--- summary: "Run OpenClaw Gateway on exe.dev (VM + HTTPS proxy) for remote access" read_when: - You want a cheap always-on Linux host for the Gateway - You want remote Control UI access without running your own VPS title: "exe.dev" --- **Goal:** OpenClaw Gateway running on an [exe.dev](https://exe.dev) VM, reachable at `https://.exe.xyz`. This guide assumes exe.dev's default **exeuntu** image. Map packages accordingly on other distros. ## What you need - exe.dev account - `ssh exe.dev` access to exe.dev VMs (optional, for manual setup) ## Beginner quick path 1. Open [https://exe.new/openclaw](https://exe.new/openclaw) 2. Fill in your auth key/token as needed 3. Click "Agent" next to your VM and wait for Shelley to finish provisioning 4. Open `https://.exe.xyz/` and authenticate with the configured shared secret (token auth by default; password auth also works if you switch `gateway.auth.mode`) 5. Approve pending device pairing requests with `openclaw devices approve ` ## Automated install with Shelley Shelley, exe.dev's agent, can install OpenClaw from a prompt: ```text Set up OpenClaw (https://docs.openclaw.ai/install) on this VM. Use the non-interactive and accept-risk flags for openclaw onboarding. Add the supplied auth or token as needed. Configure nginx to forward from the default port 18789 to the root location on the default enabled site config, making sure to enable Websocket support. Pairing is done by "openclaw devices list" and "openclaw devices approve ". Make sure the dashboard shows that OpenClaw's health is OK. exe.dev handles forwarding from port 8000 to port 80/443 and HTTPS for us, so the final "reachable" should be .exe.xyz, without port specification. ``` ## Manual installation From your device: ```bash ssh exe.dev new ``` Then connect: ```bash ssh .exe.xyz ``` Keep this VM **stateful**. OpenClaw stores `openclaw.json`, per-agent `auth-profiles.json`, sessions, and channel/provider state under `~/.openclaw/`, plus the workspace under `~/.openclaw/workspace/`. ```bash sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install -y git curl jq ca-certificates openssl ``` ```bash curl -fsSL https://openclaw.ai/install.sh | bash ``` Edit `/etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default`: ```nginx server { listen 80 default_server; listen [::]:80 default_server; listen 8000; listen [::]:8000; server_name _; location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:18789; proxy_http_version 1.1; # WebSocket support proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade; proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade"; # Standard proxy headers proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme; # Timeout settings for long-lived connections proxy_read_timeout 86400s; proxy_send_timeout 86400s; } } ``` Overwrite forwarding headers instead of preserving client-supplied chains. OpenClaw trusts forwarded IP metadata only from explicitly configured proxies, and append-style `X-Forwarded-For` chains are treated as a hardening risk. Open `https://.exe.xyz/` (see the Control UI output from onboarding). If it prompts for auth, paste the configured shared secret from the VM. This guide uses token auth by default, so retrieve `gateway.auth.token` with `openclaw config get gateway.auth.token`, or generate a new one with `openclaw doctor --n`. If you switched the gateway to password auth, use `gateway.auth.password` / `OPENCLAW_GATEWAY_PASSWORD` instead. Approve devices with `openclaw devices list` and `openclaw devices approve `. When in doubt, use Shelley from your browser. ## Remote channel setup For remote hosts, prefer one `config patch` call over many SSH calls to `config set`. Keep real tokens in the VM environment or `~/.openclaw/.env`, and put only SecretRefs in `openclaw.json`. See [Secrets management](/gateway/secrets) for the full SecretRef contract. On the VM, make the service environment contain the secrets it needs: ```bash cat >> ~/.openclaw/.env <<'EOF' SLACK_BOT_TOKEN=xoxb-... SLACK_APP_TOKEN=xapp-... DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN=... OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-... EOF ``` From your local machine, create a patch file and pipe it to the VM: ```json5 // openclaw.remote.patch.json5 { secrets: { providers: { default: { source: "env" }, }, }, channels: { slack: { enabled: true, mode: "socket", botToken: { source: "env", provider: "default", id: "SLACK_BOT_TOKEN" }, appToken: { source: "env", provider: "default", id: "SLACK_APP_TOKEN" }, groupPolicy: "open", requireMention: false, }, discord: { enabled: true, token: { source: "env", provider: "default", id: "DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN" }, dmPolicy: "disabled", dm: { enabled: false }, groupPolicy: "allowlist", }, }, agents: { defaults: { model: { primary: "openai/gpt-5.5" }, models: { "openai/gpt-5.5": { params: { fastMode: true } }, }, }, }, } ``` ```bash ssh .exe.xyz 'openclaw config patch --stdin --dry-run' < ./openclaw.remote.patch.json5 ssh .exe.xyz 'openclaw config patch --stdin' < ./openclaw.remote.patch.json5 ssh .exe.xyz 'openclaw gateway restart && openclaw health' ``` Use `--replace-path` when a nested allowlist should become exactly the patch value, for example replacing a Discord channel allowlist: ```bash ssh .exe.xyz 'openclaw config patch --stdin --replace-path "channels.discord.guilds[\"123\"].channels"' < ./discord.patch.json5 ``` See [Discord](/channels/discord) and [Slack](/channels/slack) for full channel config reference. ## Remote access exe.dev handles authentication for remote access. By default, HTTP traffic from port 8000 is forwarded to `https://.exe.xyz` with email auth. ## Updating ```bash openclaw update ``` See [Updating](/install/updating) for channel switches and manual recovery. ## Related - [Remote gateway](/gateway/remote) - [Install overview](/install)