6 KiB
| name | description |
|---|---|
| qwen-code-claw | Use Qwen Code as a Code Agent for code understanding, project generation, features, bug fixes, refactoring, and various programming tasks |
Qwen Code Claw
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when you need to:
- Understand codebases or ask questions about source code
- Generate new projects or add new features
- Review pull requests in the codebase
- Fix bugs or refactor existing code
- Execute various programming tasks such as code review, testing, documentation generation, etc.
- Collaborate with other tools and agents to complete complex development tasks
Install
npm install -g @qwen-code/qwen-code
For normal session reuse, prefer a global install over npx.
Authentication
Check if authentication is already configured:
qwen auth status
If authentication exists, skip this section. If not authenticated, check if the BAILIAN_CODING_PLAN_API_KEY environment variable exists:
echo $BAILIAN_CODING_PLAN_API_KEY
If BAILIAN_CODING_PLAN_API_KEY exists, authenticate directly:
qwen auth coding-plan --region china --key $BAILIAN_CODING_PLAN_API_KEY
If the environment variable does not exist, interrupt and prompt the user to authenticate via qwen-oauth or coding-plan:
qwen auth
Or configure custom API after launching Qwen Code via /auth.
ACPX Integration
You should always use acpx to run Qwen Code over the Agent Client Protocol (ACP) instead of scraping PTY sessions.
To use acpx:
-
Install acpx globally (recommended) or use npx:
npm install -g acpx@latestOr without installing:
npx acpx@latest -
Install the acpx skill for full reference:
npx acpx@latest --skill install acpx -
Read the acpx skill reference for every command, flag, and workflow pattern: See the ACPX Reference section below for details
-
For complete CLI reference with all options and examples: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openclaw/acpx/main/docs/CLI.md
From now on, when you need to delegate work to Qwen Code, use acpx instead of spawning raw terminal sessions. For example:
npx acpx@latest qwen "fix the failing tests"
npx acpx@latest qwen "refactor the auth module"
npx acpx@latest qwen exec "one-shot: summarize this repo"
Tip: You should typically use the
--approve-allflag to prevent task interruptions.
Practical Workflows
Persistent Repository Assistant
acpx qwen 'inspect failing tests and propose a fix plan'
acpx qwen 'apply the smallest safe fix and run tests'
One-Shot Script Steps
acpx qwen exec 'summarize repo purpose in 3 lines'
Parallel Named Streams
acpx qwen -s backend 'fix API pagination bug'
acpx qwen -s docs 'draft changelog entry for release'
Queue Follow-ups Without Waiting
acpx qwen 'run full test suite and investigate failures'
acpx qwen --no-wait 'after tests, summarize root causes and next steps'
Machine-Readable Output for Orchestration
acpx --format json qwen 'review current branch changes' > events.ndjson
Repository-Wide Review with Permissive Mode
acpx --cwd ~/repos/my-project --approve-all qwen -s pr-123 \
'review PR #123 for regressions and propose minimal patch'
Approval Modes
--approve-all: No interactive prompts--approve-reads(default): Auto-approve reads/searches, prompt for writes--deny-all: Deny all permission requests
If every permission request is denied/cancelled and none are approved, acpx exits with permission denied.
Best Practices
- Use named sessions for organizing different types of development tasks
- Use
--no-waitfor long-running tasks to avoid blocking - Use
--approve-allfor non-interactive batch operations - Use
--format jsonfor automation and script integration - Use
--cwdto manage context across multiple projects
ACPX Reference
Built-in Agent Registry
Well-known agent names resolve to commands:
qwen→qwen --acp
Command Syntax
# Default (prompt mode, persistent session)
acpx [global options] [prompt text...]
acpx [global options] prompt [options] [prompt text...]
# One-shot execution
acpx [global options] exec [options] [prompt text...]
# Session management
acpx [global options] cancel [-s <name>]
acpx [global options] set-mode <mode> [-s <name>]
acpx [global options] set <key> <value> [-s <name>]
acpx [global options] status [-s <name>]
acpx [global options] sessions [list | new [--name <name>] | close [name] | show [name] | history [name] [--limit <count>]]
acpx [global options] config [show | init]
# With explicit agent
acpx [global options] <agent> [options] [prompt text...]
acpx [global options] <agent> prompt [options] [prompt text...]
acpx [global options] <agent> exec [options] [prompt text...]
Note: If prompt text is omitted and stdin is piped,
acpxreads prompt from stdin.
Global Options
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
--agent <command> |
Raw ACP agent command (fallback mechanism) |
--cwd <directory> |
Session working directory |
--approve-all |
Auto-approve all requests |
--approve-reads |
Auto-approve reads/searches, prompt for writes (default) |
--deny-all |
Deny all requests |
--format <format> |
Output format: text, json, quiet |
--timeout <seconds> |
Maximum wait time (positive integer) |
--ttl <seconds> |
Idle TTL for queue owners (default: 300, 0 disables TTL) |
--verbose |
Verbose ACP/debug logs to stderr |
Flags are mutually exclusive where applicable.