Remove the free Parallel Search MCP path and restore the keyed Parallel backend behavior from before it was introduced.
Also drops the keyless fallback registration/display labeling tests and returns the Parallel SDK pin to the prior version.
GLM-5.2 ships with a 1M (1,048,576) token context window. Without this
entry, Hermes falls through to the generic 'glm' key (202,752 tokens),
under-reporting the context bar and prematurely compressing conversations.
The 1M limit was verified empirically via needle-in-a-haystack retrieval
at 789,240 prompt tokens on api.z.ai/api/coding/paas/v4 — zero errors,
zero truncation, correct retrieval at every tested size (25K through 789K).
Changes:
- agent/model_metadata.py: add 'glm-5.2': 1_048_576 before 'glm' fallback
- hermes_cli/models.py: add glm-5.2 to zai curated models
- hermes_cli/setup.py: add glm-5.2 to setup wizard zai list
- hermes_cli/auth.py: add glm-5.2 to coding plan endpoint probes
- plugins/model-providers/zai/__init__.py: add glm-5.2 to fallback_models
- tests/agent/test_model_metadata.py: context resolution + vendor-prefix tests
The #45966 cross-process coherence guard snapshots a session's on-disk
message_count next to the cached agent and rebuilds the agent when the
count changes. But the snapshot is taken at agent-BUILD time — before
the turn writes its own user + assistant (+ tool) rows — and the cache
entry is never rewritten on a reuse. So this process's OWN turn grows
message_count, and the very next turn sees a mismatch and rebuilds the
agent. That happens every turn, for every conversation, silently
destroying the per-conversation prompt caching the cache exists to
protect (AGENTS.md: prompt caching is sacred).
Add _refresh_agent_cache_message_count(): after a turn completes and the
agent has flushed its rows to the SessionDB, re-baseline the stored count
to the now-current value. The guard then fires ONLY when a DIFFERENT
process changes the transcript — preserving the #45966 fix while keeping
the cache warm for normal single-process operation.
Tests drive the real SessionDB + the real guard condition: 5 consecutive
same-process turns now all REUSE the cached agent (0 before the fix); a
cross-process append still invalidates; and the re-baseline is fail-safe
(no DB, falsy session_id, raising probe, legacy 2-tuple, pending sentinel
all no-op).
The platform-disabled fix landed only in agent.skill_utils.get_disabled_skill_names
(the system-prompt path). Two sibling resolvers still used the old
replace-not-union semantics, so the same skill could be hidden from the
<available_skills> prompt yet reported enabled elsewhere:
- hermes_cli/skills_config.get_disabled_skills (the 'hermes skills config' UI)
returned only the platform list, so a globally-disabled skill showed as
enabled (unchecked) on any platform with a platform_disabled entry.
- tools/skills_tool._is_skill_disabled (gates whether skill_view loads a skill)
ignored the global list when a platform list existed, so a globally-disabled
skill could still be loaded on such a platform.
Both now union the global list with the platform list, matching
get_disabled_skill_names. An explicit empty platform list no longer re-enables
a globally-disabled skill — global disables hold on every platform (#46201).
Also: fix the now-stale get_disabled_skill_names docstring and drop a stray
blank line. Regression tests added for both sites (proven to fail on the old
replace semantics).
build_skills_system_prompt() already resolved _platform_hint but called
get_disabled_skill_names() with no argument, so the resolved platform never
reached the filter and the prompt cache_key varied by platform while the
disabled set did not. Pass _platform_hint or None.
get_disabled_skill_names() also fully ignored the global 'disabled' list once
a platform-specific list was found. Return the union (global | platform) so a
globally-disabled skill stays disabled on every platform.
Salvaged from #46203 by @iborazzi; the unrelated apps/shared/tsconfig.json
ES2023 bump is intentionally dropped (one concern per PR).
Port 465 expects implicit TLS (SMTP_SSL) from the first byte. The email
adapter always used SMTP() + starttls(), which is correct for port 587
but hangs/fails on port 465 providers (e.g., Swiss ISPs).
Additionally, when the SMTP host has AAAA DNS records but IPv6 is
unreachable, socket.create_connection() tries IPv6 first and hangs
until timeout. Add an IPv4 fallback via AF_INET socket.
Extract _connect_smtp() helper to consolidate the 4 duplicate SMTP
connection sites into a single method with correct protocol selection
and IPv6 fallback logic.
The initial fix only wrote the prefix npmrc on a fresh Node install, so
pre-existing bundled-Node installs (Node already present) were not repaired
by re-running the installer — install_node/ensure_node skip when Node is
already up to date.
Extract the redirect into an idempotent helper
(configure_managed_node_npm_prefix / _nb_configure_npm_prefix) that no-ops
when there's no Hermes-managed npm, and call it unconditionally from
check_node (install.sh) and at the top of ensure_node (node-bootstrap.sh).
Re-running the install command now repairs an affected install in place,
not just brand-new ones.
Guards that install.sh and node-bootstrap.sh redirect the bundled Node's
npm global prefix to the command link dir's parent via a prefix-local
global npmrc, so `npm install -g` binaries land on PATH instead of the
off-PATH $HERMES_HOME/node/bin.
Gateway startup now queues real inbound messages until restart-interrupted auto-resume turns have completed, preventing duplicate agents for the same session after a restart.
When profile isolation activates ({HERMES_HOME}/home/ exists), child
processes receive HOME={HERMES_HOME}/home/ for tool config isolation
(git, ssh, gh). However, scripts using Path.home() to locate
~/.hermes/ would incorrectly resolve to the isolated profile home,
breaking helpers that rely on the real user home directory.
New get_real_home() helper in hermes_constants resolves the actual
user home independently of profile isolation. All four subprocess
spawners now inject HERMES_REAL_HOME alongside the profile HOME:
- tools/code_execution_tool.py (execute_code)
- tools/environments/local.py (terminal background, run_env)
- agent/copilot_acp_client.py (Copilot ACP)
Child scripts can now use:
Path(os.environ.get("HERMES_REAL_HOME", os.environ.get("HOME", "")))
to reliably find the real user home regardless of profile isolation.
Closes#25114
Registers 200 plugin commands on top of the native + COMMAND_REGISTRY set
and asserts the tree never exceeds Discord's 100-command limit, that native
high-priority commands survive the cap, and that overflow is actually
dropped. Regression guard for the recurring error 30032
("Maximum number of application commands reached") sync failures.
Allow file tools to edit shell startup files, user package-manager configs, and Hermes control files that the user can already modify directly. Keep hard blocks for SSH keys, .env/OAuth token stores, mcp-tokens, pairing files, and system privilege files.
Auto-compression rewrites history mid-turn, which made long threads look
like they reset. Re-tag the gateway lifecycle status as compacting and
surface it in the desktop thread loading indicators.
A chat-completions response that carries real text or tool calls *alongside*
a `message.refusal` note is a normal, usable turn — the model did work. The
prior logic flipped finish_reason to `content_filter` whenever a refusal
string was present, so the conversation loop reframed a content-bearing turn
as a *failed* safety refusal (failed=True) and buried the model's actual
output inside the "model declined" template, or dropped tool calls entirely.
Only promote to a terminal `content_filter` when the refusal is the sole
payload (no visible text AND no tool calls). The refusal explanation is still
recorded in provider_data in every case for observability. Refusal-only
responses (the bug this feature targets) are unaffected and still surface
terminally; the empty+refusal, bare content_filter passthrough, and no-refusal
common cases are byte-identical to before.
Updates the partial-content test to the corrected contract and adds a
tool_calls-alongside-refusal regression guard.
OpenRouter (and every other OpenAI-compatible provider) uses the default
chat_completions transport, so it is already covered by the refusal fix:
an upstream Claude / moderation refusal arrives as
finish_reason="content_filter" (often empty content, no message.refusal).
Add a regression test asserting the transport passes that finish reason
straight through to the loop's content_filter handler.
(cherry picked from commit 60168a513b)
A Claude refusal (HTTP 200, stop_reason="refusal", empty content) was
laundered into a generic retry loop and surfaced as a misleading
"rate limited / invalid response" or "no content after retries" error,
burning paid attempts reproducing a deterministic refusal.
This hit two distinct paths:
- Direct Anthropic (anthropic_messages): validate_response rejected the
empty-content refusal *before* normalize_response mapped refusal ->
content_filter, so it fell into the invalid-response retry loop.
- Nous Portal / OpenAI-compatible (chat_completions): the portal surfaces
a Claude refusal via message.refusal with empty content, which sailed
past validation and died in the empty-response retry loop.
Fix (one unified content_filter dispatch for all backends):
- AnthropicTransport.validate_response: accept empty content when
stop_reason == "refusal" so it flows to normalize_response.
- ChatCompletionsTransport.normalize_response: promote message.refusal to
content + a content_filter finish reason.
- conversation_loop: handle finish_reason == "content_filter" - fire the
api_request_error hook (content_policy_blocked), try a configured
fallback once, else return a clear terminal refusal message. Never retry
a deterministic refusal.
Supersedes #43084, which fixed only the direct-Anthropic path and could
not reach the chat_completions/portal path.
Tests: transport-level (validate_response refusal, message.refusal
promotion) + end-to-end loop (refusal surfaced, exactly one API call).
(cherry picked from commit 01f546f92c)
Parse provider-reported image pixel ceilings so many-image Anthropic requests can recover by shrinking Retina screenshots below the stricter limit instead of retrying the same rejected payload.