OpenClaw · Skill
Librenms
Monitor network infrastructure via LibreNMS REST API. Read-only monitoring skill for device status, health sensors, port statistics, and alerts.
Install
Start with the primary install command. Alternate entrypoints are included below for ClawHub and OpenClaw CLI users.
Primary command
clawhub install florianbeer/librenmsClawHub installer
npx clawhub@latest install florianbeer/librenmsOpenClaw CLI
openclaw skills install florianbeer/librenmsDirect OpenClaw install
openclaw install florianbeer/librenmsWhat this skill does
Monitor network infrastructure via LibreNMS REST API. Read-only monitoring skill for device status, health sensors, port statistics, and alerts.
Why it matters
Surfaces LibreNMS data directly in the agent without opening a browser or navigating the web UI.
Typical use cases
- Checking which network devices are currently down
- Reviewing active alerts at the start of a shift
- Pulling CPU and temperature sensors for a specific switch
- Getting port traffic stats during a network incident
- Running a daily health check across all monitored devices
Source instructions
LibreNMS Skill
Monitor network infrastructure via LibreNMS REST API. Read-only monitoring skill for device status, health sensors, port statistics, and alerts.
Configuration
Create ~/.openclaw/credentials/librenms/config.json:
{
"url": "https://librenms.example.com",
"api_token": "your-api-token-here"
}
Or set environment variables:
LIBRENMS_URL— Base URL of your LibreNMS instanceLIBRENMS_TOKEN— API authentication token
Commands
Quick Overview
librenms summary
Dashboard view showing total devices, how many are up/down, and active alert count. Use this first to get a quick status overview.
Device Management
librenms devices # List all devices with status, IP, OS, uptime
librenms down # Show ONLY devices that are down (critical for alerting)
librenms device <hostname> # Detailed info: hardware, serial, location, OS version
Health Monitoring
librenms health <hostname> # Temperature, CPU, memory, disk usage sensors
librenms ports <hostname> # Network interfaces with traffic stats
Alerts
librenms alerts # Show active/unresolved alerts with severity and timestamps
Usage Patterns
Daily health check:
librenms summary && librenms down && librenms alerts
Investigate specific device:
librenms device switch-core-01
librenms health switch-core-01
librenms ports switch-core-01
Quick down-device triage:
librenms down | grep -v "UP"
Important Notes
- All operations are read-only — no device modifications possible
- The script accepts self-signed certificates (-sk flag for curl)
- Status indicators: ● green = up, ● red = down
- Uptime is formatted as human-readable (days/hours instead of seconds)
- Traffic stats are formatted as KB/MB/GB per second
Heartbeat Integration
Check infrastructure health periodically:
# In heartbeat script
if librenms down | grep -q "Devices Down"; then
# Alert on down devices
librenms down
fi
# Check for active alerts
if librenms alerts | grep -q "Active Alerts"; then
librenms alerts
fi
Dependencies
curl— API callsjq— JSON parsingbc— Numeric formatting (optional, for bytes conversion)
API Coverage
Wrapped endpoints:
/api/v0/devices— All devices/api/v0/devices/{hostname}— Single device details/api/v0/devices/{hostname}/health— Health sensors/api/v0/devices/{hostname}/ports— Network ports/api/v0/alerts?state=1— Unresolved alerts
Full API docs: https://docs.librenms.org/API/
Troubleshooting
"Config file not found"
Create ~/.openclaw/credentials/librenms/config.json or set env vars.
"API returned HTTP 401" Check your API token. Generate a new one in LibreNMS under Settings → API.
"Failed to connect" Verify the URL is correct and the LibreNMS instance is reachable. Check firewall rules.
Self-signed cert warnings
The script uses -sk to ignore cert validation (common in LibreNMS setups). If you need strict validation, edit the script and remove the -k flag.