A top-level delegate_task dispatches in the background and re-enters as a
fresh turn when done. Print a one-line dispatch-time note — no spinner,
nothing to poll — so the idle prompt doesn't read as "nothing happened."
Follow-up to the salvage of #45035 + #48682. The two PRs touched different
functions (resolve_resume_session_id vs get_compression_tip) but #45035's
descendant walk followed ANY parent_session_id child, so a delegate/subagent
child could hijack the resume target. Apply the same _branched_from /
_delegate_from / source!='tool' exclusion the rest of hermes_state.py uses,
so the resume walk only follows genuine compression continuations.
Also updates the unrealistic delegation test fixture to carry the real
_delegate_from marker, and updates 3 list_sessions_rich test mocks for the
order_by_last_active kwarg #48682 added.
AUTHOR_MAP: map PINKIIILQWQ + ailang323 salvage authors.
After context compression, the parent session holds pre-compression messages
and a child (or deeper descendant) holds the continuation.
resolve_resume_session_id() short-circuited when the input session already
had messages (row is not None -> return session_id), causing REST API
endpoints, gateway resume, and CLI resume to serve stale parent messages.
Remove the early-return. Walk the full descendant chain, record the
deepest node that has messages (best), and return best if not None
else the original session_id (preserving the empty-chain fallback).
Callers (api_server.py, web_server.py, cli_agent_setup_mixin.py,
cli_commands_mixin.py) all use the resolved != input -> redirect pattern
and are transparent to this change.
The pre-update HERMES_HOME zip shipped on by default (DEFAULT_CONFIG +
runtime fallback both True), so every `hermes update` zipped the entire
~/.hermes — sessions DB, caches, skills — adding minutes to each update.
The shipped cli-config.yaml.example, the --backup help, and the example
config all already said "off by default," so the live default
contradicted its own documentation.
Flip the default to off everywhere: DEFAULT_CONFIG, the runtime
`.get(..., False)` fallback in _run_pre_update_backup, and the stale
--backup help string. Users who want the #48200 safety net opt in via
updates.pre_update_backup: true or --backup for a single run.
Updated test_default_enabled_creates_backup -> test_default_disabled_is_silent
to assert the new default (silent no-op, no zip).
* fix(cron): add default retention to per-run job output to bound disk usage (#52383)
Per-run cron output (cron/output/<job>/<timestamp>.md) is written once
per execution and was never pruned, so a frequently-scheduled job on
a long-running deploy accumulates one file per run indefinitely and
can fill the volume ('no space left on device').
save_job_output() now keeps the most recent N output files per job and
removes older ones. N defaults to 50 and is configurable via
cron.output_retention; a non-positive value disables pruning for
operators who manage cleanup externally.
Salvaged from #52402 by @0xDevNinja.
Closes#52383
* fix(config): add cron.output_retention to DEFAULT_CONFIG
Follow-up to #52383: the retention config key was functional via
get()-with-default but missing from DEFAULT_CONFIG, so the deep-merge
wouldn't auto-populate it for new installs. Add it explicitly.
---------
Co-authored-by: 0xDevNinja <manmit0x@gmail.com>
Regression for the salvaged #48254 fix: billing route is first-writer-wins
via update_token_counts (COALESCE), so a mid-session provider switch left
the dashboard attributing cost to the original provider. Asserts the new
update_session_billing_route() overwrites unconditionally, nulls system_prompt
so the next turn rebuilds Model:/Provider:, and preserves billing_mode when
omitted (COALESCE on None).
* feat(moa): expose MoA presets as selectable virtual models
Reconstructed onto current main (PR #46081's base had diverged with no common
ancestor, marking the PR dirty so CI never dispatched). MoA is now a virtual
provider: each named preset is a selectable model under provider 'moa', and the
preset's aggregator is the acting model that answers and calls tools.
Reference models fan out in parallel via a bounded ThreadPoolExecutor (the same
batch pattern delegate_task uses) — all references dispatched at once, collected
when every one finishes, then handed to the aggregator. Output order is
preserved, failures and the MoA-recursion guard stay isolated per reference.
- Removed the old mixture_of_agents model tool and moa toolset.
- Added moa as a virtual provider in the provider/model inventory.
- /moa is shortcut behavior over model selection (default preset / named preset
/ one-shot prompt).
- Dashboard + Desktop manage named presets; presets appear in model pickers.
- Parallel reference fan-out in agent/moa_loop.py with regression test.
* fix(moa): thread moa_config through _run_agent to _run_agent_inner
The reconstructed gateway MoA wiring declared moa_config on _run_agent (the
profile-scoping wrapper) and used it inside _run_agent_inner, but the wrapper
never forwarded it — _run_agent_inner had no such parameter, so the runtime hit
NameError: name 'moa_config' is not defined on the compression-failure session
sync path. Add moa_config to _run_agent_inner's signature and forward it from
both wrapper call sites (multiplex and non-multiplex). Caught by
tests/gateway/test_compression_failure_session_sync.py on CI shard test(4).
* fix(moa): classify moa as a virtual provider in the catalog
The moa virtual provider has no PROVIDER_REGISTRY/ProviderProfile entry, so
provider_catalog() fell through to the default auth_type="api_key" with no
env vars — tripping two catalog invariants:
- test_provider_catalog: api_key providers must expose a credential env var
- test_provider_parity: every hermes-model provider must be desktop-configurable
moa already declares auth_type="virtual" in HERMES_OVERLAYS; consult that
overlay as an auth_type fallback so the catalog reports moa as virtual (no real
credential, no network endpoint). Exempt virtual providers from the desktop
parity union check the same way 'custom' is exempt — derived from the catalog,
not a hardcoded slug, so future virtual providers are covered too.
Scheduled jobs delivering to Telegram/etc. started posting a literal
'⚠️ No reply: the model returned empty content…' message instead of
staying silent. Two interacting causes:
1. The turn-completion explainer (#34452) replaces an empty model turn
with a user-facing '⚠️ No reply…' string. In a cron context that is
not a silence marker, so the scheduler delivered it — a regression
from the previously-silent empty turn. run_job now detects the
explainer text deterministically (via the same formatter that
produced it) for abnormal-empty turn_exit_reasons and strips it to
empty, so the existing empty-response suppression + soft-fail guard
apply. The explainer is unchanged on CLI/gateway.
2. The cron suppression used a loose 'SILENT_MARKER in ...upper()'
substring check. It leaked bracketless near-markers the model emits
('SILENT', 'NO_REPLY', 'NO REPLY' — #51438, #46917) and wrongly
swallowed a real report that merely quoted '[SILENT]' mid-sentence.
Replaced with _is_cron_silence_response(): suppresses a canonical
token as the whole response, its own first/last line, or the
documented bracketed '[SILENT] <note>' prefix — while a token buried
mid-sentence in a genuine report is delivered. Preserves the
intentional cron trailing/prefix tolerance (existing tests unchanged).
Tests: bracketless-variant suppression, mid-sentence-quote delivery,
direct matcher contract, and explainer-strip + defensive real-report
delivery.
Assert bare tables upgrade to sendRichMessage under default/opt-out config,
DM-topic resumed sends without reply anchors, and rich finalize edits carry
forum topic routing metadata.
The salvaged context-window screen (#52392) skips fallback candidates that
are too small, and the rate-limit/403 fixes skip candidates that are at
capacity. A third hard failure remained uncovered: a fallback that builds a
client fine but returns a 400 because it structurally cannot run the model.
The canonical case is a configured openai-codex / ChatGPT-account fallback
asked to compress a glm-5.2 conversation:
400 - {'detail': "The 'glm-5.2' model is not supported when using
Codex with a ChatGPT account."}
This is a request-validation error, so should_fallback was False and the
explicit-provider gate blocked it — the auxiliary task (compression) aborted
every turn, dropping middle turns without a summary and churning the session,
which is exactly what destroys the prompt cache.
Adds _is_model_incompatible_error() (400 + capability phrasing, excluding
not-found and billing 400s which the sibling predicates own) and treats it as
a fallback-worthy capacity error in both sync and async call_llm, so the chain
skips the incapable route and continues to the next viable candidate.
The runtime auxiliary fallback chain (_try_configured_fallback_chain and
_try_main_fallback_chain) returned the first reachable candidate without
checking whether the candidate's context window was large enough for the
task. For task='compression' this meant a reachable but undersized
fallback (e.g. 32K) could be selected and then fail, even when a later
larger-context fallback was available.
This adds two small helpers:
_task_minimum_context_length(task)
Returns MINIMUM_CONTEXT_LENGTH (64K) for compression, None for
other tasks (vision, web_extract, etc.).
_candidate_context_window(provider, model, ...)
Thin wrapper around get_model_context_length that returns None on
probe failure so unknown/custom endpoints pass through unchanged
(preserves the existing fallback surface).
Both fallback loops now skip reachable candidates whose resolved context
is below the task minimum and continue iterating. The success path
(first viable candidate wins) is unchanged. Return shape and ordering
for healthy candidates are preserved.
Six regression tests cover:
L2 configured chain skips too-small candidate
L2 chain continues after skipping, returns last viable
L3 main chain skips too-small candidate
L4 unknown-context candidate passes through
L5 non-compression task is not filtered
L6 minimum constant matches MINIMUM_CONTEXT_LENGTH (64K)
3/6 fail on upstream/main without the production change (verified); all
6 pass with the fix. Full test_auxiliary_client.py suite (231 tests)
and related compression tests (130 tests) remain green.
When an explicit aux provider cannot build a client before any request is
sent (missing raw env key, exhausted/unavailable OAuth or credential-pool
auth, resolver returning (None, None)), call_llm raised a misleading
"no API key was found" error and bypassed the configured fallback_chain
entirely. A provider authenticated through Hermes auth / the credential
pool (e.g. ollama-cloud) whose pool entry is exhausted hit this path, so
compression failed instead of routing to the configured fallback.
Adds _try_configured_fallback_for_unavailable_client() and wires it into
both sync and async call_llm before the raise, and into the startup
compression feasibility check.
Salvaged from #51835 by @herbalizer404.
Rate-limit (429) errors on explicit-provider auxiliary tasks were
silently failing instead of triggering the fallback chain. The
is_capacity_error gate only checked payment and connection errors,
excluding rate limits — so when a configured provider like
openai-codex hit its rate limit, auxiliary tasks (kanban_decomposer,
vision, web_extract, approval, etc.) had zero resilience.
Add _is_rate_limit_error() to is_capacity_error at both call sites
(sync and async paths) so rate limits trigger fallback regardless
of whether the provider was auto-detected or explicitly configured.
Fixes#52228
Ollama Cloud (and similar) return 403 with bodies like "this model requires
a subscription, upgrade for access" or "you have reached your session usage
limit, upgrade for higher limits". These are capacity/billing conditions
semantically identical to credit exhaustion, but _is_payment_error() did not
recognize them (403 missing from the status set; keywords missing), so the
configured fallback_chain was never tried and compression failed outright.
Adds 403 to the status set and the subscription/session-usage keywords.
Salvaged from #49076 by @herbalizer404.
These 7 test sites assert rotation behavior (fork, child sessions, lock
contention, logging session-context follows id rotation, boundary hooks fire
on rotation). Pin each builder to in_place=False explicitly so they keep
exercising the retained rotation fallback regardless of the global default
(flipped to True in #38763). Rotation stays a working opt-out fallback and
deserves continued coverage — these are NOT deleted.
Pinned sites:
- test_compression_concurrent_fork._build_agent_with_db
- test_compression_logging_session_context._build_agent_with_db
- test_compression_rotation_state._build_agent_with_db
- test_compression_boundary_hook._make_agent (2 helpers: CompressionBoundaryHook + SessionCompressEvent)
- test_compression_concurrent_sessions._build_agent_with_db
Salvage of #50098 by @srojk34, cherry-picked onto current main.
The hygiene auto-compress guard and the /compress slash command both read
compression_in_place (config flag — is in-place mode enabled?) instead of
_last_compaction_in_place (result flag — did in-place compaction actually
succeed?). Both agents are built without a session_db, so archive_and_compact
always fails silently and _last_compaction_in_place stays False. Reading the
config flag makes the guard think in-place succeeded, triggering
rewrite_transcript() which replaces the original messages with only the
compressed summary — permanent data loss.
Co-authored-by: srojk34 <srojk34@users.noreply.github.com>
build_turn_context() created the DB session row via _ensure_db_session()
before the system prompt was restored/built, so a fresh API/gateway agent
carrying client-managed history inserted a row with system_prompt=NULL. That
tripped the misleading 'stored system prompt is null; rebuilding from scratch
... investigate the previous turn's write path' warning and a guaranteed
first-turn prefix cache miss. Move row creation to after _cached_system_prompt
is populated.
Verified live (OpenRouter + claude-sonnet-4.5): persistent-agent turns show
cache_read jumping to the full prefix on turn 2+ (write 24411 -> read 24411),
and the persisted system_prompt is non-NULL so fresh-agent restore keeps the
prefix cache warm.
Tests: turn-context ordering regression asserting _ensure_db_session runs
after _cached_system_prompt is populated.
/learn told the agent to fill the skill `author` field, and the system
prompt environment probe surfaces the OS login name (user=$(whoami) in
prompt_builder.py), so the model wrote the host username into published
SKILL.md frontmatter — a privacy leak the user never opted into, and
inconsistent run to run as the most-salient identity changed.
The /learn authoring prompt now sets `author` to the literal value
`Hermes` and explicitly forbids deriving it from the host environment
(OS/login user, git config, or any probeable identity). The skill names
itself as the tool that wrote it.
Closes#52368.
- Replace getattr(self.session_store, '_db', None) with self._session_db
(the GatewayRunner's own SessionDB, consistent with existing usage in
slash_commands.py L240/L499).
- Remove verbose comment referencing a branch name as an issue number.
- Update stale comment in run.py that said 'today it has no session_db'.
- Add regression test verifying session_db is passed and rotated session
is persisted (adapted from #51624 by @LeonSGP43).
- Add _session_db=None to _make_runner fixtures in test_compress_command,
test_compress_focus, and test_compress_plugin_engine.
These three assert the eager build contract — stored runtime overrides /
profile db reach _make_agent synchronously, and the agent binds to the
compression tip. Under deferred-by-default the build runs off-thread, so
they raced the timer (green in CI, flaky locally). Pin them to
eager_build; deferred coverage lives in the protocol tests.
Per review: gating the faster path behind a `defer_build` flag that the
only caller always sends is pointless. Flip it — `session.resume` now
defers the agent build by default for every caller (desktop + Ink TUI);
a caller that needs the agent built synchronously passes `eager_build:
true` (used by the build-race test). The desktop no longer sends a flag.
While verifying the flip, fixed two real parity gaps the deferred path
had vs the old eager (`_init_session`) path:
- `_enable_gateway_prompts()` was never called on a deferred resume, so
approvals/clarify wouldn't route through the gateway prompt callbacks.
- `_start_agent_build` never wired `background_review_callback` /
`memory_notifications`, so a deferred-built session's self-improvement
"💾 …" summary leaked to stdout instead of rendering in-transcript.
Wiring it there also fixes it for `session.create` sessions, which
build through the same path.
ACP is unaffected (it uses its own session_manager, not this RPC); the
Ink TUI already consumes the same lazy `info` shape from session.create
and upgrades on the later `session.info` event.
Switching sessions in the desktop app could freeze the whole UI for
several seconds on heavy, tool-rich chats. Root causes and fixes:
- Cold `session.resume` built the AIAgent (MCP discovery, prompt/skill
build) *before* returning, and the desktop awaits that RPC before it
paints — so the entire switch blocked on the build. Add an opt-in
`defer_build` resume path (the contract `session.create` already uses):
return the full display transcript immediately, register an upgradable
live session, and pre-warm the agent on a short timer. The persisted
runtime identity (model/provider/base_url/api_mode/reasoning/tier) is
restored on the deferred build so it can't drop the provider.
- Nothing bounded how many in-memory agents accumulate; a user who
reconnects often piled up detached sessions for the full 6h TTL. Add a
soft LRU cap (`max_live_sessions`, default 16) that evicts the
least-recently-active DETACHED sessions (no live client) — never a
running, awaiting-input, mid-build, or live-transport one. Reopening
re-resumes from disk.
- On the prefetch-hit cold-resume path, skip rebuilding a throwaway
merged-message array (and its 1000-entry Map) when the prefetch already
painted the exact transcript; the downstream sameMessageList guard
already drops the publish, so it was pure main-thread cost.
The desktop opts into `defer_build` for every non-watch cold resume; the
eager path stays for CLI/TUI and existing callers.
When the gateway persists a user message after a transient provider
failure (429/timeout/auth error), subsequent retries of the same
Telegram message could stack duplicate user turns in the transcript,
causing the agent to fall behind by 1-2 messages.
Add has_platform_message_id() to SessionDB (using the existing
idx_messages_platform_msg_id partial index) and a SessionStore wrapper.
The gateway's transient-failure path checks this before
append_to_transcript -- if the platform_message_id is already
persisted, the duplicate write is skipped.
Salvaged from #47869 by @davidgut1982. Adapted to current main which
has additional append sites and an existing content-based dedupe in
the exception handler path.
Closes#47237
todo_tool crashed with `AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute 'get'`
when the LLM emitted the `todos` param as a JSON-encoded string instead of an
array, or as a list containing non-dict items (observed intermittently on
Claude 4.5/4.6/4.7, and after a prior tool-call rejection where the model
"self-corrects" by wrapping the list in json.dumps).
Three additive guards, no behavior change for well-formed input:
- todo_tool(): if `todos` is a str, json.loads it; reject unparseable strings
and non-list values with a clear tool_error instead of crashing downstream.
- _validate(): non-dict items return a {id:"?", content:"(invalid item)"}
placeholder rather than calling .get() on a str/int/None.
- _dedupe_by_id(): non-dict items get a synthetic key so _validate handles them.
Salvaged from #14785 by @Tranquil-Flow (authorship preserved via cherry-pick).
Comprehensive tests: JSON-string coercion (parse / unparseable / non-list /
non-string), non-dict list items (str/None/int/mixed), and a well-formed-
unchanged regression class — both guards mutation-verified to fail without them.
Closes#14185. Supersedes #14187, #22505, #14350 (same fix, less/no test
coverage) and #16952 (bundled unrelated scope-creep).
During stdio MCP server startup, _run_stdio (an async method) called the
synchronous check_package_for_malware() inline. That makes a blocking
urllib HTTPS POST to api.osv.dev whose own timeout doesn't reliably cover a
stalled SSL handshake, so an intermittent network issue froze the entire
asyncio event loop for up to ~120s — blowing past the TUI/gateway's 15s
startup budget and showing "gateway startup timeout".
Run the check via asyncio.to_thread (off the loop) AND bound it with
asyncio.wait_for(timeout=_OSV_MALWARE_CHECK_TIMEOUT_S=12s). The malware check
is fail-open, so on timeout we log and proceed rather than blocking startup.
Salvaged from #29190 by @qdaszx (re-applied on current main — the call site
moved since the PR was opened), combining the to_thread approach also proposed
in #29192 by @ygd58. Two load-bearing tests: event-loop-not-blocked-during-
check and timeout-fails-open — both mutation-verified to fail against the old
inline blocking call.
Closes#29184.
Co-authored-by: ygd58 <buraysandro9@gmail.com>
atomic_yaml_write used default yaml.dump which emits indentless
sequences (list items at column 0), while atomic_roundtrip_yaml_update
(ruamel.yaml) emits 2-space-indented sequences. Cross-path writes to
the same config.yaml toggled indentation on every save, eventually
producing a mixed-indent file that js-yaml rejects with 'bad indentation
of a mapping entry', silently dropping custom_providers and breaking
model switching.
Add IndentDumper SafeDumper subclass that forces indentless=False,
route atomic_yaml_write through it. Route tui_gateway._save_cfg and
the Telegram adapter's config writer through atomic_yaml_write so all
paths emit the same 2-indent layout.
Salvaged from #32034 by @xxxigm. Adapted to current main which already
has allow_unicode=True (from #51356) but was missing IndentDumper.
Closes#31999