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4 commits
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fc3fd6bb6b |
fix(dashboard): UI polish — modals, layout, consistency, test fixes
Dashboard UX polish pass — consolidates create forms into modals triggered from the page header, fixes layout inconsistencies, adds scroll-to navigation for the Keys page, and aligns the TokenBar with the design system. Changes: - App.tsx: add padding to sidebar header - resolve-page-title.ts: add missing routes, better fallback title - en.ts: fix nav labels (Profiles was 'profiles : multi agents') - ModelsPage: two-col layout, auxiliary tasks modal, TokenBar redesign - ProfilesPage: create button in header, form in modal, Checkbox component - CronPage: create button in header, form in modal - EnvPage: scroll-to sub-nav in header, fix text overflow Modal and dialog standardization: - Replace all native confirm()/window.confirm() with ConfirmDialog (OAuthProvidersCard, PluginsPage, ModelsPage, ConfigPage) - Add useModalBehavior hook (Escape-to-close, scroll lock, focus restore) - Apply hook to ProfilesPage, CronPage, AuxiliaryTasksModal Component fixes (from PR review): - Checkbox: fix controlled/uncontrolled mismatch, add focus-visible ring - TokenBar: add rounded-full to legend dots, remove dead code CI/test fixes: - Fix TS unused imports (noUnusedLocals), type-narrow PickerTarget union - Add windows-footgun suppression on platform-guarded os.killpg - Fix 19 stale unit tests + 9 e2e tests broken by recent main changes - Restore minimal example-dashboard plugin for plugin auth test |
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5aa755e4e6
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feat(plugins): run any LLM call from inside a plugin via ctx.llm (#23194)
* feat(plugins): host-owned LLM access via ctx.llm
Plugins can now ask the host to run a one-shot chat or structured
completion against the user's active model and auth, without ever
seeing an OAuth token or API key. Closes the gap where plugins that
needed bounded structured inference (receipts, CRM extraction,
support classification) had to either bring their own provider keys
or register a tool the agent had to call.
New surface on PluginContext:
- ctx.llm.complete(messages, ...)
- ctx.llm.complete_structured(instructions, input, json_schema, ...)
- async siblings ctx.llm.acomplete / acomplete_structured
Backed by the existing auxiliary_client.call_llm pipeline — every
provider, fallback chain, vision routing, and timeout policy Hermes
already supports applies automatically.
Trust gate (fail-closed by default):
- plugins.entries.<id>.llm.allow_model_override
- plugins.entries.<id>.llm.allowed_models (allowlist; '*' = any)
- plugins.entries.<id>.llm.allow_agent_id_override
- plugins.entries.<id>.llm.allow_profile_override
Embedded model@profile shorthand goes through the same gate as
explicit profile=, so it can't bypass the auth-profile policy.
Conflicting explicit and embedded profiles fail closed.
Also lands:
- plugins/plugin-llm-example/ — reference plugin that registers
/receipt-extract, demonstrating image+text structured input,
jsonschema validation, and the trust-gate config.
- website/docs/developer-guide/plugin-llm-access.md — full API docs.
- 45 unit tests covering trust gates, JSON parsing, schema
validation, image encoding, async surface, and config loading.
Validation:
- 2628 tests pass in tests/agent/
- E2E: bundled plugin loaded with isolated HERMES_HOME, slash
command produced parsed JSON via stubbed call_llm
- response_format extra_body wired correctly for both json_object
and json_schema modes
* docs(plugin-llm): rewrite quickstart and framing
The quickstart now uses a meeting-notes-to-tasks example instead of
a receipt extractor, and the page leads with hook-time / gateway
pre-filter / scheduled-job framing rather than the OpenClaw
KB/support/CRM/finance/migration enumeration that the original
upstream PR used. Receipt example moved to a separate worked
example link so the docs page itself doesn't echo any of the
upstream framing.
Also clarifies where ctx.llm fits in the broader plugin surface
(table comparing register_tool / register_platform / register_hook
/ etc.) and what makes this lane different from auxiliary_client
internals.
No code change.
* docs(plugin-llm): reframe as any LLM call, not just structured output
The original draft leaned heavily on complete_structured() and made
the chat lane (complete() / acomplete()) feel like a footnote.
Restructure so:
- The page title and description say 'any LLM call.'
- The lead shows BOTH a plain chat call (error rewriter) AND a
structured call (triage scorer) up top.
- Quick start has two complete plugin examples — /tldr (chat) and
/paste-to-tasks (structured).
- New 'When to use which' table for choosing complete() vs
complete_structured() vs the async siblings.
- Trust-gate sections explicitly note 'all four methods,' and the
request-shaping list calls out chat-only fields (messages) and
structured-only fields (instructions, input, json_schema)
alongside each other.
- The 'Where this fits' section now says 'for any reason,
structured or not.'
The receipt-extractor reference plugin still exists under
plugins/plugin-llm-example/ — but the docs page no longer treats
it as the canonical surface example. It's now described as 'a third
worked example, this time with image input.'
No code change.
* feat(plugin-llm): split provider/model into independent explicit kwargs
The first cut accepted a single 'provider/model' slug on every method
and split it internally. That looked clean but broke under live test:
the model-override path tried to use the slug's vendor prefix as a
literal Hermes provider id, which silently switched the user off
their aggregator (e.g. plugin asks for 'openai/gpt-4o-mini' on a user
who routes through OpenRouter — host attempted to call the 'openai'
provider directly, failed because OPENAI_API_KEY wasn't set).
New shape mirrors the host's main config:
ctx.llm.complete(
messages=[...],
provider='openrouter', # gated, optional
model='openai/gpt-4o-mini', # gated, optional
profile='work', # gated, optional
...
)
Each is independently gated by its own allow_*_override flag.
Granting model-override does NOT auto-grant provider-override.
Allowlists are now per-axis (allowed_providers, allowed_models)
matched literally against whatever string the plugin sends.
Dropped 'model@profile' embedded-suffix shorthand entirely. Hermes
doesn't use that pattern anywhere else; profile= is its own kwarg.
Live E2E (against real OpenRouter via Teknium's config) confirms:
- zero-config call works
- default-deny blocks each override with a helpful error
- model-only override stays on user's active provider (the bug)
- provider+model override switches cleanly
- allowlist refuses non-listed entries
- structured output round-trip parses + schema-validates
Tests: 49 cases (up from 45); all green. Docs updated to match the
new shape, including a 'most plugins never need this section' callout
on the trust-gate config block.
* fix+cleanup(plugin-llm): real attribution, hook-mode coverage, move example out of core
Three integration fixes for the ctx.llm surface:
1. Attribution bug — result.provider and result.model now reflect
what call_llm actually used, not placeholder fallbacks ('auto',
'default'). New _resolve_attribution() helper:
- explicit overrides win (what the call targeted)
- response.model wins for the recorded model (provider
canonicalisation: 'gpt-4o' → 'gpt-4o-2024-08-06' etc.)
- falls back to _read_main_provider() / _read_main_model()
when no override is set, so audit logs reflect the user's
active main provider/model
- 'auto' / 'default' only when EVERYTHING is empty
Live verified: zero-config call now records
provider='openrouter', model='anthropic/claude-4.7-opus-20260416'
instead of provider='auto', model='default'.
2. Hook-mode coverage — TestHookMode confirms ctx.llm.complete
works from inside a registered post_tool_call callback. The
docs page promised hook integration; now there's a test that
exercises the lazy-import path through the real invoke_hook
machinery. Two cases: traceback-rewrite hook with conditional
ctx.llm.complete, and minimal hook regression for the
sync-hook + sync-llm path.
3. Reference plugin moved out of core. plugins/plugin-llm-example/
is gone from hermes-agent — it now lives in the new
NousResearch/hermes-example-plugins companion repo. The docs
page links there. Hermes' bundled plugins should be plugins
users actually run; reference / docs-companion plugins live
externally.
Test count: 56 (up from 49). Wider sweep on tests/hermes_cli/
+ tests/gateway/ + tests/tools/ + tests/agent/ shows 16770
passing; the 12 failures are all pre-existing on origin/main
(verified by stashing this branch's changes and re-running) —
kanban-boards, delegate-task, gateway-restart, tts-routing —
none touch the plugin_llm surface.
* chore(plugins): move all example plugins to companion repo
Reference / docs-companion plugins now live exclusively in
NousResearch/hermes-example-plugins, not bundled with the core repo:
- example-dashboard
- strike-freedom-cockpit
A new fourth example, plugin-llm-async-example, was added to that
repo demonstrating ctx.llm's async surface (acomplete()) with
asyncio.gather() — registers /translate <lang>: <text> which fires
forward translation + sentiment classifier in parallel, then a
back-translation for QA. Live-tested at 2.5s for three real
provider round-trips (would be ~5-6s sequential).
Docs updated:
- developer-guide/plugin-llm-access.md links both sync and async
examples in the Reference section
- user-guide/features/extending-the-dashboard.md repoints both demo
sections to the companion repo with corrected install paths
- user-guide/features/built-in-plugins.md drops the two demo rows
- AGENTS.md notes that example plugins live in the companion repo
Net: hermes-agent's plugins/ directory now contains only plugins
users actually run (memory providers, dashboard tabs that ship real
features, the disk-cleanup hook, platform adapters). All four
demo / reference plugins live externally where they can be cloned
on demand instead of inflating the core install.
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af22421e87
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feat(dashboard): page-scoped plugin slots for built-in pages (#15658)
* fix(terminal): three-layer defense against watch_patterns notification spam Background processes that stack notify_on_complete=True with watch_patterns can flood the user with duplicate, delayed notifications — matches deliver asynchronously via the completion queue and continue arriving minutes after the process has exited. The docstring warning against this (PR #12113) has proven insufficient; agents still misuse the combination. Three layered defenses, each sufficient on its own: 1. Mutual exclusion (terminal_tool.py): When both flags are set on a background process, drop watch_patterns with a warning. notify_on_complete wins because 'let me know when it's done' is the more useful signal and fires exactly once. Extracted as _resolve_notification_flag_conflict() so the rule is testable in isolation. 2. Suppress-after-exit (process_registry.py): _check_watch_patterns() now bails the moment session.exited is True. Post-exit chunks (buffered reads draining after the process is gone) no longer produce notifications. This is the fix flagged as future work in session 20260418_020302_79881c. 3. Global circuit breaker (process_registry.py): Per-session rate limits don't catch the sibling-flood case — N concurrent processes can each stay under 8/10s and still collectively spam. New WATCH_GLOBAL_MAX_PER_WINDOW=15 cap trips a 30-second cooldown across ALL sessions, emits a single watch_overflow_tripped event, silently counts dropped events, and emits a watch_overflow_released summary when the cooldown ends. Also updates the tool schema + docstring to document the new behavior. Tests: 8 new tests covering all three fixes (suppress-after-exit x2, mutual-exclusion resolver x4, global breaker trip/cooldown/release x2). All 60 tests across test_watch_patterns.py, test_notify_on_complete.py, test_terminal_tool.py pass. Real-world trigger: self-inflicted in session 20260425_051924 — three concurrent hermes-sweeper review subprocesses each set watch_patterns= ['failed validation', 'errored'] AND notify_on_complete=True, then iterated over multiple items, producing enough matches per process to defeat the per-session cap while staying under the global cap that didn't yet exist. * fix(terminal): aggressive 1-per-15s watch_patterns rate limit + strike-3 promotion Per Teknium's direction, the watch_patterns rate limit is now much more aggressive and self-healing. ## New rule — per session - HARD cap: 1 watch-match notification per 15 seconds per process. - Any match arriving inside the cooldown window is dropped and counts as ONE strike for that window (many drops in the same window still = 1 strike). - After 3 consecutive strike windows, watch_patterns is permanently disabled for the session and the session is auto-promoted to notify_on_complete semantics — exactly one notification when the process actually exits. - A cooldown window that expires with zero drops resets the consecutive strike counter — healthy cadence is forgiven. ## Schema + docstring rewritten The tool schema description now gives the model explicit guidance: - notify_on_complete is 'the right choice for almost every long-running task' - watch_patterns is for RARE one-shot signals on LONG-LIVED processes - Do NOT use watch_patterns with loops/batch jobs — error patterns fire every iteration and will hit the strike limit fast - Mutual exclusion is stated on both parameter descriptions - 1/15s cooldown and 3-strike promotion are stated in the watch_patterns description so the model sees the contract every turn ## Removed - WATCH_MAX_PER_WINDOW (8/10s) and WATCH_OVERLOAD_KILL_SECONDS (45) — the new 1/15s limit subsumes both; keeping them would double-count. - _watch_window_hits / _watch_window_start / _watch_overload_since fields on ProcessSession. Replaced by _watch_last_emit_at / _watch_cooldown_until / _watch_strike_candidate / _watch_consecutive_strikes. ## Kept - Global circuit breaker across all sessions (15/10s → 30s cooldown) as a secondary safety net for concurrent siblings. Still valuable when 20 short-lived processes each fire once — none individually violates the per-session limit. - Suppress-after-exit guard. - Mutual exclusion resolver at the tool entry point. ## Tests - 6 new tests in TestPerSessionRateLimit covering: first match delivers, second in cooldown suppressed, multi-drop = single strike, 3 strikes disables + promotes, clean window resets counter, suppressed count carried to next emit. - Global circuit breaker tests rewritten to use fresh sessions instead of hacking removed per-window fields. - 50/50 watch_patterns + notify_on_complete tests pass. - 60/60 including test_terminal_tool.py pass. * feat(dashboard): page-scoped plugin slots for built-in pages Dashboard plugins can now inject components into specific built-in pages (Sessions, Analytics, Logs, Cron, Skills, Config, Env, Docs, Chat) without overriding the whole route. Previously, plugins could only: 1. Add new tabs (tab.path) 2. Replace whole built-in pages (tab.override) 3. Inject into global shell slots (header-*, footer-*, pre-main, ...) None of those let a plugin add a banner, card, or widget to an existing page. The new <page>:top / <page>:bottom slots close that gap, reusing the existing registerSlot() API. Changes - web/src/plugins/slots.ts: 18 new KNOWN_SLOT_NAMES entries (sessions:top, sessions:bottom, analytics:top, ..., chat:bottom), grouped under "Shell-wide" vs "Page-scoped" in the docblock - web/src/pages/*: each built-in page now renders <PluginSlot name="<page>:top" /> as the first child of its outer wrapper and <PluginSlot name="<page>:bottom" /> as the last child -- zero visual cost when no plugin registers - plugins/example-dashboard: registers a demo banner into sessions:top via registerSlot(), with matching slots entry in the manifest -- so freshly-setup users can see what page-scoped slots look like without writing any plugin code - website/docs: new "Page-scoped slots" table in the plugin authoring guide, with a worked example - tests/hermes_cli/test_web_server.py: round-trip test for colon-bearing slot names (sessions:top, analytics:bottom, ...) Validation - npm run build: clean (tsc -b + vite build, 2761 modules) - scripts/run_tests.sh tests/hermes_cli/test_web_server.py::TestDashboardPluginManifestExtensions: 5/5 pass |
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01214a7f73 |
feat: dashboard plugin system — extend the web UI with custom tabs
Add a plugin system that lets plugins add new tabs to the dashboard.
Plugins live in ~/.hermes/plugins/<name>/dashboard/ alongside any
existing CLI/gateway plugin code.
Plugin structure:
plugins/<name>/dashboard/
manifest.json # name, label, icon, tab config, entry point
dist/index.js # pre-built JS bundle (IIFE, uses SDK globals)
plugin_api.py # optional FastAPI router mounted at /api/plugins/<name>/
Backend (hermes_cli/web_server.py):
- Plugin discovery: scans plugins/*/dashboard/manifest.json from user,
bundled, and project plugin directories
- GET /api/dashboard/plugins — returns discovered plugin manifests
- GET /api/dashboard/plugins/rescan — force re-discovery
- GET /dashboard-plugins/<name>/<path> — serves plugin static assets
with path traversal protection
- Optional API route mounting: imports plugin_api.py and mounts its
router under /api/plugins/<name>/
- Plugin API routes bypass session token auth (localhost-only)
Frontend (web/src/plugins/):
- Plugin SDK exposed on window.__HERMES_PLUGIN_SDK__ — provides React,
hooks, UI components (Card, Badge, Button, etc.), API client,
fetchJSON, theme/i18n hooks, and utilities
- Plugin registry on window.__HERMES_PLUGINS__.register(name, Component)
- usePlugins() hook: fetches manifests, loads JS/CSS, resolves components
- App.tsx dynamically adds nav items and routes for discovered plugins
- Icon resolution via static map of 20 common Lucide icons (no tree-
shaking penalty — bundle only +5KB over baseline)
Example plugin (plugins/example-dashboard/):
- Demonstrates SDK usage: Card components, backend API call, SDK reference
- Backend route: GET /api/plugins/example/hello
Tested: plugin discovery, static serving, API routes, path traversal
blocking, unknown plugin 404, bundle size (400KB vs 394KB baseline).
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