.composio.dev/mcp

What is the Fluxguard MCP server, and what's possible with it?

The Fluxguard MCP server is an implementation of the Model Context Protocol that connects your AI agent and assistants like Claude, Cursor, etc directly to your Fluxguard account. It provides structured and secure access to your website monitoring and alerting data, so your agent can perform actions like adding new monitored pages, categorizing sites, retrieving alerts, acknowledging changes, and managing webhooks on your behalf.

  • Automated website monitoring setup: Direct your agent to add new web pages or entire sites for continuous change detection and tracking with just a quick prompt.
  • Alert retrieval and analysis: Have your agent fetch detailed information about recent alerts, surfacing critical changes on any monitored page instantly.
  • Intelligent alert acknowledgment: Let your agent acknowledge and mark alerts as reviewed, helping your team stay organized and responsive.
  • Site and category management: Organize your monitored properties by creating, updating, or deleting site categories to keep your web asset monitoring streamlined.
  • Webhook automation: Set up or remove webhooks to automate notifications, ensuring you never miss an important website change event.

Supported Tools & Triggers

Tools
Acknowledge Fluxguard AlertTool to acknowledge an alert, marking it as reviewed.
Add FluxGuard PageTool to add a new page for monitoring.
Create FluxGuard Site CategoryTool to create a new site category in FluxGuard.
Create WebhookTool to create a new webhook for receiving notifications about monitored pages.
Delete Fluxguard PageTool to delete a monitored page.
Delete Fluxguard SiteTool to delete a monitored site.
Delete WebhookTool to delete a webhook.
Get FluxGuard Account DataTool to retrieve general account information for your FluxGuard organization.
Get Alert DetailsTool to retrieve details of a specific alert.
Get FluxGuard AlertsTool to retrieve all alerts generated by site changes.
Get FluxGuard Site CategoriesTool to retrieve all site categories.
Get Fluxguard ChangeTool to retrieve details of a change by its ID.
Get ChangesTool to retrieve a list of all detected changes across monitored sites.
Get Sample Webhook PayloadTool to retrieve a sample webhook payload.
Get FluxGuard Site DetailsTool to retrieve details of a specific monitored site by its ID.
Get FluxGuard SitesTool to retrieve a list of all monitored sites.
Get SnapshotTool to retrieve details of a specific snapshot by its ID.
Get Site SnapshotsTool to retrieve a list of all site snapshots.
Get FluxGuard User DetailsTool to retrieve details that represent the current FluxGuard account as a user-like object.
Get FluxGuard UsersTool to retrieve all users in the organization.
Get Webhook DetailsTool to retrieve details of a specific webhook by its ID.
Get FluxGuard WebhooksTool to retrieve all configured webhooks.
Fluxguard Webhook NotificationTool to send change data to your webhook endpoint.

Conclusion

You've successfully integrated Fluxguard with OpenClaw using Composio plugin. Now interact with Fluxguard directly from your terminal, Web UI, or any messenger app using natural language commands.

Key benefits of this setup:

  • Seamless integration across TUI, Web UIs, and Messenger apps like Telegram, WhatsApp, Slack, etc.
  • Natural language commands for Fluxguard operations
  • Managed authentication through Composio
  • Access to 20,000+ tools across 850+ apps for cross-app workflows
  • Programmatic tool calling for complex tool chaining

Next steps:

  • Try asking OpenClaw to perform various Fluxguard operations
  • Explore cross-app workflows by connecting more toolkits like Calendar, Slack, Notion, etc.
  • Build complex automation scripts that leverage OpenClaw's 24/7 running capabilities

How to build Fluxguard MCP Agent with another framework

FAQ

What are the differences in Tool Router MCP and Fluxguard MCP?

With a standalone Fluxguard MCP server, the agents and LLMs can only access a fixed set of Fluxguard tools tied to that server. However, with the Composio Tool Router, agents can dynamically load tools from Fluxguard and many other apps based on the task at hand, all through a single MCP endpoint.

Can I use Tool Router MCP with OpenClaw?

Yes, you can. OpenClaw fully supports MCP integration. You get structured tool calling, message history handling, and model orchestration while Tool Router takes care of discovering and serving the right Fluxguard tools.

Can I manage the permissions and scopes for Fluxguard while using Tool Router?

Yes, absolutely. You can configure which Fluxguard scopes and actions are allowed when connecting your account to Composio. You can also bring your own OAuth credentials or API configuration so you keep full control over what the agent can do.

How safe is my data with Composio Tool Router?

All sensitive data such as tokens, keys, and configuration is fully encrypted at rest and in transit. Composio is SOC 2 Type 2 compliant and follows strict security practices so your Fluxguard data and credentials are handled as safely as possible.

Used by agents from

Context
Letta
glean
HubSpot
Agent.ai
Altera
DataStax
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Rolai
Context
Letta
glean
HubSpot
Agent.ai
Altera
DataStax
Entelligence
Rolai
Context
Letta
glean
HubSpot
Agent.ai
Altera
DataStax
Entelligence
Rolai

Never worry about agent reliability

We handle tool reliability, observability, and security so you never have to second-guess an agent action.