Commit graph

1038 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Teknium
852c7f3be3
feat(cron): per-job workdir for project-aware cron runs (#15110)
Cron jobs can now specify a per-job working directory. When set, the job
runs as if launched from that directory: AGENTS.md / CLAUDE.md /
.cursorrules from that dir are injected into the system prompt, and the
terminal / file / code-exec tools use it as their cwd (via TERMINAL_CWD).
When unset, old behaviour is preserved (no project context files, tools
use the scheduler's cwd).

Requested by @bluthcy.

## Mechanism

- cron/jobs.py: create_job / update_job accept 'workdir'; validated to
  be an absolute existing directory at create/update time.
- cron/scheduler.py run_job: if job.workdir is set, point TERMINAL_CWD
  at it and flip skip_context_files to False before building the agent.
  Restored in finally on every exit path.
- cron/scheduler.py tick: workdir jobs run sequentially (outside the
  thread pool) because TERMINAL_CWD is process-global. Workdir-less jobs
  still run in the parallel pool unchanged.
- tools/cronjob_tools.py + hermes_cli/cron.py + hermes_cli/main.py:
  expose 'workdir' via the cronjob tool and 'hermes cron create/edit
  --workdir ...'. Empty string on edit clears the field.

## Validation

- tests/cron/test_cron_workdir.py (21 tests): normalize, create, update,
  JSON round-trip via cronjob tool, tick partition (workdir jobs run on
  the main thread, not the pool), run_job env toggle + restore in finally.
- Full targeted suite (tests/cron/, test_cronjob_tools.py, test_cron.py,
  test_config_cwd_bridge.py, test_worktree.py): 314/314 passed.
- Live smoke: hermes cron create --workdir $(pwd) works; relative path
  rejected; list shows 'Workdir:'; edit --workdir '' clears.
2026-04-24 05:07:01 -07:00
Teknium
7634c1386f
feat(delegate): diagnostic dump when a subagent times out with 0 API calls (#15105)
When a subagent in delegate_task times out before making its first LLM
request, write a structured diagnostic file under
~/.hermes/logs/subagent-timeout-<sid>-<ts>.log capturing enough state
for the user (and us) to debug the hang. The old error message —
'Subagent timed out after Ns with no response. The child may be stuck
on a slow API call or unresponsive network request.' — gave no
observability for the 0-API-call case, which is the hardest to reason
about remotely.

The diagnostic captures:
  - timeout config vs actual duration
  - goal (truncated to 1000 chars)
  - child config: model, provider, api_mode, base_url, max_iterations,
    quiet_mode, platform, _delegate_role, _delegate_depth
  - enabled_toolsets + loaded tool names
  - system prompt byte/char count (catches oversized prompts that
    providers silently choke on)
  - tool schema count + byte size
  - child's get_activity_summary() snapshot
  - Python stack of the worker thread at the moment of timeout
    (reveals whether the hang is in credential resolution, transport,
    prompt construction, etc.)

Wiring:
  - _run_single_child captures the worker thread via a small wrapper
    around child.run_conversation so we can look up its stack at
    timeout.
  - After a FuturesTimeoutError, we pull child.get_activity_summary()
    to read api_call_count. If 0 AND it was a timeout (not a raise),
    _dump_subagent_timeout_diagnostic() is invoked.
  - The returned path is surfaced in the error string so the parent
    agent (and therefore the user / gateway) sees exactly where to look.
  - api_calls > 0 timeouts keep the old 'stuck on slow API call'
    phrasing since that's the correct diagnosis for those.

This does NOT change any behavior for successful subagent runs,
non-timeout errors, or subagents that made at least one API call
before hanging.

Tests: 7 cases (tests/tools/test_delegate_subagent_timeout_diagnostic.py)
  - output format + required sections + field values
  - long-goal truncation with [truncated] marker
  - missing / already-exited worker thread branches
  - unwritable HERMES_HOME/logs/ returns None without raising
  - _run_single_child wiring: 0 API calls → dump + diagnostic_path in error
  - _run_single_child wiring: N>0 API calls → no dump, old message

Refs: #14726
2026-04-24 04:58:32 -07:00
Teknium
18f3fc8a6f
fix(tests): resolve 17 persistent CI test failures (#15084)
Make the main-branch test suite pass again. Most failures were tests
still asserting old shapes after recent refactors; two were real source
bugs.

Source fixes:
- tools/mcp_tool.py: _kill_orphaned_mcp_children() slept 2s on every
  shutdown even when no tracked PIDs existed, making test_shutdown_is_parallel
  measure ~3s for 3 parallel 1s shutdowns. Early-return when pids is empty.
- hermes_cli/tips.py: tip 105 was 157 chars; corpus max is 150.

Test fixes (mostly stale mock targets / missing fixture fields):
- test_zombie_process_cleanup, test_agent_cache: patch run_agent.cleanup_vm
  (the local name bound at import), not tools.terminal_tool.cleanup_vm.
- test_browser_camofox: patch tools.browser_camofox.load_config, not
  hermes_cli.config.load_config (the source module, not the resolved one).
- test_flush_memories_codex._chat_response_with_memory_call: add
  finish_reason, tool_call.id, tool_call.type so the chat_completions
  transport normalizer doesn't AttributeError.
- test_concurrent_interrupt: polling_tool signature now accepts
  messages= kwarg that _invoke_tool() passes through.
- test_minimax_provider: add _fallback_chain=[] to the __new__'d agent
  so switch_model() doesn't AttributeError.
- test_skills_config: SKILLS_DIR MagicMock + .rglob stopped working
  after the scanner switched to agent.skill_utils.iter_skill_index_files
  (os.walk-based). Point SKILLS_DIR at a real tmp_path and patch
  agent.skill_utils.get_external_skills_dirs.
- test_browser_cdp_tool: browser_cdp toolset was intentionally split into
  'browser-cdp' (commit 96b0f3700) so its stricter check_fn doesn't gate
  the whole browser toolset; test now expects 'browser-cdp'.
- test_registry: add tools.browser_dialog_tool to the expected
  builtin-discovery set (PR #14540 added it).
- test_file_tools TestPatchHints: patch_tool surfaces hints as a '_hint'
  key on the JSON payload, not inline '[Hint: ...' text.
- test_write_deny test_hermes_env: resolve .env via get_hermes_home() so
  the path matches the profile-aware denylist under hermetic HERMES_HOME.
- test_checkpoint_manager test_falls_back_to_parent: guard the walk-up
  so a stray /tmp/pyproject.toml on the host doesn't pick up /tmp as the
  project root.
- test_quick_commands: set cli.session_id in the __new__'d CLI so the
  alias-args path doesn't trip AttributeError when fuzzy-matching leaks
  a skill command across xdist test distribution.
2026-04-24 03:46:46 -07:00
Teknium
4350668ae4 fix(transcription): fall back to CPU when CUDA runtime libs are missing
faster-whisper's device="auto" picks CUDA when ctranslate2's wheel
ships CUDA shared libs, even on hosts without the NVIDIA runtime
(libcublas.so.12 / libcudnn*). On those hosts the model often loads
fine but transcribe() fails at first dlopen, and the broken model
stays cached in the module-global — every subsequent voice message
in the gateway process fails identically until restart.

- Add _load_local_whisper_model() wrapper: try auto, catch missing-lib
  errors, retry on device=cpu compute_type=int8.
- Wrap transcribe() with the same fallback: evict cached model, reload
  on CPU, retry once. Required because the dlopen failure only surfaces
  at first kernel launch, not at model construction.
- Narrow marker list (libcublas, libcudnn, libcudart, 'cannot be loaded',
  'no kernel image is available', 'no CUDA-capable device', driver
  mismatch). Deliberately excludes 'CUDA out of memory' and similar —
  those are real runtime failures that should surface, not be silently
  retried on CPU.
- Tests for load-time fallback, runtime fallback (with cached-model
  eviction verified), and the OOM non-fallback path.

Reported via Telegram voice-message dumps on WSL2 hosts where libcublas
isn't installed by default.
2026-04-24 02:50:14 -07:00
Teknium
34c3e67109
fix: sanitize tool schemas for llama.cpp backends; restore MCP in TUI (#15032)
Local llama.cpp servers (e.g. ggml-org/llama.cpp:full-cuda) fail the entire
request with HTTP 400 'Unable to generate parser for this template. ...
Unrecognized schema: "object"' when any tool schema contains shapes its
json-schema-to-grammar converter can't handle:

  * 'type': 'object' without 'properties'
  * bare string schema values ('additionalProperties: "object"')
  * 'type': ['X', 'null'] arrays (nullable form)

Cloud providers accept these silently, so they ship from external MCP
servers (Atlassian, GCloud, Datadog) and from a couple of our own tools.

Changes

- tools/schema_sanitizer.py: walks the finalized tool list right before it
  leaves get_tool_definitions() and repairs the hostile shapes in a deep
  copy. No-op on well-formed schemas. Recurses into properties, items,
  additionalProperties, anyOf/oneOf/allOf, and $defs.
- model_tools.get_tool_definitions(): invoke the sanitizer as the last
  step so all paths (built-in, MCP, plugin, dynamically-rebuilt) get
  covered uniformly.
- tools/browser_cdp_tool.py, tools/mcp_tool.py: fix our own bare-object
  schemas so sanitization isn't load-bearing for in-repo tools.
- tui_gateway/server.py: _load_enabled_toolsets() was passing
  include_default_mcp_servers=False at runtime. That's the config-editing
  variant (see PR #3252) — it silently drops every default MCP server
  from the TUI's enabled_toolsets, which is why the TUI didn't hit the
  llama.cpp crash (no MCP tools sent at all). Switch to True so TUI
  matches CLI behavior.

Tests

tests/tools/test_schema_sanitizer.py (17 tests) covers the individual
failure modes, well-formed pass-through, deep-copy isolation, and
required-field pruning.

E2E: loaded the default 'hermes-cli' toolset with MCP discovery and
confirmed all 27 resolved tool schemas pass a llama.cpp-compatibility
walk (no 'object' node missing 'properties', no bare-string schema
values).
2026-04-24 02:44:46 -07:00
Teknium
5a1c599412
feat(browser): CDP supervisor — dialog detection + response + cross-origin iframe eval (#14540)
* docs: browser CDP supervisor design (for upcoming PR)

Design doc ahead of implementation — dialog + iframe detection/interaction
via a persistent CDP supervisor. Covers backend capability matrix (verified
live 2026-04-23), architecture, lifecycle, policy, agent surface, PR split,
non-goals, and test plan.

Supersedes #12550.

No code changes in this commit.

* feat(browser): add persistent CDP supervisor for dialog + frame detection

Single persistent CDP WebSocket per Hermes task_id that subscribes to
Page/Runtime/Target events and maintains thread-safe state for pending
dialogs, frame tree, and console errors.

Supervisor lives in its own daemon thread running an asyncio loop;
external callers use sync API (snapshot(), respond_to_dialog()) that
bridges onto the loop.

Auto-attaches to OOPIF child targets via Target.setAutoAttach{flatten:true}
and enables Page+Runtime on each so iframe-origin dialogs surface through
the same supervisor.

Dialog policies: must_respond (default, 300s safety timeout),
auto_dismiss, auto_accept.

Frame tree capped at 30 entries + OOPIF depth 2 to keep snapshot
payloads bounded on ad-heavy pages.

E2E verified against real Chrome via smoke test — detects + responds
to main-frame alerts, iframe-contentWindow alerts, preserves frame
tree, graceful no-dialog error path, clean shutdown.

No agent-facing tool wiring in this commit (comes next).

* feat(browser): add browser_dialog tool wired to CDP supervisor

Agent-facing response-only tool. Schema:
  action: 'accept' | 'dismiss' (required)
  prompt_text: response for prompt() dialogs (optional)
  dialog_id: disambiguate when multiple dialogs queued (optional)

Handler:
  SUPERVISOR_REGISTRY.get(task_id).respond_to_dialog(...)

check_fn shares _browser_cdp_check with browser_cdp so both surface and
hide together. When no supervisor is attached (Camofox, default
Playwright, or no browser session started yet), tool is hidden; if
somehow invoked it returns a clear error pointing the agent to
browser_navigate / /browser connect.

Registered in _HERMES_CORE_TOOLS and the browser / hermes-acp /
hermes-api-server toolsets alongside browser_cdp.

* feat(browser): wire CDP supervisor into session lifecycle + browser_snapshot

Supervisor lifecycle:
  * _get_session_info lazy-starts the supervisor after a session row is
    materialized — covers every backend code path (Browserbase, cdp_url
    override, /browser connect, future providers) with one hook.
  * cleanup_browser(task_id) stops the supervisor for that task first
    (before the backend tears down CDP).
  * cleanup_all_browsers() calls SUPERVISOR_REGISTRY.stop_all().
  * /browser connect eagerly starts the supervisor for task 'default'
    so the first snapshot already shows pending_dialogs.
  * /browser disconnect stops the supervisor.

CDP URL resolution for the supervisor:
  1. BROWSER_CDP_URL / browser.cdp_url override.
  2. Fallback: session_info['cdp_url'] from cloud providers (Browserbase).

browser_snapshot merges supervisor state (pending_dialogs + frame_tree)
into its JSON output when a supervisor is active — the agent reads
pending_dialogs from the snapshot it already requests, then calls
browser_dialog to respond. No extra tool surface.

Config defaults:
  * browser.dialog_policy: 'must_respond' (new)
  * browser.dialog_timeout_s: 300 (new)
No version bump — new keys deep-merge into existing browser section.

Deadlock fix in supervisor event dispatch:
  * _on_dialog_opening and _on_target_attached used to await CDP calls
    while the reader was still processing an event — but only the reader
    can set the response Future, so the call timed out.
  * Both now fire asyncio.create_task(...) so the reader stays pumping.
  * auto_dismiss/auto_accept now actually close the dialog immediately.

Tests (tests/tools/test_browser_supervisor.py, 11 tests, real Chrome):
  * supervisor start/snapshot
  * main-frame alert detection + dismiss
  * iframe.contentWindow alert
  * prompt() with prompt_text reply
  * respond with no pending dialog -> clean error
  * auto_dismiss clears on event
  * registry idempotency
  * registry stop -> snapshot reports inactive
  * browser_dialog tool no-supervisor error
  * browser_dialog invalid action
  * browser_dialog end-to-end via tool handler

xdist-safe: chrome_cdp fixture uses a per-worker port.
Skipped when google-chrome/chromium isn't installed.

* docs(browser): document browser_dialog tool + CDP supervisor

- user-guide/features/browser.md: new browser_dialog section with
  workflow, availability gate, and dialog_policy table
- reference/tools-reference.md: row for browser_dialog, tool count
  bumped 53 -> 54, browser tools count 11 -> 12
- reference/toolsets-reference.md: browser_dialog added to browser
  toolset row with note on pending_dialogs / frame_tree snapshot fields

Full design doc lives at
developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md (committed earlier).

* fix(browser): reconnect loop + recent_dialogs for Browserbase visibility

Found via Browserbase E2E test that revealed two production-critical issues:

1. **Supervisor WebSocket drops when other clients disconnect.** Browserbase's
   CDP proxy tears down our long-lived WebSocket whenever a short-lived
   client (e.g. agent-browser CLI's per-command CDP connection) disconnects.
   Fixed with a reconnecting _run loop that re-attaches with exponential
   backoff on drops. _page_session_id and _child_sessions are reset on each
   reconnect; pending_dialogs and frames are preserved across reconnects.

2. **Browserbase auto-dismisses dialogs server-side within ~10ms.** Their
   Playwright-based CDP proxy dismisses alert/confirm/prompt before our
   Page.handleJavaScriptDialog call can respond. So pending_dialogs is
   empty by the time the agent reads a snapshot on Browserbase.

   Added a recent_dialogs ring buffer (capacity 20) that retains a
   DialogRecord for every dialog that opened, with a closed_by tag:
     * 'agent'       — agent called browser_dialog
     * 'auto_policy' — local auto_dismiss/auto_accept fired
     * 'watchdog'    — must_respond timeout auto-dismissed (300s default)
     * 'remote'      — browser/backend closed it on us (Browserbase)

   Agents on Browserbase now see the dialog history with closed_by='remote'
   so they at least know a dialog fired, even though they couldn't respond.

3. **Page.javascriptDialogClosed matching bug.** The event doesn't include a
   'message' field (CDP spec has only 'result' and 'userInput') but our
   _on_dialog_closed was matching on message. Fixed to match by session_id
   + oldest-first, with a safety assumption that only one dialog is in
   flight per session (the JS thread is blocked while a dialog is up).

Docs + tests updated:
  * browser.md: new availability matrix showing the three backends and
    which mode (pending / recent / response) each supports
  * developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md: three-field snapshot schema
    with closed_by semantics
  * test_browser_supervisor.py: +test_recent_dialogs_ring_buffer (12/12
    passing against real Chrome)

E2E verified both backends:
  * Local Chrome via /browser connect: detect + respond full workflow
    (smoke_supervisor.py all 7 scenarios pass)
  * Browserbase: detect via recent_dialogs with closed_by='remote'
    (smoke_supervisor_browserbase_v2.py passes)

Camofox remains out of scope (REST-only, no CDP) — tracked for
upstream PR 3.

* feat(browser): XHR bridge for dialog response on Browserbase (FIXED)

Browserbase's CDP proxy auto-dismisses native JS dialogs within ~10ms, so
Page.handleJavaScriptDialog calls lose the race. Solution: bypass native
dialogs entirely.

The supervisor now injects Page.addScriptToEvaluateOnNewDocument with a
JavaScript override for window.alert/confirm/prompt. Those overrides
perform a synchronous XMLHttpRequest to a magic host
('hermes-dialog-bridge.invalid'). We intercept those XHRs via Fetch.enable
with a requestStage=Request pattern.

Flow when a page calls alert('hi'):
  1. window.alert override intercepts, builds XHR GET to
     http://hermes-dialog-bridge.invalid/?kind=alert&message=hi
  2. Sync XHR blocks the page's JS thread (mirrors real dialog semantics)
  3. Fetch.requestPaused fires on our WebSocket; supervisor surfaces
     it as a pending dialog with bridge_request_id set
  4. Agent reads pending_dialogs from browser_snapshot, calls browser_dialog
  5. Supervisor calls Fetch.fulfillRequest with JSON body:
     {accept: true|false, prompt_text: '...', dialog_id: 'd-N'}
  6. The injected script parses the body, returns the appropriate value
     from the override (undefined for alert, bool for confirm, string|null
     for prompt)

This works identically on Browserbase AND local Chrome — no native dialog
ever fires, so Browserbase's auto-dismiss has nothing to race. Dialog
policies (must_respond / auto_dismiss / auto_accept) all still work.

Bridge is installed on every attached session (main page + OOPIF child
sessions) so iframe dialogs are captured too.

Native-dialog path kept as a fallback for backends that don't auto-dismiss
(so a page that somehow bypasses our override — e.g. iframes that load
after Fetch.enable but before the init-script runs — still gets observed
via Page.javascriptDialogOpening).

E2E VERIFIED:
  * Local Chrome: 13/13 pytest tests green (12 original + new
    test_bridge_captures_prompt_and_returns_reply_text that asserts
    window.__ret === 'AGENT-SUPPLIED-REPLY' after agent responds)
  * Browserbase: smoke_bb_bridge_v2.py runs 4/4 PASS:
    - alert('BB-ALERT-MSG') dismiss → page.alert_ret = undefined ✓
    - prompt('BB-PROMPT-MSG', 'default-xyz') accept with 'AGENT-REPLY'
      → page.prompt_ret === 'AGENT-REPLY' ✓
    - confirm('BB-CONFIRM-MSG') accept → page.confirm_ret === true ✓
    - confirm('BB-CONFIRM-MSG') dismiss → page.confirm_ret === false ✓

Docs updated in browser.md and developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md —
availability matrix now shows Browserbase at full parity with local
Chrome for both detection and response.

* feat(browser): cross-origin iframe interaction via browser_cdp(frame_id=...)

Adds iframe interaction to the CDP supervisor PR (was queued as PR 2).

Design: browser_cdp gets an optional frame_id parameter. When set, the
tool looks up the frame in the supervisor's frame_tree, grabs its child
cdp_session_id (OOPIF session), and dispatches the CDP call through the
supervisor's already-connected WebSocket via run_coroutine_threadsafe.

Why not stateless: on Browserbase, each fresh browser_cdp WebSocket
must re-negotiate against a signed connectUrl. The session info carries
a specific URL that can expire while the supervisor's long-lived
connection stays valid. Routing via the supervisor sidesteps this.

Agent workflow:
  1. browser_snapshot → frame_tree.children[] shows OOPIFs with is_oopif=true
  2. browser_cdp(method='Runtime.evaluate', frame_id=<OOPIF frame_id>,
                 params={'expression': 'document.title', 'returnByValue': True})
  3. Supervisor dispatches the call on the OOPIF's child session

Supervisor state fixes needed along the way:
  * _on_frame_detached now skips reason='swap' (frame migrating processes)
  * _on_frame_detached also skips when the frame is an OOPIF with a live
    child session — Browserbase fires spurious remove events when a
    same-origin iframe gets promoted to OOPIF
  * _on_target_detached clears cdp_session_id but KEEPS the frame record
    so the agent still sees the OOPIF in frame_tree during transient
    session flaps

E2E VERIFIED on Browserbase (smoke_bb_iframe_agent_path.py):
  browser_cdp(method='Runtime.evaluate',
              params={'expression': 'document.title', 'returnByValue': True},
              frame_id=<OOPIF>)
  → {'success': True, 'result': {'value': 'Example Domain'}}

  The iframe is <iframe src='https://example.com/'> inside a top-level
  data: URL page on a real Browserbase session. The agent Runtime.evaluates
  INSIDE the cross-origin iframe and gets example.com's title back.

Tests (tests/tools/test_browser_supervisor.py — 16 pass total):
  * test_browser_cdp_frame_id_routes_via_supervisor — injects fake OOPIF,
    verifies routing via supervisor, Runtime.evaluate returns 1+1=2
  * test_browser_cdp_frame_id_missing_supervisor — clean error when no
    supervisor attached
  * test_browser_cdp_frame_id_not_in_frame_tree — clean error on bad
    frame_id

Docs (browser.md and developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md) updated with
the iframe workflow, availability matrix now shows OOPIF eval as shipped
for local Chrome + Browserbase.

* test(browser): real-OOPIF E2E verified manually + chrome_cdp uses --site-per-process

When asked 'did you test the iframe stuff' I had only done a mocked
pytest (fake injected OOPIF) plus a Browserbase E2E. Closed the
local-Chrome real-OOPIF gap by writing /tmp/dialog-iframe-test/
smoke_local_oopif.py:

  * 2 http servers on different hostnames (localhost:18905 + 127.0.0.1:18906)
  * Chrome with --site-per-process so the cross-origin iframe becomes a
    real OOPIF in its own process
  * Navigate, find OOPIF in supervisor.frame_tree, call
    browser_cdp(method='Runtime.evaluate', frame_id=<OOPIF>) which routes
    through the supervisor's child session
  * Asserts iframe document.title === 'INNER-FRAME-XYZ' (from the
    inner page, retrieved via OOPIF eval)

PASSED on 2026-04-23.

Tried to embed this as a pytest but hit an asyncio version quirk between
venv (3.11) and the system python (3.13) — Page.navigate hangs in the
pytest harness but works in standalone. Left a self-documenting skip
test that points to the smoke script + describes the verification.

chrome_cdp fixture now passes --site-per-process so future iframe tests
can rely on OOPIF behavior.

Result: 16 pass + 1 documented-skip = 17 tests in
tests/tools/test_browser_supervisor.py.

* docs(browser): add dialog_policy + dialog_timeout_s to configuration.md, fix tool count

Pre-merge docs audit revealed two gaps:

1. user-guide/configuration.md browser config example was missing the
   two new dialog_* knobs. Added with a short table explaining
   must_respond / auto_dismiss / auto_accept semantics and a link to
   the feature page for the full workflow.

2. reference/tools-reference.md header said '54 built-in tools' — real
   count on main is 54, this branch adds browser_dialog so it's 55.
   Fixed the header.  (browser count was already correctly bumped
   11 -> 12 in the earlier docs commit.)

No code changes.
2026-04-23 22:23:37 -07:00
Matt Maximo
3ccda2aa05 fix(mcp): seed protocol header before HTTP initialize 2026-04-23 22:01:24 -07:00
Teknium
983bbe2d40
feat(skills): add design-md skill for Google's DESIGN.md spec (#14876)
* feat(config): make tool output truncation limits configurable

Port from anomalyco/opencode#23770: expose a new `tool_output` config
section so users can tune the hardcoded truncation caps that apply to
terminal output and read_file pagination.

Three knobs under `tool_output`:
- max_bytes (default 50_000) — terminal stdout/stderr cap
- max_lines (default 2000) — read_file pagination cap
- max_line_length (default 2000) — per-line cap in line-numbered view

All three keep their existing hardcoded values as defaults, so behaviour
is unchanged when the section is absent. Power users on big-context
models can raise them; small-context local models can lower them.

Implementation:
- New `tools/tool_output_limits.py` reads the section with defensive
  fallback (missing/invalid values → defaults, never raises).
- `tools/terminal_tool.py` MAX_OUTPUT_CHARS now comes from
  get_max_bytes().
- `tools/file_operations.py` normalize_read_pagination() and
  _add_line_numbers() now pull the limits at call time.
- `hermes_cli/config.py` DEFAULT_CONFIG gains the `tool_output` section
  so `hermes setup` writes defaults into fresh configs.
- Docs page `user-guide/configuration.md` gains a "Tool Output
  Truncation Limits" section with large-context and small-context
  example configs.

Tests (18 new in tests/tools/test_tool_output_limits.py):
- Default resolution with missing / malformed / non-dict config.
- Full and partial user overrides.
- Coercion of bad values (None, negative, wrong type, str int).
- Shortcut accessors delegate correctly.
- DEFAULT_CONFIG exposes the section with the right defaults.
- Integration: normalize_read_pagination clamps to the configured
  max_lines.

* feat(skills): add design-md skill for Google's DESIGN.md spec

Built-in skill under skills/creative/ that teaches the agent to author,
lint, diff, and export DESIGN.md files — Google's open-source
(Apache-2.0) format for describing a visual identity to coding agents.

Covers:
- YAML front matter + markdown body anatomy
- Full token schema (colors, typography, rounded, spacing, components)
- Canonical section order + duplicate-heading rejection
- Component property whitelist + variants-as-siblings pattern
- CLI workflow via 'npx @google/design.md' (lint/diff/export/spec)
- Lint rule reference including WCAG contrast checks
- Common YAML pitfalls (quoted hex, negative dimensions, dotted refs)
- Starter template at templates/starter.md

Package verified live on npm (@google/design.md@0.1.1).
2026-04-23 21:51:19 -07:00
Teknium
379b2273d9
fix(mcp): route stdio subprocess stderr to log file, not user TTY (#14901)
MCP stdio servers' stderr was being dumped directly onto the user's
terminal during hermes launch. Servers like FastMCP-based ones print a
large ASCII banner at startup; slack-mcp-server emits JSON logs; etc.
With prompt_toolkit / Rich rendering the TUI concurrently, these
unsolicited writes corrupt the terminal state — hanging the session
~80% of the time for one user with Google Ads Tools + slack-mcp
configured, forcing Ctrl+C and restart loops.

Root cause: `stdio_client(server_params)` in tools/mcp_tool.py was
called without `errlog=`, and the SDK's default is `sys.stderr` —
i.e. the real parent-process stderr, which is the TTY.

Fix: open a shared, append-mode log at $HERMES_HOME/logs/mcp-stderr.log
(created once per process, line-buffered, real fd required by asyncio's
subprocess machinery) and pass it as `errlog` to every stdio_client.
Each server's spawn writes a timestamped header so the shared log stays
readable when multiple servers are running. Falls back to /dev/null if
the log file cannot be opened.

Verified by E2E spawning a subprocess with the log fd as its stderr:
banner lines land in the log file, nothing reaches the calling TTY.
2026-04-23 21:50:25 -07:00
Teknium
50d97edbe1
feat(delegation): bump default child_timeout_seconds to 600s (#14809)
The 300s default was too tight for high-reasoning models on non-trivial
delegated tasks — e.g. gpt-5.5 xhigh reviewing 12 files would burn >5min
on reasoning tokens before issuing its first tool call, tripping the
hard wall-clock timeout with 0 api_calls logged.

- tools/delegate_tool.py: DEFAULT_CHILD_TIMEOUT 300 -> 600
- hermes_cli/config.py: surface delegation.child_timeout_seconds in
  DEFAULT_CONFIG so it's discoverable (previously the key was read by
  _get_child_timeout() but absent from the default config schema)

Users can still override via config.yaml delegation.child_timeout_seconds
or DELEGATION_CHILD_TIMEOUT_SECONDS env var (floor 30s, no ceiling).
2026-04-23 16:14:55 -07:00
Teknium
e26c4f0e34
fix(kimi,mcp): Moonshot schema sanitizer + MCP schema robustness (#14805)
Fixes a broader class of 'tools.function.parameters is not a valid
moonshot flavored json schema' errors on Nous / OpenRouter aggregators
routing to moonshotai/kimi-k2.6 with MCP tools loaded.

## Moonshot sanitizer (agent/moonshot_schema.py, new)

Model-name-routed (not base-URL-routed) so Nous / OpenRouter users are
covered alongside api.moonshot.ai.  Applied in
ChatCompletionsTransport.build_kwargs when is_moonshot_model(model).

Two repairs:
1. Fill missing 'type' on every property / items / anyOf-child schema
   node (structural walk — only schema-position dicts are touched, not
   container maps like properties/$defs).
2. Strip 'type' at anyOf parents; Moonshot rejects it.

## MCP normalizer hardened (tools/mcp_tool.py)

Draft-07 $ref rewrite from PR #14802 now also does:
- coerce missing / null 'type' on object-shaped nodes (salvages #4897)
- prune 'required' arrays to names that exist in 'properties'
  (salvages #4651; Gemini 400s on dangling required)
- apply recursively, not just top-level

These repairs are provider-agnostic so the same MCP schema is valid on
OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, and Moonshot in one pass.

## Crash fix: safe getattr for Tool.inputSchema

_convert_mcp_schema now uses getattr(t, 'inputSchema', None) so MCP
servers whose Tool objects omit the attribute entirely no longer abort
registration (salvages #3882).

## Validation

- tests/agent/test_moonshot_schema.py: 27 new tests (model detection,
  missing-type fill, anyOf-parent strip, non-mutation, real-world MCP
  shape)
- tests/tools/test_mcp_tool.py: 7 new tests (missing / null type,
  required pruning, nested repair, safe getattr)
- tests/agent/transports/test_chat_completions.py: 2 new integration
  tests (Moonshot route sanitizes, non-Moonshot route doesn't)
- Targeted suite: 49 passed
- E2E via execute_code with a realistic MCP tool carrying all three
  Moonshot rejection modes + dangling required + draft-07 refs:
  sanitizer produces a schema valid on Moonshot and Gemini
2026-04-23 16:11:57 -07:00
helix4u
24f139e16a fix(mcp): rewrite definitions refs to in input schemas 2026-04-23 15:56:57 -07:00
say8hi
8b79acb8de feat(cron): expose enabled_toolsets in cronjob tool and create_job() 2026-04-23 15:16:18 -07:00
Devorun
1df35a93b2 Fix (mixture_of_agents): replace deprecated Gemini model and forward max_tokens to OpenRouter (#6621) 2026-04-23 15:14:11 -07:00
Yukipukii1
4a0c02b7dc fix(file_tools): resolve bookkeeping paths against live terminal cwd 2026-04-23 15:11:52 -07:00
Jefferson
67c8f837fc fix(mcp): per-process PID isolation prevents cross-session crash on restart
- _stdio_pids: set → Dict[int,str] tracks pid→server_name
- SIGTERM-first with 2s grace before SIGKILL escalation
- hasattr guard for SIGKILL on platforms without it
- Updated tests for dict-based tracking and 3-phase kill sequence
2026-04-23 15:11:47 -07:00
helix4u
a884f6d5d8 fix(skills): follow symlinked category dirs consistently 2026-04-23 14:05:47 -07:00
Teknium
b848ce2c79 test: cover absolute paths in project env/config approval regex
The original regex only matched relative paths (./foo/.env or bare
.env), so the exact command from the bug report —
`cp /opt/data/.env.local /opt/data/.env` — did not trigger approval.
Broaden the leading-path prefix to accept an absolute leading slash
alongside ./ and ../, and add regressions for the bug-report command
and its redirection variant.
2026-04-23 14:05:36 -07:00
helix4u
1dfcda4e3c fix(approval): guard env and config overwrites 2026-04-23 14:05:36 -07:00
Teknium
64e6165686
fix(delegate): remove model-facing max_iterations override; config is authoritative (#14732)
Previously delegate_task exposed 'max_iterations' in its JSON schema and used
`max_iterations or default_max_iter` — so a model guessing conservatively (or
copy-pasting a docstring hint like 'Only set lower for simple tasks') could
silently shrink a subagent's budget below the user's configured
delegation.max_iterations. One such call this session capped a deep forensic
audit at 40 iterations while the user's config was set to 250.

Changes:
- Drop 'max_iterations' from DELEGATE_TASK_SCHEMA['parameters']['properties'].
  Models can no longer emit it.
- In delegate_task(): ignore any caller-supplied max_iterations, always use
  delegation.max_iterations from config. Log at debug if a stale schema or
  internal caller still passes one through.
- Keep the Python kwarg on the function signature for internal callers
  (_build_child_agent tests pass it through the plumbing layer).
- Update test_schema_valid to assert the param is now absent (intentional
  contract change, not a change-detector).
2026-04-23 13:56:26 -07:00
Teknium
ce089169d5 feat(skills-guard): gate agent-created scanner on config.skills.guard_agent_created (default off)
Replaces the blanket 'always allow' change from the previous commit with
an opt-in config flag so users who want belt-and-suspenders security can
still get the keyword scan on skill_manage output.

## Default behavior (flag off)
skill_manage(action='create'|'edit'|'patch') no longer runs the keyword
scanner. The agent can write skills that mention risky keywords in prose
(documenting what reviewers should watch for, describing cache-bust
semantics in a PR-review skill, referencing AGENTS.md, etc.) without
getting blocked.

Rationale: the agent can already execute the same code paths via
terminal() with no gate, so the scan adds friction without meaningful
security against a compromised or malicious agent.

## Opt-in behavior (flag on)
Set skills.guard_agent_created: true in config.yaml to get the original
behavior back. Scanner runs on every skill_manage write; dangerous
verdicts surface as a tool error the agent can react to (retry without
the flagged content).

## External hub installs unaffected
trusted/community sources (hermes skills install) always get scanned
regardless of this flag. The gate is specifically for skill_manage,
which only agents call.

## Changes
- hermes_cli/config.py: add skills.guard_agent_created: False to DEFAULT_CONFIG
- tools/skill_manager_tool.py: _guard_agent_created_enabled() reads the flag;
  _security_scan_skill() short-circuits to None when the flag is off
- tools/skills_guard.py: restore INSTALL_POLICY['agent-created'] =
  ('allow', 'allow', 'ask') so the scan remains strict when it does run
- tests/tools/test_skills_guard.py: restore original ask/force tests
- tests/tools/test_skill_manager_tool.py: new TestSecurityScanGate class
  covering both flag states + config error handling

## Validation
- tests/tools/test_skills_guard.py + test_skill_manager_tool.py: 115/115 pass
- E2E: flagged-keyword skill creates with default config, blocks with flag on
2026-04-23 06:20:47 -07:00
Teknium
e3c0084140 fix(skills-guard): allow agent-created dangerous verdicts without confirmation
The security scanner is meant to protect against hostile external skills
pulled from GitHub via hermes skills install — trusted/community policies
block or ask on dangerous verdicts accordingly. But agent-created skills
(from skill_manage) run in the same process as the agent that wrote them.
The agent can already execute the same code paths via terminal() with no
gate, so the ask-on-dangerous policy adds friction without meaningful
security.

Concrete trigger: an agent writing a PR-review skill that describes
cache-busting or persistence semantics in prose gets blocked because
those words appear in the patterns list. The skill isn't actually doing
anything dangerous — it's just documenting what reviewers should watch
for in other PRs.

Change: agent-created dangerous verdict maps to 'allow' instead of 'ask'.
External hub installs (trusted/community) keep their stricter policies
intact. Tests updated: renamed test_dangerous_agent_created_asks →
test_dangerous_agent_created_allowed; renamed force-override test and
updated assertion since force is now a no-op for agent-created (the allow
branch returns first).
2026-04-23 05:18:44 -07:00
Teknium
5a26938aa5
fix(terminal): auto-source ~/.profile and ~/.bash_profile so n/nvm PATH survives (#14534)
The environment-snapshot login shell was auto-sourcing only ~/.bashrc when
building the PATH snapshot. On Debian/Ubuntu the default ~/.bashrc starts
with a non-interactive short-circuit:

    case $- in *i*) ;; *) return;; esac

Sourcing it from a non-interactive shell returns before any PATH export
below that guard runs. Node version managers like n and nvm append their
PATH line under that guard, so Hermes was capturing a PATH without
~/n/bin — and the terminal tool saw 'node: command not found' even when
node was on the user's interactive shell PATH.

Expand the auto-source list (when auto_source_bashrc is on) to:

    ~/.profile → ~/.bash_profile → ~/.bashrc

~/.profile and ~/.bash_profile have no interactivity guard — installers
that write their PATH there (n's n-install, nvm's curl installer on most
setups) take effect. ~/.bashrc still runs last to preserve behaviour for
users who put PATH logic there without the guard.

Added two tests covering the new behaviour plus an E2E test that spins up
a real LocalEnvironment with a guard-prefixed ~/.bashrc and a ~/.profile
PATH export, and verifies the captured snapshot PATH contains the profile
entry.
2026-04-23 05:15:37 -07:00
Teknium
24e8a6e701 feat(skills_sync): surface collision with reset-hint
When a newly-bundled skill's name collides with a pre-existing user
skill, sync silently kept the user's copy. Users never learned that
a bundled version shipped by that name.

Now (on non-quiet sync only) print:

  ⚠ <name>: bundled version shipped but you already have a local
    skill by this name — yours was kept. Run `hermes skills reset
    <name>` to replace it with the bundled version.

No behavior change to manifest writes or to the kept user copy —
purely additive warning on the existing collision-skip path.
2026-04-23 05:09:08 -07:00
j0sephz
3a97fb3d47 fix(skills_sync): don't poison manifest on new-skill collision
When a new bundled skill's name collided with a pre-existing user skill
(from hub, custom, or leftover), sync_skills() recorded the bundled hash
in the manifest even though the on-disk copy was unrelated to bundled.
On the next sync, user_hash != origin_hash (bundled_hash) marked the
skill as "user-modified" permanently, blocking all bundled updates for
that skill until the user ran `hermes skills reset`.

Fix: only baseline the manifest entry when the user's on-disk copy is
byte-identical to bundled (safe to track — this is the reset re-sync or
coincidentally-identical install case). Otherwise skip the manifest
write entirely: the on-disk skill is unrelated to bundled and shouldn't
be tracked as if it were.

This preserves reset_bundled_skill()'s re-baseline flow (its post-delete
sync still writes to the manifest when user copy matches bundled) while
fixing the poisoning scenario for genuinely unrelated collisions.

Adds two tests following the existing test_failed_copy_does_not_poison_manifest
pattern: one verifying the manifest stays clean after a collision with
differing content, one verifying no false user_modified flag on resync.
2026-04-23 05:09:08 -07:00
MikeFac
78e213710c fix: guard against None tirith path in security scanner
When _resolve_tirith_path() returns None (e.g. install failed on
unsupported platform or all resolution paths exhausted), the function
passed None directly to subprocess.run(), causing a TypeError instead
of respecting the fail_open config.

Add a None check before the subprocess call that allows or blocks
according to the configured fail_open policy, matching the existing
error handling behavior for OSError and TimeoutExpired.
2026-04-23 03:08:53 -07:00
Wysie
be99feff1f fix(image-gen): force-refresh plugin providers in long-lived sessions 2026-04-23 03:01:18 -07:00
TaroballzChen
5d09474348 fix(tools): enforce ACP transport overrides in delegate_task child agents
When override_acp_command was passed to _build_child_agent, it failed to
override effective_provider to 'copilot-acp' and effective_api_mode to
'chat_completions'. This caused the child AIAgent to inherit the parent's
native API configuration (e.g. Anthropic) and attempt real HTTP requests
using the parent's API key, leading to HTTP 401 errors and completely
bypassing the ACP subprocess.

Ensure that if an ACP command override is provided, the child agent
correctly routes through CopilotACPClient.

Refs #2653
2026-04-23 02:37:15 -07:00
yuanhe
1df0c812c4 feat(skills): add MiniMax-AI/cli as default skill tap
Adds MiniMax-AI/cli to the default taps list so the mmx-cli skill
is discoverable and installable out of the box via /skills browse
and /skills install. The skill definition lives upstream at
github.com/MiniMax-AI/cli/skill/SKILL.md, keeping updates decoupled.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-23 02:35:13 -07:00
Julien Talbot
d8cc85dcdc review(stt-xai): address cetej's nits
- Replace hardcoded 'fr' default with DEFAULT_LOCAL_STT_LANGUAGE ('en')
  — removes locale leak, matches other providers
- Drop redundant default=True on is_truthy_value (dict .get already defaults)
- Update auto-detect comment to include 'xai' in the chain
- Fix docstring: 21 languages (match PR body + actual xAI API)
- Update test_sends_language_and_format to set HERMES_LOCAL_STT_LANGUAGE=fr
  explicitly, since default is no longer 'fr'

All 18 xAI STT tests pass locally.
2026-04-23 01:57:33 -07:00
Julien Talbot
a6ffa994cd feat(stt): add xAI Grok STT provider
Add xAI as a sixth STT provider using the POST /v1/stt endpoint.

Features:
- Multipart/form-data upload to api.x.ai/v1/stt
- Inverse Text Normalization (ITN) via format=true (default)
- Optional diarization via config (stt.xai.diarize)
- Language configuration (default: fr, overridable via config or env)
- Custom base_url support (XAI_STT_BASE_URL env or stt.xai.base_url)
- Full provider integration: explicit config + auto-detect fallback chain
- Consistent error handling matching existing provider patterns

Config (config.yaml):
  stt:
    provider: xai
    xai:
      language: fr
      format: true
      diarize: false
      base_url: https://api.x.ai/v1   # optional override

Auto-detect priority: local > groq > openai > mistral > xai > none
2026-04-23 01:57:33 -07:00
VantHoff
99af222ecf fix(tirith): detect Android/Termux as Linux ABI-compatible
In _detect_target(), platform.system() returns "Android" on Termux,
not "Linux". Without this change tirith's auto-installer skips
Android even though the Linux GNU binaries are ABI-compatible.
2026-04-22 21:17:37 -07:00
Loic Moncany
b80b400141 fix(mcp): respect ssl_verify config for StreamableHTTP servers
When an MCP server config has ssl_verify: false (e.g. local dev with
a self-signed cert), the setting was read from config.yaml but never
passed to the httpx client, causing CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED errors
and silent connection failures.

Fix: read ssl_verify from config and pass it as the 'verify' kwarg to
both code paths:
- New API (mcp >= 1.24.0): httpx.AsyncClient(verify=ssl_verify)
- Legacy API (mcp < 1.24.0): streamablehttp_client(..., verify=ssl_verify)

Fixes local dev setups using ServBay, LocalWP, MAMP, or any stack with
a self-signed TLS certificate.
2026-04-22 21:17:00 -07:00
shushuzn
fa2dbd1bb5 fix: use utf-8 encoding when reading .env file in load_env()
On Windows, Path.open() defaults to the system ANSI code page (cp1252).
If the .env file contains UTF-8 characters, decoding fails with
'gbk codec can't decode byte 0x94'. Specify encoding='utf-8'
explicitly to ensure consistent behavior across platforms.
2026-04-22 18:17:37 -07:00
Ubuntu
a3014a4481 fix(docker): add SETUID/SETGID caps so gosu drop in entrypoint succeeds
The Docker terminal backend runs containers with `--cap-drop ALL`
and re-adds only DAC_OVERRIDE, CHOWN, FOWNER. Since commit fee0e0d3
("run as non-root user, use virtualenv") the image entrypoint drops
from root to the `hermes` user via `gosu`, which requires CAP_SETUID
and CAP_SETGID. Without them every sandbox container exits
immediately with:

    Dropping root privileges
    error: failed switching to 'hermes': operation not permitted

Breaking every terminal/file tool invocation in `terminal.backend: docker`
mode.

Fix: add SETUID and SETGID to the cap-add list. The `no-new-privileges`
security-opt is kept, so gosu still cannot escalate back to root after
the one-way drop — the hardening posture is preserved.

Reproduction
------------
With any image whose ENTRYPOINT calls `gosu <user>`, the container
exits immediately under the pre-fix cap set. Post-fix, the drop
succeeds and the container proceeds normally.

    docker run --rm \
        --cap-drop ALL \
        --cap-add DAC_OVERRIDE --cap-add CHOWN --cap-add FOWNER \
        --security-opt no-new-privileges \
        --entrypoint /usr/local/bin/gosu \
        hermes-claude:latest hermes id
    # -> error: failed switching to 'hermes': operation not permitted

    # Same command with SETUID+SETGID added:
    # -> uid=10000(hermes) gid=10000(hermes) groups=10000(hermes)

Tests
-----
Added `test_security_args_include_setuid_setgid_for_gosu_drop` that
asserts both caps are present and the overall hardening posture
(cap-drop ALL + no-new-privileges) is preserved.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 18:13:14 -07:00
WuTianyi123
4c1362884d fix(local): respect configured cwd in init_session()
LocalEnvironment._run_bash() spawned subprocess.Popen without a cwd
argument, so init_session()'s pwd -P ran in the gateway process's
startup directory and overwrote self.cwd. Pass cwd=self.cwd so the
initial snapshot captures the user-configured working directory.

Tested:
- pytest tests/ -q (255 env-related tests passed)
- Full suite: 13,537 passed; 70 pre-existing failures unrelated to local env
2026-04-22 17:55:23 -07:00
ycbai
db86ed1990 fix(terminal): forward docker_forward_env and docker_env to container_config
The container_config builder in terminal_tool.py was missing
docker_forward_env and docker_env keys, causing config.yaml's
docker_forward_env setting to be silently ignored. Environment
variables listed in docker_forward_env were never injected into
Docker containers.
This fix adds both keys to the container_config dict so they are
properly passed to _create_environment().
2026-04-22 17:45:56 -07:00
Teknium
7d8b2eee63 fix(delegate): default inherit_mcp_toolsets=true, drop version bump
Follow-up on helix4u's PR #14211:
- Flip default to true: narrowing toolsets=['web','browser'] expresses
  'I want these extras', not 'silently strip MCP'. Parent MCP tools
  (registered at runtime) should survive narrowing by default.
- Drop _config_version bump (22->23); additive nested key under
  delegation.* is handled by _deep_merge, no migration needed.
- Update tests to reflect new default behavior.
2026-04-22 17:45:48 -07:00
helix4u
3e96c87f37 fix(delegate): make MCP toolset inheritance configurable 2026-04-22 17:45:48 -07:00
yudaiyan
96b0f37001 fix: separate browser_cdp into its own toolset
browser_cdp_tool.py registers before browser_tool.py (alphabetical
import order), so its stricter check_fn (requires CDP endpoint) becomes
the toolset-level check for all 11 browser tools. This causes
'hermes doctor' to report the entire browser toolset as unavailable
even when agent-browser is correctly installed.

Move browser_cdp to toolset='browser-cdp' so it is evaluated
independently. browser_navigate et al. only need agent-browser;
browser_cdp additionally requires a reachable CDP endpoint.
2026-04-22 17:45:17 -07:00
Konstantinos Karachalios
435d86ce36 fix: use builtin cd in command wrapper to bypass shell aliases
Version managers like frum (Ruby), rvm, nvm, and others commonly alias
cd to a wrapper function that runs additional logic after directory
changes. When Hermes captures the shell environment into a session
snapshot, these aliases are preserved. If the wrapper function fails
in the subprocess context (e.g. frum not on PATH), every cd fails,
causing all terminal commands to exit with code 126.

Using builtin cd bypasses any aliases or functions, ensuring the
directory change always uses the real bash builtin regardless of
what version managers are installed.
2026-04-22 17:37:12 -07:00
niyoh
3445530dbf feat(web): support TAVILY_BASE_URL env var for custom proxy endpoints
Make Tavily client respect a TAVILY_BASE_URL environment variable,
defaulting to https://api.tavily.com for backward compatibility.
Consistent with FIRECRAWL_API_URL pattern already used in this module.
2026-04-22 17:36:33 -07:00
Jaffar Keikei
c47d4eda13 fix(tools): restrict RPC socket permissions to owner-only
The code execution sandbox creates a Unix domain socket in /tmp with
default permissions, allowing any local user to connect and execute
tool calls. Restrict to 0o600 after bind.

Closes #6230
2026-04-22 17:27:18 -07:00
kshitijk4poor
284e084bcc perf(browser): upgrade agent-browser 0.13 -> 0.26, wire daemon idle timeout
Upgrades agent-browser from 0.13.0 to 0.26.0, picking up 13 releases of
daemon reliability fixes:

- Daemon hang on Linux from waitpid(-1) race in SIGCHLD handler (#1098)
- Chrome killed after ~10s idle due to PR_SET_PDEATHSIG thread tracking (#1157)
- Orphaned Chrome processes via process-group kill on shutdown (#1137)
- Stale daemon after upgrade via .version sidecar and auto-restart (#1134)
- Idle timeout not firing (sleep future recreated each loop) (#1110)
- Navigation hanging on lifecycle events that never fire (#1059, #1092)
- CDP attach hang on Chrome 144+ (#1133)
- Windows daemon TCP bind with Hyper-V port conflicts (#1041)
- Shadow DOM traversal in accessibility tree snapshots
- doctor command for user self-diagnosis

Also wires AGENT_BROWSER_IDLE_TIMEOUT_MS into the browser subprocess
environment so the daemon self-terminates after our configured inactivity
timeout (default 300s). This is the daemon-side counterpart to the
Python-side inactivity reaper — the daemon kills itself and its Chrome
children when no commands arrive, preventing orphan accumulation even
when the Python process dies without running atexit handlers.

Addresses #7343 (daemon socket hangs, shadow DOM) and #13793 (orphan
accumulation from force-killed sessions).
2026-04-22 16:33:36 -07:00
Yukipukii1
44a16c5d9d guard terminal_tool import-time env parsing 2026-04-22 14:45:50 -07:00
kshitijk4poor
d6ed35d047 feat(security): add global toggle to allow private/internal URL resolution
Adds security.allow_private_urls / HERMES_ALLOW_PRIVATE_URLS toggle so
users on OpenWrt routers, TUN-mode proxies (Clash/Mihomo/Sing-box),
corporate split-tunnel VPNs, and Tailscale networks — where DNS resolves
public domains to 198.18.0.0/15 or 100.64.0.0/10 — can use web_extract,
browser, vision URL fetching, and gateway media downloads.

Single toggle in tools/url_safety.py; all 23 is_safe_url() call sites
inherit automatically. Cached for process lifetime.

Cloud metadata endpoints stay ALWAYS blocked regardless of the toggle:
169.254.169.254 (AWS/GCP/Azure/DO/Oracle), 169.254.170.2 (AWS ECS task
IAM creds), 169.254.169.253 (Azure IMDS wire server), 100.100.100.200
(Alibaba), fd00:ec2::254 (AWS IPv6), the entire 169.254.0.0/16
link-local range, and the metadata.google.internal / metadata.goog
hostnames (checked pre-DNS so they can't be bypassed on networks where
those names resolve to local IPs).

Supersedes #3779 (narrower HERMES_ALLOW_RFC2544 for the same class of
users).

Co-authored-by: kshitijk4poor <82637225+kshitijk4poor@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-04-22 14:38:59 -07:00
brooklyn!
bc5da42b2c
Merge pull request #14045 from NousResearch/bb/subagent-observability
feat(tui): subagent spawn observability overlay
2026-04-22 12:21:25 -05:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
7eae504d15 fix(tui): address Copilot round-2 on #14045
- delegate_task: use shared tool_error() for the paused-spawn early return
  so the error envelope matches the rest of the tool.
- Disk snapshot label: treat orphaned nodes (parentId missing from the
  snapshot) as top-level, matching buildSubagentTree / summarizeLabel.
2026-04-22 11:54:19 -05:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
dee51c1607 fix(tui): address Copilot review on #14045
Four real issues Copilot flagged:

1. delegate_tool: `_build_child_agent` never passed `toolsets` to the
   progress callback, so the event payload's `toolsets` field (wired
   through every layer) was always empty and the overlay's toolsets
   row never populated.  Thread `child_toolsets` through.

2. event handler: the race-protection on subagent.spawn_requested /
   subagent.start only preserved `completed`, so a late-arriving queued
   event could clobber `failed` / `interrupted` too.  Preserve any
   terminal status (`completed | failed | interrupted`).

3. SpawnHud: comment claimed concurrency was approximated by "widest
   level in the tree" but code used `totals.activeCount` (total across
   all parents).  `max_concurrent_children` is a per-parent cap, so
   activeCount over-warns for multi-orchestrator runs.  Switch to
   `max(widthByDepth(tree))`; the label now reads `W/cap+extra` where
   W is the widest level (drives the ratio) and `+extra` is the rest.

4. spawn_tree.list: comment said "peek header without parsing full list"
   but the code json.loads()'d every snapshot.  Adds a per-session
   `_index.jsonl` sidecar written on save; list() reads only the index
   (with a full-scan fallback for pre-index sessions).  O(1) per
   snapshot now vs O(file-size).
2026-04-22 10:56:32 -05:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
7785654ad5 feat(tui): subagent spawn observability overlay
Adds a live + post-hoc audit surface for recursive delegate_task fan-out.
None of cc/oc/oclaw tackle nested subagent trees inside an Ink overlay;
this ships a view-switched dashboard that handles arbitrary depth + width.

Python
- delegate_tool: every subagent event now carries subagent_id, parent_id,
  depth, model, tool_count; subagent.complete also ships input/output/
  reasoning tokens, cost, api_calls, files_read/files_written, and a
  tail of tool-call outputs
- delegate_tool: new subagent.spawn_requested event + _active_subagents
  registry so the overlay can kill a branch by id and pause new spawns
- tui_gateway: new RPCs delegation.status, delegation.pause,
  subagent.interrupt, spawn_tree.save/list/load (disk under
  \$HERMES_HOME/spawn-trees/<session>/<ts>.json)

TUI
- /agents overlay: full-width list mode (gantt strip + row picker) and
  Enter-to-drill full-width scrollable detail mode; inverse+amber
  selection, heat-coloured branch markers, wall-clock gantt with tick
  ruler, per-branch rollups
- Detail pane: collapsible accordions (Budget, Files, Tool calls, Output,
  Progress, Summary); open-state persists across agents + mode switches
  via a shared atom
- /replay [N|last|list|load <path>] for in-memory + disk history;
  /replay-diff <a> <b> for side-by-side tree comparison
- Status-bar SpawnHud warns as depth/concurrency approaches caps;
  overlay auto-follows the just-finished turn onto history[1]
- Theme: bump DARK dim #B8860B → #CC9B1F for readable secondary text
  globally; keep LIGHT untouched

Tests: +29 new subagentTree unit tests; 215/215 passing.
2026-04-22 10:38:17 -05:00