OpenClaw Consulting
Development

Opsgenie

List and manage Opsgenie alerts and on-call. Incident and on-call from your agent.

Details

Opsgenie skill connects to Opsgenie for alerts, incidents, and on-call schedules. Triage and escalate from conversation.

When to use

Use when the agent should triage Opsgenie alerts or on-call. Requires Opsgenie API; alternative to PagerDuty.

How Opsgenie fits into your OpenClaw setup

Development skills are the workhorses of an OpenClaw setup. They give your assistant the ability to participate in real engineering work — reading and writing code, running tooling, and reporting back in the channel where you already collaborate. Opsgenie belongs to this group, and like most development skills it pays off fastest when it is wired into the projects you touch every day rather than installed and forgotten.

What working with it looks like

A typical session starts in chat: you describe what you need in plain language, and the assistant works out that Opsgenie is the right tool for the job. It runs the work, watches the output, and replies with the result or a follow-up question. Because the conversation happens in Discord, Telegram, or whichever channel you have connected, the full history of what was asked and what was done stays searchable alongside the rest of your team's discussion.

Installing Opsgenie

Getting it running is straightforward: run the command below from the OpenClaw directory and restart your assistant. The one step people skip — and regret — is reading the README first. If the skill needs an API key, a token, or account permissions, sorting that before the first request saves a confusing debugging session.

When the assistant comes back online, give it one easy request that only this skill can handle. If it responds correctly, you are done. If not, you have caught the problem while the install is still fresh in your mind — far better than discovering it mid-task next week.

clawhub install opsgenie

Getting the most out of it

No skill does its best work alone. The assistant routinely chains Opsgenie with other installed capabilities — gathering context with one skill, acting with another, reporting with a third — without being asked to. That is why it pays to choose skills as a toolkit rather than one at a time: each addition makes the others more capable.

If you would rather skip the trial and error, that is exactly what we do. We install and configure OpenClaw, select and tune skills like Opsgenie for your workflow, and build custom skills where the catalogue falls short.

Talk to us about your OpenClaw setup →