signal.SIGKILL / os.killpg don't exist on Windows. The watchdog is only
spawned on POSIX (wrap site gates on os.name), but guard via getattr with
a plain terminate/kill fallback so an accidental Windows import can't
AttributeError.
Two fixes on top of the salvaged parent-death watchdog:
- Apply the watchdog wrap AFTER the OSV malware preflight so the check
inspects the real npx/uvx package instead of the python wrapper
(the wrap previously made the preflight a silent no-op for every
stdio server).
- The real server runs in its own process group under the watchdog, so
the graceful-shutdown killpg no longer reached it; the watchdog now
forwards SIGTERM/SIGINT to the child's group, keeping wedged servers
killable on clean shutdown.
A stdio MCP server (e.g. `npx -y mcp-remote <url>`) is spawned as a direct
child of the Hermes process. Existing teardown (MCPServerTask.shutdown() /
_kill_orphaned_mcp_children()) reaps it correctly on a clean exit, but a
kill -9 / crash / force-quit of the Hermes process skips that path entirely
-- the child (and its own descendants, e.g. mcp-remote's spawned node
process) is orphaned and keeps running. Repeated ungraceful restarts pile up
N orphaned processes racing to hold the same upstream SSE session, producing
errors like 'Invalid request parameters' on legitimate reconnects.
macOS/Linux have no portable equivalent of prctl(PR_SET_PDEATHSIG) at the
Python subprocess level, so this adds a thin supervisor
(tools/mcp_stdio_watchdog.py) that:
- execs the real command as its own child in its own process group
- passes stdin/stdout/stderr through untouched (MCP stdio protocol
talks directly over those streams)
- polls the original spawning PID with the same orphan-detection
algorithm already proven in tui_gateway/slash_worker.py (ppid
comparison + psutil creation-time guard against PID reuse)
- SIGTERM-then-SIGKILL's the child's process group the moment the
original parent is gone
Wired into _run_stdio via a new _wrap_command_with_watchdog() helper,
POSIX-only (matches the existing killpg-based cleanup's platform scope),
fails open (any error resolving pid/create-time falls back to the
unwrapped command) so this can never be the reason a working MCP server
stops starting.
Verified: reproduced the exact orphan scenario standalone (fake parent
process spawns watchdog + fake long-running MCP child, kill -9 the fake
parent, confirm the watchdog reaps the child within its poll window with
zero leaked processes). Updated test_mcp_tool_issue_948.py's resolved-path
assertion to check the watchdog-wrapped command instead of the raw
resolved binary. Full test_mcp_tool.py + test_mcp_stability.py +
test_mcp_tool_issue_948.py suite: 232 passed. Full -k mcp sweep across the
whole test tree: 1003 passed, 2 skipped, 0 failed.