Closes the architectural-pin part of #19931. Most of what that issue
asked for is already implemented (logs under kanban root, env-pinned
workspace, dispatcher routing of unknown assignees, lifecycle
ownership, structured handoff conventions). What was missing:
1. A written contract integrators can point at when adding a new
worker lane shape, and
2. The "code-changing workers should not auto-promote success to
done" convention.
This commit ships both as docs+convention layered on existing primitives.
No kernel changes — the kanban_complete / kanban_block / kanban_comment
surfaces already support the review-required pattern; we just hadn't
written it down or made it visible to workers.
Changes:
- `agent/prompt_builder.py::KANBAN_GUIDANCE`: append the review-required
exception to step 5 of the lifecycle. Workers get the cue
auto-injected into their system prompt — drop structured metadata
into a kanban_comment first, then end with
kanban_block(reason="review-required: <summary>") instead of
kanban_complete when the work needs review. Total prompt size went
from ~3000 to ~3275 chars; well under the 4096 budget enforced by
test_kanban_guidance_size.
- `skills/devops/kanban-worker/SKILL.md`: add a worked example to the
existing "Good summary + metadata shapes" section between the
Coding-task and Research-task examples. Same shape as the others
(kanban_comment with structured handoff JSON, then kanban_block with
the human-readable reason). Plus a one-line guide on when to use
kanban_complete vs the review-required pattern.
- `website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban-worker-lanes.md` (new): the
integrator-facing contract. Covers the hierarchy, the three things
every lane must provide (assignee, spawn mechanism, lifecycle
terminator), the env vars the dispatcher injects, the
review-required convention, the failure modes the kernel handles
for free, and an explicit "external CLI worker lane" deferred-
pending-concrete-asker section that links to #19931 and #19924.
- `website/sidebars.ts`: link the new page under user-guide/features.
The "specialist worker lanes for external CLI tools (Codex / Claude
Code / OpenCode)" runner is NOT shipped here. The dispatcher's
spawn_fn parameter already supports plugin-shaped extension; the
per-CLI integration work (auth, sandbox policy, exit-code mapping)
needs a concrete asker. The new docs page tells would-be integrators
the contract any such lane must satisfy.
Refs #19931
Cherry-picked from PR #10371. Two-layer defense for the spurious-thread_id
issue (#3206):
1. _build_message_event filters DM thread_ids: only preserve thread_id
for real topic messages (is_topic_message=True). Telegram puts
message_thread_id on every DM that is a reply, but reply-chain ids
route to nonexistent threads on send.
2. _send_message_with_thread_fallback helper: control sends
(send_update_prompt, send_exec_approval / send_slash_confirm,
send_model_picker) retry once without message_thread_id when
Telegram returns BadRequest 'Message thread not found'. Mirrors
the pattern PR #3390 added for the streaming send path.
Salvage notes:
- Conflict 1 (line ~4099): merged the contributor's DM is_topic_message
filter with the existing forum General-topic default from #22423,
preserving both behaviors.
- Conflict 2 (line ~1664 / 1690): kept main's delete_message (PR #23416)
alongside the new helper. Tightened the helper's exception catch
from bare 'Exception' to use the existing _is_bad_request_error +
_is_thread_not_found_error helpers (line 484-496) for consistency
with the streaming send path.
- Widened the fix to send_update_prompt (was bare self._bot.send_message,
same bug class).
Authored by rahimsais via PR #10371 (re-attributed from donrhmexe@
local commit author).
* feat(goals): /goal checklist + /subgoal user controls
Two-phase judge for /goal — Phase A decomposes the goal into a detailed
checklist on first turn; Phase B evaluates each pending item harshly
against the agent's most recent response. The goal completes only when
every item is in a terminal status (completed or impossible). Adds
/subgoal so the user can append, complete, mark impossible, undo,
remove, or clear items the judge missed or got wrong.
Mechanics:
- GoalState gains `checklist` and `decomposed` fields, both backwards
compatible (old state_meta rows load unchanged).
- Phase A: aux call writes a harsh, exhaustive checklist; biased toward
more items not fewer. Falls through to legacy freeform judge when
decompose fails.
- Phase B: judge gets the checklist + last-response snippet + path to
a per-session conversation dump at <HERMES_HOME>/goals/<sid>.json.
A bounded read_file tool (max 5 calls per turn, restricted to that
one file) lets the judge inspect history when the snippet is
ambiguous. Stickiness in code: terminal items are frozen, only the
user can revert via /subgoal undo.
- Continuation prompt shows checklist progress when non-empty;
reverts to old prompt when empty.
- Status line shows M/N done counts.
CLI + gateway + TUI gateway all pass the agent reference into
evaluate_after_turn so the dump can be written. Gateway-side
/subgoal is allowed mid-run since it only modifies the checklist
the judge consults at turn boundaries.
Tests: 24 new cases — backcompat round-trip, Phase A decompose,
Phase B updates + new_items + stickiness, user override flows,
conversation dump (incl. unsafe-sid sanitization), judge read_file
restriction. Existing freeform-mode tests updated to patch the
renamed `judge_goal_freeform` and skip Phase A explicitly.
* fix(goals): off-by-one in judge index, message-list plumbing, prompt tuning
Three live-test findings from running /goal end-to-end against
gemini-3-flash-preview as the judge:
1. Off-by-one bug — the judge sees the checklist rendered with 1-based
indices ('1. [ ] foo, 2. [ ] bar') but the apply layer indexed
state.checklist as 0-based. Result: every judge update landed on
the wrong item, evidence got attached to neighbouring rows, and
the genuine 'first pending' item (usually #1) never got marked.
Fix: convert 1 → 0 in _parse_evaluate_response. Also tightened the
user prompt to call out the 1-based scheme explicitly. New tests
cover the parser conversion + an end-to-end fake-judge round-trip.
2. Conversation dump never happened — _extract_agent_messages tried
common AIAgent attribute names (.messages, .conversation_history,
etc.) but AIAgent doesn't expose the message list as an instance
attribute; it lives inside run_conversation()'s scope. Result: the
judge's read_file tool always saw history_path=unavailable. Fix:
added an explicit messages= kwarg to evaluate_after_turn that all
three call sites (CLI, gateway, TUI gateway) now pass directly.
Agent-attribute extraction kept as back-compat fallback.
3. Prompt was too harsh on simple goals. The original 'be HARSH,
default to leaving items pending' wording made the judge refuse
to mark 'file exists' completed even after the agent ran ls,
test -f, os.path.isfile, and find — burning the entire 8-turn
budget on a fizzbuzz task. Softened to 'strict but not absurd'
with explicit guidance on what counts as evidence and a directive
not to require re-proving items already established earlier.
Re-tested live with the same fizzbuzz goal: now terminates in 2
turns with all 8 checklist items correctly attributed to their
own evidence. /subgoal user-action flow (add / complete / undo /
impossible) verified live as well.
New TestUtf16OverflowDetection class covers two scenarios:
- test_emoji_text_exceeding_utf16_limit_triggers_overflow_split: feeds
2200 emoji codepoints (4400 UTF-16 units) — under Telegram's
codepoint-equivalent limit but over its UTF-16 limit. Asserts
truncate_message was called with len_fn=utf16_len, confirming the
consumer detected the overflow.
- test_codepoint_only_adapter_falls_back_to_len: documents that
adapters which don't subclass BasePlatformAdapter (or test MagicMocks)
fall back to plain len for backwards compat.
The contributor's PR shipped no tests for the UTF-16 path.
The stream consumer measured message length using Python's len() (Unicode
code points), but Telegram's actual limit is in UTF-16 code units. This
caused messages with supplementary characters (emoji, CJK, etc.) to exceed
Telegram's 4096-character limit, resulting in truncated messages with
formatting artifacts.
Changes:
- Add message_len_fn property to BasePlatformAdapter (defaults to len)
- Override in TelegramAdapter to return utf16_len
- Stream consumer uses adapter.message_len_fn for:
- safe_limit calculation
- overflow detection
- truncate_message calls
- split point calculation (via _custom_unit_to_cp)
- fallback final send chunking
Fixes truncated messages with black square artifacts on Telegram when
the model generates responses containing multi-byte Unicode characters.
Slash commands (/clear, /new, /undo, /reload-mcp) are dispatched from the
process_loop daemon thread. prompt_toolkit.run_in_terminal returns a
coroutine that only the main-thread event loop can drive, so calling it
from a daemon thread orphans the coroutine — the input prompt never
renders and user keystrokes leak into the composer instead of the
confirmation prompt (issue #23185).
Mirror the thread-aware guard already in _run_curses_picker: when off the
main thread, fall back to a direct input() call. Also wrap
run_in_terminal in try/except so WSL / Warp / other emulators that
silently drop the scheduled coroutine fall back to input() too.
Tests: tests/cli/test_prompt_text_input_thread_safety.py covers main
thread (run_in_terminal path), daemon thread (direct input fallback),
no-app, run_in_terminal-raises, and EOF handling.
When kanban_complete rejects a created_cards list as hallucinated, the
task is intentionally left in-flight (the gate runs before the write
txn) so the worker can retry with a corrected list or pass
created_cards=[] to skip the check. The retry path already worked, but
the previous error wording read like a terminal failure and workers
were observed abandoning the run instead of trying again.
Spell out the recovery path explicitly in the tool_error response
("Your task is still in-flight ... Retry kanban_complete with ...") and
add regression coverage at both the kernel and tool layers so the
retry contract — and the wording the worker depends on to discover
it — is pinned.
Fixes#22923
The auto-reset notice ("◐ Session automatically reset…") was being sent
with metadata=getattr(event, 'metadata', None), which can drop or
mis-route in Telegram forum topics: the event's metadata isn't
guaranteed to carry the originating thread_id, so the notice could leak
into General or another topic.
Use the existing self._thread_metadata_for_source(source) helper, which
already handles thread_id construction plus the Telegram DM topic
reply-fallback shape used everywhere else in the gateway.
Carve-out of #7404. The PR's other hunk (line 7578, queued first
response) is already redundant on main — gateway/run.py:15782 has used
_status_thread_metadata since the _thread_metadata_for_source plumbing
landed.
Closes#7355 (path B; paths A and C closed via prior salvage merges).
Sub-issue 5 of #22034.
Right-click on the composer always pasted from the clipboard, even when
the user had highlighted text — diverging from terminal-native behavior
(xterm/iTerm/gnome-terminal) where right-click copies an active selection
and only pastes when nothing is selected.
Extract a small pure helper, decideRightClickAction(value, range), and
route the existing onMouseDown right-click branch through it. Selection
present and non-empty -> writeClipboardText(slice). Otherwise fall back
to the existing emitPaste path.
Workers running slow models (e.g. kimi-k2.6) can spend longer than
DEFAULT_CLAIM_TTL_SECONDS inside a single tool-free LLM call, making
no tool calls and therefore not heartbeating. release_stale_claims
previously reclaimed these healthy workers, producing the
spawn-then-immediately-reclaim loop reported in #23025.
When a stale-by-TTL claim's host-local worker PID is still alive,
extend the claim (emit a claim_extended event) rather than killing
it. enforce_max_runtime / detect_crashed_workers remain the upper
bounds for genuinely wedged or dead workers. Reclaim events now also
record claim_expires, last_heartbeat_at, worker_pid, and host_local
so operators can see why a worker was killed.
* docs(user-stories): add 116 stories from Discord archive
Mined teknium1/nous-discord-archive for first-person user stories that match
the existing collage voice ('I run X every day', 'my family uses Hermes for
Y', 'so I built Z'). Skipped pure project pitches, Q&A, install help, and
generic announcements.
- Added 'discord' as a source in UserStoriesCollage (label + brand color)
- Added 116 entries to userStories.json (237 total, up from 121)
- Each entry links back to the discord-archive thread or channel archive file
* docs(user-stories): interleave discord stories across the full collage
Shuffle userStories.json with a fixed seed so the 116 Discord-sourced
entries are mixed evenly with the existing 121 entries instead of
appearing as a contiguous block at the end. Even distribution: 10-16
discord entries per decile across the array (ideal would be ~11).
xAI's Responses API returns HTTP 400 ("Model X does not support
parameter reasoningEffort") for grok-4, grok-4-0709, grok-4-fast-*,
grok-4-1-fast-*, grok-3, grok-4.20-0309-*, and grok-code-fast-1 — even
though those models reason natively. Hermes was unconditionally sending
`reasoning: {effort: 'medium'}` to xAI for every Grok model, breaking
direct `--provider xai` for the entire grok-4 line.
Add a substring allowlist predicate (verified live against api.x.ai
2026-05-10) covering the only Grok families that accept the effort dial:
grok-3-mini*, grok-4.20-multi-agent*, grok-4.3*. The Responses transport
omits the `reasoning` key entirely for everything else while still
including `reasoning.encrypted_content` so we capture native reasoning
tokens.
Verified end-to-end: `hermes chat -q hi --provider xai --model grok-4-0709`
went from HTTP 400 to a successful reply.
The contributor's regression test for Feishu fallback thread routing
asserted on attributes specific to the real lark SDK builder
(call_args.body, body.receive_id). In test environments without the
lark SDK installed, the in-tree fallback (gateway/platforms/feishu.py
_build_create_message_request) returns a SimpleNamespace using
.request_body instead of .body, causing AttributeError.
Now reads via getattr fallback and also verifies receive_id_type is
'thread_id' (not 'chat_id') as a stronger contract check.
When the first streamed message exceeds the platform length limit and
gets split into chunks, _send_new_chunk was called with self._message_id
(which is None on first send), dropping thread routing entirely.
Fallback to self._initial_reply_to_id so overflow chunks land in the
correct topic/thread.
Also fix a fragile test assertion that could be silently skipped.
Cherry-picked from PR #13077 commits:
- 5500c7d8 fix(gateway): stream consumer first message drops thread context
- e84403b9 test(gateway): add regression tests for stream consumer thread routing
Fixes: Streaming first message drops thread/topic context in Feishu group
topics, Slack threads, Telegram forum topics. Adds initial_reply_to_id
ctor arg to GatewayStreamConsumer, threaded through _send_or_edit and
_send_new_chunk. Also fixes Feishu _send_raw_message fallback path
(reply -> create) to use receive_id_type='thread_id' so the new message
lands in the correct topic instead of the main channel.
Authored by hrygo via PR #13077 (re-attributed from the bot-authored
salvage commit on the original branch).
The split-overflow path in _send_or_edit (gateway/stream_consumer.py) was
copying the cumulative _already_sent flag into _final_response_sent on the
done frame. _already_sent goes True on any successful prior edit (tool
progress) or on fallback-mode promotion when an edit fails — neither
proves the *current* chunked send delivered the final answer.
When the chunked send actually fails (network error, flood control), the
consumer would wrongly claim 'final delivered' and the gateway's
independent fallback delivery in run.py would be suppressed. User saw
only tool-progress bubbles and never got the answer.
Now we track per-chunk success locally: _send_new_chunk returns the new
message_id on success or returns the passed-in reply_to unchanged on
failure. If at least one returned id differs, chunks_delivered = True;
otherwise stays False, gateway fallback runs.
Adds two regression tests:
- test_split_overflow_failed_send_does_not_mark_final_sent — primes
_already_sent=True, then makes every send fail; asserts
_final_response_sent stays False.
- test_split_overflow_partial_send_marks_final_sent — happy path,
asserts _final_response_sent goes True.
Note: the companion bug at the CancelledError handler (issue cited
lines 417-418) was already fixed by 3b5572ded on 2026-04-16.
Closes#10748
Follow-up to the previous commit's notifier behavior change. Two test fixes:
1. `tests/gateway/test_kanban_notifier.py` gains
`test_notifier_redelivers_same_kind_on_dispatch_cycle` — pins the new
contract directly: a task that crashes, gets reclaimed, and crashes
again notifies the user BOTH times. Before #21398 the second crash
silently dropped because the subscription was already deleted.
2. `tests/hermes_cli/test_kanban_notify.py::
test_notifier_unsubs_after_abnormal_events[gave_up|crashed|timed_out]`
is flipped. Those tests were added in the salvage of #22941 and
asserted the OLD behavior (subscription deleted after gave_up /
crashed / timed_out). They're now obsolete — the new contract is
"subscription survives a non-final terminal event so retries reach
the user." Updated docstring + asserts; the cursor-advance check is
added to confirm the dedup mechanism still works.
The `test_notifier_unsubs_after_completed_event` test stays untouched
because `completed` IS still a terminal event that triggers unsub
(the task hits `done` status, which is handled by the `task_terminal`
branch in the notifier loop).
The kanban notifier was re-firing the same blocked/gave_up/crashed/timed_out
notifications on every 5-second tick. Root cause: after delivering a terminal
event, the notifier unsubscribed the subscription, deleting its cursor. If
the unsub failed (WAL contention, transient error), the subscription survived
with a stale cursor, and the next tick would re-deliver the same event.
Even when the unsub succeeded, the subscription was gone. If the task later
transitioned to a different state (e.g., blocked -> unblocked -> blocked
again), a new subscription would start at cursor=0, re-delivering all past
events.
Fix: stop unsubscribing on terminal event kinds. Only remove the subscription
when the task reaches a truly final status (done/archived). For blocked,
gave_up, crashed, and timed_out, the subscription stays alive and the cursor
mechanism deduplicates naturally -- events with id <= last_event_id are never
re-fetched. This makes the dedup idempotent and eliminates the re-fire bug.
The old concern about subscriptions leaking forever on blocked tasks is moot:
blocked tasks will eventually be unblocked (transitioning to ready/running)
or archived, at which point the subscription is cleaned up.
Follow-up to HuangYuChuh's #17384 cherry-pick:
- Use defensive getattr+logger.debug for delete_message lookup, mirroring
the sibling _try_send_fresh_final cleanup pattern at L820+. Platforms
that don't implement delete_message no longer raise AttributeError; the
failure path now logs at debug for diagnosability instead of silently
swallowing.
- Add three regression tests in tests/gateway/test_stream_consumer.py:
- delete_message awaited on happy-path exit with stale id
- delete_message NOT awaited when no fallback chunks reached the user
- no crash on adapters that lack delete_message (spec-restricted mock)
When Telegram flood control triggers 3+ consecutive edit failures, the
stream consumer enters fallback mode and sends the complete response as
a new message. This leaves the user seeing two messages: a frozen
partial (with cursor) and the full duplicate.
After the fallback chunks are sent successfully, delete the original
partial message so the user only sees one complete response. The delete
is best-effort — if it fails (e.g. flood still active, missing
permissions), the full answer is still delivered.
Fixes#16668
The shutdown forensics added in #23285 caught tests/hermes_cli/ pytest
runs sending SIGTERM to the developer's live gateway 5+ times in 3
days. Root cause: when a single test forgets to mock os.kill or
find_gateway_pids, the real call leaks past the hermetic HERMES_HOME
isolation — find_gateway_pids' psutil scan walks the whole machine and
returns the live gateway PID, then the unmocked os.kill delivers the
signal.
Rather than audit and patch ~30 tests across cmd_update, kill_gateway_processes,
and stop_profile_gateway code paths, install a single autouse guard in
tests/conftest.py that blocks the two primitives that actually cause
the damage:
- os.kill rejects any PID outside the test process subtree with a
hard RuntimeError so the offending test gets a stack trace instead
of silently murdering the real gateway.
- subprocess.run / Popen / call / check_call / check_output reject
any 'systemctl <verb> hermes-gateway' invocation that would mutate
the live unit. Read-only systemctl calls (status, show, list-units)
still pass through.
We intentionally do NOT stub find_gateway_pids / _scan_gateway_pids —
tests of those functions themselves need the real implementation.
Discovery without delivery is harmless; the os.kill + systemctl guards
catch the actual damage path.
Tests that legitimately need real signal delivery (e.g. PTY tests
signalling their own child) opt out via
@pytest.mark.live_system_guard_bypass.
Validation: tests/hermes_cli/ + tests/cli/ + tests/gateway/ produce
the same 17 failures with and without this guard (all pre-existing on
main, unrelated to gateway-kill leaks). The live gateway survives the
test run that previously SIGTERMed it.
Two follow-up improvements to the previous commit's notifier dedup work.
1. Add a regression test for the send-exception rewind path. The
contributor's PR included a test for the adapter-disconnect path
(test_kanban_notifier_rewinds_claim_if_adapter_disconnects, where
adapter is None at delivery time), but not for the "adapter is
connected, send() raises" path that fires inside the inner try/except
at gateway/run.py:4314. The new test
(test_kanban_notifier_rewinds_claim_on_send_exception) uses a
FailingAdapter that always raises and confirms (a) send was actually
attempted, (b) the claim was rewound, (c) the next call to
unseen_events_for_sub still returns the event for retry.
2. Drop the per-delivery success log from INFO to DEBUG. A busy board
on a multi-platform gateway can produce hundreds of these per day;
that's gateway.log noise that obscures real warnings. Failure paths
stay at WARNING (where you'd want to look when something's wrong)
so we don't lose visibility into transient send issues.
Adds a Cross-Platform Handoff section to user-guide/sessions.md covering
the CLI flow, per-platform thread behavior (Telegram topics / Discord
threads / Slack message-anchored / no-thread fallback), failure modes,
and the resume-back-to-CLI loop.
Adds the /handoff entry to reference/slash-commands.md and updates the
CLI-only commands note.
Three issues hit during a fresh Windows install + first `hermes update`:
1. `pyproject.toml` re-introduced the invalid `exclude-newer = "7 days"`
under [tool.uv]. uv requires an RFC 3339 / ISO date — relative-duration
strings parse-fail. The line was removed in PR #21221 on May 7 and
accidentally added back in the v0.13.0 release commit (498bfc7bc1)
the same day. Every uv invocation throughout install logged a TOML
parse error, confusing users into thinking the install was broken.
Fix: remove the line (and the now-empty [tool.uv] section).
2. `hermes update` failed on Windows with
`Access is denied. (os error 5)` when uv tried to overwrite
`venv\\Scripts\\hermes.exe` — the running entry-point shim. Windows
blocks REPLACE on a mapped/loaded executable but allows RENAME (kernel
tracks the file by handle, not path; same trick Chrome/Firefox use for
self-update). Pre-rename live shims to `hermes.exe.old.<unix-ms>`
before each `uv pip install -e .`; uv writes a fresh shim at the
original path; the .old files are swept on the next hermes invocation.
Wraps every install attempt (primary, base-only fallback, and
per-extra retries). Restores shims if uv fails before writing
replacements.
3. Tools post-setup hooks (ddgs, piper-tts, kittentts, langfuse,
tinker-atropos) shelled out to `[sys.executable, '-m', 'pip', ...]`
and died with `No module named pip` on every fresh Windows install.
install.ps1 creates the venv via `uv venv` which doesn't seed pip;
install.ps1 bootstraps pip later, but only inside the platform-SDK
verify block — by then the wizard's post-setup hooks have already
run and failed.
New `_pip_install` helper tries uv pip first (works in pip-less
venvs), then python -m pip, then ensurepip-bootstrap-then-pip. All
five post-setup sites now route through it.
E2E:
- uv pip compile pyproject.toml — no parse warning
- quarantine + cleanup with simulated Windows scripts dir; rollback
works when uv install fails before writing replacement shim
- _pip_install in a real `uv venv`-created (pip-less) venv: bootstraps
pip via ensurepip and completes the install
Tests: tests/hermes_cli/ — 4135 pass, 8 pre-existing failures on main
unrelated to this PR (kanban_boards, openclaw_migration,
update_gateway_restart, web_server PluginAPIAuth).
Builds on @kshitijk4poor's CLI handoff stub. The original PR's flow
deferred everything to whenever a real user happened to message the
target platform; this rewrites it so the gateway picks up handoffs
immediately and the destination chat just starts working.
State machine on sessions table replaces the boolean flag:
None -> 'pending' -> 'running' -> ('completed' | 'failed')
plus handoff_error for failure reasons. CLI request_handoff /
get_handoff_state / list_pending_handoffs / claim_handoff /
complete_handoff / fail_handoff helpers wrap the transitions.
CLI side (cli.py): /handoff <platform> validates the platform's home
channel via load_gateway_config, refuses if the agent is mid-turn,
flips the row to 'pending', and poll-blocks (60s) on terminal state.
On 'completed' it prints the /resume hint and exits the CLI like
/quit. On 'failed' or timeout it surfaces the reason and the CLI
session stays intact.
Gateway side (gateway/run.py): new _handoff_watcher background task
scans state.db every 2s, atomically claims pending rows, and runs
_process_handoff for each. _process_handoff:
1. Resolves the platform's home channel.
2. Asks the adapter for a fresh thread via the new
create_handoff_thread(parent_chat_id, name) capability so the
handed-off conversation gets its own scrollback. Adapters that
don't support threads (or fail) return None and the watcher
falls back to the home channel directly.
3. Constructs a SessionSource keyed as 'thread' when a thread was
created, 'dm' otherwise, then session_store.switch_session
re-binds the destination key to the CLI session_id. The full
role-aware transcript replays via load_transcript on the next
turn (no flat-text injection into context_prompt).
4. Forges a synthetic MessageEvent(internal=True) with the handoff
notice and dispatches through _handle_message; the agent runs
against the loaded transcript and adapter.send delivers the
reply.
5. Marks the row 'completed' on success, 'failed' (+error) on any
exception.
Adapter capability (gateway/platforms/base.py): create_handoff_thread
default returns None. Three overrides:
- Telegram (gateway/platforms/telegram.py): wraps _create_dm_topic
so DM topics (Bot API 9.4+) and forum supergroups both work.
- Discord (gateway/platforms/discord.py): parent.create_thread on
text channels with a seed-message + message.create_thread
fallback for permission edge cases. Skips DMs and other
non-thread-capable parents.
- Slack (gateway/platforms/slack.py): posts a seed message and
returns its ts as the thread anchor — Slack threads are
message-anchored.
In thread mode, build_session_key keys the destination without
user_id (thread_sessions_per_user defaults to False) so the synthetic
turn and any later real-user message in the thread share the same
session_key — seamless takeover without race.
CommandDef stays cli_only=True (handoff is initiated from the CLI;
gateway exposes /resume for the reverse direction).
Removed the original PR's _handle_message_with_agent handoff hook
(transcript-as-text injection into context_prompt) and the
send_message_tool notification — both replaced by the watcher path.
Tests rewritten around the new state machine: 13/13 pass.
E2E-validated thread + no-thread paths and the failure path against
real worktree imports with mocked adapters.
Adds /handoff <platform> CLI command that queues the current session for
resume on the configured home channel of any messaging platform.
CLI side:
- /handoff telegram — marks session in shared DB, sends summary to
the Telegram home channel via send_message
- /handoff discord — same for Discord
- Supports telegram, discord, slack, whatsapp, signal, matrix
Gateway side:
- On new session creation, checks for pending handoffs for the
incoming message's platform
- If found, loads the CLI session's full conversation history and
injects it into the context prompt as a handoff transcript
- Agent continues the conversation seamlessly
Files:
- hermes_state.py: handoff_pending, handoff_platform columns + helpers
- cli.py: _handle_handoff_command dispatch + handler
- hermes_cli/commands.py: CommandDef entry
- gateway/run.py: handoff detection in _handle_message_with_agent
- tests/hermes_cli/test_session_handoff.py: 8 tests
The skill enumerated 8 specialist profile names (researcher, analyst,
writer, reviewer, backend-eng, frontend-eng, ops, pm) as "the standard
roster" and told orchestrators to "assume these exist." Almost no real
Hermes setup matches that fleet — single-profile setups, Docker-worker
setups, and curated-team setups all violate it — so following the skill
literally produced cards assigned to non-existent profiles, which the
dispatcher silently failed to spawn (no autocorrect, no fallback, just
sits in `ready` forever).
Changes:
- Drop the standard-specialist-roster table.
- Add a "Profiles are user-configured — not a fixed roster" section at
the top with a Step 0 that prescribes `hermes profile list` (or asking
the user) before fanning out. Cache the result in working memory.
- Rewrite the worked task-graph example with placeholder names
(<profile-A>, <profile-B>, <profile-C>) so the structure is still
teachable but doesn't invite copy-paste of role names that may not
exist.
- Reframe the "If no specialist fits" anti-temptation rule: don't
invent profile names; ask the user.
- Add a "Inventing profile names that doesn't exist" entry to Pitfalls.
- Bump skill version 2.0.0 → 3.0.0 (semantic break: previous behavior
promised a roster the skill no longer enumerates).
- Update website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban.md to drop the
matching "(researcher, writer, analyst, backend-eng, reviewer, ops)"
line and explain the discovery prompt instead.
- Re-run website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py to refresh the
auto-generated skill page + catalog.
Closes#21131 in spirit — addresses the same hardcoded-names footgun
@yehuosi flagged, with a different shape than their PR (delete the
roster rather than replace each name with placeholder, since the
roster table was the load-bearing footgun and the worked example is
salvageable with placeholder profile names).
Co-authored-by: yehuosi <yehuosi@users.noreply.github.com>
* feat(gateway): per-platform admin/user split for slash commands
Adds an opt-in two-list access control on top of the existing per-platform
`allow_from` allowlists, scoped to slash commands only:
- allow_admin_from — full slash command access
- user_allowed_commands — what non-admins may run
- group_allow_admin_from — same, group/channel scope
- group_user_allowed_commands
When `allow_admin_from` is unset for a scope, gating is disabled and every
allowed user keeps full access (backward compat). Plain chat is unaffected.
`/help` and `/whoami` are always reachable so users can see what they
can run.
Gate runs at the slash command dispatch site in gateway/run.py and uses
`is_gateway_known_command()`, so it covers built-in AND plugin-registered
commands through the live registry without per-feature wiring.
Adds `/whoami` showing platform, scope, tier, and runnable commands.
Salvage of PR #4443's permission tier work, scoped down. The full tier
system, tool filtering, audit log, usage tracking, rate limiting,
`/promote` flow, and persistent SQLite stores are not included here —
those can be re-expanded later if needed.
Co-authored-by: ReqX <mike@grossmann.at>
* fix(gateway): close running-agent fast-path bypass + add coverage and central docs
The slash command access gate was only applied at the cold dispatch site
(line ~5921). When an agent was already running, the running-agent
fast-path block (line ~5574) dispatched /restart, /stop, /new, /steer,
/model, /approve, /deny, /agents, /background, /kanban, /goal, /yolo,
/verbose, /footer, /help, /commands, /profile, /update directly
without going through the gate — letting non-admins bypass gating just
because an agent happens to be busy.
Refactored the gate into _check_slash_access() and called from BOTH
paths. /status remains intentionally pre-gate so users can always see
session state.
Also added 18 more dispatch tests covering:
- Running-agent fast-path: blocks non-admin, allows admin, /status
always works
- Alias canonicalization (gate uses canonical name, not user alias)
- Unknown / unregistered commands pass through (don't false-positive)
- DM admin scope-locked when group has its own admin list
- Multi-platform isolation (Discord gated, Telegram unrestricted)
Docs: added Slash Command Access Control section to the central
messaging index page + /whoami row in the chat commands table.
Co-authored-by: ReqX <mike@grossmann.at>
---------
Co-authored-by: ReqX <mike@grossmann.at>
xAI is retiring grok-4, grok-4-0709, grok-4-fast{,-reasoning,-non-reasoning},
grok-4-1-fast{,-reasoning,-non-reasoning}, and grok-code-fast-1 on
May 15, 2026 at 12:00 PT. Remove them from the static fallbacks so the
`hermes model` picker, gateway /model picker, and setup wizard stop
auto-suggesting models that will be dead in days.
- _XAI_STATIC_FALLBACK in hermes_cli/models.py now lists only grok-4.20-*
and grok-4.3 (the live replacements).
- copilot lists in hermes_cli/models.py and hermes_cli/setup.py drop
grok-code-fast-1 (Copilot proxies it through xAI, so the upstream
retirement breaks it there too).
Old configs that already reference retired IDs keep working until xAI
flips the switch — context-length lookups in agent/model_metadata.py and
the cache-affinity-header logic in provider_profiles still recognise the
old names. The cleanup here is purely about not advertising them to new
users.
Closes#23278.
Source: https://docs.x.ai/developers/migration/may-15-retirement
Follow-up to the previous commit's behavior fix.
Adds a paragraph to dispatch_once's docstring making the concurrency-cap
semantic explicit, and an inline comment near the running_count query
explaining why we do the count (so a future reader doesn't refactor it
back to per-tick semantics thinking it's redundant). Both call out the
unbounded-accumulation failure mode that motivated the fix, since
nothing in the codebase or skills currently documents what max_spawn
is supposed to mean.
The semantic is per-board: each kanban board has its own SQLite file,
so the running-count COUNT(*) is naturally scoped to the board the
dispatcher tick is processing.
When the gateway received SIGTERM, the shutdown_signal_handler ran a
synchronous 'ps aux' (3s timeout) inside the asyncio event loop, then
asyncio.create_task(runner.stop()). On a busy host that ate 1-3s of
the teardown budget before draining could even start, and the resulting
log line was a multi-line ps dump that didn't tell us who sent the
signal. The shutdown path itself logged 'Stopping gateway...' and then
nothing until 'Gateway stopped' — when systemd SIGKILLed mid-drain,
there was no way to see which phase wedged.
Changes:
- New gateway/shutdown_forensics.py:
* snapshot_shutdown_context(sig) — sub-millisecond /proc-only capture
of signal name, parent pid+name+cmdline, INVOCATION_ID (systemd
marker), loadavg_1m, TracerPid, takeover/planned-stop marker
presence + whether-it-names-self. Pure stdlib, never raises.
* spawn_async_diagnostic(log_path, sig) — detached subprocess with
its own 'timeout 5s', start_new_session=True, writes ps auxf +
pstree + dmesg to ~/.hermes/logs/gateway-shutdown-diag.log.
Returns immediately, can't block the event loop or the cgroup
teardown.
* check_systemd_timing_alignment(drain_timeout) — reads
/proc/self/cgroup for our unit, asks systemctl show for
TimeoutStopUSec, returns mismatch info when the unit's stop
timeout is smaller than restart_drain_timeout + 30s headroom
(the case where systemd SIGKILLs mid-drain).
* _parse_systemd_duration_to_us — covers '90s', '1min 30s',
'500ms', '1h' style values from systemctl show.
* format_context_for_log — single scannable key=value line, parent
cmdline last.
- gateway/run.py shutdown_signal_handler:
* Replaces synchronous ps aux + ad-hoc 'hermes-related lines' filter
with snapshot + detached spawn.
* Always logs 'Shutdown context: signal=... parent_pid=...
parent_cmdline=...' regardless of planned/unexpected so we can
correlate signal source even on planned restarts.
- gateway/run.py _stop_impl:
* Per-phase '+X.XXs' timing for notify_active_sessions, drain
(with drain_seconds, active_at_start, active_now, timed_out),
post-interrupt tool kill, each adapter disconnect (Xs),
all adapters disconnected, final-cleanup tool kill, SessionDB
close, total teardown.
- gateway/run.py start():
* Stale-unit warning at startup when the running systemd unit's
TimeoutStopSec is smaller than the configured drain timeout.
Points the user at 'hermes gateway service install --replace'
to regenerate, or at shortening agent.restart_drain_timeout.
Tests: 30 new in tests/gateway/test_shutdown_forensics.py — snapshot
speed bound, signal name resolution, marker detection self-vs-other,
async diag spawn doesn't block caller, systemd duration parser, and
alignment check returns None outside systemd. Wider tests/gateway/
suite: 5258 passing, 3 pre-existing TTS-routing failures unchanged
on main.
Follow-up to the previous commit's toolset-vs-skill validation.
The contributor's fix raises ValueError on the first toolset name found
in the skills list. That works for one mistake, but agents that confuse
skills with toolsets usually pass several at once
(`skills=["web", "browser", "terminal"]`) — and serial-correcting one
per failure round-trip wastes tokens. Collect all toolset-shaped
entries first, then raise once with the full list.
The error message is also slightly clearer:
'web', 'browser', 'terminal' are toolset names, not skill name(s).
Put toolsets in the assignee profile's `toolsets:` config instead of
per-task skills. Skills are named skill bundles (e.g. `kanban-worker`,
`blogwatcher`); toolsets are runtime capabilities (e.g. `web`,
`browser`, `terminal`).
vs. the previous "the assignee profile's toolsets" — explicitly naming
the YAML key (`toolsets:`) and giving concrete examples in both
categories closes the conceptual gap that produced the bug to begin
with.
Adds one regression test (test_create_task_skills_lists_all_toolset_typos)
covering the multi-name aggregation path. The single-typo test from
the original PR still passes (the loose `match="toolset name"` matches
both singular and plural forms).
Two follow-up improvements to Tranquil-Flow's metadata-panel restyle.
Both stay within the parent PR's "tone down the panel" scope.
1. Native <details>/<summary> collapse for verbose metadata.
The parent PR consciously deferred this ("adding native expand/collapse
would be the next step but requires UX agreement"). The default they
asked for is straightforward: collapsed when the rendered JSON exceeds
300 chars (the threshold where the max-height: 8.5rem cap actually
starts mattering), expanded otherwise. <details>/<summary> is the right
primitive — zero JS, browser-handled state, accessible by default
(keyboard-navigable, screen-reader announces the disclosure state),
and survives any react-state churn for free.
The OS-default disclosure marker is suppressed (list-style: none +
::-webkit-details-marker hidden) and replaced with a CSS ::before
chevron that rotates 90deg on the [open] attribute, so the look is
consistent across Firefox/WebKit/Blink without the double-marker
that would otherwise appear on the platforms that still render the
default triangle.
2. Skip rendering when metadata is an empty object.
`r.metadata && ...` truthy-checks, but `{}` is truthy in JS — so a
completed task with no actual metadata would render a "Metadata"
labeled disclosure block containing literal `{}`. Adds an
Object.keys(r.metadata).length > 0 guard so empty payloads render
nothing instead of an empty disclosure stub.
Tests: three new static-asset assertions covering the <details> shape,
the empty-object skip, and the suppress-default-marker + animated-chevron
CSS — all in `tests/plugins/test_kanban_dashboard_plugin.py`.
Hand-rebased onto current main from PR #19980; the original branch was stale
against main (~6 unrelated dashboard fixes had landed since), so applying
the PR's dist files directly would have silently reverted them.
The run-history panel in the task drawer rendered each completed run's
`metadata` field as a `<code class="hermes-kanban-run-meta">` containing
`JSON.stringify(r.metadata)` — a single unindented monoline. With
`white-space: pre-wrap` and a monospace font, a writer task's metadata
(changed_files paths, source URLs, generated-artifact details) wrapped
into a tall block of code-ish text that filled the parent run row. The
container's faint `--color-foreground 3%` background then made the whole
thing read like a crash dump even though the run completed normally.
Restyle and label, no interactivity changes:
- Wrap the meta payload in a `.hermes-kanban-run-meta-block` sub-block
with an explicit `Metadata` label (small, uppercase, muted) so the
panel reads as auxiliary detail at a glance.
- Pretty-print the JSON (`indent=2`) so the structure is scannable
instead of a wall of monoline text.
- Cap `.hermes-kanban-run-meta` at `max-height: 8.5rem; overflow: auto`
so a verbose blob scrolls inside its own pane rather than swamping
the run row.
- Sub-block uses a thin `border-left` rule and `background: transparent`
— distinct from the destructive-tinted treatment used by crashed /
timed_out / blocked / spawn_failed runs higher in the same file.
Tests: two new static-asset assertions in
`tests/plugins/test_kanban_dashboard_plugin.py` lock in the rendered
shape (the plugin ships built-only, no src/).
Adds CDPSupervisor.evaluate_runtime() and wires it into _browser_eval as a
fast path when a supervisor is alive for the current task_id. Replaces the
~180ms agent-browser subprocess fork+exec+Node-startup hop with a ~1ms
Runtime.evaluate over the supervisor's already-connected WebSocket.
Falls through to the existing agent-browser CLI path when no supervisor is
running (e.g. backends without CDP, or before the first browser_navigate
attaches one), so behaviour is unchanged where it can't apply.
JS-side exceptions surface directly without falling through to the
subprocess (the subprocess would just re-raise the same error, slower);
supervisor-side failures (loop down, no session) fall through cleanly.
Benchmark — 30 iterations of `1 + 1` against headless Chrome:
supervisor WS mean= 0.96ms median= 0.91ms
agent-browser subprocess mean=179.35ms median=167.73ms
→ 187x speedup mean
Tests: 14 unit tests (mocked supervisor + response-shape coverage), 5
real-Chrome e2e tests in test_browser_supervisor.py (gated on Chrome
being installed). Browser test suite: 355 passed, 1 skipped.
Follow-up to the previous commit's casing fix.
The original PR shipped the dist edits without test coverage. The
contributor's reasoning (UI-only attributes in a pre-built JS bundle,
nothing meaningful to unit-test) is fair, but a static-asset assertion
catches the most likely regression vector — a future rebuild of the
dist bundle that loses the attributes — at near-zero cost.
Adds two regression tests in tests/plugins/test_kanban_dashboard_plugin.py:
- test_dashboard_assignee_inputs_preserve_casing — reads dist/index.js
and asserts autoCapitalize="none", autoCorrect="off", spellCheck=false,
and textTransform="none" each appear at least twice (one per assignee
input — inline triage/lane create + task-edit panel).
- test_dashboard_lane_head_preserves_assignee_casing — reads dist/style.css
and asserts the .hermes-kanban-lane-head rule body does NOT contain
text-transform: uppercase. Locates the rule by marker so unrelated CSS
churn nearby doesn't flake the test.
Both follow the same shape as the existing test_dashboard_requests_default_board_explicitly
static-asset guard from PR #22940's salvage.
Also adds the AUTHOR_MAP entry for princepal9120's GitHub-noreply email
so release notes credit the right account.
Follow-up to the previous commit's safe-int task_age fix.
The original PR shipped without test coverage. This commit adds:
- test_safe_int_accepts_int_and_int_string — sanity for the well-typed
path so the helper itself can't quietly start swallowing valid values.
- test_safe_int_returns_none_on_corrupt_inputs — the failure modes
(None, '%s', 'abc', '', '1.5', random objects). Covers both the
ValueError and TypeError catch branches.
- test_task_age_handles_corrupt_created_at — the headline regression:
a task with created_at='%s' used to raise ValueError and turn
GET /api/plugins/kanban/board into a 500.
- test_task_age_handles_corrupt_started_and_completed — confirms the
safe-int treatment is consistent across all three timestamp fields.
- test_task_age_well_formed_task — regression that the safe path
doesn't change observable output for normal data.
- test_task_dict_survives_corrupt_created_at — defense in depth.
Writes a corrupt row directly via SQL, reads it back through the
ORM, and confirms task_age + the surrounding plugin_api guard
degrade gracefully instead of crashing.
Also adds the AUTHOR_MAP entry for the contributor's GitHub-noreply
email so release notes credit @baocin (the commit was authored locally
as `aoi <aoi@hino.local>` — re-attributed during salvage to the
github noreply form).
task_age() crashed with ValueError when created_at contained the
literal format string '%s' instead of a Unix timestamp, taking down
the entire GET /board endpoint with a 500.
- Add _safe_int() helper that returns None on non-numeric values
- Refactor task_age() to use _safe_int instead of bare int() casts
- Wrap task_age() call in _task_dict with try/except fallback so one
corrupt row never kills the whole board endpoint