¿Qué hace imsg?
Use imsg when an OpenClaw agent must act through the user's local macOS Messages.app account: inspect iMessage/SMS history, choose the correct DM or group, send messages/files, reply, react, vote in polls, or use private-API iMessage features.
Do not use this skill for Telegram, Signal, WhatsApp, Discord, Slack, or for replying inside the current OpenClaw conversation when the configured channel already routes the reply.
Agent Flow
- Resolve the conversation first.
- Choose DM, existing group, or new group.
- Pick the lowest-capability command that can do the requested action.
- Confirm any send or visible state change unless the user already gave exact recipient, content, and action.
- Execute with stable identifiers: prefer
--chat-idfor normal sends/watch/history and--chatchat GUID for bridge actions.
Never infer a recipient from a casual name alone when several chats or handles could match. Show the matched display name, handle(s), group participants, and message text/action before sending.
Host Requirements
- macOS 14+ with Messages.app signed in for send/react/bridge actions.
- Full Disk Access for the process context that runs
imsgor OpenClaw; reads fail without Messages DB access. - Automation permission for Messages.app when using public
send. - Accessibility permission for the process context that runs public
imsg react; it uses System Events UI automation. Bridgetapbackuses private API instead. - Optional Contacts permission for contact-name resolution.
- SMS sends require Text Message Forwarding from the user's iPhone to this Mac.
- Linux reads a copied
chat.dbonly; it cannot send, react, launch Messages.app, mark read, or type.
Resolve Targets
Use --json reads. Output is newline-delimited JSON; use jq -s when jq is available, or consume one object per line directly.
imsg chats --limit 25 --json | jq -s
imsg search --query "dinner" --match contains --json | jq -s
imsg history --chat-id 42 --limit 20 --attachments --json | jq -s
imsg group --chat-id 42 --json
Target rules:
- DM to a phone/email: use
imsg send --towhen the user gave an exact handle, or after a single unambiguous chat match. - Existing DM thread:
imsg send --chat-id <id>is safer than re-resolving a name. - Existing group: inspect with
imsg group --chat-id <id> --json; send with--chat-id, bridge with the chat GUID fromgroup. - New group: use
chat-createonly when the user explicitly asked to create a group or no existing group matches. - Ambiguous group names: confirm participants, not just display name.
- SMS: use
--service smsonly when requested or when iMessage fallback is not desired. SMS relay requires Text Message Forwarding.
Do not make jq a hard prerequisite for the skill; it is only a convenient formatter for examples.
Capability Choice
Use public Messages automation when enough:
- Read/list/search/watch:
chats,group,history,search,watch - Basic text/file send:
send - Standard tapback to most recent incoming message in a chat:
react
Use the private API bridge only for features public automation cannot do:
- Rich replies, text formatting, effects, subjects, multipart sends
- Native Apple Messages polls and poll votes
- Tapback by message GUID or tapback removal
- Edit, unsend, delete, notify anyways
- Read receipts, typing indicators, bridge event watch
- Group create/name/photo/member/leave/delete/mark actions
- Account, whois, nickname checks
Before bridge actions, check:
imsg status --json
If the host supports bridge actions but Messages is not injected yet, ask before running imsg launch. It kills and relaunches Messages.app to inject the bridge, so treat it as a visible state change:
imsg launch
imsg status --json
If SIP, library validation, private entitlement checks, or missing selectors still block the capability, do not ask the user to disable SIP casually. Explain that the requested private-API action is unavailable on this host and offer the closest non-bridge action, if one exists.
DM Scenarios
Exact handle, basic send:
imsg send --to "+14155551212" --text "On my way" --service auto
Known DM thread:
imsg send --chat-id 42 --text "On my way"
imsg send --chat-id 42 --file /path/to/photo.jpg
Force channel only when the user asks:
imsg send --to "+14155551212" --text "green bubble" --service sms
imsg send --to "+14155551212" --text "iMessage only" --service imessage --no-sms-fallback
Threaded reply, formatting, effects, or attachment reply:
imsg send-rich --chat 'iMessage;-;+15551234567' \
--reply-to <message-guid> --text "reply text"
imsg send-rich --chat 'iMessage;-;+15551234567' --text 'hello world' \
--format '[{"start":0,"length":5,"styles":["bold"]}]'
imsg send-rich --chat 'iMessage;-;+15551234567' --text "boom" --effect impact
imsg send-attachment --chat 'iMessage;-;+15551234567' \
--reply-to <message-guid> --file /path/to/file.jpg
Formatting ranges are UTF-16 positions. Supported styles include bold, italic, underline, and strikethrough; use --format-file for generated JSON.
Group Scenarios
Inspect before acting:
imsg group --chat-id 42 --json
imsg history --chat-id 42 --limit 20 --json | jq -s
Send to an existing group:
imsg send --chat-id 42 --text "Works for me"
Bridge reply or poll in an existing group:
imsg send-rich --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' \
--reply-to <message-guid> --text "replying in thread"
imsg poll send --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' \
--question "Dinner?" --option "Pizza" --option "Sushi"
Create or mutate groups only on explicit request:
imsg chat-create --addresses '+15551111111,+15552222222' --name 'Crew' --text 'gm'
imsg chat-name --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' --name 'Renamed'
imsg chat-photo --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' --file /path/to/group.jpg
imsg chat-add-member --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' --address +15553333333
imsg chat-remove-member --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' --address +15553333333
imsg chat-leave --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000'
imsg chat-delete --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000'
imsg chat-mark --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' --read
Group mutations are highly visible. Confirm the exact group and participant list before changing membership, name, photo, read state, leaving, or deleting.
Reactions and Replies
Public react is limited: it reacts to the most recent incoming message in the chat.
imsg react --chat-id 42 --reaction like
imsg react --chat-id 42 --reaction love
imsg react --chat-id 42 --reaction dislike
imsg react --chat-id 42 --reaction laugh
imsg react --chat-id 42 --reaction emphasis
imsg react --chat-id 42 --reaction question
For a specific message GUID or removal, use bridge tapback:
imsg tapback --chat 'iMessage;-;+15551234567' --message <message-guid> --kind love
imsg tapback --chat 'iMessage;-;+15551234567' --message <message-guid> --kind love --remove
Use send-rich --reply-to <message-guid> for threaded replies. Confirm the referenced message if the user says "that" or "the previous one".
Polls
Native Apple Messages polls require the bridge. Creation needs at least two --option values. Voting requires one of --option-id, --option-index, or --option.
Messages renders only the options on a poll balloon; the --question title is not shown to recipients. Set --question (required) plus at least two --option values.
imsg poll send --chat 'iMessage;-;+15551234567' \
--question "Dinner?" --option "Pizza" --option "Sushi"
imsg poll send --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' --reply-to <message-guid> \
--question "Approve?" --option "Yes" --option "No"
imsg poll vote --chat 'iMessage;+;chat0000' \
--poll <poll-message-guid> --option-id <option-id>
Find poll IDs and options with:
imsg history --chat-id 42 --limit 20 --json | jq -s '.[] | select(.poll != null) | {guid, poll}'
Poll vote rows are poll events, not tapbacks; watch --reactions is not required to see them.
Watch and Long-Running Agents
For a short one-off wait, use watch:
imsg watch --chat-id 42 --since-rowid 9000 --json
imsg watch --chat-id 42 --attachments --convert-attachments --json
imsg watch --chat-id 42 --reactions --json
imsg watch --chat-id 42 --bb-events --json
--since-rowid is exclusive. Without it, watch starts at the newest row. watch uses filesystem events plus a low-frequency polling fallback, so it can catch up after missed SQLite sidecar events. Poll objects appear without --reactions.
For a daemon or multi-chat integration, use imsg rpc. It speaks JSON-RPC 2.0 over stdin/stdout. Inspect imsg status --json for rpc_methods before using newer bridge or poll methods.
Safety Rules
- Confirm recipient, chat, and content before every send unless the user's request already contains exact values.
- Confirm visible state changes: read receipts, typing indicators, edits, unsends, deletes, poll votes, tapbacks, group membership, group name/photo, leaving/deleting chats.
- Never send to unknown numbers or ambiguous contact-name matches without approval.
- Confirm attachments exist and are the intended files.
- Prefer E.164 phone numbers; use
--region USor another region only when needed for local formats. - Do not use bridge actions just because they are available; use them only when the requested behavior needs them.