If you give a client “chat/write” access to the gateway (operator.write) but you do not intend to let that client approve exec requests (operator.approvals), affected versions could still let that client approve/deny a pending exec approval by sending the /approve chat command.
This is mainly relevant for shared or multi-client setups where different tokens are intentionally scoped differently. Single-operator installs are typically less impacted.
A gateway client authenticated with a device token scoped only to operator.write (without operator.approvals) could approve/deny pending exec approval requests by sending a chat message containing the built-in /approve command.
exec.approval.resolve is correctly scoped to operator.approvals for direct RPC calls, but the /approve command path invoked it via an internal privileged gateway client.
openclaw (npm): < 2026.2.2openclaw 2026.2.2.efe2a464afcff55bb5a95b959e6bd9ec0fef086e./approve is invoked from gateway clients (webchat/internal channel), it now requires the requesting client to have operator.approvals (or operator.admin).openclaw >= 2026.2.2.commands.text=false) or restrict access to the webchat/control UI.src/auto-reply/reply/commands-approve.tssrc/auto-reply/reply/commands-approve.test.tsThis advisory is kept in draft; once the fixed npm versions are available, it can be published without further edits.
Thanks @yueyueL for reporting.
| Software | From | Fixed in |
|---|---|---|
openclaw
|
- | 2026.2.2 |
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