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278 commits
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53637fb17d | chore(skills/darwinian-evolver): AUTHOR_MAP + docs regen | ||
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dc4cde278b
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feat(docs): show per-skill pages in the left sidebar (#26646)
Individual skill pages (e.g. /docs/user-guide/skills/bundled/productivity/notion)
had no sidebar rendered — the sidebar config only listed the two catalog index
pages. That was an intentional choice from an earlier 'too many entries would
drown product docs' concern, but the effect is that a user landing on any skill
page (via search, share link, or the catalog table) loses navigation entirely
and can't see related skills.
Wire build_sidebar_items() (which was already computed and discarded) back into
the sidebar. Structure:
Skills
├── Bundled skills catalog (catalog table, was already there)
├── Optional skills catalog (catalog table, was already there)
├── Bundled
│ ├── apple/
│ │ ├── apple-apple-notes
│ │ └── ...
│ └── ... (one collapsed category per skill category)
└── Optional
└── ... (same)
Categories are collapsed by default so the top-level Skills entry doesn't
explode visually. Users browsing one skill see siblings in the same category;
the catalogs remain the at-a-glance entry point.
Also includes drift the regen script naturally produces on top of current main:
- creative-comfyui v5.0.0 → v5.1.0 page (author + new ref file)
- devops-kanban-worker SKILL.md updates
- new pages for optional skills that lacked generated docs:
hyperliquid, finance-stocks, software-development/rest-graphql-debug
- updated optional-skills-catalog row for those
Validation:
- npx docusaurus build (en locale) succeeded — only pre-existing warnings
- inspected built productivity-notion/index.html: sidebar tree present,
sibling productivity skills (airtable, linear, etc.) all linked
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42070ecefb
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feat(skills/notion): overhaul for Notion Developer Platform (May 2026) (#26612)
* feat(skills/notion): overhaul for Notion Developer Platform (May 2026) Notion shipped its Developer Platform on May 13, 2026: ntn CLI, Workers, Markdown API, bidirectional webhooks, agent tools. The existing skill only covered curl + integration token CRUD, so it didn't surface any of the new ergonomics — particularly the /markdown endpoints (much easier for agents to consume) and the ntn CLI for headless API + Workers management. This rewrite (v1.0.0 -> v2.0.0): - Splits setup into Path A (HTTP, cross-platform incl. Windows), Path B (ntn CLI on macOS/Linux, with NOTION_API_TOKEN env var for headless), and Path C (Windows fallback — HTTP API or WSL2; native ntn is 'coming soon'). - Keeps the full curl reference (still the only Windows-compatible path). - Adds /markdown endpoints — GET and PATCH page-as-markdown, plus POST /v1/pages with a markdown body param. Agent-friendly, no CLI required. - Adds ntn CLI cheat sheet for raw API shorthand, file uploads, and workspace flags. - Adds Notion Workers section: scaffold, tool/webhook capability shapes, lifecycle commands. Gated on Business/Enterprise plans + macOS/Linux. - Adds Notion-flavored Markdown reference (callouts, toggles, columns, mentions, colors) for the /markdown endpoints. - Adds a 'choose the right path' decision table at the bottom. - Notes the new efficient Notion MCP server as an optional wiring path. Auto-generated docs page regenerated via website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py. * docs(skills-catalog): update notion description for v2.0.0 |
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164a77dec9 |
docs: add pip install path to installation, quickstart, updating, and CLI reference
Document pip install hermes-agent as a first-class install option. Clarify that PyPI releases track tagged versions (major/minor), not every commit on main — git installer is for bleeding-edge. |
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4ad5fa702f
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docs(xai-oauth): add xai-oauth to provider enumeration pages (#26542)
Follow-up to #26534 (xai-oauth provider). The new guide and integrations page were shipped with the salvage, but four reference/enumeration pages still listed every other OAuth provider without xai-oauth: - reference/cli-commands.md — `--provider` choices list - reference/environment-variables.md — HERMES_INFERENCE_PROVIDER values - user-guide/configuration.md — auxiliary-task provider list, OAuth tip block (mirrored from MiniMax OAuth), and provider table row - user-guide/features/fallback-providers.md — provider table |
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5af672c753
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chore: remove Atropos RL environments and tinker-atropos integration (#26106)
* chore: remove Atropos RL environments, tools, tests, skill, and tinker-atropos submodule Delete: - environments/ (43 files — base env, agent loop, tool call parsers, benchmarks) - rl_cli.py (standalone RL training CLI) - tools/rl_training_tool.py (all 10 rl_* tools) - tests: test_rl_training_tool, test_tool_call_parsers, test_managed_server_tool_support, test_agent_loop, test_agent_loop_vllm, test_agent_loop_tool_calling, test_terminalbench2_env_security - optional-skills/mlops/hermes-atropos-environments/ - tinker-atropos git submodule + .gitmodules * chore: remove RL/Atropos references from Python source - toolsets.py: remove rl toolset block + update comment - model_tools.py: remove rl_tools group + update async bridging comment - hermes_cli/tools_config.py: remove RL display entry, _DEFAULT_OFF_TOOLSETS, setup block, and rl_training post-setup handler - tools/budget_config.py: remove RL environment reference in docstring - tests/test_model_tools.py: remove rl_tools from expected groups - tests/run_agent/test_streaming_tool_call_repair.py: fix stale cross-reference * chore: remove rl/yc-bench extras and tinker-atropos refs from pyproject.toml - Remove rl extra (atroposlib, tinker, fastapi, uvicorn, wandb) - Remove yc-bench extra - Remove rl_cli from py-modules - Remove [tool.ty.src] exclude for tinker-atropos - Remove [tool.ruff] exclude for tinker-atropos - Regenerate uv.lock * chore: remove tinker-atropos from install/setup scripts - setup-hermes.sh: remove entire tinker-atropos submodule install block - scripts/install.sh: remove both tinker-atropos blocks (Termux + standard) - scripts/install.ps1: remove tinker-atropos block - nix/hermes-agent.nix: remove tinker-atropos pip install line * chore: remove RL references from cli-config.yaml.example * docs: remove Atropos/RL references from README, CONTRIBUTING, AGENTS.md * docs: remove RL/Atropos references from website - Delete: environments.md, rl-training.md, mlops-hermes-atropos-environments.md - sidebars.ts: remove rl-training and environments sidebar entries - optional-skills-catalog.md: remove hermes-atropos-environments row - tools-reference.md: remove entire rl toolset section - toolsets-reference.md: remove rl row + update example - integrations/index.md: remove RL Training bullet - architecture.md: remove environments/ from tree + RL section - contributing.md: remove tinker-atropos setup - updating.md: remove tinker-atropos install + stale submodule update * chore: remove remaining RL/Atropos stragglers - hermes_cli/config.py: remove TINKER_API_KEY + WANDB_API_KEY env var defs - hermes_cli/doctor.py: remove Submodules check section (tinker-atropos) - hermes_cli/setup.py: remove RL Training status check - hermes_cli/status.py: remove Tinker + WandB from API key status display - agent/display.py: remove both rl_* tool preview/activity blocks - website/docs: remove RL references from providers.md + env-variables.md - tests: remove TINKER_API_KEY from conftest, set_config_value, setup_script * chore: remove RL training section from .env.example |
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4695d2716f |
fix(browser): honor pre-set AGENT_BROWSER_ARGS and document the bypass
Follow-up to the sandbox-bypass env-var fix: - Update the opt-out gate so a user-provided AGENT_BROWSER_ARGS is also respected, not just the legacy AGENT_BROWSER_CHROME_FLAGS. Previously the gate only checked the broken legacy var, so a user who pre-set AGENT_BROWSER_ARGS would still get clobbered by Hermes's auto-injection. - Document AGENT_BROWSER_ARGS in .env.example, the browser feature page, and the env var reference, with notes about the auto-injection on AppArmor-restricted systems (Ubuntu 23.10+, DGX Spark, containers). - Add Anadi Jaggia to AUTHOR_MAP. |
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ccb5aae0d2
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feat(proxy): local OpenAI-compatible proxy for OAuth providers (#25969)
Adds 'hermes proxy start' — a local HTTP server that lets external apps (OpenViking, Karakeep, Open WebUI, ...) use a Hermes-managed provider subscription as their LLM endpoint. The proxy attaches the user's real OAuth-resolved credentials to each forwarded request, refreshing them automatically; the client can send any bearer (it gets stripped). Ships with one adapter — Nous Portal. The UpstreamAdapter ABC and registry in hermes_cli/proxy/adapters/ are designed for additional OAuth providers to plug in by name without server changes. Commands: hermes proxy start [--provider nous] [--host 127.0.0.1] [--port 8645] hermes proxy status hermes proxy providers Allowed Portal paths: /v1/chat/completions, /v1/completions, /v1/embeddings, /v1/models. Anything else returns 404 with a clear error pointing at the allowed list. aiohttp is gated like gateway/platforms/api_server.py (try-import, clean runtime error if missing). No new core dependency. Tests: 24 unit tests + 1 separate E2E that spawns the real subprocess and verifies the upstream receives the right bearer with the client's header stripped. |
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ddb8d8fa84
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docs: update NovitaAI provider positioning (#25532) | ||
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1551ce46a4 | docs: update NovitaAI description to "90+ models, pay-per-use" | ||
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c76e879574 |
feat: add NovitaAI as LLM provider
Add NovitaAI as a first-class provider with dedicated model selection flow, live pricing, and authoritative context length resolution. - Register provider in PROVIDER_REGISTRY, HERMES_OVERLAYS, and all alias/label maps (ID: novita, aliases: novita-ai, novitaai) - Add dedicated _model_flow_novita() with 3-tier model list fallback: Novita API → models.dev → static curated list - Fetch live pricing from /v1/models with correct unit conversion (input_token_price_per_m is 0.0001 USD per Mtok) - Add Novita-specific context length resolution (step 4b) in get_model_context_length(), prioritized over models.dev/OpenRouter - Register api.novita.ai in _URL_TO_PROVIDER to prevent early return from the custom-endpoint code path - Add models.dev mapping (novita → novita-ai) - Add default auxiliary model (deepseek/deepseek-v3-0324) - Add NOVITA_API_KEY to test isolation (conftest.py) - Update docs: providers page, env vars reference, CLI reference, .env.example, README, and landing page |
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66c70966cd |
chore(skills/evm): tighten SKILL.md to modern format
- description ≤60 chars (was 346) - platforms: [linux, macos, windows] — script is pure stdlib (urllib, json, argparse), no POSIX-only primitives - author: credit @Mibayy + @youssefea + @ethernet8023 + Hermes Agent (was just Mibayy) - regenerated auto-gen docs page |
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e3fc081499 |
feat(skills): merge blockchain/base into blockchain/evm; salvage PR #2010
Salvages the closed PR #2010 (Mibayy's EVM multi-chain skill) and folds the existing optional-skills/blockchain/base/ skill into it, so we ship one unified EVM skill instead of two overlapping ones. Pulled in from base/: - 8 missing Base-specific tokens (AERO, DEGEN, TOSHI, BRETT, WELL, cbETH, cbBTC, wstETH, rETH) added to KNOWN_TOKENS['base'] — base/ had 11, evm/ only had 3 (USDC/DAI/WETH). - L1 data-fee pitfall note for rollups (Base, Arbitrum, Optimism, zkSync). - Batch-size chunking in rpc_batch (Base RPC caps batches at 10 calls per JSON-RPC request; adding more known tokens tripped that limit and broke 'wallet --chain base' with a 'list index out of range' error). Ported the chunking pattern from base/_rpc_batch_chunk. Latent bugs found and fixed while smoke-testing the merge: - cmd_multichain and cmd_allowance both iterated KNOWN_TOKENS[chain] with 'for contract, (symbol, _name) in known.items()' — but the dict shape is {symbol: contract_str}, not {addr: (sym, name)}. This raised 'too many values to unpack (expected 2)' on every non-zero balance. Now iterates as 'for symbol, contract in known.items()'. - Input validation: added is_valid_address / is_valid_txhash / require_address / require_txhash helpers and wired them into cmd_wallet, cmd_tx, cmd_token, cmd_activity, cmd_allowance, cmd_decode, cmd_contract, cmd_multichain. Fails fast with exit 2 on malformed input instead of burning an RPC round-trip on garbage. Documentation: - SKILL.md now flags that this skill supersedes optional-skills/blockchain/base. - Pitfalls expanded for ENS (single-endpoint dependency on ensideas.com), tx decoding (single-endpoint dependency on 4byte.directory), and rollup L1 fees. - Regenerated website/docs/user-guide/skills/optional/blockchain/ blockchain-evm.md and removed the old blockchain-base.md page; catalog updated. Removed: - optional-skills/blockchain/base/SKILL.md - optional-skills/blockchain/base/scripts/base_client.py - website/docs/user-guide/skills/optional/blockchain/blockchain-base.md Smoke-tested live against Base mainnet: stats, price, token, wallet (vitalik.eth — 3.12 ETH + 13.88 USDC + 4.23 DAI + 0.06 WETH on Base) and allowance (ethereum, 7 unlimited approvals to Uniswap/Permit2). Original PR #2010 author: Mibayy. Original base/ skill author: youssefea. |
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091d8e1030
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feat(codex-runtime): optional codex app-server runtime for OpenAI/Codex models (#24182)
* feat(codex-runtime): scaffold optional codex app-server runtime
Foundational commit for an opt-in alternate runtime that hands OpenAI/Codex
turns to a 'codex app-server' subprocess instead of Hermes' tool dispatch.
Default behavior is unchanged.
Lands in three pieces:
1. agent/transports/codex_app_server.py — JSON-RPC 2.0 over stdio speaker
for codex's app-server protocol (codex-rs/app-server). Spawn, init
handshake, request/response, notification queue, server-initiated
request queue (for approval round-trips), interrupt-friendly blocking
reads. Tested against real codex 0.130.0 binary end-to-end during
development.
2. hermes_cli/runtime_provider.py:
- Adds 'codex_app_server' to _VALID_API_MODES.
- Adds _maybe_apply_codex_app_server_runtime() helper, called at the
end of _resolve_runtime_from_pool_entry(). Inert unless
'model.openai_runtime: codex_app_server' is set in config.yaml AND
provider in {openai, openai-codex}. Other providers cannot be
rerouted (anthropic, openrouter, etc. preserved).
3. tests/agent/transports/test_codex_app_server_runtime.py — 24 tests
covering api_mode registration, the rewriter helper (default-off,
case-insensitive, opt-in, non-eligible providers preserved), version
parser, missing-binary handling, error class. Does NOT require codex
CLI installed.
This commit is wire-only: the api_mode is recognized but AIAgent does
not yet branch on it. Followup commits add the session adapter, event
projector, approval bridge, transcript projection (so memory/skill
review still works), plugin migration, and slash command.
Existing tests remain green:
- tests/cli/test_cli_provider_resolution.py (29 passed)
- tests/agent/test_credential_pool_routing.py (included above)
* feat(codex-runtime): add codex item projector for memory/skill review
The translator that lets Hermes' self-improvement loop keep working under the
Codex runtime: converts codex 'item/*' notifications into Hermes' standard
{role, content, tool_calls, tool_call_id} message shape that
agent/curator.py already knows how to read.
Item taxonomy (matches codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/protocol/v2/item.rs):
- userMessage → {role: user, content}
- agentMessage → {role: assistant, content: text}
- reasoning → stashed in next assistant's 'reasoning' field
- commandExecution → assistant tool_call(name='exec_command') + tool result
- fileChange → assistant tool_call(name='apply_patch') + tool result
- mcpToolCall → assistant tool_call(name='mcp.<server>.<tool>') + tool result
- dynamicToolCall → assistant tool_call(name=<tool>) + tool result
- plan/hookPrompt/etc → opaque assistant note, no fabricated tool_calls
Invariants preserved:
- Message role alternation never violated: each tool item produces at most
one assistant + one tool message in that order, correlated by call_id.
- Streaming deltas (item/<type>/outputDelta, item/agentMessage/delta)
don't materialize messages — only item/completed does. Mirrors how
Hermes already only writes the assistant message after streaming ends.
- Tool call ids are deterministic (codex item id-based) so replays produce
identical messages and prefix caches stay valid (AGENTS.md pitfall #16).
- JSON args use sorted_keys for the same reason.
Real wire formats verified against codex 0.130.0 by capturing live
notifications from thread/shellCommand and including one as a fixture
(COMMAND_EXEC_COMPLETED).
23 new tests, all green:
- Streaming deltas don't materialize (3 paths)
- Turn/thread frame events are silent
- commandExecution: 5 tests including non-zero exit annotation +
deterministic id stability across replays
- agentMessage + reasoning attachment + reasoning consumption
- fileChange: summary without inlined content
- mcpToolCall: namespaced naming + error surfacing
- userMessage: text fragments only (drops images/etc)
- opaque items: no fabricated tool_calls
- Helpers: deterministic id stability + sorted JSON args
- Role alternation invariant across all four tool-shaped item types
This commit is a pure addition. AIAgent integration (the wire that uses the
projector) is the next commit.
* feat(codex-runtime): add session adapter + approval bridge
The third self-contained module: CodexAppServerSession owns one Codex
thread per Hermes session, drives turn/start, consumes streaming
notifications via CodexEventProjector, handles server-initiated approval
requests, and translates cancellation into turn/interrupt.
The adapter has a single public per-turn method:
result = session.run_turn(user_input='...', turn_timeout=600)
# result.final_text → assistant text for the caller
# result.projected_messages → list ready to splice into AIAgent.messages
# result.tool_iterations → tick count for _iters_since_skill nudge
# result.interrupted → True on Ctrl+C / deadline / interrupt
# result.error → error string when the turn cannot complete
# result.turn_id, thread_id → for sessions DB / resume
Behavior:
- ensure_started() spawns codex, does the initialize handshake, and
issues thread/start with cwd + permissions profile. Idempotent.
- run_turn() blocks until turn/completed, drains server-initiated
requests (approvals) before reading notifications so codex never
deadlocks waiting for us, projects every item/completed via the
projector, and increments tool_iterations for the skill nudge gate.
- request_interrupt() is thread-safe (threading.Event); the next loop
iteration issues turn/interrupt and unwinds.
- turn_timeout deadlock guard issues turn/interrupt and records an
error if the turn never completes.
- close() escalates terminate → kill via the underlying client.
Approval bridge:
Codex emits server-initiated requests for execCommandApproval and
applyPatchApproval. The adapter translates Hermes' approval choice
vocabulary onto codex's decision vocabulary:
Hermes 'once' → codex 'approved'
Hermes 'session' or 'always' → codex 'approvedForSession'
Hermes 'deny' / anything else → codex 'denied'
Routing precedence:
1. _ServerRequestRouting.auto_approve_* flags (cron / non-interactive)
2. approval_callback wired by the CLI (defers to
tools.approval.prompt_dangerous_approval())
3. Fail-closed denial when neither is wired
Unknown server-request methods are answered with JSON-RPC error -32601
so codex doesn't hang waiting for us.
Permission profile mapping mirrors AGENTS.md:
Hermes 'auto' → codex 'workspace-write'
Hermes 'approval-required' → codex 'read-only-with-approval'
Hermes 'unrestricted/yolo' → codex 'full-access'
20 new tests, all green. Combined with prior commits this PR now has
67 tests across three modules:
- test_codex_app_server_runtime.py: 24 (api_mode + transport surface)
- test_codex_event_projector.py: 23 (item taxonomy projections)
- test_codex_app_server_session.py: 20 (turn loop + approvals + interrupts)
Full tests/agent/transports/ directory: 249/249 pass — no regressions
to existing transport tests.
Still no wire into AIAgent.run_conversation(); that integration commit
is small and goes next.
* feat(codex-runtime): wire codex_app_server runtime into AIAgent
The integration commit. AIAgent.run_conversation() now early-returns to a
new helper _run_codex_app_server_turn() when self.api_mode ==
'codex_app_server', bypassing the chat_completions tool loop entirely.
Three small surgical edits to run_agent.py (~105 LOC total):
1. Line ~1204 (constructor api_mode validation set):
Add 'codex_app_server' so an explicit api_mode='codex_app_server'
passed to AIAgent() isn't silently rewritten to 'chat_completions'.
2. Line ~12048 (run_conversation, just before the while loop):
Early-return to _run_codex_app_server_turn() when self.api_mode is
'codex_app_server'. Placed AFTER all standard pre-loop setup —
logging context, session DB, surrogate sanitization, _user_turn_count
and _turns_since_memory increments, _ext_prefetch_cache, memory
manager on_turn_start — so behavior outside the model-call loop is
identical between paths. Default Hermes flow is unchanged when the
flag is off.
3. End-of-class (line ~15497):
New method _run_codex_app_server_turn(). Lazy-instantiates one
CodexAppServerSession per AIAgent (reused across turns), runs the
turn, splices projected_messages into messages, increments
_iters_since_skill by tool_iterations (since the chat_completions
loop normally does that per iteration), fires
_spawn_background_review on the same cadence as the default path.
Counter accounting:
_turns_since_memory ← already incremented at run_conversation:11817
(gated on memory store configured) — codex
helper does NOT touch it (would double-count).
_user_turn_count ← already incremented at run_conversation:11793
— codex helper does NOT touch it.
_iters_since_skill ← incremented in the chat_completions loop per
tool iteration. Codex helper increments by
turn.tool_iterations since the loop is bypassed.
User message:
ALREADY appended to messages by run_conversation pre-loop (line 11823)
before the early-return reaches us. Helper does NOT append again.
Regression test test_user_message_not_duplicated guards this.
Approval callback wiring:
Lazy-fetches tools.terminal_tool._get_approval_callback at session
spawn time, passes to CodexAppServerSession. CLI threads with
prompt_toolkit get interactive approvals; gateway/cron contexts get
the codex-side fail-closed deny.
Error path:
Codex session exceptions become a 'partial' result with completed=False
and a final_response that explicitly tells the user how to switch back:
'Codex app-server turn failed: ... Fall back to default runtime with
/codex-runtime auto.' Same return-dict shape as the chat_completions
path so all callers (gateway, CLI, batch_runner, ACP) work unchanged.
9 new integration tests in tests/run_agent/test_codex_app_server_integration.py:
- api_mode='codex_app_server' is accepted on AIAgent construction
- run_conversation returns the expected codex shape
(final_response, codex_thread_id, codex_turn_id, completed, partial)
- Projected messages are spliced into messages list
- _iters_since_skill ticks per tool iteration
- _user_turn_count delegated to standard flow (not double-counted)
- User message appears exactly once (regression guard)
- _spawn_background_review IS invoked (memory/skill review keeps working)
- chat.completions.create is NEVER called (loop fully bypassed)
- Session exception → partial result with /codex-runtime auto hint
- Interrupted turn → partial result with error preserved
Adjacent test runs confirm no regressions:
- tests/run_agent/test_memory_nudge_counter_hydration.py: green
- tests/run_agent/test_background_review.py: green
- tests/run_agent/test_fallback_model.py: green
- tests/agent/transports/: 249/249 green
Still missing for full feature: /codex-runtime slash command, plugin
migration helper, docs page, live e2e test gated on codex binary. Those
are the remaining followup commits.
* feat(codex-runtime): add /codex-runtime slash command (CLI + gateway)
User-facing toggle for the optional codex app-server runtime. Follows the
'Adding a Slash Command (All Platforms)' pattern from AGENTS.md exactly:
single CommandDef in the central registry → CLI handler → gateway handler
→ running-agent guard → all surfaces (autocomplete, /help, Telegram menu,
Slack subcommands) update automatically.
Surface:
/codex-runtime — show current state + codex CLI status
/codex-runtime auto — Hermes default runtime
/codex-runtime codex_app_server — codex subprocess runtime
/codex-runtime on / off — synonyms
Files changed:
hermes_cli/codex_runtime_switch.py (new):
Pure-Python state machine shared by CLI and gateway. Parse args,
read/write model.openai_runtime in the config dict, gate enabling
behind a codex --version check (don't let users opt in to a runtime
they have no binary for; print npm install hint instead).
Returns a CodexRuntimeStatus dataclass that callers render however
suits their surface.
hermes_cli/commands.py:
Single CommandDef entry, no aliases (codex-runtime is its own thing).
cli.py:
Dispatch in process_command() + _handle_codex_runtime() handler that
delegates to the shared module and renders results via _cprint.
gateway/run.py:
Dispatch in _handle_message() + _handle_codex_runtime_command() that
returns a string (gateway sends as message). On a successful change
that requires a new session, _evict_cached_agent() forces the next
inbound message to construct a fresh AIAgent with the new api_mode —
avoids prompt-cache invalidation mid-session.
gateway/run.py running-agent guard:
/codex-runtime joins /model in the early-intercept block so a runtime
flip mid-turn can't split a turn across two transports.
Tests:
tests/hermes_cli/test_codex_runtime_switch.py — 25 tests covering the
state machine: arg parsing (10 cases incl. case-insensitive and
synonyms), reading current runtime (5 cases incl. malformed configs),
writing runtime (3 cases), apply() entry point covering read-only,
no-op, codex-missing-blocked, codex-present-success, disable-no-binary-check,
and persist-failure paths (8 cases). All green.
Adjacent test suites confirm no regressions:
- tests/hermes_cli/test_commands.py + test_codex_runtime_switch.py:
167/167 green
- tests/agent/transports/: 283/283 green when combined with prior commits
Still missing: plugin migration helper, docs page, live e2e test gated on
codex binary. Followup commits.
* feat(codex-runtime): auto-migrate Hermes MCP servers to ~/.codex/config.toml
Translates the user's mcp_servers config from ~/.hermes/config.yaml into
the TOML format codex's MCP client expects. Wired into the
/codex-runtime codex_app_server enable path so users get their MCP tool
surface in the spawned subprocess automatically.
The migration runs on every enable. Failures are non-fatal — the runtime
change still proceeds and the user gets a warning so they can fix the
codex config manually.
What translates (mapping verified against codex-rs/core/src/config/edit.rs):
Hermes mcp_servers.<n>.command/args/env → codex stdio transport
Hermes mcp_servers.<n>.url/headers → codex streamable_http transport
Hermes mcp_servers.<n>.timeout → codex tool_timeout_sec
Hermes mcp_servers.<n>.connect_timeout → codex startup_timeout_sec
Hermes mcp_servers.<n>.cwd → codex stdio cwd
Hermes mcp_servers.<n>.enabled: false → codex enabled = false
What does NOT translate (warned + skipped per server):
Hermes-specific keys (sampling, etc.) — codex's MCP client has no
equivalent. Listed in the per-server skipped[] field of the report.
What's NOT migrated (intentional):
AGENTS.md — codex respects this file natively in its cwd. Hermes' own
AGENTS.md (project-level) is already in the worktree, so codex picks
it up without translation. No code needed.
Idempotency design:
All managed content lives between a 'managed by hermes-agent' marker
and the next non-mcp_servers section header. _strip_existing_managed_block
removes the prior managed region cleanly, preserving any user-added
codex config (model, providers.openai, sandbox profiles, etc.) above
or below.
Files added:
hermes_cli/codex_runtime_plugin_migration.py — pure-Python migration
helper. Public API: migrate(hermes_config, codex_home=None,
dry_run=False) returns MigrationReport with .migrated/.errors/
.skipped_keys_per_server. No external TOML dependency — minimal
formatter handles strings/numbers/booleans/lists/inline-tables.
tests/hermes_cli/test_codex_runtime_plugin_migration.py — 39 tests
covering:
- per-server translation (12): stdio/http/sse, cwd, timeouts,
enabled flag, command+url precedence, sampling drop, unknown keys
- TOML formatter (8): types, escaping, inline tables, error case
- existing-block stripping (4): no marker, alone, with user content
above, with user content below
- end-to-end migrate() (8): empty, dry-run, round-trip, idempotent
re-run, preserves user config, error reporting, invalid input,
summary formatting
Files changed:
hermes_cli/codex_runtime_switch.py — apply() now calls migrate() in
the codex_app_server enable branch. Migration failure logs a warning
in the result message but does NOT fail the runtime change. Disable
path (auto) explicitly skips migration.
tests/hermes_cli/test_codex_runtime_switch.py — 3 new tests:
test_enable_triggers_mcp_migration, test_disable_does_not_trigger_migration,
test_migration_failure_does_not_block_enable.
All 325 feature tests green:
- tests/agent/transports/: 249 (incl. 67 new)
- tests/run_agent/test_codex_app_server_integration.py: 9
- tests/hermes_cli/test_codex_runtime_switch.py: 28 (3 new)
- tests/hermes_cli/test_codex_runtime_plugin_migration.py: 39 (new)
* perf(codex-runtime): cache codex --version check within apply()
Single /codex-runtime invocation could spawn 'codex --version' up to 3
times (state report, enable gate, success message). Each spawn is ~50ms,
so the cumulative cost wasn't a crisis, but it was wasteful and turned a
trivial slash command into something noticeably laggy on slower systems.
Refactored to lazy-once via a closure over a nonlocal cache. First call
spawns; subsequent calls in the same apply() reuse the result.
Behavior unchanged — same return shape, same error handling, same install
hint when codex is missing. Just one subprocess per call instead of three.
Two regression-guard tests added:
- test_binary_check_cached_within_apply: enable path → call_count == 1
- test_binary_check_cached_on_read_only_call: state-report path → call_count == 1
Total tests for /codex-runtime now 30 (was 28); all 143 codex-runtime
tests still green.
* fix(codex-runtime): correct protocol field names found via live e2e test
Three real bugs caught only by running a turn end-to-end against codex
0.130.0 with a real ChatGPT subscription. Unit tests passed because they
asserted on our own (incorrect) wire shapes; the wire format from
codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/protocol/v2/* is the source of truth and
my initial reading of the README was incomplete.
Bug 1: thread/start.permissions wire format
Was sending {"profileId": "workspace-write"}.
Real format per PermissionProfileSelectionParams enum (tagged union):
{"type": "profile", "id": "workspace-write"}
AND requires the experimentalApi capability declared during initialize.
AND requires a matching [permissions] table in ~/.codex/config.toml or
codex fails the request with 'default_permissions requires a [permissions]
table'.
Fix: stop overriding permissions on thread/start. Codex picks its default
profile (read-only unless user configures otherwise), which matches what
codex CLI users expect — they configure their default permission profile
in ~/.codex/config.toml the standard way. Trying to be clever about
profile selection broke every turn we tested.
Live error before fix: 'Invalid request: missing field type' on every
turn/start, even though our turn/start payload was correct — the field
codex was complaining about was inside the permissions sub-object we
shouldn't have been sending.
Bug 2: server-request method names
Was matching 'execCommandApproval' and 'applyPatchApproval'.
Real names per common.rs ServerRequest enum:
item/commandExecution/requestApproval
item/fileChange/requestApproval
item/permissions/requestApproval (new third method)
Fix: match the documented names. Added handler for
item/permissions/requestApproval that always declines — codex sometimes
asks to escalate permissions mid-turn and silent acceptance would surprise
users.
Live symptom before fix: agent.log showed
'Unknown codex server request: item/commandExecution/requestApproval'
and codex stalled because we replied with -32601 (unsupported method)
instead of an approval decision. The agent reported back 'The write
command was rejected' even though Hermes never showed the user an
approval prompt.
Bug 3: approval decision values
Was sending decision strings 'approved'/'approvedForSession'/'denied'.
Real values per CommandExecutionApprovalDecision enum (camelCase):
accept, acceptForSession, decline, cancel
(also AcceptWithExecpolicyAmendment and ApplyNetworkPolicyAmendment
variants we don't currently use).
Fix: rename _approval_choice_to_codex_decision return values; update
auto_approve_* fallbacks; update fail-closed default from 'denied' to
'decline'. Test mapping table updated to match.
Live test verified after fixes:
$ hermes (with model.openai_runtime: codex_app_server)
> Run the shell command: echo hermes-codex-livetest > .../proof.txt
then read it back
Approval prompt fired with 'Codex requests exec in <cwd>'.
User chose 'Allow once'. Codex executed the command, wrote the file,
read it back. Final response: 'Read back from proof.txt:
hermes-codex-livetest'. File contents on disk match.
agent.log confirms:
codex app-server thread started: id=019e200e profile=workspace-write
cwd=/tmp/hermes-codex-livetest/workspace
All 20 session tests still green after wire-format updates.
* fix(codex-runtime): correct apply_patch approval params + ship docs
Live e2e revealed FileChangeRequestApprovalParams doesn't carry the
changeset (just itemId, threadId, turnId, reason, grantRoot) — Codex's
'reason' field describes what the patch wants to do. Test config and
display logic updated to use it. The first 'apply_patch (0 change(s))'
display from the live test is now 'apply_patch: <reason>'.
Adds website/docs/user-guide/features/codex-app-server-runtime.md
covering enable/disable, prerequisites, approval UX, MCP migration
behavior, permission profile delegation to ~/.codex/config.toml, known
limitations, and the architecture diagram. Wired into the Automation
category in sidebars.ts.
Live e2e validation across the path matrix:
✓ thread/start handshake
✓ turn/start with text input
✓ commandExecution items + projection
✓ item/commandExecution/requestApproval → Hermes UI → response
✓ Approve once → command runs
✓ Deny → command rejected, codex falls back to read-only message
✓ Multi-turn (codex remembers prior turn's results)
✓ apply_patch via Codex's fileChange path
✓ item/fileChange/requestApproval → Hermes UI
✓ MCP server migration loads inside spawned codex (verified via
'use the filesystem MCP tool' prompt)
✓ /codex-runtime auto → codex_app_server toggle cycle
✓ Disable doesn't trigger migration
✓ Enable with codex CLI present succeeds + migrates
✓ Hermes-side interrupt path (turn/interrupt request issued cleanly
even if codex finishes before the interrupt lands)
Known live-validated limitations now documented in the docs page:
- delegate_task subagents unavailable on this runtime
- permission profile selection delegated to ~/.codex/config.toml
- apply_patch approval prompt has no inline changeset (codex protocol
doesn't expose it)
145/145 codex-runtime tests still green.
* feat(codex-runtime): native plugin migration + UX polish (quirks 2/4/5/10/11)
Major: migrate native Codex plugins (#7 in OpenClaw's PR list)
Discovers installed curated plugins via codex's plugin/list RPC and
writes [plugins."<name>@<marketplace>"] entries to ~/.codex/config.toml
so they're enabled in the spawned Codex sessions. This is the
'YouTube-video-worthy' bit Pash highlighted: when a user has
google-calendar, github, etc. installed in their Codex CLI, those
plugins activate automatically when they enable Hermes' codex runtime.
Implementation:
- hermes_cli/codex_runtime_plugin_migration.py: new _query_codex_plugins()
helper spawns 'codex app-server' briefly and walks plugin/list. Returns
(plugins, error) — failures are non-fatal so MCP migration still works.
- render_codex_toml_section() now takes plugins + permissions args.
- migrate() defaults: discover_plugins=True, default_permission_profile=
'workspace-write'. Explicit None on either disables that side.
- _strip_existing_managed_block() now also strips [plugins.*] and
[permissions]/[permissions.*] sections inside the managed block, so
re-runs replace plugins cleanly without touching codex's own config.
Quirk fixes:
#2 Default permissions profile written on enable.
Without this, Codex's read-only default kicks in and EVERY write
triggers an approval prompt. Now writes [permissions] default =
'workspace-write' so the runtime feels normal out of the box. Set
default_permission_profile=None to opt out.
#4 apply_patch approval prompt now shows what's changing.
Codex's FileChangeRequestApprovalParams doesn't carry the changeset.
Session adapter now caches the fileChange item from item/started
notifications and looks it up by itemId when codex requests approval.
Prompt shows '1 add, 1 update: /tmp/new.py, /tmp/old.py' instead of
'apply_patch (0 change(s))'.
Side benefit: also drains pending notifications BEFORE handling a
server request, so the projector and per-turn caches are up to date
when the approval decision fires. Bounded to 8 notifications per
loop iter to avoid starving codex's response.
#5/#10 Exec approval prompt never shows empty cwd.
When codex omits cwd in CommandExecutionRequestApprovalParams, fall
back to the session's cwd. If somehow neither is available, show
'<unknown>' explicitly instead of an empty string.
Also surfaces 'reason' from the approval params when codex provides
it — gives users more context on why codex wants to run something.
#11 Banner indicates the codex_app_server runtime when active.
New 'Runtime: codex app-server (terminal/file ops/MCP run inside
codex)' line appears in the welcome banner only when the runtime is
on. Default banner is unchanged.
Tests:
- 7 new tests in test_codex_runtime_plugin_migration.py covering
plugin discovery (mocked), failure handling, dry-run skip, opt-out
flag, idempotent re-runs, and permissions writing.
- 3 new tests in test_codex_app_server_session.py covering the
enriched approval prompts: cwd fallback, change summary on
apply_patch, fallback when no item/started cache exists.
- All 26 session tests + 46 migration tests green; 153 total in PR.
* feat(codex-runtime): hermes-tools MCP callback + native plugin migration
The big architectural addition: when codex_app_server runtime is on,
Hermes registers its own tool surface as an MCP server in
~/.codex/config.toml so the codex subprocess can call back into Hermes
for tools codex doesn't ship with — web_search, browser_*, vision,
image_generate, skills, TTS.
Also: 'migrate native codex plugins' (Pash's YouTube-video-worthy bit) —
when the user has plugins like Linear, GitHub, Gmail, Calendar, Canva
installed via 'codex plugin', Hermes discovers them via plugin/list and
writes [plugins.<name>@openai-curated] entries so they activate
automatically.
New module: agent/transports/hermes_tools_mcp_server.py
FastMCP stdio server exposing 17 Hermes tools. Each call dispatches
through model_tools.handle_function_call() — same code path as the
Hermes default runtime. Run with:
python -m agent.transports.hermes_tools_mcp_server [--verbose]
Exposed: web_search, web_extract, browser_navigate / _click / _type /
_press / _snapshot / _scroll / _back / _get_images / _console /
_vision, vision_analyze, image_generate, skill_view, skills_list,
text_to_speech.
NOT exposed (deliberately):
- terminal/shell/read_file/write_file/patch — codex has built-ins
- delegate_task/memory/session_search/todo — _AGENT_LOOP_TOOLS in
model_tools.py:493, require running AIAgent context. Documented
as a limitation and surfaced in the slash command output.
Migration changes (hermes_cli/codex_runtime_plugin_migration.py):
- _query_codex_plugins() spawns 'codex app-server' briefly to walk
plugin/list and pull installed openai-curated plugins. Failures are
non-fatal — MCP migration still completes.
- render_codex_toml_section() now takes plugins + permissions args
AND wraps the managed block with a MIGRATION_END_MARKER comment so
the stripper can reliably find both ends, even when the block
contains top-level keys (default_permissions = ...).
- migrate() defaults: discover_plugins=True, expose_hermes_tools=True,
default_permission_profile=':workspace' (built-in codex profile name
— must be prefixed with ':'). All three opt-out via explicit args.
- _build_hermes_tools_mcp_entry() builds the codex stdio entry with
HERMES_HOME and PYTHONPATH passthrough so a worktree-launched
Hermes points the MCP subprocess at the same module layout.
Live-caught wire bugs fixed during this turn:
1. Permission profile config key is top-level , NOT a [permissions] table. The [permissions] table is
for *user-defined* profiles with structured fields. Built-in
profile names start with ':' (':workspace', ':read-only',
':danger-no-sandbox'). Was emitting
which codex rejected with 'invalid type: string "X", expected
struct PermissionProfileToml'.
2. Built-in profile is , NOT . Codex
rejected with 'unknown built-in profile'.
3. Codex's MCP layer sends for
tool-call confirmation. We weren't handling it, so codex stalled
and returned 'MCP tool call was rejected'. Now: auto-accept for
our own hermes-tools server (user already opted in by enabling
the runtime), decline for third-party servers.
Quirk fixes shipped (from the limitations list):
#2 default permissions: workspace profile written on enable. No more
approval prompt on every write.
#4 apply_patch approval shows what's changing: cache fileChange
items from item/started, look up by itemId when codex sends
item/fileChange/requestApproval. Prompt: '1 add, 1 update:
/tmp/new.py, /tmp/old.py' instead of '0 change(s)'.
#5/#10 exec approval cwd never empty: fall back to session cwd, then
'<unknown>'. Also surfaces 'reason' from codex when present.
#11 banner shows 'Runtime: codex app-server' line when active so
users understand why tool counts may not match what's reachable.
Tests:
- 5 new tests in test_codex_runtime_plugin_migration.py covering
plugin discovery, expose_hermes_tools entry generation, idempotent
re-runs, opt-out flag, permissions profile.
- 3 new tests in test_codex_app_server_session.py covering enriched
approval prompts (cwd fallback, fileChange summary).
- 2 new tests for mcpServer/elicitation/request handling (accept
hermes-tools, decline others).
- New test file test_hermes_tools_mcp_server.py covering module
surface, EXPOSED_TOOLS safety invariants (no shell/file_ops,
no agent-loop tools), and main() error paths.
- 166 codex-runtime tests total, all green.
Live e2e validated against codex 0.130.0 + ChatGPT subscription:
✓ /codex-runtime codex_app_server enables, migrates filesystem MCP,
registers hermes-tools, writes default_permissions = ':workspace'
✓ Banner shows 'Runtime: codex app-server' line in subsequent sessions
✓ Shell command runs without approval prompt (workspace profile works)
✓ Multi-turn — codex remembers prior turn's results
✓ apply_patch path via fileChange request approval
✓ web_search via hermes-tools MCP callback returns real Firecrawl
results: 'OpenAI Codex CLI – Getting Started' end-to-end in 13s
✓ Disable cycle clean
Docs updated: website/docs/user-guide/features/codex-app-server-runtime.md
Full re-write covering native plugin migration, the hermes-tools
callback architecture, the prerequisites change ('codex login is
separate from hermes auth login codex'), the trade-off table now
reflecting which Hermes tools work via callback, and the limitations
list updated with what's actually unavailable on this runtime.
* feat(codex-runtime): pin user-config preservation invariant for quirk #6
Quirk #6 from the limitations list — user MCP servers / overrides /
codex-only sections in ~/.codex/config.toml that live OUTSIDE the
hermes-managed block must survive re-migration verbatim.
This already worked thanks to the MIGRATION_MARKER + MIGRATION_END_MARKER
pair I added when fixing the default_permissions wire format (so the
strip can find both ends of the managed region even with top-level
keys like default_permissions). But it was an emergent property
without a test pinning it.
Now explicitly tested:
- User MCP server above the managed block survives migration
- User MCP server below the managed block survives migration
- Both above + below survive a second re-migration
- User content (model, providers, sandbox, otel, etc.) outside our
region is left untouched
Docs added a section "Editing ~/.codex/config.toml safely" explaining
the marker contract — so users know they can add their own MCP
servers, override permissions, configure codex-only options, etc.
without fear of Hermes overwriting their work.
167 codex-runtime tests, all green.
* docs(codex-runtime): clarify the actual tool surface — shell covers terminal/read/write/find
Previous docs and PR description undersold what codex's built-in
toolset actually provides. apply_patch alone made it sound like the
runtime could only edit files in patch format — implying you'd lose
terminal use, read_file, write_file, search/find. That was wrong.
Codex's 'shell' tool runs arbitrary shell commands inside the sandbox,
which covers everything you'd do in bash: cat/head/tail (read), echo>
or heredocs (write), find/rg/grep (search), ls/cd (navigate), build/
test/git/etc. apply_patch is for structured multi-file edits on top
of that. update_plan is its in-runtime todo. view_image loads images.
And codex has its own web_search built in (in addition to the
Firecrawl-backed one Hermes exposes via MCP callback).
Docs now have a 'What tools the model actually has' section right
after Why, breaking the surface into three clearly-labeled buckets:
1. Codex's built-in toolset (always on) — shell, apply_patch,
update_plan, view_image, web_search; covers everything terminal-
adjacent.
2. Native Codex plugins (auto-migrated from your codex plugin
install) — Linear, GitHub, Gmail, Calendar, Outlook, Canva, etc.
3. Hermes tool callback (MCP server in ~/.codex/config.toml) —
web_search/web_extract via Firecrawl, browser_*, vision_analyze,
image_generate, skill_view/skills_list, text_to_speech.
Plus a 'What's NOT available' callout listing the four agent-loop tools
(delegate_task, memory, session_search, todo) that need running
AIAgent context and can't reach the codex runtime.
Trade-offs table broken out: shell, apply_patch, update_plan,
view_image, sandbox each get their own row with a one-line description
so users can see at a glance what's available natively.
Architecture diagram updated to list the codex built-ins by name
instead of 'apply_patch + shell + sandbox'.
No code changes — purely docs clarification. 167 codex-runtime tests
still green.
* fix(codex-runtime): _spawn_background_review signature + review fork api_mode downgrade
Two real bugs in the self-improvement loop integration that the previous
test mocked away.
Bug 1: wrong call signature
The codex helper was calling self._spawn_background_review() with no
args after every turn. That function actually requires:
messages_snapshot=list (positional or keyword)
review_memory=bool (at least one trigger must be True)
review_skills=bool
So the call would have raised TypeError at runtime — except the only
test that exercised this path mocked _spawn_background_review entirely
and just asserted spawn.called, so the wrong-arg shape never surfaced.
Bug 2: review fork inherits codex_app_server api_mode
The review fork is constructed with:
api_mode = _parent_runtime.get('api_mode')
So when the parent is codex_app_server, the review fork ALSO runs as
codex_app_server. But the review fork's whole job is to call agent-loop
tools (memory, skill_manage) which require Hermes' own dispatch — they
short-circuit with 'must be handled by the agent loop' on the codex
runtime. So the review fork would have run, decided to save something,
called memory or skill_manage, and silently no-op'd.
Fixed in run_agent.py:_spawn_background_review() — when the parent
api_mode is 'codex_app_server', the review fork is downgraded to
'codex_responses' (same OAuth credentials, same openai-codex provider,
but talks to OpenAI's Responses API directly so Hermes owns the loop).
Also rewrote the codex helper's review wiring to match the
chat_completions path:
- Computes _should_review_memory in the pre-loop block (was already
being computed; now passed through to the helper as an arg).
- Computes _should_review_skills AFTER the codex turn returns +
counters tick (line ~15432 pattern in chat_completions).
- Calls _spawn_background_review(messages_snapshot=, review_memory=,
review_skills=) only when at least one trigger fires.
- Adds the external memory provider sync (_sync_external_memory_for_turn)
that the chat_completions path runs after every turn.
Tests:
Replaced the broken test_background_review_invoked (which only
asserted spawn.called) with three sharper tests:
- test_background_review_NOT_invoked_below_threshold:
single turn at default thresholds → no review fires (would have
caught the original 'every turn calls spawn with no args' bug)
- test_background_review_skill_trigger_fires_above_threshold:
10 tool_iterations at threshold=10 → review fires with
messages_snapshot=list, review_skills=True, counter resets
- test_background_review_signature_never_breaks: regression guard
asserting positional args are always empty and kwargs include
messages_snapshot
New TestReviewForkApiModeDowngrade class:
- test_codex_app_server_parent_downgrades_review_fork: drives the
real _spawn_background_review function (no mock at that level),
asserts the review_agent gets api_mode='codex_responses' when
the parent was codex_app_server.
Live-validated against real run_conversation:
- Counter ticked from 0 to 5 after a 5-tool-iteration turn
- _spawn_background_review fired exactly once with kwargs-only signature
- review_skills=True, review_memory=False
- messages_snapshot was 12 entries (5 assistant tool_calls + 5 tool
results + 1 final assistant + initial system/user)
- Counter reset to 0 after fire
170 codex-runtime tests, all green.
Docs: added a Self-improvement loop section to the codex runtime page
explaining both how the trigger logic stays equivalent and that the
review fork is auto-downgraded to codex_responses for the agent-loop
tools. Also clarified that apply_patch and update_plan ARE codex's
built-in tools (the previous version made it sound like they were
separate from 'codex's stuff' — they're not, all five tools listed
in 'What tools the model actually has' section 1 are codex built-ins).
* feat(codex-runtime): expose kanban tools through Hermes MCP callback
Kanban workers spawn as separate hermes chat -q subprocesses that read
the user's config.yaml. If model.openai_runtime: codex_app_server is set
globally (which is the whole point of opt-in), every dispatched worker
ALSO comes up on the codex runtime.
That mostly works — codex's built-in shell + apply_patch + update_plan
do the actual task work fine — but it had one critical break: the
worker handoff tools (kanban_complete, kanban_block, kanban_comment,
kanban_heartbeat) are Hermes-registered tools, not codex built-ins.
On the codex runtime, codex builds its own tool list and these never
reach the model, so the worker would do the work but not be able to
report back, hanging until the dispatcher's timeout escalates it as
zombie.
Fix: add all 9 kanban tools to the EXPOSED_TOOLS list in the Hermes
MCP callback. They dispatch statelessly through handle_function_call()
just like web_search and the others — they read HERMES_KANBAN_TASK
from env (set by the dispatcher), gate correctly (worker tools require
the env var, orchestrator tools require it unset), and write to
~/.hermes/kanban.db.
Why kanban tools work via stateless dispatch when delegate_task/memory/
session_search/todo don't: those four are listed in _AGENT_LOOP_TOOLS
(model_tools.py:493) and short-circuit in handle_function_call() with
'must be handled by the agent loop' — they need to mutate AIAgent's
mid-loop state. Kanban tools have no such requirement; they're pure
side-effect functions against the kanban.db plus state_meta.
Tools exposed:
Worker handoff (require HERMES_KANBAN_TASK):
kanban_complete, kanban_block, kanban_comment, kanban_heartbeat
Read-only board queries:
kanban_show, kanban_list
Orchestrator (require HERMES_KANBAN_TASK unset):
kanban_create, kanban_unblock, kanban_link
Tests:
- test_kanban_worker_tools_exposed: complete/block/comment/heartbeat
in EXPOSED_TOOLS (regression guard for the would-hang-worker bug)
- test_kanban_orchestrator_tools_exposed: create/show/list/unblock/link
Docs:
- New 'Workflow features' section in the docs page covering /goal,
kanban, and cron behavior on this runtime
- /goal: works fully via run_conversation feedback; only caveat is
approval-prompt noise on long writes-heavy goals (mitigated by
the default :workspace permission profile)
- Kanban: enumerated which tools are reachable via the callback and
why the env var propagates correctly through the codex subprocess
to the MCP server subprocess
- Cron: documented as 'not specifically tested' — same rules as the
CLI apply since cron runs through AIAgent.run_conversation
- Trade-offs table gained rows for /goal, kanban worker, kanban
orchestrator
172/172 codex-runtime tests green (+2 from kanban tests).
* docs(codex-runtime): wire /codex-runtime into slash-commands ref + flag aux token cost
Three docs gaps caught during a final audit:
1. /codex-runtime was only in the feature docs page, not in the
slash-commands reference. Added rows to both the CLI section and
the Messaging section so users discover it where they'd look for
slash command syntax.
2. CODEX_HOME and HERMES_KANBAN_TASK weren't in environment-variables.md.
CODEX_HOME lets users redirect Codex CLI's config dir (the migration
honors it). HERMES_KANBAN_TASK is set by the kanban dispatcher and
propagates to the codex subprocess + the hermes-tools MCP subprocess
so kanban worker tools gate correctly — documented as 'don't set
manually' since it's an internal handoff.
3. Aux client behavior on this runtime. When openai_runtime=
codex_app_server is on with the openai-codex provider, every aux
task (title generation, context compression, vision auto-detect,
session search summarization, the background self-improvement review
fork) flows through the user's ChatGPT subscription by default.
This is true for the existing codex_responses path too, but it's
more visible / important here because users explicitly opted in for
subscription billing. Added a 'Auxiliary tasks and ChatGPT
subscription token cost' section to the docs page with a YAML
example showing how to override specific aux tasks to a cheaper
model (typically google/gemini-3-flash-preview via OpenRouter).
Also documents how the self-improvement review fork gets
auto-downgraded from codex_app_server to codex_responses by the
fix earlier in this PR.
No code changes — pure docs. 172 codex-runtime tests still green.
* docs+test(codex-runtime): pin HOME passthrough, document multi-profile + CODEX_HOME
OpenClaw hit a real footgun in openclaw/openclaw#81562: when spawning
codex app-server they were synthesizing a per-agent HOME alongside
CODEX_HOME. That made every subprocess codex's shell tool launches
(gh, git, aws, npm, gcloud, ...) see a fake $HOME and miss the user's
real config files. They had to back it out in PR #81562 — keep
CODEX_HOME isolation, leave HOME alone.
Audit confirms Hermes' codex spawn doesn't have this problem. We do
os.environ.copy() and only overlay CODEX_HOME (when provided) and
RUST_LOG. HOME passes through unchanged. But it was an emergent
property without a test pinning it, so adding a regression guard:
test_spawn_env_preserves_HOME — confirms parent HOME survives intact
in the subprocess env
test_spawn_env_sets_CODEX_HOME_when_provided — confirms codex_home
arg still isolates
codex state correctly
Docs additions:
'HOME environment variable passthrough' section — calls out the
contract explicitly: CODEX_HOME isolates codex's own state, HOME
stays user-real so gh/git/aws/npm/etc. find their normal config.
Cites openclaw#81562 as the cautionary tale.
'Multi-profile / multi-tenant setups' section — addresses the
related concern: profiles share ~/.codex/ by default. For users who
want per-profile codex isolation (separate auth, separate plugins),
documents the manual CODEX_HOME=<profile-scoped-dir> approach.
Explains why we DON'T auto-scope CODEX_HOME per profile: doing so
would silently invalidate existing codex login state for anyone
upgrading to this PR with tokens already at ~/.codex/auth.json.
Opt-in is safer than surprising users.
174 codex-runtime tests (+2 from HOME guards), all green.
* fix(codex-runtime): TOML control-char escapes + atomic config.toml write
Two footguns caught in a final audit pass before merge.
Bug 1: TOML control characters not escaped
The _format_toml_value() helper escaped backslashes and double quotes
but passed literal control characters (\n, \t, \r, \f, \b) through
unchanged. TOML basic strings don't allow literal control characters
— a path or env var containing a newline would produce invalid TOML
that codex refuses to load.
Realistic exposure: pathological cases like a HERMES_HOME with a
trailing newline (env var concatenation accident), or a PYTHONPATH
with a tab from a multi-line shell heredoc.
Fix: escape all five TOML basic-string control sequences (\b \t \n
\f \r) in addition to \\ and \" that we already did. Order
matters — backslash must come first or the other escapes get
re-escaped.
Bug 2: config.toml write wasn't atomic
If the python process crashed between target.mkdir() and the
write_text() finishing, a half-written config.toml could be left
behind. On NFS / Windows / some FUSE mounts this is a real concern;
on ext4/APFS small writes are usually atomic in practice but not
guaranteed.
Fix: write to a tempfile.mkstemp() temp file in the same directory,
then Path.replace() (atomic same-dir rename on POSIX, ReplaceFile on
Windows). On rename failure, clean up the temp file so repeated
failed migrations don't pile up .config.toml.* files.
Tests:
- test_string_with_newline_escaped — \n in value → \n in output
- test_string_with_tab_escaped — \t in value → \t in output
- test_string_with_other_controls_escaped — \r, \f, \b
- test_windows_path_escaped_correctly — backslash doubling
- test_atomic_write_no_temp_leak_on_success — no .config.toml.*
left over after a successful write
- test_atomic_write_cleanup_on_rename_failure — temp file removed
when Path.replace raises (simulated disk full)
180 codex-runtime tests, all green (+6 from this commit).
Footguns audited but NOT fixed (with rationale):
- Concurrent migrations race. Two Hermes processes hitting
/codex-runtime codex_app_server within seconds of each other could
cause one writer to lose entries. Low probability (you'd have to
enable from two surfaces simultaneously) and low impact (just re-run
migration). Adding fcntl/msvcrt locking is more code than it's
worth here. The atomic rename above means each individual write is
consistent — only the merge step is racy.
- Codex protocol version drift. We pin MIN_CODEX_VERSION=0.125 and
check at runtime but don't reject too-new versions. Right call —
the protocol has been stable through 0.125 → 0.130. If OpenAI
breaks it later we'd see the error in test_codex_app_server_runtime
on CI before users hit it.
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feat(video_gen): unified video_generate tool with pluggable provider backends (#25126)
* feat(video_gen): unified video_generate tool with pluggable provider backends One core video_generate tool, every backend a plugin. Mirrors the image_gen + memory_provider + context_engine architecture: ABC, registry, plugin-context registration hook, and per-plugin model catalogs surfaced through hermes tools. Surface (one schema, every backend): - operation: generate / edit / extend - modalities: text-to-video (prompt only), image-to-video (prompt + image_url), video edit (prompt + video_url), video extend (video_url) - reference_image_urls, duration, aspect_ratio, resolution, negative_prompt, audio, seed, model override - Providers ignore unknown kwargs and declare what they support via VideoGenProvider.capabilities() — backend-specific quirks stay in the backend, the agent learns one tool Backends shipped: - plugins/video_gen/xai/ — Grok-Imagine, full generate/edit/extend + image-to-video + reference images (salvaged from PR #10600 by @Jaaneek, reshaped into the plugin interface) - plugins/video_gen/fal/ — Veo 3.1 (t2v + i2v), Kling O3 i2v, Pixverse v6 i2v with model-aware payload building that drops keys a model doesn't declare Wiring: - agent/video_gen_provider.py — VideoGenProvider ABC, normalize_operation, success_response / error_response, save_b64_video / save_bytes_video, $HERMES_HOME/cache/videos/ - agent/video_gen_registry.py — thread-safe register/get/list + get_active_provider() reading video_gen.provider from config.yaml - hermes_cli/plugins.py — PluginContext.register_video_gen_provider() - hermes_cli/tools_config.py — Video Generation category in hermes tools, plugin-only providers list, model picker per plugin, config write to video_gen.{provider,model} - toolsets.py — new video_gen toolset - tests: 31 new tests covering ABC, registry, tool dispatch, both plugins - docs: developer-guide/video-gen-provider-plugin.md (parallel to the image-gen guide), sidebar + toolsets-reference + plugin guides updated Supersedes: #25035 (FAL), #17972 (FAL), #14543 (xAI), #13847 (HappyHorse), #10458 (provider categories), #10786 (xAI media+search bundle), #2984 (FAL duplicate), #19086 (Google Veo standalone — easy port to plugin interface). Co-authored-by: Jaaneek <Jaaneek@users.noreply.github.com> * feat(video_gen): dynamic schema reflects active backend's capabilities Address the 'capability variance' question — instead of one tool with a static schema that lies about what every backend supports, the video_generate tool now rebuilds its description at get_definitions() time based on the configured video_gen.provider and video_gen.model. The agent sees backend-specific guidance up-front: - 'fal-ai/veo3.1/image-to-video': 'image-to-video only — image_url is REQUIRED; text-only prompts will be rejected' - 'fal-ai/veo3.1' (t2v): no image_url restriction shown - xAI grok-imagine-video: 'operations: generate, edit, extend; up to 7 reference_image_urls' - Backends without edit/extend: 'not supported on this backend — surface that they need to switch backends via hermes tools' This is the same pattern PR #22694 used for delegate_task self-capping — documented in the dynamic-tool-schemas skill. Cache invalidation is free: get_tool_definitions() already memoizes on config.yaml mtime, so a mid-session backend swap rebuilds the schema automatically. Tested: - Empirical FAL OpenAPI schema check confirms image-to-video models require image_url (FAL returns HTTP 422 otherwise) — client-side rejection in FALVideoGenProvider.generate() now prevents the wasted round-trip - Live E2E: fal-ai/veo3.1/image-to-video + prompt-only → clean missing_image_url error; fal-ai/veo3.1 + prompt-only → dispatches - 6 new tests cover the builder (no config / image-only / full-surface / text-only / unknown provider / registry wiring), all passing - 37/37 in the slice, 134/134 in the broader regression set * test(video_gen/xai): full surface integration tests + cleaner schema Verified end-to-end that the xAI plugin handles every documented mode from PR #10600's surface: text-to-video, image-to-video, reference-images-to-video, video edit, video extend (with and without prompt). All five modes route to the correct xAI endpoint (/videos/generations, /videos/edits, /videos/extensions) with the right payload shape (image / reference_images / video keys), and all five client-side rejections fire before the network: edit-without-prompt, extend-without-video_url, image+refs conflict, >7 references, and duration/aspect_ratio clamping. 15 new integration tests grouped into four classes (endpoint routing, modalities, validation, clamping). httpx is stubbed via a small fake AsyncClient that records POSTs so the tests assert the actual payload the plugin would send to xAI — not just the success/error envelope. Also cleaned up a description redundancy: when a model's operations match the backend's overall set, we no longer print the duplicate 'operations supported by this model' line. xAI's description now reads: Active backend: xAI . model: grok-imagine-video - operations supported by this backend: edit, extend, generate - modalities supported by this backend: image, reference_images, text - aspect_ratio choices: 16:9, 1:1, 2:3, 3:2, 3:4, 4:3, 9:16 - resolution choices: 480p, 720p - duration range: 1-15s - reference_image_urls: up to 7 images Co-authored-by: Jaaneek <Jaaneek@users.noreply.github.com> * feat(video_gen): collapse surface to t2v + i2v, family-based auto-routing Two design changes per Teknium: 1) Drop edit/extend from the tool surface entirely. Only text-to-video and image-to-video remain. The agent sees a clean tool with two modalities; backend-specific quirks like xAI's edit/extend endpoints stay out of the unified schema. 2) FAL: pick a model FAMILY once, the plugin routes between the family's text-to-video and image-to-video endpoints based on whether image_url was passed. Users no longer pick 'fal-ai/veo3.1' AND 'fal-ai/veo3.1/image-to-video' as separate options — they pick 'veo3.1', and the plugin handles the rest. Catalog rewritten as families: veo3.1 fal-ai/veo3.1 / fal-ai/veo3.1/image-to-video pixverse-v6 fal-ai/pixverse/v6/text-to-video / fal-ai/pixverse/v6/image-to-video kling-o3-standard fal-ai/kling-video/o3/standard/text-to-video / fal-ai/kling-video/o3/standard/image-to-video xAI uses a single endpoint (/videos/generations) for both modes, routed by the presence of the 'image' field in the payload — no edit/extend exposure. Schema changes: - VIDEO_GENERATE_SCHEMA: drop operation, drop video_url. Final params: prompt (required), image_url, reference_image_urls, duration, aspect_ratio, resolution, negative_prompt, audio, seed, model. - VideoGenProvider ABC: drop normalize_operation, VALID_OPERATIONS, DEFAULT_OPERATION. capabilities() drops 'operations' key. - success_response: add 'modality' field ('text' | 'image') so the agent and logs can see which endpoint was actually hit. Dynamic schema builder simplified — no operations bullet, no 'switch backends if you need edit/extend' guidance. When the active backend supports both modalities (the common case), description reads: Active backend: FAL . model: pixverse-v6 - supports both text-to-video (omit image_url) and image-to-video (pass image_url) - routes automatically - aspect_ratio choices: 16:9, 9:16, 1:1 - resolution choices: 360p, 540p, 720p, 1080p - duration range: 1-15s - audio: pass audio=true to enable native audio (pricing tier) - negative_prompt: supported Tests: 51 in the video_gen slice, 216 across the broader image+video sweep, all passing. New FAL routing tests prove pixverse-v6 + no image hits text-to-video endpoint, pixverse-v6 + image_url hits image-to-video endpoint, same for veo3.1 and kling-o3-standard. Docs updated: developer-guide page rewrites the 'model families' pattern as a first-class section so external plugin authors know the convention. toolsets-reference and toolsets.py descriptions match the new surface. Co-authored-by: Jaaneek <Jaaneek@users.noreply.github.com> * feat(video_gen/fal): expand catalog to 6 families, cheap + premium tiers Catalog now covers everything Teknium specced from FAL: Cheap tier: ltx-2.3 fal-ai/ltx-2.3-22b/text-to-video / image-to-video pixverse-v6 fal-ai/pixverse/v6/text-to-video / image-to-video Premium tier: veo3.1 fal-ai/veo3.1 / fal-ai/veo3.1/image-to-video seedance-2.0 bytedance/seedance-2.0/text-to-video / image-to-video kling-v3-4k fal-ai/kling-video/v3/4k/text-to-video / image-to-video happy-horse fal-ai/happy-horse/text-to-video / image-to-video DEFAULT_MODEL moved from veo3.1 (premium) to pixverse-v6 (cheap, sane defaults, both modalities) — better first-run UX for users who haven't explicitly picked a model. New family-entry knob: image_param_key. Kling v3 4K's image-to-video endpoint expects start_image_url instead of image_url; declaring image_param_key='start_image_url' on the family lets _build_payload remap correctly. Other families default to plain image_url. Per-family capability flags reflect each model's docs: - LTX 2.3 + Happy Horse: minimal payloads (no duration/aspect/resolution enum exposed by FAL — let endpoint apply defaults) - Seedance: 6 aspect ratios incl 21:9, durations 4-15, audio supported, negative prompts NOT supported per docs - Kling v3 4K: 16:9/9:16/1:1, 3-15s, audio + negative - Veo 3.1: unchanged, 16:9/9:16, 4/6/8s Tests: +5 covering the new families (full catalog, Kling 4K start_image_url remap, Seedance routing, LTX payload minimality, Happy Horse minimality). 56/56 in the slice green. Note: I did NOT add the FAL-hosted xAI Grok-Imagine variant. Hermes already has a direct xAI plugin that talks to xAI's own API; routing the same model through FAL's wrapper would duplicate the surface without adding capabilities. Users on FAL who want Grok-Imagine should use the xAI plugin directly; flag if you want both routes available. * test(video_gen): tool-surface routing matrix — every model x modality End-to-end matrix test driven through _handle_video_generate() — the actual function the agent's video_generate tool call lands in. Writes config.yaml, invokes the registered handler with a raw args dict, then asserts the outbound HTTP/SDK call hit the right endpoint with the right payload shape. Parametrized over FAL_FAMILIES.keys() so the matrix auto-discovers new families as they're added (add a family to FAL_FAMILIES and you get both modalities tested for free). Coverage: - All 6 FAL families x {text-only, text+image} = 12 cases - xAI x {text-only, text+image} = 2 cases - tool-level model= arg overrides config = 2 cases For each case, verifies: - result['success'] is True - result['modality'] matches input shape ('text' if no image_url, 'image' otherwise) - outbound endpoint URL matches the family's text_endpoint or image_endpoint - text-only payloads carry no image-shaped keys - text+image payloads carry the family's image key (image_url for most, start_image_url for kling-v3-4k, wrapped 'image' object for xAI) All 16 cases passing. Confirms the tool surface routes every (provider, model, modality) combination correctly with zero leakage. * feat(video_gen): keep video_gen out of first-run setup, surface in status Two changes: 1. video_gen joins _DEFAULT_OFF_TOOLSETS, so it is NOT pre-selected in the first-run toolset checklist. Video gen is niche, paid, and slow — most users don't want it nagging them during initial setup. Anyone who wants it opts in via 'hermes tools' -> Video Generation, which already routes to the provider+model picker. 2. The 'hermes setup' status panel learns about video_gen — but only shows the row when a plugin reports available. Users without FAL_KEY/XAI_API_KEY see nothing about video gen; users with one of those keys see 'Video Generation (FAL) ✓' as confirmation it's wired. Verified live: - Fresh install (no creds): zero video_gen mentions in wizard. - With FAL_KEY: status row appears with active backend name. - 160/160 in the setup + tools_config + video_gen test slice. Rationale: image_gen is on by default because it's a featured creative tool used in casual chat (telegrams, etc). Video gen is heavier — long wait, paid per-second pricing. Default-off matches user intent better. --------- Co-authored-by: Jaaneek <Jaaneek@users.noreply.github.com> |
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feat(lsp): semantic diagnostics from real language servers in write_file/patch (#24168)
* feat(lsp): semantic diagnostics from real language servers in write_file/patch
Wire ~26 language servers (pyright, gopls, rust-analyzer, typescript-language-server,
clangd, bash-language-server, ...) into the post-write lint check used by write_file
and patch. The model now sees type errors, undefined names, missing imports, and
project-wide semantic issues introduced by its edits, not just syntax errors.
LSP is gated on git workspace detection: when the agent's cwd or the file being
edited is inside a git worktree, LSP runs against that workspace; otherwise the
existing in-process syntax checks are the only tier. This keeps users on
user-home cwds (Telegram/Discord gateway chats) from spawning daemons.
The post-write check is layered: in-process syntax check first (microseconds),
then LSP semantic diagnostics second when syntax is clean. Diagnostics are
delta-filtered against a baseline captured at write start, so the agent only
sees errors its edit introduced. A flaky/missing language server can never
break a write -- every LSP failure path falls back silently to the syntax-only
result.
New module agent/lsp/ split into:
- protocol.py: Content-Length JSON-RPC framer + envelope helpers
- client.py: async LSPClient (spawn, initialize, didOpen/didChange,
ContentModified retry, push/pull diagnostic stores)
- workspace.py: git worktree walk-up + per-server NearestRoot resolver
- servers.py: registry of 26 language servers (extension match,
root resolver, spawn builder per language)
- install.py: auto-install dispatch (npm install --prefix, go install
with GOBIN, pip install --target) into HERMES_HOME/lsp/bin/
- manager.py: LSPService (per-(server_id, root) client registry, lazy
spawn, broken-set, in-flight dedupe, sync facade for tools layer)
- reporter.py: <diagnostics> block formatter (severity-1-only, 20-per-file)
- cli.py: hermes lsp {status,list,install,install-all,restart,which}
Wired into tools/file_operations.py:
- write_file/patch_replace now call _snapshot_lsp_baseline before write
- _check_lint_delta gains a third tier: LSP semantic diagnostics when
syntax is clean
- All LSP code paths swallow exceptions; write_file's contract unchanged
Config: 'lsp' section in DEFAULT_CONFIG with enabled (default true),
wait_mode, wait_timeout, install_strategy (default 'auto'), and per-server
overrides (disabled, command, env, initialization_options).
Tests: tests/agent/lsp/ -- 49 tests covering protocol framing (encode and
read_message round-trip, EOF/truncation/missing Content-Length), workspace
gate (git walk-up, exclude markers, fallback to file location), reporter
(severity filter, max-per-file cap, truncation), service-level delta filter,
and an in-process mock LSP server that exercises the full client lifecycle
including didChange version bumps, dedup, crash recovery, and idempotent
teardown.
Live E2E verified end-to-end through ShellFileOperations: pyright
auto-installed via npm into HERMES_HOME, baseline captured, type error
introduced, single delta diagnostic surfaced with correct line/column/code/
source, then patch fix removes the diagnostic from the output.
Docs: new website/docs/user-guide/features/lsp.md page covering supported
languages, configuration knobs, performance characteristics, and
troubleshooting; cli-commands.md updated with the 'hermes lsp' reference;
sidebar updated.
* feat(lsp): structured logging, backend gate, defensive walk caps
Cherry-picks the substantive ideas from #24155 (different scope, same
problem space) onto our PR.
agent/lsp/eventlog.py (new): dedicated structured logger
``hermes.lint.lsp`` with steady-state silence. Module-level dedup sets
keep a 1000-write session at exactly ONE INFO line ("active for
<root>") at the default INFO threshold; clean writes log at DEBUG so
they never reach agent.log under normal config. State transitions
(server starts, no project root for a file, server unavailable) fire
at INFO/WARNING once per (server_id, key); novel events (timeouts,
unexpected errors) fire WARNING per call. Grep recipe: ``rg 'lsp\\['``.
agent/lsp/manager.py: wire the eventlog into _get_or_spawn and
get_diagnostics_sync so users can answer "did LSP fire on this edit?"
with a single grep, plus surface "binary not on PATH" warnings once
instead of silently retrying every write.
tools/file_operations.py: backend-type gate. ``_lsp_local_only()``
returns False for non-local backends (Docker / Modal / SSH /
Daytona); ``_snapshot_lsp_baseline`` and ``_maybe_lsp_diagnostics``
now skip entirely on remote envs. The host-side language server
can't see files inside a sandbox, so this prevents pretending to
lint a file the host process can't open.
agent/lsp/protocol.py: 8 KiB cap on the header block in
``read_message``. A pathological server that streams headers
without ever emitting CRLF-CRLF would have looped forever consuming
bytes; now raises ``LSPProtocolError`` instead.
agent/lsp/workspace.py: 64-step cap on ``find_git_worktree`` and
``nearest_root`` upward walks, plus try/except containment around
``Path(...).resolve()`` and child ``.exists()`` calls. Defensive
against pathological inputs (symlink loops, encoding errors,
permission failures mid-walk) — the lint hook is hot-path code and
must never raise.
Tests:
- tests/agent/lsp/test_eventlog.py: 18 tests covering steady-state
silence (clean writes stay DEBUG), state-transition INFO-once
semantics (active for, no project root), action-required
WARNING-once (server unavailable), per-call WARNING (timeouts,
spawn failures), and the "1000 clean writes => 1 INFO" contract.
- tests/agent/lsp/test_backend_gate.py: 5 tests verifying
_lsp_local_only / snapshot_baseline / maybe_lsp_diagnostics skip
the LSP layer for non-local backends and route correctly for
LocalEnvironment.
- tests/agent/lsp/test_protocol.py: new test_read_message_rejects_runaway_header
exercising the 8 KiB cap.
Validation:
- 73/73 LSP tests pass (49 original + 18 eventlog + 5 backend-gate + 1 framer cap)
- 198/198 pass when run alongside existing file_operations tests
- Live E2E re-run with pyright still surfaces "ERROR [2:12] Type
... reportReturnType (Pyright)" through the full path, then patch
fix removes it on the next call.
* feat(lsp): atexit cleanup + separate lsp_diagnostics JSON field
Two improvements salvaged from #24414's plugin-form alternative,
keeping our core-integrated design:
1. atexit cleanup of spawned language servers
----------------------------------------------------------------
``agent/lsp/__init__.get_service`` now registers an ``atexit``
handler on first creation that tears down the LSPService on
Python exit. Without this, every ``hermes chat`` exit was
leaking pyright/gopls/etc. processes for a few seconds while
their stdout buffers drained -- they got reaped by the kernel
eventually but a watchful ``ps aux`` would catch them.
The handler runs once per process (gated by
``_atexit_registered``); idempotent ``shutdown_service``
ensures double-fire is a no-op. Errors during shutdown are
swallowed at debug level since by the time atexit fires the
user has already seen the agent's final response.
2. Separate ``lsp_diagnostics`` field on WriteResult / PatchResult
----------------------------------------------------------------
Previously the LSP layer folded its diagnostic block into the
``lint.output`` string, conflating the syntax-check tier with
the semantic tier. The agent (and any downstream parsers) now
read syntax errors and semantic errors as independent signals:
{
"bytes_written": 42,
"lint": {"status": "ok", "output": ""},
"lsp_diagnostics": "<diagnostics file=...>\nERROR [2:12] ..."
}
``_check_lint_delta`` returns to its original two-tier shape
(syntax check + delta filter); ``write_file`` and
``patch_replace`` independently fetch LSP diagnostics via
``_maybe_lsp_diagnostics`` and pass them into the new field.
``patch_replace`` propagates the inner write_file's
``lsp_diagnostics`` so the outer PatchResult carries the patch's
delta correctly.
Tests: 19 new
- tests/agent/lsp/test_lifecycle.py (8 tests): atexit registration
fires once and only once across N get_service calls; the
registered callable is our internal shutdown wrapper;
shutdown_service is idempotent and safe when never started;
exceptions during shutdown are swallowed; inactive service is
cached so we don't rebuild on every check.
- tests/agent/lsp/test_diagnostics_field.py (11 tests): WriteResult
/ PatchResult dataclass shape, to_dict include/omit semantics,
channel separation (lint and lsp_diagnostics carry independent
signals), write_file populates the field via
_maybe_lsp_diagnostics only when the syntax tier is clean,
patch_replace propagates the field forward from its internal
write_file.
Validation:
- 92/92 LSP tests pass (73 prior + 8 lifecycle + 11 diagnostics field)
- 217/217 pass with file_operations + LSP combined
- Live E2E reverified: clean writes -> both fields empty/none; type
error introduced -> lint clean (parses), lsp_diagnostics carries
the pyright reportReturnType block; patch fix -> both fields
clean again.
* fix(lsp): broken-set short-circuit so a wedged server isn't paid every write
Discovered while auditing failure paths: a language server binary that
hangs (sleep forever, no LSP traffic on stdin/stdout) caused EVERY
subsequent write to re-pay the 8s snapshot_baseline timeout. Five
writes = ~64s of dead time.
The bug: ``_get_or_spawn`` adds the (server_id, root) pair to
``_broken`` inside its inner exception handler, but when the OUTER
``_loop.run`` timeout fires, it cancels the inner task before that
handler runs. The pair never makes it to broken-set, so the next
write re-enters the spawn path and re-pays the timeout.
Fix:
- New ``_mark_broken_for_file`` helper at the service layer marks
the (server_id, workspace_root) pair broken from the OUTSIDE when
the outer timeout fires. Called from the except branches in
``snapshot_baseline``, ``get_diagnostics_sync`` (asyncio.TimeoutError
+ generic Exception). Also kills any orphan client process that
survived the cancelled future, fire-and-forget with a 1s ceiling.
- ``enabled_for`` now consults the broken-set BEFORE returning True.
Files in already-broken (server_id, root) pairs short-circuit to
False, so the file_operations layer skips the LSP path entirely
with no spawn cost. Until the service is restarted (``hermes lsp
restart``) or the process exits.
- A single eventlog WARNING is emitted on first mark-broken so the
user knows which server gave up. Subsequent edits in the same
project stay silent.
Tests: 7 new in tests/agent/lsp/test_broken_set.py — covers the
key shape (server_id, per_server_root), enabled_for short-circuit,
sibling-file skip in same project, project isolation (broken in
A doesn't affect B), graceful no-op for missing-server / no-workspace,
and an end-to-end test that snapshots after a failure and verifies
the next ``enabled_for`` returns False.
Validation:
- Live retest of the wedged-binary scenario: 5 sequential writes,
first 8.88s (the one snapshot timeout), subsequent four ~0.84s
(no LSP cost). Down from 5x12.85s = 64s before this fix.
- 99/99 LSP tests pass (92 prior + 7 broken-set)
- 224/224 pass with file_operations + LSP combined
- Happy path E2E reverified — clean write, type error introduced,
patch fix all behave correctly with the new broken-set logic.
Note: the FIRST write to a wedged binary still pays 8s (the
snapshot_baseline timeout). We could shorten that, but pyright/
tsserver normally take 2-3s and slow CI rust-analyzer can need
5+ seconds, so 8s is the conservative ceiling. Subsequent writes
are instant.
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62fd905340 |
feat(browser): support externally managed Camofox sessions
Allow integrations to share a visible Camofox identity with Hermes and recover existing tabs without carrying local patches. Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com> |
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c594a23047
|
feat(agent): per-turn file-mutation verifier footer (#24498)
Detect when write_file / patch calls fail during a turn and are never superseded by a successful write to the same path. When the final text response is delivered, append an advisory footer listing the files that did NOT change — so models that over-claim 'patched 5 files' after 4 silent failures can't hide the lie. Catches the failure mode reported in Ben Eng's llm-wiki session: grok-4.1-fast issued batches of parallel patches, half failed with 'Could not find old_string', and the agent summarised the turn claiming every file was edited. The user had to manually run 'git status' each turn to catch it. The verifier is a pure post-hoc check on tool results — no new LLM calls, no synthetic messages injected into history (prompt cache preserved), no changes to tool argument dispatch. Per-turn state is keyed by path; a later successful write to the same path clears the failure entry so single-file retry recovery is not flagged. Wired into both _execute_tool_calls_concurrent and _execute_tool_calls_sequential, so batched parallel patches and one-at- a-time edits are both covered. Footer emission happens after the agent loop exits, before transform_llm_output / post_llm_call plugin hooks run, so plugins still see (and can modify) the augmented text. Config: display.file_mutation_verifier (bool, default true) + HERMES_FILE_MUTATION_VERIFIER env override. 31 unit tests in tests/run_agent/test_file_mutation_verifier.py cover target extraction (write_file, patch-replace, patch-v4a single and multi-file), error-preview extraction (JSON .error field and plain string), per-turn state transitions (first-error-wins on repeated failure, success supersedes failure), footer rendering (truncation at 10 entries, user-actionable hint), and env/config precedence. Companion docs updated: user-guide/configuration.md + reference/environment-variables.md. |
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|
ced1990c1c
|
feat(computer-use): refresh cua-driver on hermes update + add install --upgrade (#24063)
cua-driver was only installed once on toolset enable: `_run_post_setup` early-returns when the binary is already on PATH, so upstream fixes (e.g. v0.1.6 Safari window-focus fix) never reached existing users without manual reinstall. Two refresh points now: - `hermes update` re-runs the upstream installer at the end of the update if cua-driver is on PATH (macOS-only, no-op otherwise). Ties driver freshness to the user-controlled update cadence — no startup latency, no per-launch GitHub API call. - `hermes computer-use install --upgrade` for manual force-refresh. The upstream `install.sh` always pulls the latest release, so re-running is the canonical upgrade path. No version-comparison logic needed. `hermes computer-use status` now shows the installed version, and points at `--upgrade` for refreshing. |
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373c4d6647
|
docs(sessions): document /handoff cross-platform session transfer (#23400)
Adds a Cross-Platform Handoff section to user-guide/sessions.md covering the CLI flow, per-platform thread behavior (Telegram topics / Discord threads / Slack message-anchored / no-thread fallback), failure modes, and the resume-back-to-CLI loop. Adds the /handoff entry to reference/slash-commands.md and updates the CLI-only commands note. |
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6e5c49bdc4 |
refactor(kanban-orchestrator): drop hardcoded specialist roster, add Step-0 profile discovery
The skill enumerated 8 specialist profile names (researcher, analyst, writer, reviewer, backend-eng, frontend-eng, ops, pm) as "the standard roster" and told orchestrators to "assume these exist." Almost no real Hermes setup matches that fleet — single-profile setups, Docker-worker setups, and curated-team setups all violate it — so following the skill literally produced cards assigned to non-existent profiles, which the dispatcher silently failed to spawn (no autocorrect, no fallback, just sits in `ready` forever). Changes: - Drop the standard-specialist-roster table. - Add a "Profiles are user-configured — not a fixed roster" section at the top with a Step 0 that prescribes `hermes profile list` (or asking the user) before fanning out. Cache the result in working memory. - Rewrite the worked task-graph example with placeholder names (<profile-A>, <profile-B>, <profile-C>) so the structure is still teachable but doesn't invite copy-paste of role names that may not exist. - Reframe the "If no specialist fits" anti-temptation rule: don't invent profile names; ask the user. - Add a "Inventing profile names that doesn't exist" entry to Pitfalls. - Bump skill version 2.0.0 → 3.0.0 (semantic break: previous behavior promised a roster the skill no longer enumerates). - Update website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban.md to drop the matching "(researcher, writer, analyst, backend-eng, reviewer, ops)" line and explain the discovery prompt instead. - Re-run website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py to refresh the auto-generated skill page + catalog. Closes #21131 in spirit — addresses the same hardcoded-names footgun @yehuosi flagged, with a different shape than their PR (delete the roster rather than replace each name with placeholder, since the roster table was the load-bearing footgun and the worked example is salvageable with placeholder profile names). Co-authored-by: yehuosi <yehuosi@users.noreply.github.com> |
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50f9fee988
|
feat(gateway): add LINE Messaging API platform plugin (#23197)
* feat(gateway): add LINE Messaging API platform plugin
Adds LINE as a bundled platform plugin under `plugins/platforms/line/`,
synthesized from the strongest pieces of seven open community PRs. The
adapter requires zero core edits — `Platform("line")` is auto-discovered
via the bundled-plugin scan in `gateway/config.py`, and all hooks
(setup, env-enablement, cron delivery, standalone send) are wired
through `register_platform()` kwargs the way IRC and Teams do it.
Highlights merged into one plugin:
- **Reply token preferred, Push fallback.** Try the free reply token
first (single-use, ~60s TTL); fall back to metered Push when the
token is absent, expired, or rejected. (PR #21023)
- **Slow-LLM Template Buttons postback.** When the LLM is still running
past `LINE_SLOW_RESPONSE_THRESHOLD` (default 45s), the adapter burns
the original reply token to send a "Get answer" button bubble. The
user taps it to fetch the cached answer via a fresh reply token —
also free. State machine: PENDING → READY → DELIVERED, ERROR for
cancelled runs (orphan resolves to `LINE_INTERRUPTED_TEXT` after
/stop). Set threshold to 0 to disable. (PR #18153)
- **Three-allowlist gating** — separate user / group / room allowlists
with `LINE_ALLOW_ALL_USERS=true` dev-only escape hatch. (PR #18153)
- **Markdown URL preservation.** Strip bold/italic/code-fence/heading
markers (LINE renders them literally) but keep `[label](url)` →
`label (url)` so URLs stay tappable. (PR #18153)
- **System-message bypass** for `⚡ Interrupting`, `⏳ Queued`, etc. —
busy-acks reach the user as visible bubbles instead of being
swallowed into the postback cache. (PR #18153)
- **Media via public HTTPS URLs.** LINE doesn't accept binary uploads;
images/audio/video must be HTTPS-reachable. The adapter serves
registered tempfiles under `/line/media/<token>/<filename>` from the
same aiohttp app. Allowed-roots traversal guard covers
`tempfile.gettempdir()`, `/tmp` (→ `/private/tmp` on macOS), and
`HERMES_HOME`. `LINE_PUBLIC_URL` overrides URL construction for
setups behind tunnels/proxies. (PR #8398)
- **5-message-per-call batching.** LINE rejects >5 messages per
Reply/Push; smart-chunker caps text at 4500 chars per bubble.
- **Inbound dedup** via `webhookEventId` LRU. (PR #21023)
- **Self-message filter** via `/v2/bot/info` userId lookup. (PR #21023)
- **Loading-animation indicator** wired to LINE's `chat/loading/start`
endpoint, DM-only (LINE rejects it for groups/rooms). (PR #21023)
- **Out-of-process cron delivery** via `_standalone_send`, so
`deliver: line` cron jobs work even when cron runs detached from
the gateway.
- **Webhook hardening** — 1 MiB body cap, constant-time HMAC-SHA256
signature verification, dedup, scoped lock so two profiles can't
bind the same channel.
Validation
----------
- `scripts/run_tests.sh tests/gateway/test_line_plugin.py` →
73 passed in 1.05s
- `scripts/run_tests.sh tests/gateway/test_line_plugin.py
tests/gateway/test_irc_adapter.py
tests/gateway/test_plugin_platform_interface.py
tests/gateway/test_platform_registry.py
tests/gateway/test_config.py` → 193 passed, 7 skipped
- E2E import + register + signature roundtrip + `Platform("line")`
bundled-plugin discovery verified against current `origin/main`.
Closes the seven open LINE PRs (#18153, #16832, #6676, #21023, #14942,
#14988, #8398) by superseding them with a single plugin-form
implementation that takes the best idea from each.
Co-authored-by: pwlee <32443648+leepoweii@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jetha Chan <jetha@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Cattia <openclaw@liyangchen.me>
Co-authored-by: perng <charles@perng.com>
Co-authored-by: Soichiro Yoshimura <soichiro0111.dev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Zhou <77736378+David-0x221Eight@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Yu-ga <74749461+yuga-hashimoto@users.noreply.github.com>
* docs(platforms): document platform-specific slow-LLM UX pattern
Add a 'Platform-Specific Slow-LLM UX' section to the platform-adapter
developer guide covering the _keep_typing override pattern that LINE
uses for its Template Buttons postback flow.
Three subsections:
- Pattern: subclass _keep_typing to layer mid-flight UX (with code)
- Pattern: subclass send to route through a cache instead of sending
- When this pattern is appropriate (vs. always-Push fallback)
Plus a short pointer in gateway/platforms/ADDING_A_PLATFORM.md so
tree-readers find the prose walkthrough on the docsite.
Filed because the LINE plugin (PR #23197) was the first bundled
adapter to need this pattern — every prior plugin (irc, teams,
google_chat) handles slow responses with the default typing-loop and
a regular send_text. Documenting now while the rationale is fresh.
---------
Co-authored-by: pwlee <32443648+leepoweii@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jetha Chan <jetha@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Cattia <openclaw@liyangchen.me>
Co-authored-by: perng <charles@perng.com>
Co-authored-by: Soichiro Yoshimura <soichiro0111.dev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Zhou <77736378+David-0x221Eight@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Yu-ga <74749461+yuga-hashimoto@users.noreply.github.com>
|
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ded194eb6a
|
chore(skills): move heavy training skills + outlines to optional-skills (#22912)
These skills require heavy GPU/CUDA stacks or are niche enough that they shouldn't be active by default. Moved to optional-skills/ where users opt-in via `hermes skills install official/...`. Moved: - mlops/training/axolotl - mlops/training/trl-fine-tuning - mlops/training/unsloth - mlops/inference/outlines Counts: 91 -> 87 built-in, 72 -> 76 optional. Auto-regenerated docs (per-skill pages + catalogs) reflect the move. |
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252d68fd45
|
docs: deep audit — fix stale config keys, missing commands, and registry drift (#22784)
* docs: deep audit — fix stale config keys, missing commands, and registry drift Cross-checked ~80 high-impact docs pages (getting-started, reference, top-level user-guide, user-guide/features) against the live registries: hermes_cli/commands.py COMMAND_REGISTRY (slash commands) hermes_cli/auth.py PROVIDER_REGISTRY (providers) hermes_cli/config.py DEFAULT_CONFIG (config keys) toolsets.py TOOLSETS (toolsets) tools/registry.py get_all_tool_names() (tools) python -m hermes_cli.main <subcmd> --help (CLI args) reference/ - cli-commands.md: drop duplicate hermes fallback row + duplicate section, add stepfun/lmstudio to --provider enum, expand auth/mcp/curator subcommand lists to match --help output (status/logout/spotify, login, archive/prune/ list-archived). - slash-commands.md: add missing /sessions and /reload-skills entries + correct the cross-platform Notes line. - tools-reference.md: drop bogus '68 tools' headline, drop fictional 'browser-cdp toolset' (these tools live in 'browser' and are runtime-gated), add missing 'kanban' and 'video' toolset sections, fix MCP example to use the real mcp_<server>_<tool> prefix. - toolsets-reference.md: list browser_cdp/browser_dialog inside the 'browser' row, add missing 'kanban' and 'video' toolset rows, drop the stale '38 tools' count for hermes-cli. - profile-commands.md: add missing install/update/info subcommands, document fish completion. - environment-variables.md: dedupe GMI_API_KEY/GMI_BASE_URL rows (kept the one with the correct gmi-serving.com default). - faq.md: Anthropic/Google/OpenAI examples — direct providers exist (not just via OpenRouter), refresh the OpenAI model list. getting-started/ - installation.md: PortableGit (not MinGit) is what the Windows installer fetches; document the 32-bit MinGit fallback. - installation.md / termux.md: installer prefers .[termux-all] then falls back to .[termux]. - nix-setup.md: Python 3.12 (not 3.11), Node.js 22 (not 20); fix invalid 'nix flake update --flake' invocation. - updating.md: 'hermes backup restore --state pre-update' doesn't exist — point at the snapshot/quick-snapshot flow; correct config key 'updates.pre_update_backup' (was 'update.backup'). user-guide/ - configuration.md: api_max_retries default 3 (not 2); display.runtime_footer is the real key (not display.runtime_metadata_footer); checkpoints defaults enabled=false / max_snapshots=20 (not true / 50). - configuring-models.md: 'hermes model list' / 'hermes model set ...' don't exist — hermes model is interactive only. - tui.md: busy_indicator -> tui_status_indicator with values kaomoji|emoji|unicode|ascii (not kawaii|minimal|dots|wings|none). - security.md: SSH backend keys (TERMINAL_SSH_HOST/USER/KEY) live in .env, not config.yaml. - windows-wsl-quickstart.md: there is no 'hermes api' subcommand — the OpenAI-compatible API server runs inside hermes gateway. user-guide/features/ - computer-use.md: approvals.mode (not security.approval_level); fix broken ./browser-use.md link to ./browser.md. - fallback-providers.md: top-level fallback_providers (not model.fallback_providers); the picker is subcommand-based, not modal. - api-server.md: API_SERVER_* are env vars — write to per-profile .env, not 'hermes config set' which targets YAML. - web-search.md: drop web_crawl as a registered tool (it isn't); deep-crawl modes are exposed through web_extract. - kanban.md: failure_limit default is 2, not '~5'. - plugins.md: drop hard-coded '33 providers' count. - honcho.md: fix unclosed quote in echo HONCHO_API_KEY snippet; document that 'hermes honcho' subcommand is gated on memory.provider=honcho; reconcile subcommand list with actual --help output. - memory-providers.md: legacy 'hermes honcho setup' redirect documented. Verified via 'npm run build' — site builds cleanly; broken-link count went from 149 to 146 (no regressions, fixed a few in passing). * docs: round 2 audit fixes + regenerate skill catalogs Follow-up to the previous commit on this branch: Round 2 manual fixes: - quickstart.md: KIMI_CODING_API_KEY mentioned alongside KIMI_API_KEY; voice-mode and ACP install commands rewritten — bare 'pip install ...' doesn't work for curl-installed setups (no pip on PATH, not in repo dir); replaced with 'cd ~/.hermes/hermes-agent && uv pip install -e ".[voice]"'. ACP already ships in [all] so the curl install includes it. - cli.md / configuration.md: 'auxiliary.compression.model' shown as 'google/gemini-3-flash-preview' (the doc's own claimed default); actual default is empty (= use main model). Reworded as 'leave empty (default) or pin a cheap model'. - built-in-plugins.md: added the bundled 'kanban/dashboard' plugin row that was missing from the table. Regenerated skill catalogs: - ran website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py to refresh all 163 per-skill pages and both reference catalogs (skills-catalog.md, optional-skills-catalog.md). This adds the entries that were genuinely missing — productivity/teams-meeting-pipeline (bundled), optional/finance/* (entire category — 7 skills: 3-statement-model, comps-analysis, dcf-model, excel-author, lbo-model, merger-model, pptx-author), creative/hyperframes, creative/kanban-video-orchestrator, devops/watchers, productivity/shop-app, research/searxng-search, apple/macos-computer-use — and rewrites every other per-skill page from the current SKILL.md. Most diffs are tiny (one line of refreshed metadata). Validation: - 'npm run build' succeeded. - Broken-link count moved 146 -> 155 — the +9 are zh-Hans translation shells that lag every newly-added skill page (pre-existing pattern). No regressions on any en/ page. |
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8f711f79a4
|
fix(tools): install cua-driver when Computer Use is enabled via 'hermes tools' (#22765)
Returning users who enabled '🖱️ Computer Use (macOS)' via 'hermes tools' saw '✓ Saved configuration' but no install — cua-driver was never on PATH and the toolset failed at first use. Two compounding causes: 1. _toolset_needs_configuration_prompt fell through to _toolset_has_keys, which returned True for any provider with empty env_vars. cua-driver has no env vars, so the gate skipped _configure_toolset entirely and _run_post_setup('cua_driver') never ran. 2. No stable CLI entry-point existed for re-running the install when the picker no-op'd it (e.g. when toggling the toolset off+on inside one picker session, where 'added' is empty). Changes: - hermes_cli/tools_config.py: add _POST_SETUP_INSTALLED registry mapping post_setup keys to installed-state predicates. The gate now returns True when any visible provider has a registered post_setup whose predicate fails. cua_driver is the only opt-in for now; other post_setup hooks keep their existing behaviour. - hermes_cli/main.py: add 'hermes computer-use install' and 'hermes computer-use status' as a stable docs target. install reuses the same _run_post_setup('cua_driver') path that the picker invokes; status reports whether cua-driver is on PATH. - tools/computer_use/cua_backend.py: install hint now points users at 'hermes computer-use install' first. - website/docs/user-guide/features/computer-use.md: document the new command as the primary install path. - website/docs/reference/cli-commands.md: catalog 'hermes computer-use' alongside 'hermes tools'. - tests/hermes_cli/test_post_setup_gating.py: regression coverage for the gate predicate (missing -> setup forced, installed -> setup skipped, broken predicate -> non-blocking, unregistered keys -> behaviour unchanged). Fixes #22737. Reported by @f-trycua. |
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79694018f8
|
feat(plugins): HERMES_PLUGINS_DEBUG=1 surfaces plugin discovery logs (#22684)
Plugin authors had no easy way to figure out why their plugin wasn't loading — failures were buried in agent.log at WARNING and skip reasons (disabled, not enabled, depth cap, exclusive) were DEBUG-only and invisible by default. Set HERMES_PLUGINS_DEBUG=1 to attach a stderr handler at DEBUG to the hermes_cli.plugins logger only. Surfaces: - which directories were scanned + manifest counts per source - per manifest: resolved key, name, kind, source, on-disk path - skip reasons (disabled, not enabled, exclusive, depth cap, no register) - per load: tools/hooks/slash/CLI commands the plugin registered - full traceback on YAML parse failure (exc_info on the existing warning) - full traceback on register() exceptions, pointing at the plugin author's line Env var off (default) → zero new stderr output, same as before. Touches only hermes_cli/plugins.py + a doc section in the plugin-build guide + an entry in the env-vars reference. 3 new tests lock the attach/idempotent/no-attach behavior. |
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3299be6bdb
|
docs(windows): add native Windows guide + install one-liner on landing page (#22089)
New page: website/docs/user-guide/windows-native.md — comprehensive Windows-native deep dive covering: - Quick install (irm | iex) and parameterized form - What the installer does end-to-end (uv, Python 3.11, Node 22, PortableGit, messaging SDK bootstrap) - Feature matrix: native Windows vs WSL2 (dashboard /chat is WSL-only) - How Hermes runs shell commands on Windows (Git Bash resolution, HERMES_GIT_BASH_PATH override, MinGit layout pitfall) - UTF-8 console shim (configure_windows_stdio, opt-out via HERMES_DISABLE_WINDOWS_UTF8) - Editor handling (notepad default, VSCode/Notepad++/nvim overrides, why Ctrl-X Ctrl-E used to silently do nothing) - Ctrl+Enter for newline in the CLI - Gateway as a Scheduled Task (schtasks + Startup-folder fallback, pythonw.exe detached spawn, why not a Windows Service) - Data layout (%LOCALAPPDATA%\hermes vs %USERPROFILE%\.hermes split) - PATH after install, environment variables, uninstall - Process management internals (bpo-14484 os.kill(pid, 0) footgun, _pid_exists primitive, check-windows-footguns.py CI gate) - 10+ concrete pitfalls with fixes Also: - docs/index.md: add inline 'Install' section with both Linux/macOS curl and Windows irm|iex one-liners right under the hero CTAs. Updates the quick-links row to include 'native Windows'. - sidebars.ts: add Windows (Native) entry above Windows (WSL2). - windows-wsl-quickstart.md: point native-install cross-link at the new dedicated page (was going to installation.md#windows-native). - reference/environment-variables.md: document HERMES_GIT_BASH_PATH and HERMES_DISABLE_WINDOWS_UTF8 (previously undocumented). |
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9680827078 |
docs(teams): meeting summary delivery section + env var reference
Third docs slice shipped alongside the TeamsSummaryWriter code so operators can configure outbound summary delivery the moment this PR lands. - website/docs/user-guide/messaging/teams.md: new 'Meeting Summary Delivery (Teams Meeting Pipeline)' section under Features, explaining that the existing teams adapter handles pipeline outbound (not a separate adapter surface), with a config-snippet example for graph and incoming_webhook modes, a mode-choice trade-off table, and a note that settings are inert when the teams_pipeline plugin is disabled. - website/docs/reference/environment-variables.md: new Teams Meeting Summary Delivery subsection documenting TEAMS_DELIVERY_MODE, TEAMS_INCOMING_WEBHOOK_URL, TEAMS_GRAPH_ACCESS_TOKEN, TEAMS_TEAM_ID, TEAMS_CHANNEL_ID, TEAMS_CHAT_ID with cross-link to the Teams setup page section. Verified via npm run build: pages route correctly, no new warnings or errors. |
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ea86714cc0
|
docs(profiles): full user guide for profile distributions (#22017)
PR #20831 shipped the feature with a terse reference page. This adds a proper user guide — ~570 lines of what/why/when/how with use-case walkthroughs, lifecycle coverage from author through installer through update, and recipe snippets for common workflows. New page: website/docs/user-guide/profile-distributions.md Sections: * What this means — the before/after, side-by-side * Why git, not tarballs or a custom format * When to use a distribution (personal, team, community, product) and when NOT to (local backup, sharing credentials, sharing memories) * The lifecycle — dedicated walkthroughs for authors (publish in 4 steps) and installers (install, check, update, remove) * Use cases: personal sync, team internal bot, community publish, commercial product, ephemeral ops agent * Recipes: pin a version, compare installed vs. latest, preserve local customizations through updates, force clean reinstall, fork-and-customize, test before pushing * What is NEVER in a distribution (the user-owned exclude list verbatim) * Security and trust model — what you are trusting, why cron is not auto-scheduled, the browser-extension analogy Cross-linking: * Added to sidebar under Getting Started, right after user-guide/profiles. * Existing Profiles page ends with a Sharing profiles as distributions teaser that links here. * The Distribution section of the reference page gets an admonition pointing newcomers here first. The reference stays as a CLI-flag lookup for people who already know what they want. Validation: * ascii-guard lint --exclude-code-blocks docs -> 0 errors. * All internal links resolve to real pages. |
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850413f120 |
feat(computer-use): cua-driver backend, universal any-model schema
Background macOS desktop control via cua-driver MCP — does NOT steal the user's cursor or keyboard focus, works with any tool-capable model. Replaces the Anthropic-native `computer_20251124` approach from the abandoned #4562 with a generic OpenAI function-calling schema plus SOM (set-of-mark) captures so Claude, GPT, Gemini, and open models can all drive the desktop via numbered element indices. - `tools/computer_use/` package — swappable ComputerUseBackend ABC + CuaDriverBackend (stdio MCP client to trycua/cua's cua-driver binary). - Universal `computer_use` tool with one schema for all providers. Actions: capture (som/vision/ax), click, double_click, right_click, middle_click, drag, scroll, type, key, wait, list_apps, focus_app. - Multimodal tool-result envelope (`_multimodal=True`, OpenAI-style `content: [text, image_url]` parts) that flows through handle_function_call into the tool message. Anthropic adapter converts into native `tool_result` image blocks; OpenAI-compatible providers get the parts list directly. - Image eviction in convert_messages_to_anthropic: only the 3 most recent screenshots carry real image data; older ones become text placeholders to cap per-turn token cost. - Context compressor image pruning: old multimodal tool results have their image parts stripped instead of being skipped. - Image-aware token estimation: each image counts as a flat 1500 tokens instead of its base64 char length (~1MB would have registered as ~250K tokens before). - COMPUTER_USE_GUIDANCE system-prompt block — injected when the toolset is active. - Session DB persistence strips base64 from multimodal tool messages. - Trajectory saver normalises multimodal messages to text-only. - `hermes tools` post-setup installs cua-driver via the upstream script and prints permission-grant instructions. - CLI approval callback wired so destructive computer_use actions go through the same prompt_toolkit approval dialog as terminal commands. - Hard safety guards at the tool level: blocked type patterns (curl|bash, sudo rm -rf, fork bomb), blocked key combos (empty trash, force delete, lock screen, log out). - Skill `apple/macos-computer-use/SKILL.md` — universal (model-agnostic) workflow guide. - Docs: `user-guide/features/computer-use.md` plus reference catalog entries. 44 new tests in tests/tools/test_computer_use.py covering schema shape (universal, not Anthropic-native), dispatch routing, safety guards, multimodal envelope, Anthropic adapter conversion, screenshot eviction, context compressor pruning, image-aware token estimation, run_agent helpers, and universality guarantees. 469/469 pass across tests/tools/test_computer_use.py + the affected agent/ test suites. - `model_tools.py` provider-gating: the tool is available to every provider. Providers without multi-part tool message support will see text-only tool results (graceful degradation via `text_summary`). - Anthropic server-side `clear_tool_uses_20250919` — deferred; client-side eviction + compressor pruning cover the same cost ceiling without a beta header. - macOS only. cua-driver uses private SkyLight SPIs (SLEventPostToPid, SLPSPostEventRecordTo, _AXObserverAddNotificationAndCheckRemote) that can break on any macOS update. Pin with HERMES_CUA_DRIVER_VERSION. - Requires Accessibility + Screen Recording permissions — the post-setup prints the Settings path. Supersedes PR #4562 (pyautogui/Quartz foreground backend, Anthropic- native schema). Credit @0xbyt4 for the original #3816 groundwork whose context/eviction/token design is preserved here in generic form. |
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474d1e812b |
docs(msgraph): webhook listener setup page + env var reference
Second docs slice shipped alongside the webhook listener code so users can actually wire up the endpoint the moment this PR lands. - website/docs/user-guide/messaging/msgraph-webhook.md: new page covering what the listener is (change-notification ingress, distinct from the teams chat adapter), quick-start YAML + env-var config, full config table, security hardening (clientState + timing-safe compare, source-IP allowlisting against Microsoft's published egress ranges, TLS termination at the reverse proxy, response hygiene), status-code table, troubleshooting, and cross-links to the Azure app registration guide. - website/docs/reference/environment-variables.md: new Microsoft Graph Webhook Listener subsection with MSGRAPH_WEBHOOK_ENABLED, _PORT, _CLIENT_STATE, _ACCEPTED_RESOURCES, _ALLOWED_SOURCE_CIDRS. - website/sidebars.ts: wire the new page into Messaging Platforms, right after the teams chat adapter so the two related pages are adjacent in the sidebar. The pipeline runtime / operator CLI / outbound delivery pages still land with their matching PRs. With this PR merged, an operator can get the listener running end-to-end, register a Graph subscription manually, and receive validation handshake plus notification POSTs against the configured client_state. Verified via npm run build: new page routes at /docs/user-guide/messaging/msgraph-webhook, sidebar wires correctly, no new warnings or errors. |
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f209a35859
|
feat(profile): shareable profile distributions via git (#20831)
* feat(profile): shareable profile distributions (pack/install/update/info) Closes #20456. Turns a profile into a portable, versioned artifact. Packs SOUL.md, config, skills, cron, and an env-var manifest into a tar.gz that others can install from a local path, URL, or git repo. Updates re-pull the distribution while preserving user data (memories, sessions, auth.json, .env) and the user's config.yaml overrides. New subcommands (under hermes profile, no parallel tree): hermes profile pack <name> [-o FILE] hermes profile install <source> [--name N] [--alias] [--force] [-y] hermes profile update <name> [--force-config] [-y] hermes profile info <name> Manifest (distribution.yaml at the profile root): name, version, hermes_requires, author, env_requires, distribution_owned. Security: - Installer shows manifest + env-var requirements before mutating disk; confirmation required unless -y. - auth.json and .env are never packed (same exclude set as profile export). - Cron jobs are packed but NOT auto-scheduled — user is pointed at 'hermes -p <name> cron list' to review. - Archive extraction rejects path traversal (../ members). - Alias creation is opt-in via --alias. Update semantics: - Distribution-owned paths (SOUL.md, skills/, cron/, mcp.json, manifest): replaced from the new archive. - config.yaml: preserved by default; --force-config to overwrite. - User-owned paths (memories/, sessions/, auth.json, .env, state.db*, logs/, workspace/, plans/, home/, *_cache/, local/): never touched. Version pin: hermes_requires accepts >=, <=, ==, !=, >, < or a bare version (treated as >=). Install fails with a clear error when the running Hermes version doesn't satisfy the spec. Sources supported by 'install': - Local .tar.gz / .tgz archive - Local directory - HTTP(S) URL pointing to a .tar.gz (uses httpx, already a dep) - Git URL (github.com/user/repo, https://..., git@..., ssh://, git://) Tests: 43 new unit tests (manifest parsing, version checks, env template, pack/install/update round-trip, config-preservation, security). E2E validated via real CLI invocations against an isolated HERMES_HOME covering pack, install with confirmation, update preservation, update --force-config, decline-preview, duplicate-install rejection, and version-requirement rejection. * refactor(profile-dist): git-only — drop tar.gz/HTTP transports and pack Scope-cut on top of the original distribution PR: a profile distribution is now exclusively a git repository (or a local directory during development). The tar.gz / HTTP archive transports and the matching `hermes profile pack` subcommand have been removed. Why: * GitHub tags, branches, and commits are already the right versioning primitive. Tag pushes do for us what 'pack + upload' did. * `hermes profile export` / `import` already cover local backup and restore; they are not a distribution format and stay untouched. * One transport means one install/update code path, one doc page, and one mental model. The extra source types doubled the surface for no real user win — GitHub auto-attaches release tarballs, and `git bundle` / `git clone --mirror` cover the airgap case. Changes: * hermes_cli/profile_distribution.py — removed pack_profile, _fetch_tar_archive (_http_fetch), _safe_extract, _archive_roots, _safe_parts, _find_dist_root, tarfile/io/urlparse imports. The new _stage_source has two arms: git URL → clone, local directory → use in place. * hermes_cli/main.py — removed the 'pack' subparser and action handler. Install help text updated to match the reduced source list. * tests/hermes_cli/test_profile_distribution.py — rewritten around a local-directory staging fixture. The install/update/describe suites now build a distribution tree on disk directly and install from it, which is what a real git clone produces after .git is stripped. Dropped TestPack, TestFindDistRoot, and the tar-specific security test. New tests cover _looks_like_git_url, env_example emission, hermes_requires enforcement, and 'installer does not import credentials if an author mistakenly leaks them in the staging tree'. * website/docs/reference/profile-commands.md — 'Distribution commands' section rewritten around git. Added a 'Publishing a distribution' section. export/import stay documented as local backup/restore. * website/docs/reference/cli-commands.md — dropped 'pack' from the profile subcommand table. * website/package.json — 'lint:diagrams' now passes --exclude-code-blocks to ascii-guard. Without it, markdown tables and box-drawing diagrams inside fenced code blocks were being misidentified as malformed ASCII boxes, blocking the PR's docs-site-checks CI with 8 false-positive errors. Validation: * Targeted suite: tests/hermes_cli/test_profile_distribution.py — 56/56 pass (down from 43 — reorganized to cover the new local-dir paths). * Regression: test_profiles.py + test_profile_export_credentials.py 102/102 still pass. export/import behaviour unchanged. * Docs lint: ascii-guard lint --exclude-code-blocks docs returns 0 errors (was 8 on the PR before the flag bump). * E2E: ran the real `hermes profile install`/`info` against a local staging dir under an isolated HERMES_HOME — install writes SOUL.md + skills to the target profile, info reads the manifest back, a bogus source produces a clear error, and `hermes profile pack` is now rejected by argparse as expected. * feat(profile-dist): distribution-aware list/show/delete + installed_at + env preview Polish pass on top of the git-only scope cut. Five additions, all small, wiring into existing commands rather than adding new surface. 1. `installed_at` timestamp on the manifest * Stamped automatically inside plan_install() on both fresh install and update — ISO-8601 UTC, seconds resolution. * Surfaced in `hermes profile info` as `Installed: <ts>`. * Lets users tell "installed 6 months ago, needs update" from "installed yesterday" without guessing from file mtimes. 2. `hermes profile list` grows a `Distribution` column * Plain profiles: "—" * Distribution profiles: "<name>@<version>" (e.g. `telemetry@1.2.3`) * ProfileInfo gains three optional fields — distribution_name, distribution_version, distribution_source — populated by a new _read_distribution_meta() helper that swallows manifest read errors so a broken distribution.yaml in one profile can't break `list` for the others. 3. `hermes profile show` and `hermes profile delete` surface distribution provenance * show: `Distribution: name@version` + `Installed from: <source>` plus a pointer to `hermes profile info <name>` for the full manifest. * delete: same lines in the pre-confirmation preview, so a user deleting "telemetry" can see it came from `github.com/kyle/telemetry-distribution` before they type `telemetry` to confirm. No change to the confirmation gate itself — deletion semantics are identical to plain profiles. 4. Install preview checks env vars against the current environment * Replaces the "Env vars you'll need to set:" header with a simpler "Env vars:" block. * Each required var is labeled: - `✓ set` — already in `os.environ` OR present as a key in the target profile's existing .env (update case). - `needs setting` — required but not found in either place. - `—` — optional. * Mirrors pip's "Requirement already satisfied" UX: no unnecessary nagging about keys the user already has configured. 5. Docs: private distributions * New "Private distributions" section in website/docs/reference/profile-commands.md explaining that we shell out to the user's `git` binary, so SSH keys / credential helpers / GitHub CLI stored creds all work transparently. One paragraph, two examples. * `hermes profile info` section updated to mention `Installed:`. Module-level hoist: * `from datetime import datetime, timezone` was previously lazy-imported inside plan_install(). Hoisted to module scope so tests can monkeypatch `hermes_cli.profile_distribution.datetime` to freeze time. Tests (+7): * TestInstalledAtStamp.test_install_stamps_installed_at — format check (4-digit year, 'T', +00:00 suffix). * TestInstalledAtStamp.test_update_refreshes_installed_at — freezes datetime.now() to 2099-01-01 and confirms update writes a new stamp. * TestProfileInfoDistribution.test_installed_distribution_shows_in_list — ProfileInfo.distribution_{name,version,source} populated after install. * TestProfileInfoDistribution.test_plain_profile_has_no_distribution_fields — plain profiles have None. * TestProfileInfoDistribution.test_malformed_manifest_does_not_break_list — broken distribution.yaml in one profile doesn't break list_profiles(). Validation: * 163/163 tests pass (56 distribution + 102 profile regression + 5 new from this commit — up from 158). * docs-lint: 0 errors. * E2E verified: install preview shows ✓/needs-setting per env var, `profile list` shows Distribution column, `profile show` + `delete` preview mentions source URL, `info` shows Installed: timestamp. * fix(profile-dist): clean errors + warn when overwriting plain profiles Two small polish fixes found during collision sweeps of the PR: 1. ValueError from validate_profile_name now caught cleanly * A distribution.yaml whose 'name' field can't be used as a profile identifier (spaces, path traversal, etc.) raises ValueError from hermes_cli.profiles.validate_profile_name, which was escaping as a raw Python traceback from 'hermes profile install/update/info'. * Broadened the except clause in all three handlers to catch (DistributionError, ValueError) — users now see: Error: Invalid profile name '../../etc/passwd'. Must match [a-z0-9][a-z0-9_-]{0,63} instead of a stack trace. 2. Install preview distinguishes plain profile overwrite from distribution re-install * When plan.target_dir exists and IS a distribution (has distribution.yaml), preview still shows the mild (profile exists — will overwrite distribution-owned files only) * When plan.target_dir exists but is a HAND-BUILT plain profile (no distribution.yaml), preview now shows a loud warning: ⚠ Profile exists but is NOT a distribution. Installing here will overwrite its SOUL.md, skills/, cron/, and mcp.json. Your memories, sessions, auth.json, and .env will be preserved, but any hand-edits to distribution-owned files will be lost. * Users who type 'hermes profile install foo --force' against a profile they hand-built now see what they're signing up for. User data is still safe (memories, sessions, auth, .env are in USER_OWNED_EXCLUDE), but custom SOUL/skills get stomped. Tests (+2): * TestErrorSurfaces.test_bad_profile_name_raises_valueerror_not_traceback * TestErrorSurfaces.test_path_traversal_name_rejected Validation: * 165/165 tests pass (was 163). * E2E: bad manifest names produce 'Error: Invalid profile name ...' with no traceback; installing over a plain profile shows the warning; re-installing over an existing distribution shows the normal overwrite message. * Bad HTTPS URLs still produce 'Error: git clone failed: ...' — git itself generates a clean enough message that no wrapper is needed. * 'install .' works correctly from any cwd. * fix(profiles): reject reserved names at validate time Before: `hermes profile create hermes` / `profile install` / `profile rename` all silently accepted reserved names like `hermes`, `test`, `tmp`, `root`, `sudo`. The profile directory was created; only alias creation failed (via check_alias_collision), leaving a confusingly-named profile on disk — e.g. `~/.hermes/profiles/hermes/` sitting next to `~/.hermes/` itself. The reserved set already exists (_RESERVED_NAMES, introduced alongside alias collision detection). This commit moves the check up one layer to validate_profile_name so every entry point — create, install, import, rename, dashboard web API — shares the same gate. The error message points the user at the cause without being cryptic: Error: Profile name 'hermes' is reserved — it collides with either the Hermes installation itself or a common system binary. Pick a different name. `default` continues to pass through (it's a special alias for ~/.hermes). _HERMES_SUBCOMMANDS (`chat`, `model`, `gateway`, etc.) stays at alias-collision time only — those are fine as bare profile names with `--no-alias`. Tests (+5): test_reserved_names_rejected parametrized over the full _RESERVED_NAMES set, matching the existing pattern in TestValidateProfileName. No existing test uses a reserved name as a profile identifier (greppped create_profile("hermes|test|tmp|root|sudo") — zero hits). Validation: * 170/170 tests pass in the profile suites. * E2E: `profile create hermes`, `profile install` with manifest name=hermes, and `profile install ... --name hermes` all produce the same clean `Error: Profile name 'hermes' is reserved ...` with rc=1 and no traceback. Normal names (`mybot`) still work. |
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cf648a9b7e |
docs(msgraph): add Azure app registration walkthrough + env var reference
Foundation docs shipped alongside the Graph auth/client code so users have a working path from zero to a verified token from the moment this PR lands. - website/docs/guides/microsoft-graph-app-registration.md: new page walking through app registration, client secret, the exact minimum Graph API permissions per pipeline capability (transcript-first, recording fallback, Graph-mode delivery), admin consent, optional Application Access Policy for tenant-scoping, token-flow smoke test with the shipped MicrosoftGraphTokenProvider, and a troubleshooting table for common AADSTS errors. Includes secret-rotation procedure. - website/docs/reference/environment-variables.md: new Microsoft Graph subsection in Messaging documenting MSGRAPH_TENANT_ID, MSGRAPH_CLIENT_ID, MSGRAPH_CLIENT_SECRET, MSGRAPH_SCOPE (default .default), MSGRAPH_AUTHORITY_URL (with sovereign-cloud override note for GCC High etc.). - website/sidebars.ts: wire the guide into Guides Tutorials. The guide pages that cover the webhook listener, pipeline runtime, operator CLI, and outbound delivery land with their matching PRs. This one is the standalone prereq that's safe to verify in advance. Verified via npm run build: no new warnings or errors; page routes correctly at /docs/guides/microsoft-graph-app-registration. |
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24d48ffb82
|
feat(kanban): add specify — auxiliary LLM fleshes out triage tasks (#21435)
* feat(kanban): add `specify` — auxiliary LLM fleshes out triage tasks
The Triage column shipped with a placeholder 'a specifier will flesh
out the spec', but the specifier itself was never built. This wires
it up as a dedicated CLI verb.
`hermes kanban specify <id>` calls the auxiliary LLM (configured under
`auxiliary.triage_specifier`) to expand a rough one-liner into a
concrete spec — tightened title plus a body with Goal / Approach /
Acceptance criteria / Out-of-scope sections — then atomically flips
`status: triage -> todo` and recomputes ready so parent-free tasks
go straight to the dispatcher on the same tick.
Surface:
hermes kanban specify <task_id> # single task
hermes kanban specify --all [--tenant T] # sweep triage column
hermes kanban specify ... --author NAME # audit-comment author
hermes kanban specify ... --json # one JSON line per task
Design choices:
- Parent gating is preserved. specify_triage_task flips to 'todo',
then recompute_ready promotes to 'ready' only when parents are
done — same rule as a normal parent-gated todo.
- No daemon, no background watcher. Every invocation is explicit —
keeps cost predictable and doesn't fight the dispatcher loop.
- Response parse is lenient: strict JSON preferred, markdown-fence
tolerated, raw-body fallback on malformed JSON so the LLM can't
strand a task in triage.
- All failure modes (no aux client, API error, task moved out of
triage mid-call) return SpecifyOutcome(ok=False, reason=...) so
--all continues past individual failures.
Changes:
hermes_cli/kanban_db.py + specify_triage_task()
hermes_cli/kanban_specify.py NEW (~220 LOC — prompt, parse, call)
hermes_cli/kanban.py + specify subcommand + _cmd_specify
hermes_cli/config.py + auxiliary.triage_specifier task slot
website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban.md specify + config notes
website/docs/reference/cli-commands.md CLI reference entry
tests/hermes_cli/test_kanban_specify_db.py NEW (10 tests)
tests/hermes_cli/test_kanban_specify.py NEW (20 tests)
Validation: 30/30 targeted tests pass. E2E: triage task -> specify ->
ends in 'ready' with events [created, specified, promoted] and the
audit comment recorded under the configured author.
* feat(kanban): wire specifier into dashboard and gateway slash
Follow-ups to the initial PR #21435 — closes the two gaps I'd left as
post-merge: dashboard button and first-class gateway surface.
Dashboard (plugins/kanban/dashboard/)
- POST /tasks/:id/specify NEW endpoint. Thin wrapper around
kanban_specify.specify_task(). Returns the CLI outcome shape
({ok, task_id, reason, new_title}); ok=false with a human reason
is a 200, not a 4xx, so the UI can render it inline without
treating 'no aux client configured' as a crash.
- Runs sync in FastAPI's threadpool because the LLM call can take
tens of seconds on reasoning models.
- Pins HERMES_KANBAN_BOARD around the specify call so the module's
argless kb.connect() lands on the right board.
- dist/index.js: doSpecify callback threaded through the drawer →
TaskDetail → StatusActions prop chain. ✨ Specify button appears
ONLY when task.status === 'triage' (elsewhere the backend would
reject anyway — hide the button to keep the action row clean).
Busy state (Specifying…) + inline success/error banner under the
button using the response.reason text.
- dist/style.css: tiny hermes-kanban-msg-ok / -err classes using
existing --color vars so themes reskin cleanly.
Gateway slash (/kanban specify)
- Already works via the existing run_slash → build_parser →
kanban_command pipeline. No code change needed — slash commands
inherit the argparse tree automatically. Added coverage:
test_run_slash_specify_end_to_end (create --triage, specify, verify
promotion + retitle) and test_run_slash_specify_help_is_reachable.
Tests
- tests/plugins/test_kanban_dashboard_plugin.py: 3 new tests for the
REST endpoint — happy path, non-triage rejection as ok=false 200,
missing aux client as ok=false 200.
- tests/hermes_cli/test_kanban_cli.py: 2 new slash-surface tests.
Docs
- website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban.md: dashboard action row
description mentions ✨ Specify + all three surfaces. REST table
gains /tasks/:id/specify. Slash examples include /kanban specify.
Validation: 340/340 targeted tests pass. E2E via TestClient: create a
triage task over REST → POST /specify with mocked aux client → task
moves to 'ready' column on /board with new title and body applied.
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44cd79e798 |
feat(plugins/google_chat): Google Chat platform adapter as a bundled plugin
Adds Google Chat as a new gateway platform, shipped under plugins/platforms/google_chat/ following the canonical bundled-plugin pattern (Teams, IRC). Rewired from the original PR #18425 to use the new env_enablement_fn + cron_deliver_env_var plugin interfaces landed in the preceding commit, so the adapter touches ZERO core files. What it does: - Inbound DM + group messages via Cloud Pub/Sub pull subscription (no public URL needed), with attachments (PDFs, images, audio, video) downloaded through an SSRF-guarded Google-host allowlist. - Outbound text replies with the 'Hermes is thinking…' patch-in-place pattern — no tombstones. - Native file attachment delivery via per-user OAuth. Google Chat's media.upload endpoint rejects service-account auth, so each user runs /setup-files once in their own DM to grant chat.messages.create for themselves; the adapter then uploads as them. Tokens stored per email at ~/.hermes/google_chat_user_tokens/<email>.json. - Thread isolation: side-threads get isolated sessions, top-level DM messages share one continuous session. Persistent thread-count store survives gateway restart. - Supervisor reconnect with exponential backoff. - Multi-user out of the box. How it plugs in (no core edits): - env_enablement_fn seeds PlatformConfig.extra with project_id, subscription_name, service_account_json, and the home_channel dict (which the core hook turns into a HomeChannel dataclass). Reads GOOGLE_CHAT_PROJECT_ID (falls back to GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT), GOOGLE_CHAT_SUBSCRIPTION_NAME (falls back to GOOGLE_CHAT_SUBSCRIPTION), GOOGLE_CHAT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_JSON (falls back to GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS), GOOGLE_CHAT_HOME_CHANNEL. - cron_deliver_env_var='GOOGLE_CHAT_HOME_CHANNEL' gets cron delivery for free — cron/scheduler.py consults the platform registry for any name not in its hardcoded built-in sets. - plugin.yaml's rich requires_env / optional_env blocks auto-populate OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS via the new hermes_cli/config.py injector, so 'hermes config' UI surfaces them with description / url / prompt / password metadata. - Module-level Platform('google_chat') call in adapter.py triggers the Platform._missing_() registration so Platform.GOOGLE_CHAT attribute access works without an enum entry. Distribution: ships inside the existing hermes-agent package. Users opt in via 'pip install hermes-agent[google_chat]' and follow the 8-step GCP walkthrough at website/docs/user-guide/messaging/google_chat.md. Test coverage: 153 tests in tests/gateway/test_google_chat.py, all passing. Spans platform registration, env config loading, Pub/Sub envelope routing, outbound send + chunking + typing patch-in-place, attachment send paths, SSRF guard, thread/session model, supervisor reconnect, authorization, per-user OAuth, and the new plugin-registry cron delivery wiring. Credit: adapter + OAuth + tests + docs authored by @donramon77 (PR #18425). Rewire onto the new plugin hooks + salvage commit by Teknium. Co-Authored-By: Ramón Fernández <112875006+donramon77@users.noreply.github.com> |
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6b3a9b4bfa |
docs(curator): update CLI docs for synchronous-by-default manual run
Follow-up to the previous commit which flipped 'hermes curator run' default from async to sync. Updates the curator.md feature page and cli-commands.md reference to show --background as the opt-in async flag and note that the default now blocks until the LLM pass finishes. |
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fb1ce793e6
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feat(security): enable secret redaction by default (#17691, #20785) (#21193)
Flip the default for HERMES_REDACT_SECRETS from off to on so the redactor already wired into send_message_tool, logs, and tool output actually runs on a fresh install. - agent/redact.py: env-var default "" → "true" - hermes_cli/config.py: DEFAULT_CONFIG security.redact_secrets True; two config-template comments rewritten - gateway/run.py + cli.py: startup log / banner warning when the user has explicitly opted out, so the downgrade is visible in agent.log and at CLI banner time - docs/reference/environment-variables.md: description reconciled - tests: flipped the default-pin, restructured the force=True regression test to explicit-false instead of unset Users who need raw credential values (redactor development) can still opt out via security.redact_secrets: false in config.yaml or HERMES_REDACT_SECRETS=false in .env. Closes #17691. Addresses #20785 (short-term output-pipeline recommendation). |
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94016dd1aa
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docs+skill: add searxng-search optional skill and documentation
Closes the remaining gaps from PR #11562 that weren't covered by the core SearXNG integration landed in #20823. - optional-skills/research/searxng-search/ — installable skill with SKILL.md (curl-based usage, category support, Python example) and searxng.sh helper script for health checks and instance queries - website/docs/user-guide/configuration.md — SearXNG added to the Web Search Backends section (5 backends, backend table, per-capability split config example, correct search-only note) - website/docs/reference/environment-variables.md — SEARXNG_URL row - website/docs/reference/optional-skills-catalog.md — searxng-search entry The core SearXNG code, OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS, hermes tools picker, and tests were already on main via #20823. This commit is purely additive docs + the optional skill scaffold. Credits from #11562 salvage: @w4rum — original _searxng_search structure @nathansdev — tools_config.py integration @moyomartin — category support and result formatting @0xMihai — config/env var approach @nicobailon — skill and documentation structure @searxng-fan — error handling patterns @local-first — self-hosted-first philosophy and docs |
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a0fedfbb1b
|
feat(checkpoints): v2 single-store rewrite with real pruning + disk guardrails (#20709)
Replaces the per-directory shadow-repo design with a single shared shadow
git store at ~/.hermes/checkpoints/store/. Object DB is now deduplicated
across every working directory the agent has ever touched; a dozen
worktrees of the same project cost near-zero in additional disk.
Why
---
Pre-v2 design had three compounding problems that let ~/.hermes/checkpoints/
grow to multi-GB on active machines:
1. Each working directory got its own full shadow git repo — no object
dedup across projects or across worktrees of the same project.
2. _prune() was a documented no-op: max_snapshots only limited the
/rollback listing. Loose objects accumulated forever.
3. Defaults: enabled=True, auto_prune=False — users paid the disk cost
without ever asking for /rollback.
Field report on a single workstation: 847 MB across 47 shadow repos,
mostly redundant clones of the hermes-agent source tree.
Changes
-------
- tools/checkpoint_manager.py: full rewrite. Single bare store, per-project
refs (refs/hermes/<hash>), per-project indexes (store/indexes/<hash>),
per-project metadata (store/projects/<hash>.json with workdir +
created_at + last_touch). On first v2 init, any pre-v2 per-directory
shadow repos are auto-migrated into legacy-<timestamp>/ so the new
store starts clean. _prune() now actually rewrites the per-project ref
to the last max_snapshots commits and runs git gc --prune=now. New
_enforce_size_cap() drops oldest commits round-robin across projects
when the store exceeds max_total_size_mb. _drop_oversize_from_index()
filters any single file larger than max_file_size_mb out of the snapshot.
- hermes_cli/checkpoints.py: new 'hermes checkpoints' CLI
(status / list / prune / clear / clear-legacy) for managing the store
outside a session.
- hermes_cli/config.py: flipped defaults — enabled=False, max_snapshots=20,
auto_prune=True. Added max_total_size_mb=500, max_file_size_mb=10.
Tightened DEFAULT_EXCLUDES (added target/, *.so/*.dylib/*.dll,
*.mp4/*.mov, *.zip/*.tar.gz, .worktrees/, .mypy_cache/, etc.).
- run_agent.py / cli.py / gateway/run.py: thread the new kwargs through
AIAgent and the startup auto_prune hooks.
- Tests rewritten to match v2 storage while keeping backwards-compat
coverage for the pre-v2 prune path (per-directory shadow repos under
base/ are still swept correctly for anyone mid-migration).
- Docs updated: user-guide/checkpoints-and-rollback.md explains the
shared store, new defaults, migration, and the new CLI;
reference/cli-commands.md documents 'hermes checkpoints'.
E2E validated
-------------
- Legacy migration: pre-v2 shadow repos auto-archived into legacy-<ts>/.
- Object dedup: two projects with an identical shared.py blob resolve to
7 total objects in the store (v1 would have stored the blob twice).
- max_snapshots=3 actually enforced: after 6 commits, list shows 3.
- Orphan prune: deleting a project's workdir + 'hermes checkpoints prune
--retention-days 0' removes its ref, index, and metadata; GC reclaims
the objects.
- max_file_size_mb=1 excludes a 2 MB weights.bin while keeping the
tracked source code files.
- hermes checkpoints {status,prune,clear,clear-legacy} all work from the
CLI without an agent running.
Breaking / migration
--------------------
No in-place data migration — legacy per-directory shadow repos are moved
into legacy-<timestamp>/ on first run. Old /rollback history is still
accessible by inspecting the archive with git; run
'hermes checkpoints clear-legacy' to reclaim the space when ready. Users
relying on /rollback must now set checkpoints.enabled=true (or pass
--checkpoints) explicitly.
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e598e18529
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docs: document custom model aliases for /model command (#20475)
User-defined model aliases (config.yaml model_aliases: and model.aliases.*) have worked since early versions but were entirely undocumented. Add a dedicated 'Custom model aliases' section to slash-commands.md covering both YAML config formats and the 'hermes config set' shell form, mirror a shorter version into the configuring-models 'Alternative methods' section, and cross-link from the two /model table rows. Flagged by @weehowe on Twitter — he wasn't aware the feature existed. |
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a11234dd68 | docs(browser): document WSL-to-Windows Chrome MCP bridge | ||
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144ba71a33 | docs(faq): use messaging extra for gateway deps | ||
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15be493055 | docs(skills): modernize Obsidian file workflows | ||
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80c579a9dd | docs(skills): explain restoring bundled skills | ||
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84ec27616a | docs(cli): expand hermes import reference — add description, warning, and examples | ||
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20a4f79ed1 |
feat: provider modules — ProviderProfile ABC, 33 providers, fetch_models, transport single-path
Introduces providers/ package — single source of truth for every inference provider. Adding a simple api-key provider now requires one providers/<name>.py file with zero edits anywhere else. What this PR ships: - providers/ package (ProviderProfile ABC + 33 profiles across 4 api_modes) - ProviderProfile declarative fields: name, api_mode, aliases, display_name, env_vars, base_url, models_url, auth_type, fallback_models, hostname, default_headers, fixed_temperature, default_max_tokens, default_aux_model - 4 overridable hooks: prepare_messages, build_extra_body, build_api_kwargs_extras, fetch_models - chat_completions.build_kwargs: profile path via _build_kwargs_from_profile, legacy flag path retained for lmstudio/tencent-tokenhub (which have session-aware reasoning probing that doesn't map cleanly to hooks yet) - run_agent.py: profile path for all registered providers; legacy path variable scoping fixed (all flags defined before branching) - Auto-wires: auth.PROVIDER_REGISTRY, models.CANONICAL_PROVIDERS, doctor health checks, config.OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS, model_metadata._URL_TO_PROVIDER - GeminiProfile: thinking_config translation (native + openai-compat nested) - New tests/providers/ (79 tests covering profile declarations, transport parity, hook overrides, e2e kwargs assembly) Deltas vs original PR (salvaged onto current main): - Added profiles: alibaba-coding-plan, azure-foundry, minimax-oauth (were added to main since original PR) - Skipped profiles: lmstudio, tencent-tokenhub stay on legacy path (their reasoning_effort probing has no clean hook equivalent yet) - Removed lmstudio alias from custom profile (it's a separate provider now) - Skipped openrouter/custom from PROVIDER_REGISTRY auto-extension (resolve_provider special-cases them; adding breaks runtime resolution) - runtime_provider: profile.api_mode only as fallback when URL detection finds nothing (was breaking minimax /v1 override) - Preserved main's legacy-path improvements: deepseek reasoning_content preserve, gemini Gemma skip, OpenRouter response caching, Anthropic 1M beta recovery, etc. - Kept agent/copilot_acp_client.py in place (rejected PR's relocation — main has 7 fixes landed since; relocation would revert them) - _API_KEY_PROVIDER_AUX_MODELS alias kept for backward compat with existing test imports Co-authored-by: kshitijk4poor <82637225+kshitijk4poor@users.noreply.github.com> Closes #14418 |
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ec7f2f249e |
docs(cli): add skills reset subcommand to CLI reference
PR #11468 added `hermes skills reset` but cli-commands.md was not updated. Adds the subcommand to the table and usage examples. Closes #11543 |
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ee502e5640 |
docs(cli): add --deliver-only flag to hermes webhook subscribe
PR #12473 (merged 2026-04-19) added a new --deliver-only flag to `hermes webhook subscribe` for zero-LLM direct delivery, but website/docs/reference/cli-commands.md options table did not reference it. Add the row so CLI users can discover the flag from the reference page instead of having to read the source. |
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ce9888b52a | docs(config): fix fallback provider config paths | ||
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93869b48ab |
docs: add Microsoft Teams to platform lists across docs
Update all platform enumeration lists to include Teams: index.md, quickstart.md, integrations/index.md, sessions.md, slash-commands.md, updating.md, hooks.md, hermes-agent skill. Skipped PII redaction docs — Teams uses AAD object IDs, not phone numbers, so redaction doesn't apply there. Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com> |