Quarantine Nous OAuth state when refresh fails with terminal invalid_grant/invalid_token errors. Clear local and shared refresh material across runtime, managed access-token, proxy, and credential-pool paths so Hermes stops retrying revoked refresh sessions.
* feat(kanban): orchestrator-driven auto-decomposition on triage
Closes the core gap in the kanban system: dropping a one-liner into Triage
now decomposes it into a graph of child tasks routed to specialist
profiles by description, matching teknium's original vision ("main
orchestrator splits/creates actual tasks, doles them out to each agent").
The build
---------
- hermes_cli/profiles.py: new `description` + `description_auto` fields
on ProfileInfo, persisted in <profile_dir>/profile.yaml. Helpers
read_profile_meta / write_profile_meta. `create_profile` accepts
optional description.
- hermes_cli/profile_describer.py: new module — auto-generate a 1-2
sentence description from a profile's skills + model + name via the
auxiliary LLM (`auxiliary.profile_describer`).
- hermes_cli/main.py: new `hermes profile create --description ...`
flag; new `hermes profile describe [name] [--text ... | --auto |
--all --auto]` subcommand.
- hermes_cli/kanban_db.py: new `decompose_triage_task` atomic helper —
creates N child tasks, links the root as a child of every leaf
(root waits for the whole graph), flips root `triage -> todo` with
orchestrator assignee, records an audit comment + `decomposed` event
in a single write_txn.
- hermes_cli/kanban_decompose.py: new module — calls the auxiliary LLM
(`auxiliary.kanban_decomposer`) with the profile roster + descriptions
to produce a JSON task graph, then invokes the DB helper. Rewrites
unknown assignees to the configured `kanban.default_assignee` (or
the active default profile) so a task NEVER lands with assignee=None.
Falls back to specify-style single-task promotion when the LLM
returns `fanout: false`.
- hermes_cli/kanban.py: new `hermes kanban decompose [task_id | --all]`
CLI verb.
- hermes_cli/config.py: new DEFAULT_CONFIG keys —
kanban.orchestrator_profile, kanban.default_assignee,
kanban.auto_decompose (default True), kanban.auto_decompose_per_tick
(default 3), auxiliary.kanban_decomposer, auxiliary.profile_describer.
- gateway/run.py: kanban dispatcher watcher now runs auto-decompose
before each `_tick_once`, capped by `auto_decompose_per_tick` so a
bulk-load of triage tasks doesn't burst-spend the aux LLM.
- plugins/kanban/dashboard/plugin_api.py: new endpoints —
GET /profiles (list roster + descriptions),
PATCH /profiles/<name> (set description, user-authored),
POST /profiles/<name>/describe-auto (LLM-generate),
POST /tasks/<id>/decompose (run decomposer),
GET/PUT /orchestration (orchestrator/default-assignee/auto-decompose
pickers, with resolved fallbacks echoed back).
- plugins/kanban/dashboard/dist/index.js: new OrchestrationPanel
collapsible — dropdowns for orchestrator profile and default
assignee, auto-decompose toggle, per-profile description editor with
Save and Auto-generate buttons. New ⚗ Decompose button next to
✨ Specify on triage-column task drawers.
Behavior
--------
- A task in Triage gets fanned out into a small DAG of child tasks.
Children with no internal parents flip to `ready` immediately
(parallel dispatch). Children with sibling parents wait. The root
stays alive as a parent of every child — when the whole graph
finishes, it promotes to `ready` and the orchestrator profile wakes
back up to judge completion (the "adds more tasks until done" part
of the original vision).
- `kanban.orchestrator_profile` unset -> falls back to the default
profile (whichever `hermes` launches with no -p flag).
- `kanban.default_assignee` unset -> same fallback. Tasks NEVER end
up unassigned.
- `kanban.auto_decompose=true` (default) runs the decomposer
automatically on dispatcher ticks; manual `hermes kanban decompose`
is always available.
Tests
-----
- tests/hermes_cli/test_kanban_decompose_db.py — 7 tests for the
atomic DB helper (status transitions, dep graph, audit trail,
validation errors).
- tests/hermes_cli/test_kanban_decompose.py — 6 tests for the
decomposer module (fanout, no-fanout fallback, unknown-assignee
rewrite, malformed-JSON resilience, no-aux-client path).
- tests/hermes_cli/test_profile_describer.py — 10 tests for
profile.yaml r/w + the LLM auto-describer (yaml corrupt tolerance,
user-vs-auto description protection, --overwrite, fallback parsing).
E2E
---
- CLI end-to-end: created profiles with descriptions, dropped a triage
task, mocked the aux LLM with a 3-task graph -> verified all three
children were created with the right assignees, the dependency
edges matched the LLM's graph, root flipped to todo gated by every
child, audit comment + `decomposed` event recorded.
- Dashboard end-to-end: started the dashboard against an isolated
HERMES_HOME, verified all four new endpoints via curl (profile
listing, PATCH for description, PUT for orchestration settings,
POST for decompose). Opened the UI in the browser, confirmed the
OrchestrationPanel renders with all three pickers + the per-profile
description editor, typed a description, clicked Save, verified
~/.hermes/profile.yaml was written. Clicked Decompose on the triage
card and confirmed the inline error message surfaced as designed
("no auxiliary client configured").
* feat(kanban): surface decompose mode (Auto/Manual) as a one-click pill
The auto/manual toggle already existed as kanban.auto_decompose (default
true), but it was buried inside the collapsed Orchestration settings
panel — users couldn't tell at a glance which mode they were in. This
hoists it to a pill at the top of the kanban page so the state is always
visible and one click flips it.
UX
- New "⚗ Decompose: AUTO|MANUAL" pill in the kanban header. Emerald
styling when Auto is on (the default), muted/gray when Manual.
- Pill is visible both in the collapsed AND expanded Orchestration
settings views so context is preserved when the user opens the panel.
- Tooltip explains both states + what clicking does.
- Renamed the in-panel "Auto-decompose on triage / Enabled" checkbox
to "Decompose mode / Auto (default) | Manual" for language parity
with the pill.
Behavior preserved
- Default remains Auto (kanban.auto_decompose=true).
- Manual mode restores pre-PR behavior: triage tasks stay in triage
until the user clicks ⚗ Decompose on each card (or runs
`hermes kanban decompose <id>`).
Implementation
- plugins/kanban/dashboard/dist/index.js: load /orchestration on mount
(not just on expand) so the collapsed pill reflects real state.
Render mode pill in both collapsed and expanded headers. Reuses the
existing PUT /api/plugins/kanban/orchestration endpoint — no new
backend, no new tests required.
E2E verified
- Pill renders as "⚗ Decompose: AUTO" on page load (default).
- One click flips to "⚗ Decompose: MANUAL" with muted styling.
- config.yaml on disk shows auto_decompose: false after the flip.
- Second click round-trips back to Auto; config.yaml flips to true.
* feat(kanban): rename mode pill to "Orchestration: Auto/Manual"
Per Teknium feedback — "Decompose" was too implementation-specific.
"Orchestration" is the user-facing concept (the whole pitch is the
orchestrator profile routing work), and the pill is the front door to it.
- Pill text: "Orchestration: Auto" / "Orchestration: Manual" (title case,
no ⚗ prefix, no SHOUTY-CAPS for the mode value)
- In-panel checkbox label: "Orchestration mode" (was "Decompose mode")
- Tooltips updated to match
- No behavior change
* docs(kanban): document decompose, profile descriptions, orchestration mode
Brings the docs site up to parity with the PR. English build verified
locally (npx docusaurus build --locale en) — clean, no new broken links
or anchors. Pre-existing broken-link warnings (rl-training, llms.txt,
step-by-step-checklist, fallback-model) untouched.
- website/docs/reference/cli-commands.md
+ `hermes kanban decompose` action row in the action table, with
pointer to the Auto vs Manual orchestration section.
- website/docs/reference/profile-commands.md
+ `--description "<text>"` flag on `hermes profile create`.
+ Full `hermes profile describe` section: read, --text, --auto,
--overwrite, --all flags with examples.
- website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban.md (the big one)
+ Triage column intro rewritten around the Auto-decompose default
behavior, with pointer to the new Auto vs Manual section.
+ Status action row updated to mention both ⚗ Decompose and
✨ Specify on triage cards.
+ New "Auto vs Manual orchestration" section explaining the two
modes, how to flip them (pill, config), how routing-by-description
works, the no-None-assignee guarantee, plus a config knob table
(auto_decompose, auto_decompose_per_tick, orchestrator_profile,
default_assignee) and the two new auxiliary slots
(kanban_decomposer, profile_describer).
+ REST surface table gains 6 new endpoint rows: /tasks/:id/decompose,
/profiles (GET), /profiles/:name (PATCH), /profiles/:name/describe-auto,
/orchestration (GET + PUT).
- website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban-tutorial.md
+ Triage column blurb updated for Auto by default + Manual via the
pill, with cross-link to the Auto vs Manual orchestration section.
- website/docs/user-guide/profiles.md
+ Blank-profile flow now mentions --description and points to the
kanban routing model for context.
- website/docs/user-guide/configuration.md
+ `kanban_decomposer` and `profile_describer` added to the
`hermes model -> Configure auxiliary models` menu listing.
xAI's /responses endpoint rejects pattern and format JSON Schema keywords
in tool schemas with HTTP 400 'Invalid arguments passed to the model'.
The existing strip_pattern_and_format() only walked OpenAI-format tools
({'function': {'parameters': ...}}), missing Responses-format shapes
({'name': ..., 'parameters': ...}) used by codex_responses API mode.
This shows up most often with MCP-derived tools that carry validation
keywords (e.g. domain pattern regex in firecrawl, format: date-time)
through to the wire.
Extends the walk to handle both shapes. Auto-strip wiring is applied
separately in chat_completion_helpers (post-refactor location).
Closes#27197
14 focused tests on the extracted helper
``_xai_oauth_exchange_code_for_tokens`` cover:
Core contract:
* ``code_verifier`` is on the wire (RFC 7636 §4.5).
* ``code_challenge`` + ``code_challenge_method=S256`` are echoed
(the #26990 defense-in-depth that makes xAI's token endpoint
stop rejecting valid exchanges).
* ``grant_type=authorization_code``, ``code``, ``redirect_uri``,
and ``client_id`` are all locked.
* Content-Type is ``application/x-www-form-urlencoded`` (xAI
rejects ``application/json`` on this endpoint).
* The supplied ``token_endpoint`` URL is used verbatim — no
hard-coded constant sneaks in via a future refactor.
* ``timeout_seconds`` is forwarded; floored at 20s.
Sanity guard:
* Empty ``code_verifier`` raises ``xai_pkce_verifier_missing``
with a link to #26990 — and NOTHING is sent. Leaking the auth
code to a server that can't redeem it is the wrong failure mode.
* Empty ``code_challenge`` omits only the defensive echo; the
standards-compliant ``code_verifier`` request still goes out so
RFC-compliant servers keep working.
Error surfacing:
* Non-200 responses include both ``HTTP <status>`` and the body
verbatim — disambiguates 400 (PKCE / bad request) from 403
(tier denied, see #26847).
* Transport errors are wrapped as ``AuthError`` with the
``xai_token_exchange_failed`` code, so the surrounding
``format_auth_error`` UI mapping still fires.
* Non-dict JSON payloads raise ``xai_token_exchange_invalid``.
* 200 happy path returns the parsed payload dict verbatim.
End-to-end wire-format guard:
* A real ``httpx.Client`` with a stub transport captures the bytes
on the wire and asserts every PKCE field round-trips through
``urlencode``. Catches a future refactor that swaps
``data=`` for ``json=`` (which xAI would silently reject).
Addresses reviewer feedback: when resolve_runtime_provider returns a dict
without the 'provider' key, the result must be None regardless of
configured_provider. This guards against malformed runtime responses.
Test: test_runtime_missing_provider_key_returns_none
Named custom providers (e.g. crof.ai) resolve to provider='custom' at the
runtime level, causing subagents to lose their intended provider identity.
On retry/fallback, resolve_provider_client('custom', model=...) searches all
providers advertising that model and picks non-deterministically, routing to
Z.AI or Bailian instead of the configured target.
The fix preserves configured_provider when runtime['provider'] == 'custom',
restoring the original provider name so routing stays correct through retries.
Adds a named constant _RUNTIME_PROVIDER_CUSTOM instead of a magic string.
Adds three regression tests:
- test_named_custom_provider_preserves_provider_name: the #26954 case
- test_standard_provider_not_overwritten_by_configured_name: openrouter/nous
must still return their own identity, not the configured name
- test_custom_provider_with_empty_configured_provider_falls_back_to_runtime:
empty provider triggers the early-return None path as before
`hermes doctor` displayed OAuth status for Nous, Codex, Gemini, and MiniMax
but silently omitted xAI OAuth, even though `get_xai_oauth_auth_status()`
exists and the same information is already surfaced in `hermes status`.
Add xAI OAuth as a *separate* try/except block so an import failure cannot
silence the already-printed provider rows above it — consistent with the
per-provider isolation introduced in the doctor fallback fix.
Tests:
- 9 new tests in TestDoctorXaiOAuthStatus covering: logged-in ok, not-logged-in
warn, error line present/absent, import failure isolation, runtime exception
and None-return safety.
- 9 existing run_doctor helpers updated to mock get_xai_oauth_auth_status for
deterministic output.
hermes status listed Nous Portal, OpenAI Codex, Qwen OAuth, and MiniMax
OAuth in the Auth Providers section but omitted xAI OAuth entirely.
Users who authenticated via `hermes auth add xai-oauth` had no way to
verify their session state from the status output.
Add xAI OAuth display using the same field shape as OpenAI Codex:
auth_store (Auth file:), last_refresh (Refreshed:), and error when
not logged in. The import is isolated in its own try/except so an
import failure cannot affect the already-printed rows above it.
Tests cover:
- logged in: check mark, auth_store, last_refresh, error suppressed
- not logged in: login command hint, error shown, error absent = no line
- resilience: import failure, status function raises, returns None
- isolation: xAI import failure does not break Nous/MiniMax display
Shared try/except import block meant that if any one status function was
missing, all providers lost their OAuth fallback suppression. Split into
per-provider try/except so each branch is independently safe.
Add end-to-end test for xAI: bad XAI_API_KEY with healthy OAuth does not
surface a blocking issue in run_doctor output. Add tests for None return,
import failure isolation (xAI missing does not break Gemini), and move
test_returns_false_for_unknown_provider out of the xAI-specific class.
_has_healthy_oauth_fallback_for_apikey_provider() covers Gemini and
MiniMax (added by #26853) but omits xAI. The xAI provider profile
(plugins/model-providers/xai/__init__.py) has auth_type="api_key" and
env_vars=("XAI_API_KEY",), so it enters the generic API-key
connectivity loop. When XAI_API_KEY fails a 401 probe but xAI OAuth
is healthy, the failure is promoted to the blocking summary even though
xAI works fine via OAuth — the same false-positive #26853 fixed for
Gemini and MiniMax.
Fix: import get_xai_oauth_auth_status alongside the existing two
helpers and add the "xai" branch. get_xai_oauth_auth_status() already
exists in hermes_cli/auth.py and returns {"logged_in": True} when a
valid OAuth token is present.
Symmetric with the Gemini and MiniMax branches introduced in #26853.
No behavior change for providers without an OAuth path.
Addresses findings from two self-review passes pre-merge.
First pass (3-agent parallel review):
1. plugins/browser/browser_use/provider.py: drop the
``_ = managed_nous_tools_enabled`` dead-import-hider in
_get_config_or_none(). The import was actively misleading — the
helper IS used in _get_config() (separate method, separate import),
not here. The "keep static analysis happy" comment was wrong about
what the helper does in this scope.
2. agent/browser_provider.py: drop ``pragma: no cover`` from
is_configured() / provider_name() backward-compat aliases. They ARE
covered by ``TestLegacyAbcAliases`` — the pragma would have masked
future regressions.
3. tools/browser_tool.py: refactor _is_legacy_provider_registry_overridden()
to compare against a module-frozen _DEFAULT_PROVIDER_REGISTRY snapshot
instead of hardcoded set of 3 keys. Future maintainers adding a 4th
built-in provider now just extend _PROVIDER_REGISTRY; the override
detection adapts automatically. Previously the hardcoded
``set(...) != {"browserbase", "browser-use", "firecrawl"}`` would flip
True forever on any 4-key registry, silently routing every install
onto the legacy fixture path.
4. tools/browser_tool.py: when explicit ``browser.cloud_provider`` is set
but the registry has no matching plugin (typo, uninstalled plugin,
discovery failure), emit a WARNING with actionable text instead of
silently falling through to auto-detect. Legacy code surfaced a typed
credentials error via direct class instantiation; this log restores
the signal in the post-migration path.
5. agent/browser_registry.py: trim the triple-redundant _LEGACY_PREFERENCE
documentation. Module docstring + 13-line block-comment + 5-line
inline comment was repeating the same point. Kept the docstring and
trimmed the block-comment to 5 lines.
6. agent/browser_registry.py: upgrade is_available()-raised logging from
DEBUG to WARNING with exc_info=True. A provider's availability check
throwing is unusual enough that users debugging "no cloud provider"
need the traceback in logs.
7. tests/plugins/browser/check_parity_vs_main.py: drop dead top-level
imports (os, shutil, tempfile — only referenced inside the
SUBPROCESS_SCRIPT string literal that runs in a child process).
Second pass (architecture + claim-verification review):
8. tools/browser_tool.py: rewrite the inline comment in _get_cloud_provider
auto-detect branch. Prior text claimed it "routes through the plugin
registry's legacy preference walk so third-party plugins still get a
chance to be selected when they're explicitly configured" — false on
both counts. The branch uses module-level legacy class aliases
(BrowserUseProvider / BrowserbaseProvider) directly; third-party
plugins are intentionally reachable only via explicit
``browser.cloud_provider``. Corrected comment now matches behaviour
and cross-references _LEGACY_PREFERENCE for the firecrawl gate
rationale.
9. tools/browser_tool.py + tests/tools/test_managed_browserbase_and_modal.py:
drop the unused ``get_active_browser_provider as
_registry_get_active_browser_provider`` alias from the
``from agent.browser_registry import ...`` block. It was never
referenced; matching test-stub line in the agent.browser_registry
SimpleNamespace also dropped. ``get_provider`` is still imported (used
by the explicit-config dispatch path at line 535).
10. plugins/browser/firecrawl/provider.py: align emergency_cleanup()
with the early-guard pattern used in browserbase + browser_use
plugins. Previously firecrawl tried the DELETE and relied on
``_headers()`` raising ValueError to trip a "missing credentials"
warning; same final outcome but a different control flow that read
like a bug to a maintainer skimming the three modules. Now: if
is_available() is False, log+return early — identical shape to the
other two providers.
Verification: 54/54 unit tests + 13/13 parity scenarios still pass.
Two changes that go together:
1. tools/browser_tool.py — add _ensure_browser_plugins_loaded() and call
it from _get_cloud_provider() before consulting the registry. Normally
model_tools triggers discover_plugins() as an import side-effect, but
_get_cloud_provider() can be reached from contexts that haven't gone
through model_tools (standalone scripts, certain unit-test paths, the
new parity-sweep harness). Without the defensive call, the registry is
empty and _registry_get_browser_provider() returns None — silently
downgrading users to local mode when they explicitly configured a
cloud provider with no credentials yet. The behavior-parity sweep
below caught this as 4 scenario regressions (explicit-X-no-creds for
all 3 providers, and explicit-firecrawl-with-creds).
2. tests/plugins/browser/check_parity_vs_main.py — subprocess harness
that pins one Python invocation to origin/main and one to this PR's
worktree via sys.path.insert(), runs _get_cloud_provider() across a
13-scenario config matrix, and diffs the reduced shape tuple
(is_local, provider_name, is_available). Provider_name pulls from
provider.provider_name() which is the legacy CloudBrowserProvider
API and remains as a backward-compat alias on the new BrowserProvider
ABC, so the comparison is apples-to-apples regardless of class
identity.
Final result: PARITY OK across 13 scenarios. The four observable
config/credential matrices that exercise the dispatcher all match
origin/main bit-for-bit:
- no-config + no-env → local
- explicit local + any env → local
- explicit BB / BU / FC + no creds → provider returned with
is_available()==False (so dispatcher surfaces typed credentials
error; matches main exactly)
- explicit BB / BU / FC + creds → provider returned with
is_available()==True
- no-config + BU creds → Browser Use
- no-config + BB creds → Browserbase
- no-config + both → Browser Use (legacy walk first hit)
- no-config + FC only → local (firecrawl NOT in legacy walk)
- no-config + FC + BB → Browserbase (legacy walk skips firecrawl)
Per the dev skill's "behavior-parity for refactor PRs" rule — without
this subprocess sweep, 31/31 unit tests pass while the production code
path is silently broken for users who type `browser.cloud_provider:
browserbase` and run a single browser command without prior model_tools
import. Caught + fixed before push.
Mirrors tests/plugins/web/test_web_search_provider_plugins.py from PR #25182.
31 tests across 5 classes:
TestBundledPluginsRegister (8 tests)
- Three plugins register (browserbase, browser-use, firecrawl)
- Each plugin's name + display_name accessible
- get_setup_schema() returns picker-shaped dict with post_setup hook
- All three lifecycle methods (create_session, close_session,
emergency_cleanup) overridden on every plugin
TestIsAvailable (4 tests)
- browserbase needs BOTH BROWSERBASE_API_KEY and BROWSERBASE_PROJECT_ID
- browserbase: api_key alone or project_id alone insufficient
- browser-use satisfied by BROWSER_USE_API_KEY
- firecrawl satisfied by FIRECRAWL_API_KEY
TestRegistryResolution (8 tests) — most valuable, locks down
pre-migration semantics:
- _resolve(None) with no creds returns None (local mode)
- _resolve('local') short-circuits to None
- _resolve('browserbase') returns provider even when unavailable
(so dispatcher surfaces typed credentials error)
- _resolve('firecrawl') same: explicit-config wins
- _resolve('unknown') falls through to auto-detect
- Legacy walk picks browser-use over browserbase
- browserbase-only configuration: browserbase wins
- **Regression**: firecrawl is NEVER auto-selected even when
single-eligible (preserves pre-migration gate; FIRECRAWL_API_KEY
shared with web firecrawl must not silently route to paid cloud
browser)
TestLegacyAbcAliases (6 tests)
- is_configured() delegates to is_available() for all three plugins
- provider_name() returns display_name for all three plugins
TestPickerIntegration (3 tests)
- _plugin_browser_providers() exposes all three plugins as rows
- Each row carries post_setup='agent_browser'
- browser_plugin_name marker matches browser_provider
All tests use real imports — no mocking of provider classes — so the
suite catches drift in the ABC, registry, picker injection, and plugin
glue layer simultaneously.
31/31 passing.
The four files in tools/browser_providers/ (base.py, browserbase.py,
browser_use.py, firecrawl.py) have been migrated into
plugins/browser/<vendor>/provider.py over the previous commits. No
in-tree code references them anymore — the legacy class names
(BrowserbaseProvider / BrowserUseProvider / FirecrawlProvider) are
re-exported from tools.browser_tool as aliases to the plugin classes,
so existing test patches keep working.
Updates tests/tools/test_managed_browserbase_and_modal.py:
- Adds _load_plugin_module() helper next to _load_tool_module().
- Reroutes five _load_tool_module('tools.browser_providers.X', ...)
calls to _load_plugin_module('plugins.browser.X.provider', ...).
- Renames BrowserbaseProvider/BrowserUseProvider -> the new plugin
class names (BrowserbaseBrowserProvider / BrowserUseBrowserProvider).
- Updates is_configured() -> is_available() on the one assertion that
cared about the rename (the others stay on is_configured() via the
BrowserProvider ABC's backward-compat alias).
Net diff: -630 / +39 lines (tests + dead-code deletion). Verified
23/23 tests in test_browser_cloud_*.py + test_managed_browserbase_and_modal.py
still pass.
Closes the file-tree mismatch portion of #25214. Remaining work:
new plugin-level test coverage under tests/plugins/browser/, behaviour
parity subprocess sweep vs origin/main, and full tests/tools/ regression
sweep before opening the PR.
Switches tools.browser_tool's cloud-provider lookup from the hardcoded
_PROVIDER_REGISTRY class-instantiation pattern to the
agent.browser_registry singleton registry that plugins self-populate.
Changes:
- tools/browser_tool.py top imports: pull BrowserProvider from
agent.browser_provider (re-exported as CloudBrowserProvider for legacy
callers) and the three provider classes from plugins/browser/<vendor>/.
Legacy class names (BrowserbaseProvider, BrowserUseProvider, FirecrawlProvider)
remain on tools.browser_tool as re-export shims so existing test patches
(monkeypatch.setattr(browser_tool, 'BrowserUseProvider', ...)) keep working.
- _get_cloud_provider() now consults agent.browser_registry.get_provider()
for explicit-config lookups. The auto-detect fallback still uses
BrowserUseProvider() / BrowserbaseProvider() at the module level so the
cache-policy test fixtures (which patch those names) keep driving the
function. Test-time _PROVIDER_REGISTRY overrides are detected by class
identity and routed through the legacy factory-call path.
- agent/browser_provider.py: BrowserProvider grows is_configured() and
provider_name() as thin backward-compat aliases for the legacy
CloudBrowserProvider API. Subclasses MUST implement is_available() and
name; the aliases delegate. This keeps ~6 caller sites in browser_tool.py
working without churning them.
- tests/tools/test_managed_browserbase_and_modal.py: _install_fake_tools_package
grows stubs for agent.browser_provider / agent.browser_registry /
plugins.browser.<vendor>.provider so the test's spec-loader path
(sys.modules-reset + reload-tool-from-disk) can satisfy tools.browser_tool's
top-level imports.
Verified: all 23 existing tests in test_browser_cloud_*.py +
test_managed_browserbase_and_modal.py still pass post-cutover.
The legacy tools/browser_providers/ directory is NOT yet deleted; several
tests still _load_tool_module() those files via spec_from_file_location.
The deletion + test-path updates land in a later commit.
Address code review feedback on _parse_response:
1. Restore isinstance(raw, str) guard so non-string message/reason values
(e.g. integers, lists) from a malformed hook response fall back to the
default rather than being forwarded as-is. This keeps the contract that
message in the returned dict is always a string.
2. Extract the repeated literal 'Blocked by shell hook.' into a module-level
constant _DEFAULT_BLOCK_MESSAGE to avoid duplication and make it easy to
change in one place.
Four new unit tests added to tests/agent/test_shell_hooks.py covering:
- action block with no message (uses default)
- decision block with no reason (uses default)
- action block with empty string message (uses default)
- action block with non-string message, e.g. integer (uses default)
qwen3.6-plus did not have an explicit entry in DEFAULT_CONTEXT_LENGTHS,
so the longest-substring fallback matched the generic 'qwen': 131072
catch-all. That dropped the effective context limit from 1,048,576
tokens to 131,072, prematurely lowered the compression threshold, and
produced misleading warnings about main/compression context mismatch
in long sessions.
Add an explicit 'qwen3.6-plus': 1048576 entry before the catch-all and
cover it with a regression test (bare, qwen/, and dashscope/ prefixes).
Note: PR #6599 also mentions touching model_metadata.py but the actual
diff only edits hermes_cli/models.py, so this fix is independent and
not duplicated by that PR.
Closes#27008
The restart-drain test previously asserted equality between two calls
to t("gateway.draining", count=1), which masked the original
xdist failure mode in #22266: if the locale catalog is not resolved
from the worker's import path, t() returns the bare key path and
both sides of the equality still match.
Add a guard that the resolved value is not the raw catalog key and
contains the English placeholder substitution. This keeps the test
loudly failing when locale resolution silently degrades.
Six days after #23937 (608 fixes) the codebase had accumulated 241 new
PLR6201 violations. Same mechanical `x in (...)` → `x in {...}` fix,
same zero-risk profile: set lookup is O(1) vs O(n) for tuple and the
two are semantically equivalent for hashable scalar membership tests.
All 241 instances fixed via `ruff check --select PLR6201 --fix
--unsafe-fixes`, zero remaining. Every changed value is a hashable
scalar (str/int/None/enum/signal); no risk of unhashable runtime
errors. No behavior change.
Test plan:
- 119 files changed, +244/-244 (net zero) — exactly one-line edits
- `ruff check` clean afterward
- Compile checks pass on the largest touched files (cli.py, run_agent.py,
gateway/run.py, gateway/platforms/discord.py, model_tools.py)
- Subset broad test run on tests/gateway/ tests/hermes_cli/ tests/agent/
tests/tools/: 18187 passed, 59 pre-existing failures (verified against
origin/main with the same shape — identical failure count, identical
category — all xdist test-order flakes unrelated to this change)
Follows the same template as PR #23937 ([tracker: #23972](https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent/issues/23972)).
When Hermes runs on a remote host over SSH, MCP OAuth loopback flows
silently fail: the OAuth provider redirects the user's browser to
http://127.0.0.1:<port>/callback, which reaches the callback server
on the *remote* machine — not the local machine where the browser is
running.
_redirect_handler already detected SSH (via _can_open_browser) and
printed "Headless environment detected — open the URL manually." but
gave no guidance on how to actually reach the callback server. Users
got silent timeouts or "Could not establish connection" errors.
This is the same bug fixed for xAI-oauth and Spotify in #26592, which
added _print_loopback_ssh_hint() in hermes_cli/auth.py. mcp_oauth.py
uses the identical loopback callback pattern (http://127.0.0.1:<port>/callback
via _configure_callback_port / _wait_for_callback) but was missing the hint.
Fix: when SSH_CLIENT or SSH_TTY is set and _oauth_port is available,
print the ssh -N -L port-forward command and the OAuth-over-SSH guide
URL to stderr, consistent with the rest of _redirect_handler's output.
Tests: 4 new cases in TestRedirectHandlerSshHint covering SSH_CLIENT,
SSH_TTY, local session (no hint), and missing _oauth_port (no hint).
_configure_provider() calls _run_post_setup() after collecting env vars
(line 2286). _reconfigure_provider() did not — providers with both
env_vars and post_setup (Browserbase, Browser Use, Firecrawl, Camofox)
skipped the installation step on reconfiguration.
Fix: mirror the _configure_provider() call. post_setup hooks are
idempotent (check before installing), so no behaviour change for users
who already have the dependencies installed.
The x_search toolset is gated on xAI credentials (SuperGrok OAuth or
XAI_API_KEY), but it was staying off-by-default even for users who had
already configured those credentials — they had to also click through
`hermes tools` → X (Twitter) Search to flip it on. The HASS_TOKEN →
homeassistant rule already handles the parallel case cleanly; x_search
needs the same treatment.
Why a separate code path from HASS_TOKEN: `ha_*` tools live inside
the `hermes-cli` composite, so the subset-inference loop picks them
up and the HASS branch just unmasks default_off. `x_search` is its
own one-tool toolset NOT in the composite, so the subset loop never
adds it — it has to be injected directly.
* Add `_xai_credentials_present()` — side-effect-free check for stored
xAI OAuth tokens or XAI_API_KEY (dotenv or env). No network.
* In `_get_platform_tools()` else branch (no explicit user config),
inject `x_search` and carve a parallel hole in default_off.
* Auto-enable does NOT fire when the user has saved an explicit toolset
list via `hermes tools` — that list stays authoritative.
* `agent.disabled_toolsets: [x_search]` still wins (global override).
Tests: 4 new in test_tools_config.py covering OAuth path, API-key path,
no-creds path, and explicit-config-respect. All pass alongside existing
70/70 in that file.
The 5-second startup-grace filter in _on_room_message silently drops
events where event_ts < startup_ts - 5. When the host clock is set
ahead of real time, the comparison flips against every live event and
the bot 'connects but never replies' — exactly the symptom in #12614.
Reporter Schnurzel700 chased this for several weeks before tracing it
to their Debian VM's clock being out of sync. The current /1000.0
millisecond->second conversion is correct (mautrix returns ms); the
failure mode is purely environmental.
Add a one-shot WARNING that fires when:
- we are >30s past startup (initial-sync replay window closed), AND
- 3 consecutive drops share the same skew within 60s (a constant
clock offset, not varied-age backfill from an invited room).
State is reset in connect() so reconnects after fixing NTP rearm the
detector. Includes the NTP fix instruction in the warning message
itself and a new Troubleshooting entry in the Matrix docs.
5 new tests cover the happy path, initial-sync backfill, under-
threshold drops, varied-age backfill, and the reconnect rearm path.
run_agent.py taken from HEAD (the extracted forwarder structure). The 25
run_agent.py fixes that landed on main during the PR's life need to be
ported into the agent/* extracted modules in follow-up commits.
Tests in TestReadClaudeCodeCredentials were not mocking
_read_claude_code_credentials_from_keychain, which was added after the
tests were written. On macOS machines with real Claude Code credentials
stored in the Keychain, the function returns live credentials instead of
the test fixtures, causing assertions to fail and leaking real tokens in
test output.
Add an autouse fixture that stubs the keychain reader to None so all
tests in the class exercise only the file-based credential path.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Four fixes from PR #27248 review:
1. **__init__ forwarder is now keyword-forwarded** (daimon-nous review).
Previously the run_agent.AIAgent.__init__ wrapper forwarded all 64
params positionally to agent.agent_init.init_agent, so adding a
65th param on main would require three lockstep edits (signature,
init_agent signature, forwarder call) or silently shift every value.
Keyword forwarding makes this trivially safe — adding a param now
only needs the two signatures and one extra keyword line.
2. **Drop dead _ra() in agent/codex_runtime.py** (daimon-nous + Copilot).
The lazy run_agent reference was defined but never called inside
this module — the codex paths use agent.* accessors only.
3. **Drop unused imports in agent/codex_runtime.py** (Copilot):
contextvars, threading, time, uuid, Optional. Carried over from
run_agent.py during the original extraction.
4. **Tighten three source-introspection test guards** (Copilot):
- test_memory_nudge_counter_hydration.py — was scanning the
concatenated source of run_agent.py + agent/conversation_loop.py
and matching self.X or agent.X form. Now asserts the
hydration block lives in agent/conversation_loop.py specifically
with the agent.X form — the body never moves back, so if it
ever drifts a future re-introduction fails the guard.
- test_run_agent.py::TestMemoryNudgeCounterPersistence — anchor on
agent.iteration_budget = IterationBudget exactly (was just
iteration_budget = IterationBudget) so an unrelated identifier
ending in iteration_budget can't match.
- test_run_agent.py::TestMemoryProviderTurnStart — assert the
agent._user_turn_count form directly (the extracted body uses
agent.X, not self.X — accepting either was a transitional fudge).
- test_jsondecodeerror_retryable.py — scan agent/conversation_loop.py
only, not the concatenation.
Not addressed in this commit:
* Pre-existing bugs in agent/tool_executor.py (heartbeat index
mismatch when calls are blocked, _current_tool clobber in result
loop, blocked-counted-as-completed in spinner summary, dead
result_preview computation). These were preserved byte-for-byte from
the original _execute_tool_calls_concurrent — worth a separate
follow-up PR with proper tests.
* _OpenAIProxy.__instancecheck__ concern — pre-existing, not flagged
by any of the original test patches (nothing actually does
isinstance(x, OpenAI) against the proxy instance).
* agent_init.py:949 mem_config potential NameError — pre-existing;
only triggers if _agent_cfg.get('memory', {}) itself raises, which
it can't with a stock dict.
tests/run_agent/ + tests/agent/: 4313 passed, 1 pre-existing
test_auxiliary_client failure (unchanged).
run_agent.py: 3821 -> 3937 lines (+116 from the keyword-forwarded
init call's verbosity). Final: 16083 -> 3937 (-12146, 75% reduction).
Closes#26924 (and supersedes #26926) in spirit.
DeepSeek was missing `default_aux_model` on its `ProviderProfile`, so
`_get_aux_model_for_provider("deepseek")` returned an empty string and
the compression / vision / session-search paths emitted
"No auxiliary LLM provider configured -- context compression will
drop middle turns without a summary."
on every DeepSeek session, even when the user had perfectly working
DeepSeek credentials.
Fix lands at the profile layer rather than the legacy
`_API_KEY_PROVIDER_AUX_MODELS_FALLBACK` dict the original PR targeted.
Every modern provider (gemini, zai, minimax, anthropic, kimi-coding,
stepfun, ollama-cloud, gmi, novita, kilocode, ai-gateway, opencode-zen)
sets `default_aux_model` on its `ProviderProfile`; the fallback dict
only exists for providers that predate the profiles system.
Tests added under `tests/plugins/model_providers/test_deepseek_profile.py`:
- `test_profile_advertises_deepseek_chat` -- pins the profile attribute
- `test_consumer_api_returns_deepseek_chat` -- pins the consumer API behavior
- `test_consumer_api_returns_non_empty` -- regression guard for the
symptom in the issue
Original diagnosis and aux-model choice from @kriscolab in PR #26926;
moved one layer up.
Co-authored-by: kriscolab <71590782+kriscolab@users.noreply.github.com>
Add test_returns_none_when_skill_load_fails to verify that
build_skill_invocation_message() returns None when a registered
skill exists in the command cache but _load_skill_payload() fails.
This guards against regression of the fix in 877d01b.