feat(skills): add design-md skill for Google's DESIGN.md spec (#14876)

* feat(config): make tool output truncation limits configurable

Port from anomalyco/opencode#23770: expose a new `tool_output` config
section so users can tune the hardcoded truncation caps that apply to
terminal output and read_file pagination.

Three knobs under `tool_output`:
- max_bytes (default 50_000) — terminal stdout/stderr cap
- max_lines (default 2000) — read_file pagination cap
- max_line_length (default 2000) — per-line cap in line-numbered view

All three keep their existing hardcoded values as defaults, so behaviour
is unchanged when the section is absent. Power users on big-context
models can raise them; small-context local models can lower them.

Implementation:
- New `tools/tool_output_limits.py` reads the section with defensive
  fallback (missing/invalid values → defaults, never raises).
- `tools/terminal_tool.py` MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS now comes from
  get_max_bytes().
- `tools/file_operations.py` normalize_read_pagination() and
  _add_line_numbers() now pull the limits at call time.
- `hermes_cli/config.py` DEFAULT_CONFIG gains the `tool_output` section
  so `hermes setup` writes defaults into fresh configs.
- Docs page `user-guide/configuration.md` gains a "Tool Output
  Truncation Limits" section with large-context and small-context
  example configs.

Tests (18 new in tests/tools/test_tool_output_limits.py):
- Default resolution with missing / malformed / non-dict config.
- Full and partial user overrides.
- Coercion of bad values (None, negative, wrong type, str int).
- Shortcut accessors delegate correctly.
- DEFAULT_CONFIG exposes the section with the right defaults.
- Integration: normalize_read_pagination clamps to the configured
  max_lines.

* feat(skills): add design-md skill for Google's DESIGN.md spec

Built-in skill under skills/creative/ that teaches the agent to author,
lint, diff, and export DESIGN.md files — Google's open-source
(Apache-2.0) format for describing a visual identity to coding agents.

Covers:
- YAML front matter + markdown body anatomy
- Full token schema (colors, typography, rounded, spacing, components)
- Canonical section order + duplicate-heading rejection
- Component property whitelist + variants-as-siblings pattern
- CLI workflow via 'npx @google/design.md' (lint/diff/export/spec)
- Lint rule reference including WCAG contrast checks
- Common YAML pitfalls (quoted hex, negative dimensions, dotted refs)
- Starter template at templates/starter.md

Package verified live on npm (@google/design.md@0.1.1).
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@ -487,6 +487,26 @@ DEFAULT_CONFIG = {
# 100K chars ≈ 2535K tokens across typical tokenisers. # 100K chars ≈ 2535K tokens across typical tokenisers.
"file_read_max_chars": 100_000, "file_read_max_chars": 100_000,
# Tool-output truncation thresholds. When terminal output or a
# single read_file page exceeds these limits, Hermes truncates the
# payload sent to the model (keeping head + tail for terminal,
# enforcing pagination for read_file). Tuning these trades context
# footprint against how much raw output the model can see in one
# shot. Ported from anomalyco/opencode PR #23770.
#
# - max_bytes: terminal_tool output cap, in chars
# (default 50_000 ≈ 12-15K tokens).
# - max_lines: read_file pagination cap — the maximum `limit`
# a single read_file call can request before
# being clamped (default 2000).
# - max_line_length: per-line cap applied when read_file emits a
# line-numbered view (default 2000 chars).
"tool_output": {
"max_bytes": 50_000,
"max_lines": 2000,
"max_line_length": 2000,
},
"compression": { "compression": {
"enabled": True, "enabled": True,
"threshold": 0.50, # compress when context usage exceeds this ratio "threshold": 0.50, # compress when context usage exceeds this ratio

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@ -0,0 +1,196 @@
---
name: design-md
description: Author, validate, diff, and export DESIGN.md files — Google's open-source format spec that gives coding agents a persistent, structured understanding of a design system (tokens + rationale in one file). Use when building a design system, porting style rules between projects, generating UI with consistent brand, or auditing accessibility/contrast.
version: 1.0.0
author: Hermes Agent
license: MIT
metadata:
hermes:
tags: [design, design-system, tokens, ui, accessibility, wcag, tailwind, dtcg, google]
related_skills: [popular-web-designs, excalidraw, architecture-diagram]
---
# DESIGN.md Skill
DESIGN.md is Google's open spec (Apache-2.0, `google-labs-code/design.md`) for
describing a visual identity to coding agents. One file combines:
- **YAML front matter** — machine-readable design tokens (normative values)
- **Markdown body** — human-readable rationale, organized into canonical sections
Tokens give exact values. Prose tells agents *why* those values exist and how to
apply them. The CLI (`npx @google/design.md`) lints structure + WCAG contrast,
diffs versions for regressions, and exports to Tailwind or W3C DTCG JSON.
## When to use this skill
- User asks for a DESIGN.md file, design tokens, or a design system spec
- User wants consistent UI/brand across multiple projects or tools
- User pastes an existing DESIGN.md and asks to lint, diff, export, or extend it
- User asks to port a style guide into a format agents can consume
- User wants contrast / WCAG accessibility validation on their color palette
For purely visual inspiration or layout examples, use `popular-web-designs`
instead. This skill is for the *formal spec file* itself.
## File anatomy
```md
---
version: alpha
name: Heritage
description: Architectural minimalism meets journalistic gravitas.
colors:
primary: "#1A1C1E"
secondary: "#6C7278"
tertiary: "#B8422E"
neutral: "#F7F5F2"
typography:
h1:
fontFamily: Public Sans
fontSize: 3rem
fontWeight: 700
lineHeight: 1.1
letterSpacing: "-0.02em"
body-md:
fontFamily: Public Sans
fontSize: 1rem
rounded:
sm: 4px
md: 8px
lg: 16px
spacing:
sm: 8px
md: 16px
lg: 24px
components:
button-primary:
backgroundColor: "{colors.tertiary}"
textColor: "#FFFFFF"
rounded: "{rounded.sm}"
padding: 12px
button-primary-hover:
backgroundColor: "{colors.primary}"
---
## Overview
Architectural Minimalism meets Journalistic Gravitas...
## Colors
- **Primary (#1A1C1E):** Deep ink for headlines and core text.
- **Tertiary (#B8422E):** "Boston Clay" — the sole driver for interaction.
## Typography
Public Sans for everything except small all-caps labels...
## Components
`button-primary` is the only high-emphasis action on a page...
```
## Token types
| Type | Format | Example |
|------|--------|---------|
| Color | `#` + hex (sRGB) | `"#1A1C1E"` |
| Dimension | number + unit (`px`, `em`, `rem`) | `48px`, `-0.02em` |
| Token reference | `{path.to.token}` | `{colors.primary}` |
| Typography | object with `fontFamily`, `fontSize`, `fontWeight`, `lineHeight`, `letterSpacing`, `fontFeature`, `fontVariation` | see above |
Component property whitelist: `backgroundColor`, `textColor`, `typography`,
`rounded`, `padding`, `size`, `height`, `width`. Variants (hover, active,
pressed) are **separate component entries** with related key names
(`button-primary-hover`), not nested.
## Canonical section order
Sections are optional, but present ones MUST appear in this order. Duplicate
headings reject the file.
1. Overview (alias: Brand & Style)
2. Colors
3. Typography
4. Layout (alias: Layout & Spacing)
5. Elevation & Depth (alias: Elevation)
6. Shapes
7. Components
8. Do's and Don'ts
Unknown sections are preserved, not errored. Unknown token names are accepted
if the value type is valid. Unknown component properties produce a warning.
## Workflow: authoring a new DESIGN.md
1. **Ask the user** (or infer) the brand tone, accent color, and typography
direction. If they provided a site, image, or vibe, translate it to the
token shape above.
2. **Write `DESIGN.md`** in their project root using `write_file`. Always
include `name:` and `colors:`; other sections optional but encouraged.
3. **Use token references** (`{colors.primary}`) in the `components:` section
instead of re-typing hex values. Keeps the palette single-source.
4. **Lint it** (see below). Fix any broken references or WCAG failures
before returning.
5. **If the user has an existing project**, also write Tailwind or DTCG
exports next to the file (`tailwind.theme.json`, `tokens.json`).
## Workflow: lint / diff / export
The CLI is `@google/design.md` (Node). Use `npx` — no global install needed.
```bash
# Validate structure + token references + WCAG contrast
npx -y @google/design.md lint DESIGN.md
# Compare two versions, fail on regression (exit 1 = regression)
npx -y @google/design.md diff DESIGN.md DESIGN-v2.md
# Export to Tailwind theme JSON
npx -y @google/design.md export --format tailwind DESIGN.md > tailwind.theme.json
# Export to W3C DTCG (Design Tokens Format Module) JSON
npx -y @google/design.md export --format dtcg DESIGN.md > tokens.json
# Print the spec itself — useful when injecting into an agent prompt
npx -y @google/design.md spec --rules-only --format json
```
All commands accept `-` for stdin. `lint` returns exit 1 on errors. Use the
`--format json` flag and parse the output if you need to report findings
structurally.
### Lint rule reference (what the 7 rules catch)
- `broken-ref` (error) — `{colors.missing}` points at a non-existent token
- `duplicate-section` (error) — same `## Heading` appears twice
- `invalid-color`, `invalid-dimension`, `invalid-typography` (error)
- `wcag-contrast` (warning/info) — component `textColor` vs `backgroundColor`
ratio against WCAG AA (4.5:1) and AAA (7:1)
- `unknown-component-property` (warning) — outside the whitelist above
When the user cares about accessibility, call this out explicitly in your
summary — WCAG findings are the most load-bearing reason to use the CLI.
## Pitfalls
- **Don't nest component variants.** `button-primary.hover` is wrong;
`button-primary-hover` as a sibling key is right.
- **Hex colors must be quoted strings.** YAML will otherwise choke on `#` or
truncate values like `#1A1C1E` oddly.
- **Negative dimensions need quotes too.** `letterSpacing: -0.02em` parses as
a YAML flow — write `letterSpacing: "-0.02em"`.
- **Section order is enforced.** If the user gives you prose in a random order,
reorder it to match the canonical list before saving.
- **`version: alpha` is the current spec version** (as of Apr 2026). The spec
is marked alpha — watch for breaking changes.
- **Token references resolve by dotted path.** `{colors.primary}` works;
`{primary}` does not.
## Spec source of truth
- Repo: https://github.com/google-labs-code/design.md (Apache-2.0)
- CLI: `@google/design.md` on npm
- License of generated DESIGN.md files: whatever the user's project uses;
the spec itself is Apache-2.0.

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@ -0,0 +1,99 @@
---
version: alpha
name: MyBrand
description: One-sentence description of the visual identity.
colors:
primary: "#0F172A"
secondary: "#64748B"
tertiary: "#2563EB"
neutral: "#F8FAFC"
on-primary: "#FFFFFF"
on-tertiary: "#FFFFFF"
typography:
h1:
fontFamily: Inter
fontSize: 3rem
fontWeight: 700
lineHeight: 1.1
letterSpacing: "-0.02em"
h2:
fontFamily: Inter
fontSize: 2rem
fontWeight: 600
lineHeight: 1.2
body-md:
fontFamily: Inter
fontSize: 1rem
lineHeight: 1.5
label-caps:
fontFamily: Inter
fontSize: 0.75rem
fontWeight: 600
letterSpacing: "0.08em"
rounded:
sm: 4px
md: 8px
lg: 16px
full: 9999px
spacing:
xs: 4px
sm: 8px
md: 16px
lg: 24px
xl: 48px
components:
button-primary:
backgroundColor: "{colors.tertiary}"
textColor: "{colors.on-tertiary}"
rounded: "{rounded.sm}"
padding: 12px
button-primary-hover:
backgroundColor: "{colors.primary}"
textColor: "{colors.on-primary}"
card:
backgroundColor: "{colors.neutral}"
textColor: "{colors.primary}"
rounded: "{rounded.md}"
padding: 24px
---
## Overview
Describe the voice and feel of the brand in one or two paragraphs. What mood
does it evoke? What emotional response should a user have on first impression?
## Colors
- **Primary ({colors.primary}):** Core text, headlines, high-emphasis surfaces.
- **Secondary ({colors.secondary}):** Supporting text, borders, metadata.
- **Tertiary ({colors.tertiary}):** Interaction driver — buttons, links,
selected states. Use sparingly to preserve its signal.
- **Neutral ({colors.neutral}):** Page background and surface fills.
## Typography
Inter for everything. Weight and size carry hierarchy, not font family. Tight
letter-spacing on display sizes; default tracking on body.
## Layout
Spacing scale is a 4px baseline. Use `md` (16px) for intra-component gaps,
`lg` (24px) for inter-component gaps, `xl` (48px) for section breaks.
## Shapes
Rounded corners are modest — `sm` on interactive elements, `md` on cards.
`full` is reserved for avatars and pill badges.
## Components
- `button-primary` is the only high-emphasis action per screen.
- `card` is the default surface for grouped content. No shadow by default.
## Do's and Don'ts
- **Do** use token references (`{colors.primary}`) instead of literal hex in
component definitions.
- **Don't** introduce colors outside the palette — extend the palette first.
- **Don't** nest component variants. `button-primary-hover` is a sibling,
not a child.

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@ -0,0 +1,152 @@
"""Tests for tools.tool_output_limits.
Covers:
1. Default values when no config is provided.
2. Config override picks up user-supplied max_bytes / max_lines /
max_line_length.
3. Malformed values (None, negative, wrong type) fall back to defaults
rather than raising.
4. Integration: the helpers return what the terminal_tool and
file_operations call paths will actually consume.
Port-tracking: anomalyco/opencode PR #23770
(feat(truncate): allow configuring tool output truncation limits).
"""
from __future__ import annotations
from unittest.mock import patch
import pytest
from tools import tool_output_limits as tol
class TestDefaults:
def test_defaults_match_previous_hardcoded_values(self):
assert tol.DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES == 50_000
assert tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINES == 2000
assert tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH == 2000
def test_get_limits_returns_defaults_when_config_missing(self):
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value={}):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits == {
"max_bytes": tol.DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES,
"max_lines": tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINES,
"max_line_length": tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH,
}
def test_get_limits_returns_defaults_when_config_not_a_dict(self):
# load_config should always return a dict but be defensive anyway.
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value="not a dict"):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits["max_bytes"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES
def test_get_limits_returns_defaults_when_load_config_raises(self):
def _boom():
raise RuntimeError("boom")
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", side_effect=_boom):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits["max_lines"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINES
class TestOverrides:
def test_user_config_overrides_all_three(self):
cfg = {
"tool_output": {
"max_bytes": 100_000,
"max_lines": 5000,
"max_line_length": 4096,
}
}
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value=cfg):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits == {
"max_bytes": 100_000,
"max_lines": 5000,
"max_line_length": 4096,
}
def test_partial_override_preserves_other_defaults(self):
cfg = {"tool_output": {"max_bytes": 200_000}}
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value=cfg):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits["max_bytes"] == 200_000
assert limits["max_lines"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINES
assert limits["max_line_length"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH
def test_section_not_a_dict_falls_back(self):
cfg = {"tool_output": "nonsense"}
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value=cfg):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits["max_bytes"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES
class TestCoercion:
@pytest.mark.parametrize("bad", [None, "not a number", -1, 0, [], {}])
def test_invalid_values_fall_back_to_defaults(self, bad):
cfg = {"tool_output": {"max_bytes": bad, "max_lines": bad, "max_line_length": bad}}
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value=cfg):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits["max_bytes"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES
assert limits["max_lines"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINES
assert limits["max_line_length"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH
def test_string_integer_is_coerced(self):
cfg = {"tool_output": {"max_bytes": "75000"}}
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value=cfg):
limits = tol.get_tool_output_limits()
assert limits["max_bytes"] == 75_000
class TestShortcuts:
def test_individual_accessors_delegate_to_get_tool_output_limits(self):
cfg = {
"tool_output": {
"max_bytes": 111,
"max_lines": 222,
"max_line_length": 333,
}
}
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value=cfg):
assert tol.get_max_bytes() == 111
assert tol.get_max_lines() == 222
assert tol.get_max_line_length() == 333
class TestDefaultConfigHasSection:
"""The DEFAULT_CONFIG in hermes_cli.config must expose tool_output so
that ``hermes setup`` and default installs stay in sync with the
helpers here."""
def test_default_config_contains_tool_output_section(self):
from hermes_cli.config import DEFAULT_CONFIG
assert "tool_output" in DEFAULT_CONFIG
section = DEFAULT_CONFIG["tool_output"]
assert isinstance(section, dict)
assert section["max_bytes"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES
assert section["max_lines"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINES
assert section["max_line_length"] == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH
class TestIntegrationReadPagination:
"""normalize_read_pagination uses get_max_lines() — verify the plumbing."""
def test_pagination_limit_clamped_by_config_value(self):
from tools.file_operations import normalize_read_pagination
cfg = {"tool_output": {"max_lines": 50}}
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value=cfg):
offset, limit = normalize_read_pagination(offset=1, limit=1000)
# limit should have been clamped to 50 (the configured max_lines)
assert limit == 50
assert offset == 1
def test_pagination_default_when_config_missing(self):
from tools.file_operations import normalize_read_pagination
with patch("hermes_cli.config.load_config", return_value={}):
offset, limit = normalize_read_pagination(offset=10, limit=100000)
# Clamped to default MAX_LINES (2000).
assert limit == tol.DEFAULT_MAX_LINES
assert offset == 10

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@ -292,10 +292,15 @@ def normalize_read_pagination(offset: Any = DEFAULT_READ_OFFSET,
Tool schemas declare minimum/maximum values, but not every caller or Tool schemas declare minimum/maximum values, but not every caller or
provider enforces schemas before dispatch. Clamp here so invalid values provider enforces schemas before dispatch. Clamp here so invalid values
cannot leak into sed ranges like ``0,-1p``. cannot leak into sed ranges like ``0,-1p``.
The upper bound on ``limit`` comes from ``tool_output.max_lines`` in
config.yaml (defaults to the module-level ``MAX_LINES`` constant).
""" """
from tools.tool_output_limits import get_max_lines
max_lines = get_max_lines()
normalized_offset = max(1, _coerce_int(offset, DEFAULT_READ_OFFSET)) normalized_offset = max(1, _coerce_int(offset, DEFAULT_READ_OFFSET))
normalized_limit = _coerce_int(limit, DEFAULT_READ_LIMIT) normalized_limit = _coerce_int(limit, DEFAULT_READ_LIMIT)
normalized_limit = max(1, min(normalized_limit, MAX_LINES)) normalized_limit = max(1, min(normalized_limit, max_lines))
return normalized_offset, normalized_limit return normalized_offset, normalized_limit
@ -414,12 +419,14 @@ class ShellFileOperations(FileOperations):
def _add_line_numbers(self, content: str, start_line: int = 1) -> str: def _add_line_numbers(self, content: str, start_line: int = 1) -> str:
"""Add line numbers to content in LINE_NUM|CONTENT format.""" """Add line numbers to content in LINE_NUM|CONTENT format."""
from tools.tool_output_limits import get_max_line_length
max_line_length = get_max_line_length()
lines = content.split('\n') lines = content.split('\n')
numbered = [] numbered = []
for i, line in enumerate(lines, start=start_line): for i, line in enumerate(lines, start=start_line):
# Truncate long lines # Truncate long lines
if len(line) > MAX_LINE_LENGTH: if len(line) > max_line_length:
line = line[:MAX_LINE_LENGTH] + "... [truncated]" line = line[:max_line_length] + "... [truncated]"
numbered.append(f"{i:6d}|{line}") numbered.append(f"{i:6d}|{line}")
return '\n'.join(numbered) return '\n'.join(numbered)

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@ -1805,7 +1805,8 @@ def terminal_tool(
pass pass
# Truncate output if too long, keeping both head and tail # Truncate output if too long, keeping both head and tail
MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS = 50000 from tools.tool_output_limits import get_max_bytes
MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS = get_max_bytes()
if len(output) > MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS: if len(output) > MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS:
head_chars = int(MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS * 0.4) # 40% head (error messages often appear early) head_chars = int(MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS * 0.4) # 40% head (error messages often appear early)
tail_chars = MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS - head_chars # 60% tail (most recent/relevant output) tail_chars = MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS - head_chars # 60% tail (most recent/relevant output)

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@ -0,0 +1,92 @@
"""Configurable tool-output truncation limits.
Ported from anomalyco/opencode PR #23770 (``feat(truncate): allow
configuring tool output truncation limits``).
OpenCode hardcoded ``MAX_LINES = 2000`` and ``MAX_BYTES = 50 * 1024``
as tool-output truncation thresholds. Hermes-agent had the same
hardcoded constants in two places:
* ``tools/terminal_tool.py`` ``MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS = 50000`` (terminal
stdout/stderr cap)
* ``tools/file_operations.py`` ``MAX_LINES = 2000`` /
``MAX_LINE_LENGTH = 2000`` (read_file pagination cap + per-line cap)
This module centralises those values behind a single config section
(``tool_output`` in ``config.yaml``) so power users can tune them
without patching the source. The existing hardcoded numbers remain as
defaults, so behaviour is unchanged when the config key is absent.
Example ``config.yaml``::
tool_output:
max_bytes: 100000 # terminal output cap (chars)
max_lines: 5000 # read_file pagination + truncation cap
max_line_length: 2000 # per-line length cap before '... [truncated]'
The limits reader is defensive: any error (missing config file, invalid
value type, etc.) falls back to the built-in defaults so tools never
fail because of a malformed config.
"""
from __future__ import annotations
from typing import Any, Dict
# Hardcoded defaults — these match the pre-existing values, so adding
# this module is behaviour-preserving for users who don't set
# ``tool_output`` in config.yaml.
DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES = 50_000 # terminal_tool.MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS
DEFAULT_MAX_LINES = 2000 # file_operations.MAX_LINES
DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH = 2000 # file_operations.MAX_LINE_LENGTH
def _coerce_positive_int(value: Any, default: int) -> int:
"""Return ``value`` as a positive int, or ``default`` on any issue."""
try:
iv = int(value)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
return default
if iv <= 0:
return default
return iv
def get_tool_output_limits() -> Dict[str, int]:
"""Return resolved tool-output limits, reading ``tool_output`` from config.
Keys: ``max_bytes``, ``max_lines``, ``max_line_length``. Missing or
invalid entries fall through to the ``DEFAULT_*`` constants. This
function NEVER raises.
"""
try:
from hermes_cli.config import load_config
cfg = load_config() or {}
section = cfg.get("tool_output") if isinstance(cfg, dict) else None
if not isinstance(section, dict):
section = {}
except Exception:
section = {}
return {
"max_bytes": _coerce_positive_int(section.get("max_bytes"), DEFAULT_MAX_BYTES),
"max_lines": _coerce_positive_int(section.get("max_lines"), DEFAULT_MAX_LINES),
"max_line_length": _coerce_positive_int(
section.get("max_line_length"), DEFAULT_MAX_LINE_LENGTH
),
}
def get_max_bytes() -> int:
"""Shortcut for terminal-tool callers that only need the byte cap."""
return get_tool_output_limits()["max_bytes"]
def get_max_lines() -> int:
"""Shortcut for file-ops callers that only need the line cap."""
return get_tool_output_limits()["max_lines"]
def get_max_line_length() -> int:
"""Shortcut for file-ops callers that only need the per-line cap."""
return get_tool_output_limits()["max_line_length"]

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@ -431,6 +431,35 @@ file_read_max_chars: 30000
The agent also deduplicates file reads automatically — if the same file region is read twice and the file hasn't changed, a lightweight stub is returned instead of re-sending the content. This resets on context compression so the agent can re-read files after their content is summarized away. The agent also deduplicates file reads automatically — if the same file region is read twice and the file hasn't changed, a lightweight stub is returned instead of re-sending the content. This resets on context compression so the agent can re-read files after their content is summarized away.
## Tool Output Truncation Limits
Three related caps control how much raw output a tool can return before Hermes truncates it:
```yaml
tool_output:
max_bytes: 50000 # terminal output cap (chars)
max_lines: 2000 # read_file pagination cap
max_line_length: 2000 # per-line cap in read_file's line-numbered view
```
- **`max_bytes`** — When a `terminal` command produces more than this many characters of combined stdout/stderr, Hermes keeps the first 40% and last 60% and inserts a `[OUTPUT TRUNCATED]` notice between them. Default `50000` (≈12-15K tokens across typical tokenisers).
- **`max_lines`** — Upper bound on the `limit` parameter of a single `read_file` call. Requests above this are clamped so a single read can't flood the context window. Default `2000`.
- **`max_line_length`** — Per-line cap applied when `read_file` emits the line-numbered view. Lines longer than this are truncated to this many chars followed by `... [truncated]`. Default `2000`.
Raise the limits on models with large context windows that can afford more raw output per call. Lower them for small-context models to keep tool results compact:
```yaml
# Large context model (200K+)
tool_output:
max_bytes: 150000
max_lines: 5000
# Small local model (16K context)
tool_output:
max_bytes: 20000
max_lines: 500
```
## Git Worktree Isolation ## Git Worktree Isolation
Enable isolated git worktrees for running multiple agents in parallel on the same repo: Enable isolated git worktrees for running multiple agents in parallel on the same repo: