Quick Start

Deploy your own OpenClaw instance in under 60 seconds with Clawdy's one-click setup.

2 min read

Get your own AI coding agent running in the cloud with zero configuration. Clawdy handles server provisioning, security hardening, SSL certificates, and authentication so you can focus on building.

Prerequisites

Before you begin, you'll need:

  • A Clawdy account (sign up at clawdy.app)
  • A modern web browser (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge)

That's it. No SSH keys, no cloud provider accounts, no server configuration required.

Step 1: Create Your Instance

  1. Log in to your Clawdy dashboard
  2. Click Create New Instance
  3. Choose your server specifications:
    • Standard: 4 vCPU, 8GB RAM, 80GB SSD (recommended)
    • Pro: 8 vCPU, 16GB RAM, 160GB SSD (for heavy workloads)
  4. Select your preferred region (closest to you for lowest latency)
  5. Click Deploy

Your instance will be ready in approximately 60 seconds.

Step 2: Connect to OpenClaw

Once deployment completes, you'll see your instance in the dashboard with:

  • Instance URL: https://your-slug.clawdy.app
  • Status: Running (green indicator)

Click Open OpenClaw to launch your AI agent in a new tab. You're now connected to your personal OpenClaw instance!

Step 3: Start Your First Conversation

OpenClaw is ready to help with coding tasks. Try these example prompts:

Create a React component that displays a user profile card with name, email, and avatar
Help me debug this TypeScript error: Type 'string' is not assignable to type 'number'
Write unit tests for my authentication middleware

OpenClaw can:

  • Write and refactor code across 25+ languages
  • Debug errors and suggest fixes
  • Run terminal commands in your instance
  • Create and edit files in your workspace
  • Browse the web for documentation

Tips for Working with OpenClaw

Set Up Your Development Environment

When starting a new project, tell OpenClaw about your preferences:

"When building apps, use bunx path-to-port \pwd`` to set the dev server port. This gives each project a unique port based on its path, so I won't have port conflicts between projects."

"Always start dev servers in a tmux session named after the project, so they persist in the background even if I close the browser."

Useful Prompts to Try

Project setup:

Create a new Next.js project with TypeScript, Tailwind, and set up 
the dev server on a unique port using path-to-port

Background services:

Start the dev server in a tmux session called 'my-app' so it 
runs in the background

Multi-service development:

I need to run frontend on one port and backend on another. 
Set up tmux sessions for each with unique ports.

What's Running on Your Instance

Behind the scenes, your Clawdy instance includes:

ComponentDescription
OpenClaw AgentThe AI coding assistant
Code EditorVS Code Server for browser-based editing
TerminalFull shell access via web browser
File SystemPersistent 80GB+ storage
GitPre-installed for version control

Next Steps

Now that your instance is running, explore these features:

Need Help?