| name | configure |
| description | Check iMessage channel setup and review access policy. Use when the user asks to configure iMessage, asks "how do I set this up" or "who can reach me," or wants to know why texts aren't reaching the assistant. |
| user-invocable | true |
| allowed-tools | ["Read","Bash(ls *)"] |
/imessage:configure — iMessage Channel Setup
There's no token to save — iMessage reads ~/Library/Messages/chat.db
directly. This skill checks whether that works and orients the user on
access policy.
Arguments passed: $ARGUMENTS (unused — this skill only shows status)
Status and guidance
Read state and give the user a complete picture:
-
Full Disk Access — run ls ~/Library/Messages/chat.db. If it fails
with "Operation not permitted", FDA isn't granted. Say: "Grant Full Disk
Access to your terminal (or IDE if that's where Claude Code runs): System
Settings → Privacy & Security → Full Disk Access. The server can't read
chat.db without it."
-
Access — read ~/.claude/channels/imessage/access.json (missing file
= defaults: dmPolicy: "allowlist", empty allowlist). Show:
- DM policy and what it means in one line
- Allowed senders: count, and list the handles
- Pending pairings: count, with codes if any (only if policy is
pairing)
-
What next — end with a concrete next step based on state:
- FDA not granted → the FDA instructions above
- FDA granted, policy is allowlist → "Text yourself from any device
signed into your Apple ID — self-chat always bypasses the gate. To let
someone else through:
/imessage:access allow +15551234567."
- FDA granted, someone allowed → "Ready. Self-chat works; {N} other
sender(s) allowed."
Build the allowlist — don't pair
iMessage reads your personal chat.db. You already know the phone
numbers and emails of people you'd allow — there's no ID-capture problem to
solve. Pairing has no upside here and a clear downside: every contact who
texts this Mac gets an unsolicited auto-reply.
Drive the conversation this way:
- Read the allowlist. Tell the user who's in it (self-chat always works
regardless).
- Ask: "Besides yourself, who should be able to text you through this?"
- "Nobody, just me" → done. The default
allowlist with an empty list
is correct. Self-chat bypasses the gate.
- "My partner / a friend / a couple people" → ask for each handle
(phone like
+15551234567 or email like them@icloud.com) and offer to
run /imessage:access allow <handle> for each. Stay on allowlist.
- Current policy is
pairing → flag it immediately: "Your policy is
pairing, which auto-replies a code to every contact who texts this Mac.
Switch back to allowlist?" and offer /imessage:access policy allowlist. Don't wait to be asked.
- User asks for
pairing → push back. Explain the auto-reply-to-
everyone consequence. If they insist and confirm a dedicated line with
few contacts, fine — but treat it as a one-off, not a recommendation.
Handles are +15551234567 or someone@icloud.com. disabled drops
everything except self-chat.
Implementation notes
- No
.env file for this channel. No token. The only OS-level setup is FDA
plus the one-time Automation prompt when the server first sends (which
can't be checked from here).
access.json is re-read on every inbound message — policy changes via
/imessage:access take effect immediately, no restart.