Files

@copilotkit/channels-slack

The Slack PlatformAdapter for @copilotkit/channels. It connects a Slack workspace to any AG-UI agent: ingress via Bolt (Socket Mode), egress as Block Kit rendered from the @copilotkit/channels-ui JSX vocabulary, plus text streaming, opaque-id interactions, and HITL.

You write your UI as JSX once (@copilotkit/channels-ui) and drive the bot with @copilotkit/channels; this package is the only one that talks to Slack.

Install

pnpm add @copilotkit/channels-slack @copilotkit/channels @copilotkit/channels-ui

Quickstart

import { createBot } from "@copilotkit/channels";
import {
  slack,
  defaultSlackTools,
  defaultSlackContext,
} from "@copilotkit/channels-slack";

const bot = createBot({
  adapters: [
    slack({
      botToken: process.env.SLACK_BOT_TOKEN!, // xoxb-…
      appToken: process.env.SLACK_APP_TOKEN!, // xapp-… (Socket Mode)
    }),
  ],
  agent: (threadId) => makeAgent(threadId),
  tools: [...defaultSlackTools, ...appTools], // lookup_slack_user + your tools
  context: [...defaultSlackContext, ...appContext], // tagging/mrkdwn/thread guidance
});

bot.onMention(({ thread }) => thread.runAgent());

await bot.start();

slack(opts) returns a SlackAdapter. By default it runs in Socket Mode (socketMode: true) — outbound WebSocket only, no public URL needed. HTTP mode (socketMode: false) needs signingSecret and a port. The Slack listener pre-filters ingress to the turns the bot should answer. By default, DMs are conversational, app mentions respond in-thread, and plain replies in channel/private-channel threads require another app mention.

Required env

Var Token Purpose
SLACK_BOT_TOKEN xoxb- Bot token for the Web API.
SLACK_APP_TOKEN xapp- App-level token for Socket Mode.

Response routing

Use respondTo to choose which Slack message events become onMention turns:

Surface Default behavior Option
Direct messages (message.im) Respond respondTo.directMessages
App mentions (app_mention) Respond in-thread respondTo.appMentions / appMentions.reply
Plain channel/private-channel replies Ignore unless mentioned respondTo.threadReplies: "afterBotReply" for legacy
Assistant pane Separate default-on API assistant; not controlled by respondTo
Slash commands, reactions, interactions Explicit trigger paths Not controlled by respondTo
// Default routing made explicit.
slack({
  botToken,
  appToken,
  respondTo: {
    directMessages: true,
    appMentions: { reply: "thread" },
    threadReplies: "mentionsOnly",
  },
});
// Legacy owned-thread continuation.
slack({
  botToken,
  appToken,
  respondTo: {
    threadReplies: "afterBotReply",
  },
});

For the default mention-only thread behavior, subscribe to app_mention and message.im events. Add message.channels and message.groups only when you enable respondTo.threadReplies: "afterBotReply" and want Slack to deliver plain channel/private-channel thread replies.

What it provides

JSX → Block Kit rendering

renderSlackMessage(ir) / renderBlockKit(ir) translate the @copilotkit/channels-ui vocabulary to Block Kit: Message → blocks, Header → header, Section → section (mrkdwn), Markdown → markdownToMrkdwn, Field(s) → section.fields, Context → context, Actions → actions, Button → button (action_id = minted opaque id), Select → static_select, Input → plain_text_input, Image → image, Divider → divider.

Per-element budget

Slack caps every element. The renderer degrades by truncate-with-overflow / clamp — it never silently drops content. Limits live in SLACK_LIMITS:

Limit Value Element
blocksPerMessage 50 blocks per message
sectionText 3000 section body chars
headerText 150 header chars
fieldsPerSection 10 fields per section
fieldText 2000 field chars
actionsElements 25 controls per actions row
contextElements 10 elements per context block
buttonText 75 button label chars
actionId 255 action_id chars
buttonValue 2000 button value chars
selectOptions 100 options per select

Colored cards

<Message accent="#RRGGBB"> renders as a Slack attachment with a colored left bar (Block Kit blocks have no native accent, so accented messages are posted as attachments: [{ color, blocks }]).

Streaming

By default, replies stream via Slack's native streaming API (chat.startStream / appendStream / stopStream) wherever the reply target is a thread — a true streaming UI rendering raw markdown (so real tables and fenced code render natively). A whole turn streams into one message: text from every step accumulates into a single bubble (Slack documents only a 12k char limit per append, with no cumulative cap, so there is no multi-message splitting), and tool calls surface as native in-message task_update chunks (a "timeline" of Using …Used … steps) instead of separate status messages. Workspaces where structured chunks aren't available degrade automatically to :wrench: status rows.

Flat DMs (no thread) and any workspace where the streaming API is unavailable fall back automatically to the shipped chat.update transport (throttled edits, multi-message chunking, mid-stream bracket auto-close, Markdown → mrkdwn translation). Pass streaming: "legacy" to force the chat.update transport everywhere. The fallback is transparent — opting in can never break a bot: the first startStream failure marks the workspace legacy and redoes the stream the old way.

Feedback buttons (opt-in)

Pass feedback to attach Slack's native AI feedback row (👍/👎, context_actions + feedback_buttons) to each finalized streamed reply. Clicks are routed straight to your handler — they never reach the engine's interaction dispatch. Without feedback, no buttons are shown.

slack({
  botToken,
  appToken,
  feedback: {
    onFeedback: ({ sentiment, user, channel, messageTs }) => {
      recordFeedback({ sentiment, user, channel, messageTs }); // your telemetry
    },
    // positiveLabel / negativeLabel are optional
  },
});

The row is attached at chat.stopStream (the only streaming call that accepts blocks), so it appears on the native path only — the legacy chat.update fallback omits it.

Native "is thinking…" status (everywhere)

While the agent runs, the bot shows Slack's native loading status (assistant.threads.setStatus: "is thinking…") on every thread-anchored reply — channel @-mentions, threads it owns, DMs, and the assistant pane. Slack now accepts this method with the ordinary chat:write scope (no assistant:write needed just for the loading state), so it works for channel-based apps too. The status auto-clears when the reply streams in. Tool progress is surfaced per surface: the pane uses live composer status ("is using `tool`…"); elsewhere it uses the native task_update timeline (or :wrench: rows on older workspaces). Set assistant: false to opt out of the status (and pane) entirely.

Assistant pane (agent-native, default-on)

When the Slack app has the Agents & AI Apps toggle (an assistant_view manifest block + the assistant:write scope and assistant_thread_* events), the adapter activates Slack's assistant pane with zero config:

  • Opening the pane posts a greeting + tappable prompt chips, and each pane conversation is its own thread (replies stay in-thread).
  • While the agent runs, native composer status is shown (see above), with "is using `tool`…" per tool call.
  • The pane thread is auto-titled from the first message.

Customize via the assistant option, or set assistant: false to disable pane handling entirely. Apps without the toggle behave exactly as before — the pane machinery lies dormant.

slack({
  botToken,
  appToken,
  assistant: {
    greeting: "Hi! I can triage issues, search docs, and more.",
    suggestedPrompts: [
      { title: "Triage my open issues", message: "Triage my open issues" },
    ],
  },
});

// Dynamic behavior when a user opens the pane (layers on top of the defaults):
bot.onThreadStarted(async ({ thread, user }) => {
  await thread.setSuggestedPrompts(promptsFor(user));
  // await thread.setTitle(...) is also available
});

Interactions (ack-first)

Every Slack block_actions click is acked immediately (within the ≤3s deadline, ackDeadlineMs = 3000), then decodeInteraction extracts the opaque minted id (ck:…), any tiny bind() value, and the message ref, and hands an InteractionEvent to the engine. The token carries only the opaque id — no props or secrets. Unrelated clicks decode to events the bot harmlessly ignores.

Human-in-the-loop

Use thread.awaitChoice(<Picker .../>) to post an interactive message and block until a click resolves it; the resolved value is the clicked control's value. Agent interrupts (on_interrupt) are captured by the run renderer and dispatched to your onInterrupt handler, which posts a picker; the click resumes the agent via thread.resume(value).

Sender-profile resolution & file download

The adapter resolves each turn's Slack user id to a richer PlatformUser ({ id, name?, email? }), cached per id. Inbound files can be downloaded and delivered to the agent as multimodal content parts (buildFileContentParts); a tool can post a file back out via thread.postFile(...).

Built-ins

  • defaultSlackTools — ships lookup_slack_user so the agent can resolve a name/handle/email to a <@USERID> mention. Spread into tools.
  • defaultSlackContext — tagging procedure, Markdown-vs-mrkdwn guidance, and the Slack thread/DM conversation model. Spread into context.

Tool context

There is no Slack-specific tool context. Tools receive the single shared BotToolContext from @copilotkit/channels ({ thread, message?, user?, signal?, platform }) and reach Slack power only through capability-gated thread methods, which this adapter backs:

  • thread.getMessages() — the current thread's messages (via conversations.replies), each a ThreadMessage ({ user?, text, ts?, isBot? }).
  • thread.lookupUser(query) — resolve a name/handle/email to a PlatformUser.
  • thread.postFile({ bytes, filename, title?, altText? }) — upload a file back into the thread (files.uploadV2).

This keeps tools portable: define them with defineBotTool({...}) and they work against any adapter that advertises the same capabilities.

Running the demo

This package is the library. A runnable end-to-end demo wiring all of the above against a real workspace lives in examples/slack.

Slash commands

The adapter forwards every slash command Slack delivers to the engine, which routes it to the matching bot.onCommand handler (and ignores unregistered ones). Register handlers on the engine — see @copilotkit/channels:

bot.onCommand({
  name: "triage",
  description: "Summarize the thread and propose issues.",
  async handler({ thread, text, user }) {
    await thread.runAgent({ prompt: `Triage: ${text}` });
  },
});

You must also declare each command in the Slack app config ("Slash Commands" / app manifest) with the same name — Slack won't deliver an unregistered command, even over Socket Mode. Args arrive as free text (ctx.text); the optional options schema is for surfaces with native structured args (e.g. Discord) and is unused on Slack. The adapter does not implement registerCommands, so the engine skips it (Slack matches commands dynamically rather than registering them up front).

OAuth bot scopes

The following bot token scopes are required or relevant depending on the features your app uses:

Scope Required for
chat:write Posting messages, streaming, ephemeral messages (chat.postEphemeral), and opening modals (views.open) — all share this single scope.
reactions:read Reading reactions; subscribe to reaction_added / reaction_removed events in the app manifest to receive them.
reactions:write Adding or removing reactions via reactions.add / reactions.remove.
assistant:write Native streaming task_update tool-timeline chunks and the assistant pane. (The "is thinking…" status works with chat:write alone.)
files:write Uploading files via thread.postFile().
users:read Resolving Slack user profiles (name, email) via users.info.
users:read.email Resolving user email addresses.
channels:history Reading channel thread messages via conversations.replies.
groups:history Reading private-channel thread messages via conversations.replies.
im:history Reading DM thread messages via conversations.replies.
mpim:history Reading group-DM thread messages via conversations.replies.

Notes

  • Modals (views.open, view_submission, view_closed): handled via chat:write — no additional scope is needed.
  • Ephemeral messages (chat.postEphemeral): covered by chat:write.
  • Reactions (reactions:read / reactions:write): these scopes alone are not enough — you must also subscribe to the reaction_added and reaction_removed events in the Slack app manifest so that Slack delivers the events to your bot.

What's NOT in v1

  • OAuth / multi-workspace install (single bot token only)
  • Durable (Redis/DB) ActionStore — in-memory only; actions expire on restart
  • Proactive posting (bot replies only to turns it's part of)

Exports

slack, SlackAdapter, SlackAdapterOptions, SlackAssistantOptions, SlackRespondToOptions; createRunRenderer; decodeInteraction, conversationKeyOf; renderBlockKit, renderSlackMessage, SLACK_LIMITS; defaultSlackTools, lookupSlackUserTool, defaultSlackContext (+ the individual context entries); markdownToMrkdwn; and the preserved mechanics (SlackConversationStore, MessageStream, ChunkedMessageStream, NativeMessageStream, attachSlackListener, attachAssistant, SanitizingHttpAgent, buildFileContentParts, autoCloseOpenMarkdown, and supporting types).