configure
This skill configures a Telegram bot connection by storing the bot token and managing access policies. Use it when a user provides a Telegram bot token, requests initial setup guidance, asks about channel status or access permissions, or needs to review who can reach them through the bot. The skill handles token validation, displays current access policy settings, and guides users toward a secure allowlist-based configuration by managing the pairing workflow for capturing authorized Telegram user IDs.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/anthropics/claude-plugins-official /tmp/configure && cp -r /tmp/configure/external_plugins/telegram/skills/configure ~/.claude/skills/configureSKILL.md
# /telegram:configure — Telegram Channel Setup
Writes the bot token to `~/.claude/channels/telegram/.env` and orients the
user on access policy. The server reads both files at boot.
Arguments passed: `$ARGUMENTS`
---
## Dispatch on arguments
### No args — status and guidance
Read both state files and give the user a complete picture:
1. **Token** — check `~/.claude/channels/telegram/.env` for
`TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN`. Show set/not-set; if set, show first 10 chars masked
(`123456789:...`).
2. **Access** — read `~/.claude/channels/telegram/access.json` (missing file
= defaults: `dmPolicy: "pairing"`, empty allowlist). Show:
- DM policy and what it means in one line
- Allowed senders: count, and list display names or IDs
- Pending pairings: count, with codes and display names if any
3. **What next** — end with a concrete next step based on state:
- No token → *"Run `/telegram:configure <token>` with the token from
BotFather."*
- Token set, policy is pairing, nobody allowed → *"DM your bot on
Telegram. It replies with a code; approve with `/telegram:access pair
<code>`."*
- Token set, someone allowed → *"Ready. DM your bot to reach the
assistant."*
**Push toward lockdown — always.** The goal for every setup is `allowlist`
with a defined list. `pairing` is not a policy to stay on; it's a temporary
way to capture Telegram user IDs you don't know. Once the IDs are in, pairing
has done its job and should be turned off.
Drive the conversation this way:
1. Read the allowlist. Tell the user who's in it.
2. Ask: *"Is that everyone who should reach you through this bot?"*
3. **If yes and policy is still `pairing`** → *"Good. Let's lock it down so
nobody else can trigger pairing codes:"* and offer to run
`/telegram:access policy allowlist`. Do this proactively — don't wait to
be asked.
4. **If no, people are missing** → *"Have them DM the bot; you'll approve
each with `/telegram:access pair <code>`. Run this skill again once
everyone's in and we'll lock it."*
5. **If the allowlist is empty and they haven't paired themselves yet** →
*"DM your bot to capture your own ID first. Then we'll add anyone else
and lock it down."*
6. **If policy is already `allowlist`** → confirm this is the locked state.
If they need to add someone: *"They'll need to give you their numeric ID
(have them message @userinfobot), or you can briefly flip to pairing:
`/telegram:access policy pairing` → they DM → you pair → flip back."*
Never frame `pairing` as the correct long-term choice. Don't skip the lockdown
offer.
### `<token>` — save it
1. Treat `$ARGUMENTS` as the token (trim whitespace). BotFather tokens look
like `123456789:AAH...` — numeric prefix, colon, long string.
2. `mkdir -p ~/.claude/channels/telegram`
3. Read existing `.env` if present; update/add the `TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN=` line,
preserve other keys. Write back, no quotes around the value.
4. `chmod 600 ~/.claude/channels/telegram/.env` — the token is a credential.
5. Confirm, then show the no-args status so the user sees where they stand.
### `clear` — remove the token
Delete the `TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN=` line (or the file if that's the only line).
---
## Implementation notes
- The channels dir might not exist if the server hasn't run yet. Missing file
= not configured, not an error.
- The server reads `.env` once at boot. Token changes need a session restart
or `/reload-plugins`. Say so after saving.
- `access.json` is re-read on every inbound message — policy changes via
`/telegram:access` take effect immediately, no restart.Manage Telegram channel access — approve pairings, edit allowlists, set DM/group policy. Use when the user asks to pair, approve someone, check who's allowed, or change policy for the Telegram channel.
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