--- summary: "Linux support + companion app status" read_when: - Looking for Linux companion app status - Planning platform coverage or contributions - Debugging Linux OOM kills or exit 137 on a VPS or container title: "Linux app" --- The Gateway is fully supported on Linux. Node is the recommended runtime; Bun is not recommended (known WhatsApp/Telegram issues). There is no native Linux companion app yet. Contributions are welcome. ## Quick path (VPS) 1. Install Node 24 (recommended) or Node 22.19+ (LTS, still supported). 2. `npm i -g openclaw@latest` 3. `openclaw onboard --install-daemon` 4. From your laptop: `ssh -N -L 18789:127.0.0.1:18789 @` 5. Open `http://127.0.0.1:18789/` and authenticate with the configured shared secret (token by default; password if `gateway.auth.mode` is `"password"`). Full server guide: [Linux Server](/vps). Step-by-step VPS example: [exe.dev](/install/exe-dev). ## Install - [Getting Started](/start/getting-started) - [Install & updates](/install/updating) - Optional: [Bun (experimental)](/install/bun), [Nix](/install/nix), [Docker](/install/docker) ## Gateway service (systemd) Install with one of: ```bash openclaw onboard --install-daemon openclaw gateway install openclaw configure # select "Gateway service" when prompted ``` Repair or migrate an existing install: ```bash openclaw doctor ``` `openclaw gateway install` renders a systemd **user** unit by default. Full service guidance, including the **system**-level unit variant for shared or always-on hosts, lives in the [Gateway runbook](/gateway#supervision-and-service-lifecycle). Write a unit by hand only for a custom setup. Minimal user-unit example (`~/.config/systemd/user/openclaw-gateway[-].service`): ```ini [Unit] Description=OpenClaw Gateway (profile: , v) After=network-online.target Wants=network-online.target StartLimitBurst=5 StartLimitIntervalSec=60 [Service] ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/openclaw gateway --port 18789 Restart=always RestartSec=5 RestartPreventExitStatus=78 TimeoutStopSec=30 TimeoutStartSec=30 SuccessExitStatus=0 143 OOMPolicy=continue KillMode=control-group [Install] WantedBy=default.target ``` Enable it: ```bash systemctl --user enable --now openclaw-gateway[-].service ``` ## Memory pressure and OOM kills On Linux, the kernel picks an OOM victim when a host, VM, or container cgroup runs out of memory. The Gateway is a poor victim because it owns long-lived sessions and channel connections, so OpenClaw biases transient child processes to be killed first when possible. For eligible Linux child spawns, OpenClaw wraps the command in a short `/bin/sh` shim that raises the child's own `oom_score_adj` to `1000`, then `exec`s the real command. This is unprivileged: a process may always raise its own OOM score. Covered child process surfaces: - Supervisor-managed command children - PTY shell children - MCP stdio server children - OpenClaw-launched browser/Chrome processes (via the plugin SDK process runtime) The wrapper is Linux-only and skipped when `/bin/sh` is unavailable, or when the child env sets `OPENCLAW_CHILD_OOM_SCORE_ADJ` to `0`, `false`, `no`, or `off`. Verify a child process: ```bash cat /proc//oom_score_adj ``` Expected value for covered children is `1000`; the Gateway process itself keeps its normal score (usually `0`). The systemd unit's `OOMPolicy=continue` keeps the Gateway service alive when a transient child is selected by the OOM killer instead of marking the whole unit failed and restarting all channels; the failed child/session reports its own error. This does not replace normal memory tuning. If a VPS or container repeatedly kills children, raise the memory limit, reduce concurrency, or add stronger resource controls (systemd `MemoryMax=`, container memory limits). ## Related - [Install overview](/install) - [Linux server](/vps) - [Raspberry Pi](/platforms/raspberry-pi) - [Gateway runbook](/gateway) - [Gateway configuration](/gateway/configuration)