* feat(delegation): single-task delegate_task always runs in the background
The model no longer decides whether a subagent runs in the background — a
single-task delegate_task from the top-level agent is now always dispatched
async, so the parent turn returns immediately and the subagent's result
re-enters the conversation when it finishes.
- run_agent._dispatch_delegate_task (the live model path) forces
background=True for top-level single-task calls; the schema-level
`background` param is ignored.
- A batch (tasks with >1 item) stays synchronous (fan-out can't go async).
- A delegation from an orchestrator subagent (depth > 0) stays synchronous —
it needs its workers' results within its own turn.
- The function-level default is unchanged, so direct Python callers/tests keep
the historical synchronous behavior.
- On async-pool capacity rejection, single-task now falls through to a
synchronous run instead of erroring (the child stays attached for interrupt
propagation; detach happens only on a successful dispatch).
- Schema `background` param marked deprecated/ignored; tool description
updated to state the always-background single-task rule.
* feat(delegation): all delegate_task fan-out runs in the background
Extend the always-background behavior to the full fan-out. A batch is now
dispatched as N independent async subagents (one handle each), instead of
running synchronously. Single task and batch both return immediately; each
subagent's result re-enters the conversation as its own message when it
finishes.
- delegate_task: when background is set, loop over ALL built children and
dispatch each via dispatch_async_delegation; return a combined handle block
(count + per-task delegation_ids). Children the async pool rejects (at
capacity) run synchronously inline and are reported alongside the dispatched
handles, so nothing is silently dropped.
- run_agent._dispatch_delegate_task + registry handler: force background for
any top-level model delegation (single OR batch); orchestrator subagents
(depth > 0) still run synchronously since they need workers' results within
their own turn.
- Removed the v1 'batch async not supported' rejection.
- Tool description updated: BOTH MODES RUN IN THE BACKGROUND.
- Tests updated to assert batch fan-out dispatches each task async (verified
E2E: 3-task batch -> 3 independent completion-queue events).
* fix(delegation): background fan-out joins and returns one consolidated block
Correct the fan-out semantics: a backgrounded batch is dispatched as ONE
async unit (one handle, one async-pool slot), not N independent dispatches.
The unit runs all children in parallel, waits on every one, and emits a
SINGLE completion event carrying the consolidated per-task results. The chat
is never blocked; when all subagents finish, their full summaries re-enter
the conversation together as one message.
- async_delegation.dispatch_async_delegation_batch + _finalize_batch: a batch
occupies one slot; its runner returns the combined {results:[...]} dict and
one event with the full results list is pushed to the completion queue.
- delegate_tool: extract the sync execution+aggregation into
_execute_and_aggregate(); background dispatches it via the batch unit and
returns one handle; on pool-capacity rejection it runs the batch inline.
- process_registry._format_async_delegation: render a consolidated multi-task
block (TASK i/N + per-task summary) when the event carries is_batch/results.
- Tests updated; E2E verified: 3-task batch -> immediate return -> one combined
completion block with all three summaries.
test_telegram_webhook_secret reads telegram adapter source by path; point it
at plugins/platforms/telegram/adapter.py. test_windows_native_support
npm-spawn parametrization referenced gateway/platforms/whatsapp.py; point it at
plugins/platforms/whatsapp/adapter.py.
Salvage of PR #41284 onto current main. Relocates the last 9 inline messaging
adapters (+ satellites: telegram_network, feishu_comment/_rules/meeting_invite,
wecom_crypto, wecom_callback) from gateway/platforms/ into self-contained
bundled plugins under plugins/platforms/<x>/, discovered via the platform
registry. Strips the per-platform core touchpoints from gateway/run.py,
gateway/config.py, hermes_cli/gateway.py, hermes_cli/setup.py, and
tools/send_message_tool.py.
Carries forward the migration fixes (explicit enabled:false honored,
get_connected_platforms forces discovery, plugin is_connected via
gateway.get_env_value, logs --component gateway matches plugins.platforms.*,
matrix hidden on Windows).
Additionally ports config keys main added since the PR base: the matrix
plugin's _apply_yaml_config now also covers allowed_users,
ignore_user_patterns, process_notices, and session_scope (the inline
gateway/config.py matrix block gained these in the 1340 commits the PR sat
open; they would otherwise have been silently dropped on deletion).
Route Signal send paths through shared markdown formatting helpers and render markdown bullets consistently as Unicode bullets. Add coverage for Signal formatting and send_message integration.
_build_fal_payload and _build_fal_edit_payload assemble the request and then
filter it down to the model's supports / edit_supports whitelist. That filter
also covers prompt (and image_urls for edits), which every FAL endpoint
requires. Today all model configs happen to list those keys, but a single
config that omits one would silently produce a request with no prompt or no
source images — a broken generation with no error.
Always keep the mandatory keys regardless of the whitelist so a missing
whitelist entry can only drop optional knobs, never the prompt or the images.
MCP Streamable HTTP servers that garbage-collect idle sessions on a short
TTL (e.g. Unreal Engine's editor MCP, ~15s) were unusable: the keepalive
was hardcoded at 180s, so the session was always dead by the time it ran,
and every idle tool call then landed on an expired session and paid the
full reconnect path (observed hangs of 113-143s until interrupt, bounded
only by the 300s tool_timeout).
Two coordinated, backward-compatible changes:
- Add per-server `keepalive_interval` (config.yaml, not an env var per the
contribution rubric). Default 180s — byte-identical to the old hardcoded
value when unset — floored at 5s. Servers with short session TTLs set it
below their TTL so the session stays warm.
- Switch the keepalive probe from `list_tools()` to `ping` (the MCP base
protocol liveness primitive). On large servers `list_tools` pulled ~1 MB
every cycle (830 tools = 1,068,041 bytes); `ping` is ~55 bytes and works
uniformly across tool/prompt/resource servers. Tool-list changes still
arrive out-of-band via notifications/tools/list_changed -> _refresh_tools.
`ping` is an OPTIONAL utility, so to guarantee zero regression for a
tool-capable server that doesn't implement it: the first -32601 latches
`_ping_unsupported` and the probe falls back to the pre-ping `list_tools`
path for that connection (no reconnect loop). The latch resets on each
fresh connection (_discover_tools, all transport paths) so a server that
gains ping support after a reconnect is re-probed with the cheap path.
Non-(-32601) ping errors propagate as genuine liveness failures.
Verified end-to-end against a live Unreal MCP server (idle 22s past the
~15s TTL -> post-idle tool call returns in 0.31s, no teardown) and with a
simulated ping-less tool server driving the real keepalive loop (ping once,
list_tools thereafter, no reconnect). 25/25 unit tests pass.
Note: a separate upstream defect (modelcontextprotocol/python-sdk#2604)
still tears down the whole session when one tool-call POST returns 4xx;
that is not addressed here.
Second review pass (Codex + Hermes subagent). Codex reproduced a real race with
a two-thread harness; both converged on the remaining issues.
- Generation-aware publish (fixes a lost-update race): two refresh callers (the
late-refresh daemon and the between-turns prologue around turn 1) could each
compute a snapshot outside the lock; a SLOWER caller holding an OLDER registry
generation could acquire the publish lock after a newer caller and clobber it,
deleting just-landed tools. refresh_agent_mcp_tools now captures
registry._generation before computing and refuses to publish a stale set;
agent._tool_snapshot_generation tracks the published generation.
- Context-engine routing names (_context_engine_tool_names) are now staged on a
local and published atomically with the snapshot, and only claimed when this
rebuild actually appended the schema — matching agent_init's dedup so a
registry/plugin tool of the same name keeps its own dispatch. (Previously
mutated live, before the publish lock, and on no-change refreshes.)
- CLI /reload-mcp: self.enabled_toolsets is resolved once at startup, so a
server newly ENABLED in config mid-session wasn't picked up (TUI already
re-resolved). Merge now-connected MCP server names into the override (unless
the user pinned all/*), mirroring startup, and keep self.enabled_toolsets in
sync. Closes the CLI/TUI parity hole.
- ACP (acp_adapter/server.py) routed through the shared helper — it was a 5th
sibling rebuild that re-injected memory tools but NOT context-engine tools and
bypassed the atomic/name-diff path (inert today, fragile).
- mcp_startup._resolve_discovery_timeout pulls its default from DEFAULT_CONFIG
(single source of truth) instead of a stale hardcoded 5.0 literal.
- Tests: stale-generation-no-clobber, _skip_mcp_refresh honored, timeout
fallback uses DEFAULT_CONFIG.
Consolidated findings from three independent reviewers (Codex, Claude Code, a
Hermes subagent w/ the hermes-agent-dev skill):
- BLOCKING: refresh_agent_mcp_tools rebuilt only the registry subset, silently
dropping post-build-injected memory-provider (mem0/honcho/…) and context-
engine (lcm_*) tools on every refresh. Now additive-preserving: re-applies
the same injectors agent_init uses, staged on locals and published atomically.
- Re-injection now honors the #5544 enabled_toolsets gate for context-engine
tools, so a restricted-toolset platform can't get lcm_* leaked back in.
- Atomic read-diff-publish under one lock: the returned `added` set and the
(tools, valid_tool_names) pair are consistent even under concurrent callers
(no half-swap, no TOCTOU).
- background_review fork opts out (_skip_mcp_refresh) so its byte-identical
tools[] cache parity with the parent is preserved.
- CLI /reload-mcp routed through the shared helper (was a 4th divergent copy
with the same clobber bug + missing disabled_toolsets).
- Explicit reloads (TUI RPC + CLI) pass enabled_override so a server the user
just enabled in config this session is picked up; automatic paths reuse the
agent's build-time selection.
- mcp_discovery_timeout default 5.0 -> 1.5s: correctness now comes from the
between-turns refresh, so the startup wait is only a small turn-1 UX bump
rather than a heavy dead-server latency penalty.
- has_registered_mcp_tools checks registered TOOLS (not connected servers) so a
zero-tool/prompt-only server doesn't make the per-turn hook fire forever.
- Tests: rewrote the thread-safety test to actually exercise the write path
(alternating tool sets), added the #5544-gate regression, the memory/context
preservation regression, and a "callable next turn via valid_tool_names"
contract; removed a dead monkeypatch line.
MCP servers that connect after the agent's one-time tool snapshot were
invisible for the whole session. Two root causes, fixed together:
1. The startup discovery wait was a flat 0.75s. HTTP/OAuth servers
commonly take 2-6s on a cold connect, so they missed the window and
their tools never entered the agent's snapshot. `thread.join(timeout)`
already returns the instant discovery completes, so raising the bound
costs ~0s for the common case (no MCP / fast servers) and only ever
blocks for a genuinely-pending server, capped so a dead server can't
freeze startup. The bound is now configurable via
`mcp_discovery_timeout` (config.yaml, default 5.0s).
2. Three call sites duplicated the agent tool-snapshot rebuild (the TUI
`reload.mcp` RPC, the gateway reload, and the TUI late-binding refresh
thread), and the late-refresh detected changes by tool COUNT — missing
an equal-size add/remove swap. Consolidated into one shared
`tools.mcp_tool.refresh_agent_mcp_tools(agent)` helper that diffs by
tool NAME, mutates the agent under a lock (thread-safe), and respects
the agent's own enabled/disabled toolsets.
The late-binding refresh keeps its pre-first-turn cache-safety guard:
it never rebuilds the tool list once a turn has started, so the cached
prompt prefix is never invalidated mid-conversation.
Tests: new tests/tools/test_refresh_agent_mcp_tools.py covers the
name-based diff, in-place mutation, agent-scoped filtering, thread
safety, and the config-driven discovery bound (incl. instant-return
when nothing is pending). 75 passed across the touched areas.
Wires support for the MCP `elicitation/create` request (Python SDK 1.11+)
so MCP servers can ask the user to confirm sensitive operations
mid-tool-call (payment authorization, OAuth confirmation, etc.) instead
of failing closed or requiring out-of-band biometrics.
Behavior:
- `tools/mcp_tool.py` adds `ElicitationHandler`, attached per server task
and passed to `ClientSession` as `elicitation_callback`. Form-mode
requests route through the existing approval system; URL-mode requests
decline cleanly (out of scope for this pass).
- `tools/approval.py` adds `request_elicitation_consent()`, which dispatches
to whichever surface owns the active session — `_await_gateway_decision`
for Telegram / Slack / etc. (so the approval prompt lands on the right
platform), `prompt_dangerous_approval` for CLI / TUI. Fails closed on
timeout, missing notify_cb, or exception.
- The MCP tool wrapper snapshots `contextvars.copy_context()` into
`MCPServerTask._pending_call_context` before each `session.call_tool`
and clears it after. The recv-loop task that dispatches incoming
`elicitation/create` requests does not inherit the agent task's
contextvars (HERMES_SESSION_PLATFORM and friends), so without the
bridge `_is_gateway_approval_context()` returns False on every
gateway session and the elicitation falls through to a CLI prompt
that has no TTY → fail-closed decline. The handler now reads the
snapshot via its `owner` back-reference and replays it through
`Context.copy().run(...)` so attribution survives the task hop.
Tests (`tests/tools/test_mcp_elicitation.py`):
- form-mode accept / decline / cancel
- URL-mode declined without prompting
- exception in approval system → decline
- timeout in approval → cancel
- context-bridge regression tests (replay observed in consent call,
missing-context fallback, multiple-replay safety, owner with
cleared `_pending_call_context`)
Verified end-to-end against pay's MCP server on macOS: agent message
arrives via Telegram, agent calls `mcp_pay_curl` against a paid endpoint,
pay returns 402, ElicitationHandler routes the approval prompt back to
the originating Telegram chat, user replies in TG, the curl tool signs
and completes.
Platforms tested: macOS 14 (darwin/arm64). No Unix-only syscalls
introduced; Windows footgun checker passes on the touched files.
The xAI TTS REST endpoint (POST /v1/tts) accepts 'speed' (0.7-1.5)
and 'optimize_streaming_latency' (0/1/2) parameters, but the Hermes
built-in xAI provider was reading neither from config nor sending
either in the request body. Add them as tts.xai.speed and
tts.xai.optimize_streaming_latency config knobs (with global
tts.speed / tts.optimize_streaming_latency fallbacks).
- speed: float, clamped to 0.7-1.5. 1.0 (the API default) is omitted
from the request body to preserve the existing minimal-payload
contract.
- optimize_streaming_latency: int, clamped to 0-2. 0 (best quality,
the API default) is omitted from the request body.
Resolver order: tts.xai.<knob> overrides the global tts.<knob>.
The previous xAI auto-speech-tag tests asserted on the local
pause-only fallback and only passed because call_llm silently
returns None in the test environment. They gave zero coverage of
the new auxiliary-rewrite path added in the previous commit.
Add tests that:
- mock agent.auxiliary_client.call_llm and pin down the new contract
(auxiliary rewriter output wins over the local fallback)
- verify the system prompt lists every documented inline + wrapping
tag and uses BBCode-style [/tag] closing syntax
- cover markdown-fence stripping (with and without language hint)
- exercise the local fallback on rewriter exception, empty response,
None response, and missing-choices response
- confirm call_llm is NOT invoked when the input already has
explicit speech tags, or is empty / whitespace-only
- replace the end-to-end test that asserted on the silent-fallback
output with one that mocks the rewriter and asserts the
rewriter's tagged text is what reaches the xAI TTS API
The built-in Piper provider (tts.provider: piper, Python piper-tts
package) already constructs piper.SynthesisConfig for the advanced
tuning knobs, but did not forward speaker_id from the user config.
This wires tts.piper.speaker_id through to SynthesisConfig.speaker_id
so multi-speaker ONNX models (e.g. libritts_r) can be addressed via
config without dropping to the command-provider path.
Changes:
- Add speaker_id to the has_advanced tuple so setting it triggers
SynthesisConfig construction (same gating as the other knobs).
- Pass speaker_id=speaker_id to SynthesisConfig. Defaults to 0
(Piper's own default; single-speaker models ignore the field).
- Tolerant parse: bad input (non-int strings, lists, dicts) is
dropped to 0 instead of raising. Booleans are rejected outright
(True/False would silently coerce to 1/0 and hide a config
mistake). Mirrors the same shape as the command-provider's
_resolve_command_tts_optional_number helper.
speaker_id is applied per-call via syn_config.speaker_id, so the
PiperVoice cache key is intentionally left as just (model, cuda) --
the same loaded model serves all speakers. Tests cover the
config knob, the tolerant parse, and the no-reload invariant.
sentence_silence is intentionally not added here: the Python
piper-tts SynthesisConfig does not expose that field (CLI-only).
The Discord fix (previous commit) handles dict-shaped clarify choices at the
Discord adapter only. The same dict-repr leak originates upstream at
tools/clarify_tool.py's str(c).strip() normalization — the single
platform-agnostic point both the CLI and every gateway adapter flow through.
When an LLM emits [{"description": "..."}] instead of bare strings, str(c)
produced {'description': '...'} which leaked onto the CLI panel
(cli.py:13048/13081), was returned verbatim as the user's answer
(cli.py:11945), and hit Telegram's numbered list too.
Add _flatten_choice (same label->description->text->title unwrap as the
Discord adapter, name/value excluded, keyless dicts dropped) and apply it at
the normalization line. Fixes CLI + Telegram + all platforms at the root;
the Discord smart-truncation now operates on already-clean text.
Adds johnjacobkenny to AUTHOR_MAP for the salvaged commit.
* feat(image-gen): add image-to-image / editing to image_generate
Brings image generation to parity with video generation: the unified
image_generate tool now edits/transforms a source image (image-to-image)
when given image_url / reference_image_urls, routing to each backend's
edit endpoint, exactly as video_generate routes to image-to-video.
- ImageGenProvider ABC: generate() gains keyword-only image_url +
reference_image_urls; new capabilities() declares modalities +
max_reference_images (defaults to text-only, backward compatible).
success_response gains a modality field; adds normalize_reference_images.
- image_generate tool: schema exposes image_url + reference_image_urls;
dynamic schema reflects the active model's actual edit capability so the
agent knows when image_url is honored. Handler + plugin dispatch forward
the new inputs; legacy/text-only providers get a clear modality_unsupported
error instead of silently dropping the source image.
- In-tree FAL: 7 models gain edit endpoints (flux-2-klein, flux-2-pro,
nano-banana-pro, gpt-image-1.5, gpt-image-2, ideogram/v3, qwen-image)
with per-model edit_supports whitelists + reference caps; routes to the
/edit endpoint and skips the upscaler for edits.
- Plugins: openai (images.edit, 16 refs), xai (/v1/images/edits via
grok-imagine-image-quality, JSON body per xAI docs), krea
(image_style_references, 10 refs). openai-codex stays text-only and
rejects edits with an actionable error.
- Tests: 15 new (payload, routing, dispatch forwarding, dynamic schema,
capabilities); updated 2 change-detector/lambda tests for the new schema.
- Docs: image-generation feature page, image-gen provider plugin guide,
tools reference.
* fix(image-gen): preserve legacy passthrough in fal/krea plugin tests
Two existing plugin tests asserted pre-image-to-image behavior:
- fal: forward image_url/reference_image_urls only when supplied, so a
text-to-image delegation stays byte-identical (no None kwargs).
- krea: keep dict-shaped image_style_references refs verbatim (the unified
string refs go through normalize_reference_images; legacy non-string ref
objects pass through unchanged) — fixes KeyError when callers pass the
richer Krea ref-object shape.
* fix(image-gen): clearer not-capable message for text-to-image-only models
When a text-to-image-only model (incl. gpt-image-2 on the Codex OAuth path,
which can't do editing through the Responses image_generation tool) gets a
source image, say 'this model is not capable of image-to-image / editing —
provide a text-only prompt' rather than sending the user shopping for other
backends. Applies to the openai-codex guard, the in-tree FAL no-edit-endpoint
error, and the dynamic tool-schema text-only line.
When a worker calls kanban_create from inside a session that has a
persistent delivery channel, the originating session is now subscribed
to the new task's completion/block events automatically. The agent
that dispatched the task gets notified instead of having to poll.
- Gateway sessions (telegram/discord/slack): HERMES_SESSION_PLATFORM +
HERMES_SESSION_CHAT_ID ContextVars, set by the messaging gateway.
- TUI / desktop sessions: HERMES_SESSION_KEY in the subprocess env.
The TUI notification poller keys on platform='tui' + chat_id=<key>.
- CLI / cron / test: no persistent channel, no subscription.
Gated by kanban.auto_subscribe_on_create in config.yaml (default True).
Disable to mirror pre-feature behaviour — users who want explicit
kanban_notify-subscribe calls per task can set it to false. This
config gate addresses the design concern that got PR #19718 reverted
upstream (unconditional implicit auto-subscribe on tool-driven
kanban_create was too aggressive for orchestrator users).
HERMES_SESSION_ID is intentionally not a fallback channel — it is
set by ACP/agent subprocess telemetry for every invocation, not just
TUI, so treating it as a notification target would auto-subscribe
every CLI session and re-introduce the over-eager behaviour.
The kanban_create response now includes a 'subscribed' bool so
orchestrators can react if subscription failed (e.g. by falling
back to explicit kanban_notify-subscribe or to polling).
Includes 6 tests covering the gateway / TUI / CLI / partial-context /
gated / add_notify_sub-failure paths. All 90 tests in
test_kanban_tools.py pass; 509 broader kanban tests pass.
The memory tool was strictly one-op-per-call. With the store running near
its char limit by design, a new add that would overflow gets rejected with
'consolidate now, then retry' -- but the model could not consolidate and add
in one call. It had to remove/replace across several turns, then retry the
add, each turn re-sending the whole conversation context. Expensive thrash.
Add an 'operations' array: a list of add/replace/remove ops applied
atomically against the FINAL char budget. The model frees space and adds new
entries in ONE call, even when an add alone would overflow. All-or-nothing:
any bad op aborts the whole batch, nothing written.
Root-cause note: the two agent-level memory interception sites
(agent_runtime_helpers.py, tool_executor.py) silently dropped any param not
in their explicit kwarg list, so 'operations' never reached the handler and
batch calls failed with 'Unknown action None'. Both now pass it through and
bridge each add/replace op to external memory providers.
Also: success response is now terminal (done=true + 'do not repeat' note,
no full-entries echo that invited re-edits); schema rewritten to lead with
the batch mechanism and an explicit one-shot stop rule (2138 -> 1476 chars).
Live-verified: near-full consolidate-and-add went 7 calls -> 1 call,
stable across 3 reps. 103 memory/approval tests + 398 background-review/
run_agent tests green; 6 new batch tests added.
The salvaged guard allowed _rmtree_writable(SKILLS_DIR) itself. No call
site ever passes the root — every site passes a skill subdir or its .bak
sibling — so allowing the root only preserves the #48200 footgun (a dest
that collapses to the root wipes every installed skill). Require a strict
strict-child relationship and update the test that documented the
nonexistent 'full reset' capability.
Defense-in-depth fix for the silent wipe of ~/.hermes/ documented in
#48200. A `hermes update --yes` run silently destroyed a user's
.env, MEMORY.md, kanban.db, custom skills, and scripts. Two changes:
1. `_rmtree_writable` in tools/skills_sync.py now refuses to rmtree
anything outside SKILLS_DIR (the HERMES_HOME/skills/ root).
All five call sites pass paths under SKILLS_DIR, so the guard is
a no-op for current code and a loud, recoverable failure for
any future regression (bad path join, malicious bundled
manifest, stale path in scope after an exception).
2. The default `updates.pre_update_backup` flips from false to
true in hermes_cli/config.py. A few minutes of zip per update
is negligible compared to silent total data loss. Still
overridable; --no-backup still works for one-off opt-out.
Five new tests in TestRmtreeWritableScopeGuard (root path,
hermes home, sibling dir, skills root itself, subdir) plus a
flipped `test_default_enabled_creates_backup` in test_backup.py.
178/178 tests pass in the two affected files. Public method
signatures unchanged, no test-stub blast radius.
Closes#48200
Review feedback from egilewski:
1. Remove trailing whitespace from test docstring and mock patches (lines 1430, 1469, 1476, 1482)
2. Expand test coverage: also verify ANTHROPIC_API_KEY is stripped (not just OPENAI_API_KEY)
Changes:
- Remove trailing whitespace from test file
- Add ANTHROPIC_API_KEY to test environment
- Add assertion verifying ANTHROPIC_API_KEY is stripped from cua-driver subprocess env
- Syntax verified: python3 -m py_compile tests/tools/test_computer_use.py ✓
- Use _sanitize_subprocess_env() to filter Hermes-managed credentials
from the cua-driver subprocess environment (issue #37878)
- Prevents credential exfiltration to the third-party cua-driver binary
- Aligns with existing pattern used by browser-tool and other tools
- Add regression test to verify environment sanitization
The cua-driver is a lower-trust MCP subprocess per SECURITY.md §2.3.
Its inherited environment is now scrubbed by default, removing provider
API keys, gateway tokens, and platform credentials that should not leak
to third-party binaries.
Fixes#37878
Exercises the real sync pipeline (no mocked comparison logic): a pristine
synced skill is not flagged; an edited one is listed and diffed (modified +
added files); an unknown skill returns not-ok; and `reset --restore` clears
the modified state so revert and discovery stay consistent.
The install method (docker/git/pip/...) describes the *running binary*, but
detect_install_method() read it from $HERMES_HOME/.install_method — a shared
DATA directory. The Docker docs deliberately bind-mount $HERMES_HOME
(~/.hermes:/opt/data) so config/sessions/memory persist and can be shared with
a host-side Desktop/CLI install.
When a containerized gateway and a host install share one $HERMES_HOME, the
home-scoped stamp is a single slot describing two installs: the published image
stamps 'docker' on every boot, the host install then reads 'docker' and the
in-app updater refuses to run 'hermes update' ("doesn't apply inside the Docker
container"). Reinstalling the Desktop app from the DMG doesn't help because the
contaminated stamp is re-read every time.
Fix (option 1 — code-scoped stamp):
- detect_install_method() reads <install tree>/.install_method first (next to
the running code, immune to the shared data dir). It falls back to the legacy
$HERMES_HOME stamp for back-compat, but IGNORES a 'docker' home stamp when
not actually containerized — so already-poisoned shared homes self-heal.
- stamp_install_method() writes the code-scoped stamp.
- install.sh stamps $INSTALL_DIR instead of $HERMES_HOME.
- Dockerfile bakes 'docker' into /opt/hermes/.install_method at build time
(inside the immutable block); stage2-hook.sh no longer writes the home stamp
and proactively removes a stale 'docker' one to heal existing shared homes.
Genuine containers still resolve to 'docker' (baked stamp, or legacy home stamp
honored when containerized). Unstamped installs in generic containers still fall
through to git/pip (preserves the #34397 fix).
* feat(search_files): path-grouped lossless densification of content matches
Content-mode search_files results repeat the {path,line,content} JSON keys
and the full path string for every match. Group consecutive same-path matches
under one path header with indented '<line>: <content>' rows — lossless (every
path/line/content byte preserved), self-describing (matches_format key), and
readable by the model with no decode step.
57.8% mean token reduction on real search_files content outputs (422-output
corpus), fires on 97% of them. Gated at >=5 matches; below that the verbose
array is left untouched. Default to_dict(densify=False) is unchanged, so no
other caller is affected.
ripgrep emits matches path-ordered, so consecutive grouping never reorders
results.
* test: accept densify kwarg in _FakeSearchResult.to_dict
The search loop-detection tests stub SearchResult with a fake whose
to_dict() must mirror the real signature now that it takes densify=.
* test(search_files): edge-case losslessness battery for densification
Adversarial single-line content (colons, indentation, unicode/emoji, empty,
trailing whitespace, quotes+commas), paths with spaces, and an explicit
one-line-per-match invariant documenting the ripgrep contract the format
relies on (0/6775 real match contents contained a newline).
* feat(mcp): raise default tool-call timeout 120s -> 300s
Port from openai/codex#28234. Long-running MCP tools (web fetches,
sandboxed builds, deep-research servers) routinely exceed 120s, causing
spurious timeout failures. Codex bumped its default MCP tool timeout from
120 to 300 for the same reason.
- _DEFAULT_TOOL_TIMEOUT 120 -> 300 in tools/mcp_tool.py (per-server
'timeout' config override unchanged)
- update test_default_timeout assertion
- document the default in mcp-config-reference.md
* refactor: remove agent-callable send_message tool
The agent should not decide on its own to fire off cross-platform
messages or reactions. Outbound platform messaging is handled outside
the agent loop — cron delivery, the gateway kanban notifier
(dashboard-toggled), and the `hermes send` CLI.
Removes the model-tool registration only; the send engine in
send_message_tool.py (_send_to_platform, _send_via_adapter,
_parse_target_ref, per-platform _send_* helpers) is kept intact for
those non-agent callers. Drops the now-empty 'messaging' toolset and
its `hermes tools` toggle. Yuanbao DM guidance now points at the
native yb_send_dm tool.
restore_skill() falls back to p.name.startswith(f"{skill_name}-") when no
archive directory matches the requested name exactly. That fallback is meant
to catch the timestamped duplicate archive_skill() writes on a name collision
(<skill>-YYYYMMDDHHMMSS), but the bare prefix also matches any unrelated
archived skill named <name>-something. So restoring "git" can pull an archived
"git-helpers" out of .archive/, rename it to "git", and report success: the
requested skill is not restored and the sibling is gone from the archive.
Constrain the fallback to the exact suffix archive_skill() produces, a 14 digit
timestamp. The exact-name match and the recursive nested-archive walk are
unchanged, so nested and timestamped restores still work; unrelated siblings no
longer match.
Fixes#47647
Support files under references/, templates/, assets/, and scripts/ are progressive-disclosure data loaded through skill_view(..., file_path=...). They should not be treated as standalone skills during discovery or collision checks.
This prevents archived skill packages or support markdown files inside a real skill from shadowing active skills with the same name while still allowing top-level categories named scripts/templates/assets/references.
Tests cover:
- pruning nested SKILL.md files inside skill support directories
- preserving support-named top-level categories
- avoiding skill_view collisions from support markdown
- keeping archived package SKILL.md files accessible only through file_path
* feat(desktop): stream subagent replies into watch windows
A desktop watch window resumes a child session lazily (no full agent) and
mirrors the parent-relayed `subagent.*` events into native child-session
stream events. The child's streamed reply text was never relayed, so the
window sat blank while the subagent "talked".
- delegate_tool: forward the child's `run_conversation` stream tokens up the
progress relay as `subagent.text` (inert under CLI/TUI — their progress
handlers ignore non-tool event types; only a gateway watch window mirrors it).
- server: mirror `subagent.text` -> `message.delta` on the child sid only, and
skip the parent emit (per-token frames are meaningless on the parent session,
which shows the child via the spawn tree). Demote `subagent.start` to a
one-time goal header and drop the noisy `subagent.progress` mirror — tools
already mirror natively.
- server: guard `_start_agent_build` so a lazy watch session spectating an
in-flight child stays lazy; incidental RPCs were upgrading it to a full
agent mid-stream and silently killing the mirror.
* fix(desktop): keep watch-window chat clear of titlebar chrome
Secondary windows (new-session scratch, subagent watch, cmd-click pop-out)
hide the titlebar tool cluster + session header, so the transcript ran to the
window's top edge and streamed text slid up under the OS traffic lights.
- Gate the hidden chrome on `isSecondaryWindow()` everywhere (app-shell,
chat header, thread list) instead of the narrower new-session flag.
- Add a fixed opaque drag-strip at the top of the secondary-window transcript:
content padding alone scrolls away with the text, so the strip masks
anything behind it and keeps the window draggable like the main header.
* fix: WSL subagent window
* fix: subagent window top padding
---------
Co-authored-by: Austin Pickett <pickett.austin@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Teknium <127238744+teknium1@users.noreply.github.com>
Port from Kilo-Org/kilocode#11240. Their issue #11227 lost a user's entire
working directory: a built-in-skill sentinel location resolved to the server
cwd and the skill-removal endpoint ran a recursive delete on it.
Hermes' /skills uninstall path (skills_hub.py) is already hardened, but the
agent-facing skill_manage(action='delete') path did a bare
shutil.rmtree(skill_dir) with no last-line validation. Add _validate_delete_target():
refuse to rmtree a path that (1) isn't strictly inside a known skills root,
(2) is a skills root itself, or (3) is reached via a symlink/junction.
Tests: 4 cases (normal delete works; symlinked dir, skills-root, out-of-tree
all refused). E2E verified with real symlink + file I/O.
* feat(delegation): async background subagents via delegate_task(background=true)
delegate_task(background=true) dispatches a subagent that runs in the
background and returns a handle immediately, so the user and model keep
working while it runs. The full result — plus the original task source —
re-enters the conversation as a new turn when the subagent finishes,
riding the same completion-queue rail as terminal background processes.
- tools/async_delegation.py: daemon-executor registry, capacity cap,
rich self-contained completion event pushed onto the shared
process_registry.completion_queue (type='async_delegation').
- delegate_tool.py: background param + single-task dispatch branch;
batch async rejected (v1).
- process_registry.py: format_process_notification renders the rich
task-source block (goal/context/toolsets/model/status/result).
- gateway/run.py: dedicated _async_delegation_watcher drains + injects
results into the originating session (idle + post-turn), session_key
routing enrichment, shutdown interrupt of dangling delegations.
- config: delegation.max_async_children (default 3).
Reuses the existing idle-drain wiring rather than mutating a running
agent loop, preserving message-role alternation and prompt-cache
invariants. 13 targeted tests; CLI + gateway paths E2E-verified.
* test(delegation): make async non-blocking tests environment-independent
CI 'test (5)' flaked on a cold, 8-worker runner: the first
delegate_task(background=true) call measured 2.27s of one-time setup
(config load + child-agent construction + imports), tripping the
elapsed < 1.0 wall-clock assertion. That assertion was testing setup
overhead, not blocking.
Replace the wall-clock thresholds with the real invariant: dispatch
returns while the child is still gated (active_count == 1, completion
queue empty), which a synchronous impl could not do. Keep only a loose
4s sanity backstop well under the runner's 5s gate.
* fix(delegation): harden async background delegation
Follow-up review fixes:
- Detach background child from parent._active_children at dispatch —
otherwise parent-turn interrupts (Ctrl+C, mid-turn steering), cache
evicts (release_clients), and session close (/new) kill/close the
detached subagent mid-run, defeating the point of background mode.
Lifecycle is owned by the async registry's interrupt_fn.
- Make the capacity check atomic with the record insert (TOCTOU: two
concurrent dispatches could both pass active_count() and exceed the cap).
- TUI dedup: key async_delegation events by delegation_id — the
fallthrough keyed them all as ("", type), suppressing every completion
after the first in the desktop/TUI status feed.
- CLI /stop now interrupts running background delegations and /agents
lists them (they live outside the process registry and were invisible).
- Drop stray unbalanced ']' line from the re-injection block and the
unused _ASYNC_DEFAULT import.
Tests: detach-at-dispatch + concurrent-capacity race added (15 total in
test_async_delegation.py); 137 delegate + 140 process-registry/notify/watch
+ 7 TUI dedup tests pass.
* fix(delegation): harden async background completion drains
Track why a background process finished and include that source in notify-on-complete messages so SIGTERM from process.kill, kill_all, backend loss, and ordinary exits are distinguishable.
Add a parser-only routing regression that proves raw WhatsApp group JIDs bypass channel-directory resolution and home-channel fallback, include channel_aliases.json in quick state snapshots, harden malformed alias handling, and map Keiron McCammon for release attribution.
send_message(target="whatsapp:<group-jid>") silently delivered to the
configured home DM instead of the requested group. Two gaps:
1. _parse_target_ref had no WhatsApp branch. Group JIDs (<id>@g.us),
user JIDs (<id>@s.whatsapp.net), linked-identity JIDs (<id>@lid), and
broadcast/newsletter JIDs matched no pattern and fell through to
`return None, None, False`, so the caller treated them as
unresolvable and used the home channel. The bridge's /send endpoint
accepts any chatId, so only the tool-side target parsing was at fault.
Add a whatsapp branch that recognizes native JIDs as explicit targets.
The pre-existing '+'-prefixed E.164 path is preserved.
2. WhatsApp groups have no human-friendly name — the channel directory
is regenerated from session data on a timer, so a group shows up as
its raw 18-digit JID and any hand-edit to channel_directory.json is
clobbered on the next rebuild. Add a user-maintained alias overlay
(~/.hermes/channel_aliases.json) re-applied on every build AND every
load, giving durable friendly names and letting a freshly-created
group be pre-named before its first message.
Tests: TestParseTargetRefWhatsAppJID (7 cases) for the parser;
TestChannelAliases (7 cases) for the overlay, plus an autouse fixture
isolating CHANNEL_ALIASES_PATH so a real alias file can't leak into the
existing directory tests.
* fix(gateway): chown logs/gateways parent so late-added profiles can log
The per-profile log service script created $HERMES_HOME/logs/gateways/
via 'mkdir -p' but only chowned the leaf logs/gateways/<profile>. When
the first log service boots in root context, the gateways/ parent stays
root:root; every profile registered later runs its log service as the
dropped hermes user, 'mkdir -p' fails with EACCES, and s6-log enters a
sub-second fatal crash-loop flooding the container log. The stage2
recursive heal does not catch it either: it is gated on needs_chown,
which is false when the top-level $HERMES_HOME is already hermes-owned.
Two complementary fixes:
- service_manager._render_log_run: chown the gateways/ parent
(non-recursively) before the leaf chown. Runs on every root-context
boot, so it also heals volumes already poisoned by older images.
- docker/stage2-hook.sh: seed logs/gateways in the as_hermes mkdir -p
block; cont-init runs before any service starts, so the parent
already exists hermes-owned when the first log/run does 'mkdir -p'.
The needs_chown repair loop needs no twin entry: it already chowns
logs/ recursively, which covers logs/gateways.
Fixes#45258
* chore(release): map salvaged contributor
---------
Co-authored-by: tangtaizhong666 <tangtaizhong792@gmail.com>
Remove the free Parallel Search MCP path and restore the keyed Parallel backend behavior from before it was introduced.
Also drops the keyless fallback registration/display labeling tests and returns the Parallel SDK pin to the prior version.
Allow file tools to edit shell startup files, user package-manager configs, and Hermes control files that the user can already modify directly. Keep hard blocks for SSH keys, .env/OAuth token stores, mcp-tokens, pairing files, and system privilege files.
Three tests covering: a stale .bak poisoning a failed update's move/restore, an orphaned .bak misread as a user deletion, and a partially written dest blocking restore-on-failure. All three fail on current main without the fix.
Refs #44942
tools/approval.py already denies tee/redirection writes to every
_SENSITIVE_WRITE_TARGET (~/.ssh/*, ~/.netrc/.pgpass/.npmrc/.pypirc, shell
rc files, ~/.hermes/config.yaml/.env) via the DANGEROUS_PATTERNS tee/`>`
rules, but cp/mv/install were only paired for _SYSTEM_CONFIG_PATH (/etc) and
the project-relative env/config target. So `cp evil ~/.ssh/authorized_keys`
(SSH-key implant / persistence), `cp creds ~/.netrc`, and `cp evil ~/.bashrc`
(login-time command injection) auto-approved while the equivalent tee/`>`
forms were denied — an unpaired write deny is theater (same rationale as
#14639 / commit 4e9d886d, which paired the terminal side for
~/.hermes/config.yaml writes but did not touch these cp/mv/install verbs on
the broader sensitive set).
Add one (cp|mv|install) DANGEROUS_PATTERNS entry reusing the existing
_SENSITIVE_WRITE_TARGET fragment, anchored via _COMMAND_TAIL so it fires on
the destination (last arg) only: reading OUT of a sensitive path
(`cp ~/.ssh/config /tmp/x`) stays auto-approved. Description differs from the
system-config cp entry so the two keep distinct approval keys (no silent
cross-approval). Additive — does not subsume the /etc or project-config rules.
Adds TestSensitiveCopyMovePattern: 5 positive cases (ssh authorized_keys,
ssh private key via mv, netrc via install, bashrc, ~/.hermes/config.yaml) +
2 negative guards (copy FROM ssh, unrelated copy). The ssh/netrc/bashrc
positives fail on main and pass on this branch; the negatives stay green
both ways.