LocalEnvironment._run_bash() spawned subprocess.Popen without a cwd
argument, so init_session()'s pwd -P ran in the gateway process's
startup directory and overwrote self.cwd. Pass cwd=self.cwd so the
initial snapshot captures the user-configured working directory.
Tested:
- pytest tests/ -q (255 env-related tests passed)
- Full suite: 13,537 passed; 70 pre-existing failures unrelated to local env
The container_config builder in terminal_tool.py was missing
docker_forward_env and docker_env keys, causing config.yaml's
docker_forward_env setting to be silently ignored. Environment
variables listed in docker_forward_env were never injected into
Docker containers.
This fix adds both keys to the container_config dict so they are
properly passed to _create_environment().
Follow-up on helix4u's PR #14211:
- Flip default to true: narrowing toolsets=['web','browser'] expresses
'I want these extras', not 'silently strip MCP'. Parent MCP tools
(registered at runtime) should survive narrowing by default.
- Drop _config_version bump (22->23); additive nested key under
delegation.* is handled by _deep_merge, no migration needed.
- Update tests to reflect new default behavior.
browser_cdp_tool.py registers before browser_tool.py (alphabetical
import order), so its stricter check_fn (requires CDP endpoint) becomes
the toolset-level check for all 11 browser tools. This causes
'hermes doctor' to report the entire browser toolset as unavailable
even when agent-browser is correctly installed.
Move browser_cdp to toolset='browser-cdp' so it is evaluated
independently. browser_navigate et al. only need agent-browser;
browser_cdp additionally requires a reachable CDP endpoint.
Version managers like frum (Ruby), rvm, nvm, and others commonly alias
cd to a wrapper function that runs additional logic after directory
changes. When Hermes captures the shell environment into a session
snapshot, these aliases are preserved. If the wrapper function fails
in the subprocess context (e.g. frum not on PATH), every cd fails,
causing all terminal commands to exit with code 126.
Using builtin cd bypasses any aliases or functions, ensuring the
directory change always uses the real bash builtin regardless of
what version managers are installed.
Make Tavily client respect a TAVILY_BASE_URL environment variable,
defaulting to https://api.tavily.com for backward compatibility.
Consistent with FIRECRAWL_API_URL pattern already used in this module.
The code execution sandbox creates a Unix domain socket in /tmp with
default permissions, allowing any local user to connect and execute
tool calls. Restrict to 0o600 after bind.
Closes#6230
Upgrades agent-browser from 0.13.0 to 0.26.0, picking up 13 releases of
daemon reliability fixes:
- Daemon hang on Linux from waitpid(-1) race in SIGCHLD handler (#1098)
- Chrome killed after ~10s idle due to PR_SET_PDEATHSIG thread tracking (#1157)
- Orphaned Chrome processes via process-group kill on shutdown (#1137)
- Stale daemon after upgrade via .version sidecar and auto-restart (#1134)
- Idle timeout not firing (sleep future recreated each loop) (#1110)
- Navigation hanging on lifecycle events that never fire (#1059, #1092)
- CDP attach hang on Chrome 144+ (#1133)
- Windows daemon TCP bind with Hyper-V port conflicts (#1041)
- Shadow DOM traversal in accessibility tree snapshots
- doctor command for user self-diagnosis
Also wires AGENT_BROWSER_IDLE_TIMEOUT_MS into the browser subprocess
environment so the daemon self-terminates after our configured inactivity
timeout (default 300s). This is the daemon-side counterpart to the
Python-side inactivity reaper — the daemon kills itself and its Chrome
children when no commands arrive, preventing orphan accumulation even
when the Python process dies without running atexit handlers.
Addresses #7343 (daemon socket hangs, shadow DOM) and #13793 (orphan
accumulation from force-killed sessions).
Adds security.allow_private_urls / HERMES_ALLOW_PRIVATE_URLS toggle so
users on OpenWrt routers, TUN-mode proxies (Clash/Mihomo/Sing-box),
corporate split-tunnel VPNs, and Tailscale networks — where DNS resolves
public domains to 198.18.0.0/15 or 100.64.0.0/10 — can use web_extract,
browser, vision URL fetching, and gateway media downloads.
Single toggle in tools/url_safety.py; all 23 is_safe_url() call sites
inherit automatically. Cached for process lifetime.
Cloud metadata endpoints stay ALWAYS blocked regardless of the toggle:
169.254.169.254 (AWS/GCP/Azure/DO/Oracle), 169.254.170.2 (AWS ECS task
IAM creds), 169.254.169.253 (Azure IMDS wire server), 100.100.100.200
(Alibaba), fd00:ec2::254 (AWS IPv6), the entire 169.254.0.0/16
link-local range, and the metadata.google.internal / metadata.goog
hostnames (checked pre-DNS so they can't be bypassed on networks where
those names resolve to local IPs).
Supersedes #3779 (narrower HERMES_ALLOW_RFC2544 for the same class of
users).
Co-authored-by: kshitijk4poor <82637225+kshitijk4poor@users.noreply.github.com>
- delegate_task: use shared tool_error() for the paused-spawn early return
so the error envelope matches the rest of the tool.
- Disk snapshot label: treat orphaned nodes (parentId missing from the
snapshot) as top-level, matching buildSubagentTree / summarizeLabel.
Four real issues Copilot flagged:
1. delegate_tool: `_build_child_agent` never passed `toolsets` to the
progress callback, so the event payload's `toolsets` field (wired
through every layer) was always empty and the overlay's toolsets
row never populated. Thread `child_toolsets` through.
2. event handler: the race-protection on subagent.spawn_requested /
subagent.start only preserved `completed`, so a late-arriving queued
event could clobber `failed` / `interrupted` too. Preserve any
terminal status (`completed | failed | interrupted`).
3. SpawnHud: comment claimed concurrency was approximated by "widest
level in the tree" but code used `totals.activeCount` (total across
all parents). `max_concurrent_children` is a per-parent cap, so
activeCount over-warns for multi-orchestrator runs. Switch to
`max(widthByDepth(tree))`; the label now reads `⚡W/cap+extra` where
W is the widest level (drives the ratio) and `+extra` is the rest.
4. spawn_tree.list: comment said "peek header without parsing full list"
but the code json.loads()'d every snapshot. Adds a per-session
`_index.jsonl` sidecar written on save; list() reads only the index
(with a full-scan fallback for pre-index sessions). O(1) per
snapshot now vs O(file-size).
Adds a live + post-hoc audit surface for recursive delegate_task fan-out.
None of cc/oc/oclaw tackle nested subagent trees inside an Ink overlay;
this ships a view-switched dashboard that handles arbitrary depth + width.
Python
- delegate_tool: every subagent event now carries subagent_id, parent_id,
depth, model, tool_count; subagent.complete also ships input/output/
reasoning tokens, cost, api_calls, files_read/files_written, and a
tail of tool-call outputs
- delegate_tool: new subagent.spawn_requested event + _active_subagents
registry so the overlay can kill a branch by id and pause new spawns
- tui_gateway: new RPCs delegation.status, delegation.pause,
subagent.interrupt, spawn_tree.save/list/load (disk under
\$HERMES_HOME/spawn-trees/<session>/<ts>.json)
TUI
- /agents overlay: full-width list mode (gantt strip + row picker) and
Enter-to-drill full-width scrollable detail mode; inverse+amber
selection, heat-coloured branch markers, wall-clock gantt with tick
ruler, per-branch rollups
- Detail pane: collapsible accordions (Budget, Files, Tool calls, Output,
Progress, Summary); open-state persists across agents + mode switches
via a shared atom
- /replay [N|last|list|load <path>] for in-memory + disk history;
/replay-diff <a> <b> for side-by-side tree comparison
- Status-bar SpawnHud warns as depth/concurrency approaches caps;
overlay auto-follows the just-finished turn onto history[1]
- Theme: bump DARK dim #B8860B → #CC9B1F for readable secondary text
globally; keep LIGHT untouched
Tests: +29 new subagentTree unit tests; 215/215 passing.
* feat(plugins): pluggable image_gen backends + OpenAI provider
Adds a ImageGenProvider ABC so image generation backends register as
bundled plugins under `plugins/image_gen/<name>/`. The plugin scanner
gains three primitives to make this work generically:
- `kind:` manifest field (`standalone` | `backend` | `exclusive`).
Bundled `kind: backend` plugins auto-load — no `plugins.enabled`
incantation. User-installed backends stay opt-in.
- Path-derived keys: `plugins/image_gen/openai/` gets key
`image_gen/openai`, so a future `tts/openai` cannot collide.
- Depth-2 recursion into category namespaces (parent dirs without a
`plugin.yaml` of their own).
Includes `OpenAIImageGenProvider` as the first consumer (gpt-image-1.5
default, plus gpt-image-1, gpt-image-1-mini, DALL-E 3/2). Base64
responses save to `$HERMES_HOME/cache/images/`; URL responses pass
through.
FAL stays in-tree for this PR — a follow-up ports it into
`plugins/image_gen/fal/` so the in-tree `image_generation_tool.py`
slims down. The dispatch shim in `_handle_image_generate` only fires
when `image_gen.provider` is explicitly set to a non-FAL value, so
existing FAL setups are untouched.
- 41 unit tests (scanner recursion, kind parsing, gate logic,
registry, OpenAI payload shapes)
- E2E smoke verified: bundled plugin autoloads, registers, and
`_handle_image_generate` routes to OpenAI when configured
* fix(image_gen/openai): don't send response_format to gpt-image-*
The live API rejects it: 'Unknown parameter: response_format'
(verified 2026-04-21 with gpt-image-1.5). gpt-image-* models return
b64_json unconditionally, so the parameter was both unnecessary and
actively broken.
* feat(image_gen/openai): gpt-image-2 only, drop legacy catalog
gpt-image-2 is the latest/best OpenAI image model (released 2026-04-21)
and there's no reason to expose the older gpt-image-1.5 / gpt-image-1 /
dall-e-3 / dall-e-2 alongside it — slower, lower quality, or awkward
(dall-e-2 squares only). Trim the catalog down to a single model.
Live-verified end-to-end: landscape 1536x1024 render of a Moog-style
synth matches prompt exactly, 2.4MB PNG saved to cache.
* feat(image_gen/openai): expose gpt-image-2 as three quality tiers
Users pick speed/fidelity via the normal model picker instead of a
hidden quality knob. All three tier IDs resolve to the single underlying
gpt-image-2 API model with a different quality parameter:
gpt-image-2-low ~15s fast iteration
gpt-image-2-medium ~40s default
gpt-image-2-high ~2min highest fidelity
Live-measured on OpenAI's API today: 15.4s / 40.8s / 116.9s for the
same 1024x1024 prompt.
Config:
image_gen.openai.model: gpt-image-2-high
# or
image_gen.model: gpt-image-2-low
# or env var for scripts/tests
OPENAI_IMAGE_MODEL=gpt-image-2-medium
Live-verified end-to-end with the low tier: 18.8s landscape render of a
golden retriever in wildflowers, vision-confirmed exact match.
* feat(tools_config): plugin image_gen providers inject themselves into picker
'hermes tools' → Image Generation now shows plugin-registered backends
alongside Nous Subscription and FAL.ai without tools_config.py needing
to know about them. OpenAI appears as a third option today; future
backends appear automatically as they're added.
Mechanism:
- ImageGenProvider gains an optional get_setup_schema() hook
(name, badge, tag, env_vars). Default derived from display_name.
- tools_config._plugin_image_gen_providers() pulls the schemas from
every registered non-FAL plugin provider.
- _visible_providers() appends those rows when rendering the Image
Generation category.
- _configure_provider() handles the new image_gen_plugin_name marker:
writes image_gen.provider and routes to the plugin's list_models()
catalog for the model picker.
- _toolset_needs_configuration_prompt('image_gen') stops demanding a
FAL key when any plugin provider reports is_available().
FAL is skipped in the plugin path because it already has hardcoded
TOOL_CATEGORIES rows — when it gets ported to a plugin in a follow-up
PR the hardcoded rows go away and it surfaces through the same path
as OpenAI.
Verified live: picker shows Nous Subscription / FAL.ai / OpenAI.
Picking OpenAI prompts for OPENAI_API_KEY, then shows the
gpt-image-2-low/medium/high model picker sourced from the plugin.
397 tests pass across plugins/, tools_config, registry, and picker.
* fix(image_gen): close final gaps for plugin-backend parity with FAL
Two small places that still hardcoded FAL:
- hermes_cli/setup.py status line: an OpenAI-only setup showed
'Image Generation: missing FAL_KEY'. Now probes plugin providers
and reports '(OpenAI)' when one is_available() — or falls back to
'missing FAL_KEY or OPENAI_API_KEY' if nothing is configured.
- image_generate tool schema description: said 'using FAL.ai, default
FLUX 2 Klein 9B'. Rewrote provider-neutral — 'backend and model are
user-configured' — and notes the 'image' field can be a URL or an
absolute path, which the gateway delivers either way via
extract_local_files().
- Wrap child.run_conversation() in a ThreadPoolExecutor with configurable
timeout (delegation.child_timeout_seconds, default 300s) to prevent
indefinite blocking when a subagent's API call or tool HTTP request hangs.
- Add heartbeat stale detection: if a child's api_call_count doesn't
advance for 5 consecutive heartbeat cycles (~2.5 min), stop touching
the parent's activity timestamp so the gateway inactivity timeout
can fire as a last resort.
- Add 'timeout' as a new exit_reason/status alongside the existing
completed/max_iterations/interrupted states.
- Use shutdown(wait=False) on the timeout executor to avoid the
ThreadPoolExecutor.__exit__ deadlock when a child is stuck on
blocking I/O.
Closes#13768
A single global MAX_TEXT_LENGTH = 4000 truncated every TTS provider at
4000 chars, causing long inputs to be silently chopped even though the
underlying APIs allow much more:
- OpenAI: 4096
- xAI: 15000
- MiniMax: 10000
- ElevenLabs: 5000 / 10000 / 30000 / 40000 (model-aware)
- Gemini: ~5000
- Edge: ~5000
The schema description also told the model 'Keep under 4000 characters',
which encouraged the agent to self-chunk long briefs into multiple TTS
calls (producing 3 separate audio files instead of one).
New behavior:
- PROVIDER_MAX_TEXT_LENGTH table + ELEVENLABS_MODEL_MAX_TEXT_LENGTH
encode the documented per-provider limits.
- _resolve_max_text_length(provider, cfg) resolves:
1. tts.<provider>.max_text_length user override
2. ElevenLabs model_id lookup
3. provider default
4. 4000 fallback
- text_to_speech_tool() and stream_tts_to_speaker() both call the
resolver; old MAX_TEXT_LENGTH alias kept for back-compat.
- Schema description no longer hardcodes 4000.
Tests: 27 new unit + E2E tests; all 53 existing TTS tests and 253
voice-command/voice-cli tests still pass.
* feat(models): hide OpenRouter models that don't advertise tool support
Port from Kilo-Org/kilocode#9068.
hermes-agent is tool-calling-first — every provider path assumes the
model can invoke tools. Models whose OpenRouter supported_parameters
doesn't include 'tools' (e.g. image-only or completion-only models)
cannot be driven by the agent loop and fail at the first tool call.
Filter them out of fetch_openrouter_models() so they never appear in
the model picker (`hermes model`, setup wizard, /model slash command).
Permissive when the field is missing — OpenRouter-compatible gateways
(Nous Portal, private mirrors, older snapshots) don't always populate
supported_parameters. Treat missing as 'unknown → allow' rather than
silently emptying the picker on those gateways. Only hide models
whose supported_parameters is an explicit list that omits tools.
Tests cover: tools present → kept, tools absent → dropped, field
missing → kept, malformed non-list → kept, non-dict item → kept,
empty list → dropped.
* feat(delegate): cross-agent file state coordination for concurrent subagents
Prevents mangled edits when concurrent subagents touch the same file
(same process, same filesystem — the mangle scenario from #11215).
Three layers, all opt-out via HERMES_DISABLE_FILE_STATE_GUARD=1:
1. FileStateRegistry (tools/file_state.py) — process-wide singleton
tracking per-agent read stamps and the last writer globally.
check_stale() names the sibling subagent in the warning when a
non-owning agent wrote after this agent's last read.
2. Per-path threading.Lock wrapped around the read-modify-write
region in write_file_tool and patch_tool. Concurrent siblings on
the same path serialize; different paths stay fully parallel.
V4A multi-file patches lock in sorted path order (deadlock-free).
3. Delegate-completion reminder in tools/delegate_tool.py: after a
subagent returns, writes_since(parent, child_start, parent_reads)
appends '[NOTE: subagent modified files the parent previously
read — re-read before editing: ...]' to entry.summary when the
child touched anything the parent had already seen.
Complements (does not replace) the existing path-overlap check in
run_agent._should_parallelize_tool_batch — batch check prevents
same-file parallel dispatch within one agent's turn (cheap prevention,
zero API cost), registry catches cross-subagent and cross-turn
staleness at write time (detection).
Behavior is warning-only, not hard-failing — matches existing project
style. Errors surface naturally: sibling writes often invalidate the
old_string in patch operations, which already errors cleanly.
Tests: tests/tools/test_file_state_registry.py — 16 tests covering
registry state transitions, per-path locking, per-path-not-global
locking, writes_since filtering, kill switch, and end-to-end
integration through the real read_file/write_file/patch handlers.
Adds role='leaf'|'orchestrator' to delegate_task. With max_spawn_depth>=2,
an orchestrator child retains the 'delegation' toolset and can spawn its
own workers; leaf children cannot delegate further (identical to today).
Default posture is flat — max_spawn_depth=1 means a depth-0 parent's
children land at the depth-1 floor and orchestrator role silently
degrades to leaf. Users opt into nested delegation by raising
max_spawn_depth to 2 or 3 in config.yaml.
Also threads acp_command/acp_args through the main agent loop's delegate
dispatch (previously silently dropped in the schema) via a new
_dispatch_delegate_task helper, and adds a DelegateEvent enum with
legacy-string back-compat for gateway/ACP/CLI progress consumers.
Config (hermes_cli/config.py defaults):
delegation.max_concurrent_children: 3 # floor-only, no upper cap
delegation.max_spawn_depth: 1 # 1=flat (default), 2-3 unlock nested
delegation.orchestrator_enabled: true # global kill switch
Salvaged from @pefontana's PR #11215. Overrides vs. the original PR:
concurrency stays at 3 (PR bumped to 5 + cap 8 — we keep the floor only,
no hard ceiling); max_spawn_depth defaults to 1 (PR defaulted to 2 which
silently enabled one level of orchestration for every user).
Co-authored-by: pefontana <fontana.pedro93@gmail.com>
Adds OpenAI's new GPT Image 2 model via FAL.ai, selectable through
`hermes tools` → Image Generation. SOTA text rendering (including CJK)
and world-aware photorealism.
- FAL_MODELS entry with image_size_preset style
- 4:3 presets on all aspect ratios — 16:9 (1024x576) falls below
GPT-Image-2's 655,360 min-pixel floor and would be rejected
- quality pinned to medium (same rule as gpt-image-1.5) for
predictable Nous Portal billing
- BYOK (openai_api_key) deliberately omitted from supports so all
users stay on shared FAL billing
- 6 new tests covering preset mapping, quality pinning, and
supports-whitelist integrity
- Docs table + aspect-ratio map updated
Live-tested end-to-end: 39.9s cold request, clean 1024x768 PNG
Two related ACP approval issues:
GHSA-96vc-wcxf-jjff — ACP's _run_agent never set HERMES_INTERACTIVE
(or any other flag recognized by tools.approval), so check_all_command_guards
took the non-interactive auto-approve path and never consulted the
ACP-supplied approval callback (conn.request_permission). Dangerous
commands executed in ACP sessions without operator approval despite
the callback being installed. Fix: set HERMES_INTERACTIVE=1 around
the agent run so check_all_command_guards routes through
prompt_dangerous_approval(approval_callback=...) — the correct shape
for ACP's per-session request_permission call. HERMES_EXEC_ASK would
have routed through the gateway-queue path instead, which requires a
notify_cb registered in _gateway_notify_cbs (not applicable to ACP).
GHSA-qg5c-hvr5-hjgr — _approval_callback and _sudo_password_callback
were module-level globals in terminal_tool. Concurrent ACP sessions
running in ThreadPoolExecutor threads each installed their own callback
into the same slot, racing. Fix: store both callbacks in threading.local()
so each thread has its own slot. CLI mode (single thread) is unaffected;
gateway mode uses a separate queue-based approval path and was never
touched.
set_approval_callback is now called INSIDE _run_agent (the executor
thread) rather than before dispatching — so the TLS write lands on the
correct thread.
Tests: 5 new in tests/acp/test_approval_isolation.py covering
thread-local isolation of both callbacks and the HERMES_INTERACTIVE
callback routing. Existing tests/acp/ (159 tests) and tests/tools/
approval-related tests continue to pass.
Fixes GHSA-96vc-wcxf-jjff
Fixes GHSA-qg5c-hvr5-hjgr
A skill declaring `required_environment_variables: [ANTHROPIC_TOKEN]` in
its SKILL.md frontmatter silently bypassed the `execute_code` sandbox's
credential-scrubbing guarantee. `register_env_passthrough` had no
blocklist, so any name a skill chose flipped `is_env_passthrough(name) =>
True`, which shortcircuits the sandbox's secret filter.
Fix: reject registration when the name appears in
`_HERMES_PROVIDER_ENV_BLOCKLIST` (the canonical list of Hermes-managed
credentials — provider keys, gateway tokens, etc.). Log a warning naming
GHSA-rhgp-j443-p4rf so operators see the rejection in logs.
Non-Hermes third-party API keys (TENOR_API_KEY for gif-search,
NOTION_TOKEN for notion skills, etc.) remain legitimately registerable —
they were never in the sandbox scrub list in the first place.
Tests: 16 -> 17 passing. Two old tests that documented the bypass
(`test_passthrough_allows_blocklisted_var`, `test_make_run_env_passthrough`)
are rewritten to assert the new fail-closed behavior. New
`test_non_hermes_api_key_still_registerable` locks in that legitimate
third-party keys are unaffected.
Reported in GHSA-rhgp-j443-p4rf by @q1uf3ng. Hardening; not CVE-worthy
on its own per the decision matrix (attacker must already have operator
consent to install a malicious skill).
Fixes#13027
Previously, `_is_skill_disabled()` only checked the explicit `platform`
argument and `os.getenv('HERMES_PLATFORM')`, missing the gateway session
context (`HERMES_SESSION_PLATFORM`). This caused `skill_view()` to expose
skills that were platform-disabled for the active gateway session.
Add `_get_session_platform()` helper that resolves the platform from
`gateway.session_context.get_session_env`, mirroring the logic in
`agent.skill_utils.get_disabled_skill_names()`.
Now the platform resolution follows the same precedence as skill_utils:
1. Explicit `platform` argument
2. `HERMES_PLATFORM` environment variable
3. `HERMES_SESSION_PLATFORM` from gateway session context
Previously the breaker was only cleared when the post-reconnect retry
call itself succeeded (via _reset_server_error at the end of the try
block). If OAuth recovery succeeded but the retry call happened to
fail for a different reason, control fell through to the
needs_reauth path which called _bump_server_error — adding to an
already-tripped count instead of the fresh count the reconnect
justified. With fix#1 in place this would still self-heal on the
next cooldown, but we should not pay a 60s stall when we already
have positive evidence the server is viable.
Move _reset_server_error(server_name) up to immediately after the
reconnect-and-ready-wait block, before the retry_call. The
subsequent retry still goes through _bump_server_error on failure,
so a genuinely broken server re-trips the breaker as normal — but
the retry starts from a clean count (1 after a failure), not a
stale one.
The MCP circuit breaker previously had no path back to the closed
state: once _server_error_counts[srv] reached _CIRCUIT_BREAKER_THRESHOLD
the gate short-circuited every subsequent call, so the only reset
path (on successful call) was unreachable. A single transient
3-failure blip (bad network, server restart, expired token) permanently
disabled every tool on that MCP server for the rest of the agent
session.
Introduce a classic closed/open/half-open state machine:
- Track a per-server breaker-open timestamp in _server_breaker_opened_at
alongside the existing failure count.
- Add _CIRCUIT_BREAKER_COOLDOWN_SEC (60s). Once the count reaches
threshold, calls short-circuit for the cooldown window.
- After the cooldown elapses, the *next* call falls through as a
half-open probe that actually hits the session. Success resets the
breaker via _reset_server_error; failure re-bumps the count via
_bump_server_error, which re-stamps the open timestamp and re-arms
the cooldown.
The error message now includes the live failure count and an
"Auto-retry available in ~Ns" hint so the model knows the breaker
will self-heal rather than giving up on the tool for the whole
session.
Covers tests 1 (half-opens after cooldown) and 2 (reopens on probe
failure); test 3 (cleared on reconnect) still fails pending fix#2.
Follow-up to PR #2504. The original fix covered the two direct FAL_KEY
checks in image_generation_tool but left four other call sites intact,
including the managed-gateway gate where a whitespace-only FAL_KEY
falsely claimed 'user has direct FAL' and *skipped* the Nous managed
gateway fallback entirely.
Introduce fal_key_is_configured() in tools/tool_backend_helpers.py as a
single source of truth (consults os.environ, falls back to .env for
CLI-setup paths) and route every FAL_KEY presence check through it:
- tools/image_generation_tool.py : _resolve_managed_fal_gateway,
image_generate_tool's upfront check, check_fal_api_key
- hermes_cli/nous_subscription.py : direct_fal detection, selected
toolset gating, tools_ready map
- hermes_cli/tools_config.py : image_gen needs-setup check
Verified by extending tests/tools/test_image_generation_env.py and by
E2E exercising whitespace + managed-gateway composition directly.
Treat whitespace-only FAL_KEY the same as unset so users who export
FAL_KEY=" " (or CI that leaves a blank token) get the expected
'not set' error path instead of a confusing downstream fal_client
failure.
Applied to the two direct FAL_KEY checks in image_generation_tool.py:
image_generate_tool's upfront credential check and check_fal_api_key().
Both keep the existing managed-gateway fallback intact.
Adapted the original whitespace/valid tests to pin the managed gateway
to None so the whitespace assertion exercises the direct-key path
rather than silently relying on gateway absence.
Follow-ups on top of @teyrebaz33's cherry-picked commit:
1. New shared helper format_no_match_hint() in fuzzy_match.py with a
startswith('Could not find') gate so the snippet only appends to
genuine no-match errors — not to 'Found N matches' (ambiguous),
'Escape-drift detected', or 'identical strings' errors, which would
all mislead the model.
2. file_tools.patch_tool suppresses the legacy generic '[Hint: old_string
not found...]' string when the rich 'Did you mean?' snippet is
already attached — no more double-hint.
3. Wire the same helper into patch_parser.py (V4A patch mode, both
_validate_operations and _apply_update) and skill_manager_tool.py so
all three fuzzy callers surface the hint consistently.
Tests: 7 new gating tests in TestFormatNoMatchHint cover every error
class (ambiguous, drift, identical, non-zero match count, None error,
no similar content, happy path). 34/34 test_fuzzy_match, 96/96
test_file_tools + test_patch_parser + test_skill_manager_tool pass.
E2E verified across all four scenarios: no-match-with-similar,
no-match-no-similar, ambiguous, success. V4A mode confirmed
end-to-end with a non-matching hunk.
When patch_replace() cannot find old_string in a file, the error message
now includes the closest matching lines from the file with line numbers
and context. This helps the LLM self-correct without a separate read_file
call.
Implements Phase 1 of #536: enhanced patch error feedback with no
architectural changes.
- tools/fuzzy_match.py: new find_closest_lines() using SequenceMatcher
- tools/file_operations.py: attach closest-lines hint to patch errors
- tests/tools/test_fuzzy_match.py: 5 new tests for find_closest_lines
Builds on @AxDSan's PR #2109 to finish the KittenTTS wiring so the
provider behaves like every other TTS backend end to end.
- tools/tts_tool.py: `_check_kittentts_available()` helper and wire
into `check_tts_requirements()`; extend Opus-conversion list to
include kittentts (WAV → Opus for Telegram voice bubbles); point the
missing-package error at `hermes setup tts`.
- hermes_cli/tools_config.py: add KittenTTS entry to the "Text-to-Speech"
toolset picker, with a `kittentts` post_setup hook that auto-installs
the wheel + soundfile via pip.
- hermes_cli/setup.py: `_install_kittentts_deps()`, new choice + install
flow in `_setup_tts_provider()`, provider_labels entry, and status row
in the `hermes setup` summary.
- website/docs/user-guide/features/tts.md: add KittenTTS to the provider
table, config example, ffmpeg note, and the zero-config voice-bubble tip.
- tests/tools/test_tts_kittentts.py: 10 unit tests covering generation,
model caching, config passthrough, ffmpeg conversion, availability
detection, and the missing-package dispatcher branch.
E2E verified against the real `kittentts` wheel:
- WAV direct output (pcm_s16le, 24kHz mono)
- MP3 conversion via ffmpeg (from WAV)
- Telegram flow (provider in Opus-conversion list) produces
`codec_name=opus`, 48kHz mono, `voice_compatible=True`, and the
`[[audio_as_voice]]` marker
- check_tts_requirements() returns True when kittentts is installed
Add support for KittenTTS - a lightweight, local TTS engine with models
ranging from 25-80MB that runs on CPU without requiring a GPU or API key.
Features:
- Support for 8 built-in voices (Jasper, Bella, Luna, etc.)
- Configurable model size (nano 25MB, micro 41MB, mini 80MB)
- Adjustable speech speed
- Model caching for performance
- Automatic WAV to Opus conversion for Telegram voice messages
Configuration example (config.yaml):
tts:
provider: kittentts
kittentts:
model: KittenML/kitten-tts-nano-0.8-int8
voice: Jasper
speed: 1.0
clean_text: true
Installation:
pip install https://github.com/KittenML/KittenTTS/releases/download/0.8.1/kittentts-0.8.1-py3-none-any.whl
Full AST-based scan of all .py files to find every case where a module
or name is imported locally inside a function body but is already
available at module level. This is the second pass — the first commit
handled the known cases from the lint report; this one catches
everything else.
Files changed (19):
cli.py — 16 removals: time as _time/_t/_tmod (×10),
re / re as _re (×2), os as _os, sys,
partial os from combo import,
from model_tools import get_tool_definitions
gateway/run.py — 8 removals: MessageEvent as _ME /
MessageType as _MT (×3), os as _os2,
MessageEvent+MessageType (×2), Platform,
BasePlatformAdapter as _BaseAdapter
run_agent.py — 6 removals: get_hermes_home as _ghh,
partial (contextlib, os as _os),
cleanup_vm, cleanup_browser,
set_interrupt as _sif (×2),
partial get_toolset_for_tool
hermes_cli/main.py — 4 removals: get_hermes_home, time as _time,
logging as _log, shutil
hermes_cli/config.py — 1 removal: get_hermes_home as _ghome
hermes_cli/runtime_provider.py
— 1 removal: load_config as _load_bedrock_config
hermes_cli/setup.py — 2 removals: importlib.util (×2)
hermes_cli/nous_subscription.py
— 1 removal: from hermes_cli.config import load_config
hermes_cli/tools_config.py
— 1 removal: from hermes_cli.config import load_config, save_config
cron/scheduler.py — 3 removals: concurrent.futures, json as _json,
from hermes_cli.config import load_config
batch_runner.py — 1 removal: list_distributions as get_all_dists
(kept print_distribution_info, not at top level)
tools/send_message_tool.py
— 2 removals: import os (×2)
tools/skills_tool.py — 1 removal: logging as _logging
tools/browser_camofox.py
— 1 removal: from hermes_cli.config import load_config
tools/image_generation_tool.py
— 1 removal: import fal_client
environments/tool_context.py
— 1 removal: concurrent.futures
gateway/platforms/bluebubbles.py
— 1 removal: httpx as _httpx
gateway/platforms/whatsapp.py
— 1 removal: import asyncio
tui_gateway/server.py — 2 removals: from datetime import datetime,
import time
All alias references (_time, _t, _tmod, _re, _os, _os2, _json, _ghh,
_ghome, _sif, _ME, _MT, _BaseAdapter, _load_bedrock_config, _httpx,
_logging, _log, get_all_dists) updated to use the top-level names.
Sweep ~74 redundant local imports across 21 files where the same module
was already imported at the top level. Also includes type fixes and lint
cleanups on the same branch.
* feat(skills): inject absolute skill dir and expand ${HERMES_SKILL_DIR} templates
When a skill loads, the activation message now exposes the absolute
skill directory and substitutes ${HERMES_SKILL_DIR} /
${HERMES_SESSION_ID} tokens in the SKILL.md body, so skills with
bundled scripts can instruct the agent to run them by absolute path
without an extra skill_view round-trip.
Also adds opt-in inline-shell expansion: !`cmd` snippets in SKILL.md
are pre-executed (with the skill directory as CWD) and their stdout is
inlined into the message before the agent reads it. Off by default —
enable via skills.inline_shell in config.yaml — because any snippet
runs on the host without approval.
Changes:
- agent/skill_commands.py: template substitution, inline-shell
expansion, absolute skill-dir header, supporting-files list now
shows both relative and absolute forms.
- hermes_cli/config.py: new skills.template_vars,
skills.inline_shell, skills.inline_shell_timeout knobs.
- tests/agent/test_skill_commands.py: coverage for header, both
template tokens (present and missing session id), template_vars
disable, inline-shell default-off, enabled, CWD, and timeout.
- website/docs/developer-guide/creating-skills.md: documents the
template tokens, the absolute-path header, and the opt-in inline
shell with its security caveat.
Validation: tests/agent/ 1591 passed (includes 9 new tests).
E2E: loaded a real skill in an isolated HERMES_HOME; confirmed
${HERMES_SKILL_DIR} resolves to the absolute path, ${HERMES_SESSION_ID}
resolves to the passed task_id, !`date` runs when opt-in is set, and
stays literal when it isn't.
* feat(terminal): source ~/.bashrc (and user-listed init files) into session snapshot
bash login shells don't source ~/.bashrc, so tools that install themselves
there — nvm, asdf, pyenv, cargo, custom PATH exports — stay invisible to
the environment snapshot Hermes builds once per session. Under systemd
or any context with a minimal parent env, that surfaces as
'node: command not found' in the terminal tool even though the binary
is reachable from every interactive shell on the machine.
Changes:
- tools/environments/local.py: before the login-shell snapshot bootstrap
runs, prepend guarded 'source <file>' lines for each resolved init
file. Missing files are skipped, each source is wrapped with a
'[ -r ... ] && . ... || true' guard so a broken rc can't abort the
bootstrap.
- hermes_cli/config.py: new terminal.shell_init_files (explicit list,
supports ~ and ${VAR}) and terminal.auto_source_bashrc (default on)
knobs. When shell_init_files is set it takes precedence; when it's
empty and auto_source_bashrc is on, ~/.bashrc gets auto-sourced.
- tests/tools/test_local_shell_init.py: 10 tests covering the resolver
(auto-bashrc, missing file, explicit override, ~/${VAR} expansion,
opt-out) and the prelude builder (quoting, guarded sourcing), plus
a real-LocalEnvironment snapshot test that confirms exports in the
init file land in subsequent commands' environment.
- website/docs/reference/faq.md: documents the fix in Troubleshooting,
including the zsh-user pattern of sourcing ~/.zshrc or nvm.sh
directly via shell_init_files.
Validation: 10/10 new tests pass; tests/tools/test_local_*.py 40/40
pass; tests/agent/ 1591/1591 pass; tests/hermes_cli/test_config.py
50/50 pass. E2E in an isolated HERMES_HOME: confirmed that a fake
~/.bashrc setting a marker var and PATH addition shows up in a real
LocalEnvironment().execute() call, that auto_source_bashrc=false
suppresses it, that an explicit shell_init_files entry wins over the
auto default, and that a missing bashrc is silently skipped.
Aslaaen's fix in the original PR covered _detect_api_mode_for_url and the
two openai/xai sites in run_agent.py. This finishes the sweep: the same
substring-match false-positive class (e.g. https://api.openai.com.evil/v1,
https://proxy/api.openai.com/v1, https://api.anthropic.com.example/v1)
existed in eight more call sites, and the hostname helper was duplicated
in two modules.
- utils: add shared base_url_hostname() (single source of truth).
- hermes_cli/runtime_provider, run_agent: drop local duplicates, import
from utils. Reuse the cached AIAgent._base_url_hostname attribute
everywhere it's already populated.
- agent/auxiliary_client: switch codex-wrap auto-detect, max_completion_tokens
gate (auxiliary_max_tokens_param), and custom-endpoint max_tokens kwarg
selection to hostname equality.
- run_agent: native-anthropic check in the Claude-style model branch
and in the AIAgent init provider-auto-detect branch.
- agent/model_metadata: Anthropic /v1/models context-length lookup.
- hermes_cli/providers.determine_api_mode: anthropic / openai URL
heuristics for custom/unknown providers (the /anthropic path-suffix
convention for third-party gateways is preserved).
- tools/delegate_tool: anthropic detection for delegated subagent
runtimes.
- hermes_cli/setup, hermes_cli/tools_config: setup-wizard vision-endpoint
native-OpenAI detection (paired with deduping the repeated check into
a single is_native_openai boolean per branch).
Tests:
- tests/test_base_url_hostname.py covers the helper directly
(path-containing-host, host-suffix, trailing dot, port, case).
- tests/hermes_cli/test_determine_api_mode_hostname.py adds the same
regression class for determine_api_mode, plus a test that the
/anthropic third-party gateway convention still wins.
Also: add asslaenn5@gmail.com → Aslaaen to scripts/release.py AUTHOR_MAP.
Users can declare shell scripts in config.yaml under a hooks: block that
fire on plugin-hook events (pre_tool_call, post_tool_call, pre_llm_call,
subagent_stop, etc). Scripts receive JSON on stdin, can return JSON on
stdout to block tool calls or inject context pre-LLM.
Key design:
- Registers closures on existing PluginManager._hooks dict — zero changes
to invoke_hook() call sites
- subprocess.run(shell=False) via shlex.split — no shell injection
- First-use consent per (event, command) pair, persisted to allowlist JSON
- Bypass via --accept-hooks, HERMES_ACCEPT_HOOKS=1, or hooks_auto_accept
- hermes hooks list/test/revoke/doctor CLI subcommands
- Adds subagent_stop hook event fired after delegate_task children exit
- Claude Code compatible response shapes accepted
Cherry-picked from PR #13143 by @pefontana.
Cherry-picked from PR #13159 by @cdanis.
Adds native media attachment delivery to Signal via signal-cli JSON-RPC
attachments param. Signal messages with media now follow the same
early-return pattern as Telegram/Discord/Matrix — attachments are sent
only with the last chunk to avoid duplicates.
Follow-up fixes on top of the original PR:
- Moved Signal into its own early-return block above the restriction
check (matches Telegram/Discord/Matrix pattern)
- Fixed media_files being sent on every chunk in the generic loop
- Restored restriction/warning guards to simple form (Signal exits early)
- Fixed non-hermetic test writing to /tmp instead of tmp_path
Adds a _resolve_path() helper that reads TERMINAL_CWD and uses it as
the base for relative path resolution. Applied to _check_sensitive_path,
read_file_tool, _update_read_timestamp, and _check_file_staleness.
Absolute paths and non-worktree sessions (no TERMINAL_CWD) are
unaffected — falls back to os.getcwd().
Fixes#12689.
Replaces the serial for-loop in tick() with ThreadPoolExecutor so all
jobs due in a single tick run concurrently. A slow job no longer blocks
others from executing, fixing silent job skipping (issue #9086).
Thread safety:
- Session/delivery env vars migrated from os.environ to ContextVars
(gateway/session_context.py) so parallel jobs can't clobber each
other's delivery targets. Each thread gets its own copied context.
- jobs.json read-modify-write cycles (advance_next_run, mark_job_run)
protected by threading.Lock to prevent concurrent save clobber.
- send_message_tool reads delivery vars via get_session_env() for
ContextVar-aware resolution with os.environ fallback.
Configuration:
- cron.max_parallel_jobs in config.yaml (null = unbounded, 1 = serial)
- HERMES_CRON_MAX_PARALLEL env var override
Based on PR #9169 by @VenomMoth1.
Fixes#9086
Cherry-picked from PR #2545 by @Mibayy.
The setup wizard could leave stt.model: "whisper-1" in config.yaml.
When using the local faster-whisper provider, this crashed with
"Invalid model size 'whisper-1'". Voice messages were silently ignored.
_normalize_local_model() now detects cloud-only names (whisper-1,
gpt-4o-transcribe, etc.) and maps them to the default local model
with a warning. Valid local sizes (tiny, base, small, medium, large-v3)
pass through unchanged.
- Renamed _normalize_local_command_model -> _normalize_local_model
(backward-compat wrapper preserved)
- 6 new tests including integration test
- Added lowercase AUTHOR_MAP alias for @Mibayy
Closes#2544
On macOS, Unix domain socket paths are capped at 104 bytes (sun_path).
SSH appends a 16-byte random suffix to the ControlPath when operating
in ControlMaster mode. With an IPv6 host embedded literally in the
filename and a deeply-nested macOS $TMPDIR like
/var/folders/XX/YYYYYYYYYYYY/T/, the full path reliably exceeds the
limit — every terminal/file-op tool call then fails immediately with
``unix_listener: path "…" too long for Unix domain socket``.
Swap the ``user@host:port.sock`` filename for a sha256-derived 16-char
hex digest. The digest is deterministic for a given (user, host, port)
triple, so ControlMaster reuse across reconnects is preserved, and the
full path fits comfortably under the limit even after SSH's random
suffix. Collision space is 2^64 — effectively unreachable for the
handful of concurrent connections any single Hermes process holds.
Regression tests cover: path length under realistic macOS $TMPDIR with
the IPv6 host from the issue report, determinism for reconnects, and
distinctness across different (user, host, port) triples.
Closes#11840
Follow-up to #12704. The SignalAdapter can resolve +E164 numbers to
UUIDs via listContacts, but _parse_target_ref() in the send_message
tool rejected '+' as non-digit and fell through to channel-name
resolution — which fails for contacts without a prior session entry.
Adds an E.164 branch in _parse_target_ref for phone-based platforms
(signal, sms, whatsapp) that preserves the leading '+' so downstream
adapters keep the format they expect. Non-phone platforms are
unaffected.
Reported by @qdrop17 on Discord after pulling #12704.