10 commits landed across OpenClaw in 3 hours. The headliner is multi-tenant hosting via fleet cell supervisor — but the patch batch also tightens browser profile security and smooths macOS onboarding.
What Changed
Fleet cell supervisor (#104527). OpenClaw now supports multi-tenant hosting through a fleet cell supervisor architecture. Each tenant gets isolated cell boundaries, letting operators run multiple agent workloads on shared infrastructure without cross-tenant leakage. This is a foundational infra layer for any team running OpenClaw at scale.
Browser profile fixes (#104616, #104601). Two fixes landed for the browser integration layer: host-local profile administration was incorrectly blocked, and stale profile resurrection could orphan state across sessions. Both are patched.
Feishu streaming timeout (#102948). The Feishu channel integration now enforces a 30-second request timeout on streaming-card API calls. Prevents hung cards from blocking downstream message delivery.
macOS cookie-import improvement (#104591). The old browser cookie-import modal is replaced with an inline dashboard banner — fewer clicks, less UI friction for Mac users configuring agent access.
Why It Matters
Multi-tenant hosting is the kind of infrastructure play that signals OpenClaw is targeting enterprise deployments. If you’re running multiple teams or clients on one OpenClaw instance, the cell supervisor eliminates the need for separate deployments. The browser fixes close real security gaps, and the Feishu timeout is a quality-of-life patch for teams using Chinese workplace tooling.
The Takeaway
OpenClaw is investing in isolation primitives and platform maturity. If you evaluated it for multi-team use and hit deployment friction before, this batch addresses several of those blockers. See how it compares in our OpenClaw vs pi-dot-dev comparison.