## Problem
`get_model_context_length()` in `agent/model_metadata.py` had a resolution
order bug that caused every Bedrock model to fall back to the 128K default
context length instead of reaching the static Bedrock table (200K for
Claude, etc.).
The root cause: `bedrock-runtime.<region>.amazonaws.com` is not listed in
`_URL_TO_PROVIDER`, so `_is_known_provider_base_url()` returned False.
The resolution order then ran the custom-endpoint probe (step 2) *before*
the Bedrock branch (step 4b), which:
1. Treated Bedrock as a custom endpoint (via `_is_custom_endpoint`).
2. Called `fetch_endpoint_model_metadata()` → `GET /models` on the
bedrock-runtime URL (Bedrock doesn't serve this shape).
3. Fell through to `return DEFAULT_FALLBACK_CONTEXT` (128K) at the
"probe-down" branch — never reaching the Bedrock static table.
Result: users on Bedrock saw 128K context for Claude models that
actually support 200K on Bedrock, causing premature auto-compression.
## Fix
Promote the Bedrock branch from step 4b to step 1b, so it runs *before*
the custom-endpoint probe at step 2. The static table in
`bedrock_adapter.py::get_bedrock_context_length()` is the authoritative
source for Bedrock (the ListFoundationModels API doesn't expose context
window sizes), so there's no reason to probe `/models` first.
The original step 4b is replaced with a one-line breadcrumb comment
pointing to the new location, to make the resolution-order docstring
accurate.
## Changes
- `agent/model_metadata.py`
- Add step 1b: Bedrock static-table branch (unchanged predicate, moved).
- Remove dead step 4b block, replace with breadcrumb comment.
- Update resolution-order docstring to include step 1b.
- `tests/agent/test_model_metadata.py`
- New `TestBedrockContextResolution` class (3 tests):
- `test_bedrock_provider_returns_static_table_before_probe`:
confirms `provider="bedrock"` hits the static table and does NOT
call `fetch_endpoint_model_metadata` (regression guard).
- `test_bedrock_url_without_provider_hint`: confirms the
`bedrock-runtime.*.amazonaws.com` host match works without an
explicit `provider=` hint.
- `test_non_bedrock_url_still_probes`: confirms the probe still
fires for genuinely-custom endpoints (no over-reach).
## Testing
pytest tests/agent/test_model_metadata.py -q
# 83 passed in 1.95s (3 new + 80 existing)
## Risk
Very low.
- Predicate is identical to the original step 4b — no behaviour change
for non-Bedrock paths.
- Original step 4b was dead code for the user-facing case (always hit
the 128K fallback first), so removing it cannot regress behaviour.
- Bedrock path now short-circuits before any network I/O — faster too.
- `ImportError` fall-through preserved so users without `boto3`
installed are unaffected.
## Related
- This is a prerequisite for accurate context-window accounting on
Bedrock — the fix for #14710 (stale-connection client eviction)
depends on correct context sizing to know when to compress.
Signed-off-by: Andre Kurait <andrekurait@gmail.com>
Bedrock model IDs use dots as namespace separators (anthropic.claude-opus-4-7,
us.anthropic.claude-sonnet-4-5-v1:0), not version separators.
normalize_model_name() was unconditionally converting all dots to hyphens,
producing invalid IDs that Bedrock rejects with HTTP 400/404.
This affected both the main agent loop (partially mitigated by
_anthropic_preserve_dots in run_agent.py) and all auxiliary client calls
(compression, session_search, vision, etc.) which go through
_AnthropicCompletionsAdapter and never pass preserve_dots=True.
Fix: add _is_bedrock_model_id() to detect Bedrock namespace prefixes
(anthropic., us., eu., ap., jp., global.) and skip dot-to-hyphen
conversion for these IDs regardless of the preserve_dots flag.
A child running a legitimately long-running tool (terminal command,
browser fetch, big file read) holds current_tool set and keeps
api_call_count frozen while the tool runs. The previous stale check
treated that as idle after 5 heartbeat cycles (~150s), stopped
touching the parent, and let the gateway kill the session.
Split the threshold in two:
- _HEARTBEAT_STALE_CYCLES_IDLE=5 (~150s) — applied only when
current_tool is None (child wedged between turns)
- _HEARTBEAT_STALE_CYCLES_IN_TOOL=20 (~600s) — applied when the child
is inside a tool call
Stale counter also resets when current_tool changes (new tool =
progress). The hard child_timeout_seconds (default 600s) is still
the final cap, so genuinely stuck tools don't get to block forever.
A — 'hermes tools' activation now runs the full Spotify wizard.
Previously a user had to (1) toggle the Spotify toolset on in 'hermes
tools' AND (2) separately run 'hermes auth spotify' to actually use
it. The second step was a discovery gap — the docs mentioned it but
nothing in the TUI pointed users there.
Now toggling Spotify on calls login_spotify_command as a post_setup
hook. If the user has no client_id yet, the interactive wizard walks
them through Spotify app creation; if they do, it skips straight to
PKCE. Either way, one 'hermes tools' pass leaves Spotify toggled on
AND authenticated. SystemExit from the wizard (user abort) leaves the
toolset enabled and prints a 'run: hermes auth spotify' hint — it
does NOT fail the toolset toggle.
Dropped the TOOL_CATEGORIES env_vars list for Spotify. The wizard
handles HERMES_SPOTIFY_CLIENT_ID persistence itself, and asking users
to type env var names before the wizard fires was UX-backwards — the
point of the wizard is that they don't HAVE a client_id yet.
B — Docs page now covers cron + Spotify.
New 'Scheduling: Spotify + cron' section with two working examples
(morning playlist, wind-down pause) using the real 'hermes cron add'
CLI surface (verified via 'cron add --help'). Covers the active-device
gotcha, Premium gating, memory isolation, and links to the cron docs.
Also fixed a stale '9 Spotify tools' reference in the setup copy —
we consolidated to 7 tools in #15154.
Validation:
- scripts/run_tests.sh tests/hermes_cli/test_tools_config.py
tests/hermes_cli/test_spotify_auth.py
tests/tools/test_spotify_client.py
→ 54 passed
- website: node scripts/prebuild.mjs && npx docusaurus build
→ SUCCESS, no new warnings
Bug 3 — Stale OAuth token not detected in 'hermes model':
- _model_flow_anthropic used 'has_creds = bool(existing_key)' which treats
any non-empty token (including expired OAuth tokens) as valid.
- Added existing_is_stale_oauth check: if the only credential is an OAuth
token (sk-ant- prefix) with no valid cc_creds fallback, mark it stale
and force the re-auth menu instead of silently accepting a broken token.
Bug 4 — macOS Keychain credentials never read:
- Claude Code >=2.1.114 migrated from ~/.claude/.credentials.json to the
macOS Keychain under service 'Claude Code-credentials'.
- Added _read_claude_code_credentials_from_keychain() using the 'security'
CLI tool; read_claude_code_credentials() now tries Keychain first then
falls back to JSON file.
- Non-Darwin platforms return None from Keychain read immediately.
Tests:
- tests/agent/test_anthropic_keychain.py: 11 cases covering Darwin-only
guard, security command failures, JSON parsing, fallback priority.
- tests/hermes_cli/test_anthropic_model_flow_stale_oauth.py: 8 cases
covering stale OAuth detection, API key passthrough, cc_creds fallback.
Refs: #12905
FixesNousResearch/hermes-agent#9813
Root cause: _is_oauth_token() only recognized sk-ant-* and eyJ* patterns,
but Claude Code OAuth tokens from CLAUDE_CODE_OAUTH_TOKEN use cc- prefix
Fix: Add cc- prefix detection so these tokens route through Bearer auth
Moves the Spotify integration from tools/ into plugins/spotify/,
matching the existing pattern established by plugins/image_gen/ for
third-party service integrations.
Why:
- tools/ should be reserved for foundational capabilities (terminal,
read_file, web_search, etc.). tools/providers/ was a one-off
directory created solely for spotify_client.py.
- plugins/ is already the home for image_gen backends, memory
providers, context engines, and standalone hook-based plugins.
Spotify is a third-party service integration and belongs alongside
those, not in tools/.
- Future service integrations (eventually: Deezer, Apple Music, etc.)
now have a pattern to copy.
Changes:
- tools/spotify_tool.py → plugins/spotify/tools.py (handlers + schemas)
- tools/providers/spotify_client.py → plugins/spotify/client.py
- tools/providers/ removed (was only used for Spotify)
- New plugins/spotify/__init__.py with register(ctx) calling
ctx.register_tool() × 7. The handler/check_fn wiring is unchanged.
- New plugins/spotify/plugin.yaml (kind: backend, bundled, auto-load).
- tests/tools/test_spotify_client.py: import paths updated.
tools_config fix — _DEFAULT_OFF_TOOLSETS now wins over plugin auto-enable:
- _get_platform_tools() previously auto-enabled unknown plugin
toolsets for new platforms. That was fine for image_gen (which has
no toolset of its own) but bad for Spotify, which explicitly
requires opt-in (don't ship 7 tool schemas to users who don't use
it). Added a check: if a plugin toolset is in _DEFAULT_OFF_TOOLSETS,
it stays off until the user picks it in 'hermes tools'.
Pre-existing test bug fix:
- tests/hermes_cli/test_plugins.py::test_list_returns_sorted
asserted names were sorted, but list_plugins() sorts by key
(path-derived, e.g. image_gen/openai). With only image_gen plugins
bundled, name and key order happened to agree. Adding plugins/spotify
broke that coincidence (spotify sorts between openai-codex and xai
by name but after xai by key). Updated test to assert key order,
which is what the code actually documents.
Validation:
- scripts/run_tests.sh tests/hermes_cli/test_plugins.py \
tests/hermes_cli/test_tools_config.py \
tests/hermes_cli/test_spotify_auth.py \
tests/tools/test_spotify_client.py \
tests/tools/test_registry.py
→ 143 passed
- E2E plugin load: 'spotify' appears in loaded plugins, all 7 tools
register into the spotify toolset, check_fn gating intact.
Three quality improvements on top of #15121 / #15130 / #15135:
1. Tool consolidation (9 → 7)
- spotify_saved_tracks + spotify_saved_albums → spotify_library with
kind='tracks'|'albums'. Handler code was ~90 percent identical
across the two old tools; the merge is a behavioral no-op.
- spotify_activity dropped. Its 'now_playing' action was a duplicate
of spotify_playback.get_currently_playing (both return identical
204/empty payloads). Its 'recently_played' action moves onto
spotify_playback as a new action — history belongs adjacent to
live state.
- Net: each API call ships 2 fewer tool schemas when the Spotify
toolset is enabled, and the action surface is more discoverable
(everything playback-related is on one tool).
2. Spotify skill (skills/media/spotify/SKILL.md)
Teaches the agent canonical usage patterns so common requests don't
balloon into 4+ tool calls:
- 'play X' = one search, then play by URI (not search + scan +
describe + play)
- 'what's playing' = single get_currently_playing (no preflight
get_state chain)
- Don't retry on '403 Premium required' or '403 No active device' —
both require user action
- URI/URL/bare-ID format normalization
- Full failure-mode reference for 204/401/403/429
3. Surfaced in 'hermes setup' tool status
Adds 'Spotify (PKCE OAuth)' to the tool status list when
auth.json has a Spotify access/refresh token. Matches the
homeassistant pattern but reads from auth.json (OAuth-based) rather
than env vars.
Docs updated to reflect the new 7-tool surface, and mention the
companion skill in the 'Using it' section.
Tests: 54 passing (client 22, auth 15, tools_config 35 — 18 = 54 after
renaming/replacing the spotify_activity tests with library +
recently_played coverage). Docusaurus build clean.
Salvage of the Gemini-specific piece from PR #12585 by @briandevans.
Gemini's OpenAI-compat /v1beta/openai/models endpoint returns IDs prefixed
with 'models/' (native Gemini-API convention), so set-membership against
curated bare IDs drops every model. Strip the prefix before comparison.
The Anthropic static-catalog piece of #12585 was subsumed by #12618's
_fetch_anthropic_models() branch landing earlier in the same salvage PR.
Full branch cherry-pick was skipped because it also carried unrelated
catalog-version regressions.
The generic /v1/models probe in validate_requested_model() sent a plain
'Authorization: Bearer <key>' header, which works for OpenAI-compatible
endpoints but results in a 401 Unauthorized from Anthropic's API.
Anthropic requires x-api-key + anthropic-version headers (or Bearer for
OAuth tokens from Claude Code).
Add a provider-specific branch for normalized == 'anthropic' that calls
the existing _fetch_anthropic_models() helper, which already handles
both regular API keys and Claude Code OAuth tokens correctly. This
mirrors the pattern already used for openai-codex, copilot, and bedrock.
The branch also includes:
- fuzzy auto-correct (cutoff 0.9) for near-exact model ID typos
- fuzzy suggestions (cutoff 0.5) when the model is not listed
- graceful fall-through when the token cannot be resolved or the
network is unreachable (accepts with a warning rather than hard-fail)
- a note that newer/preview/snapshot model IDs can be gate-listed
and may still work even if not returned by /v1/models
Fixes Anthropic provider users seeing 'service unreachable' errors
when running /model <claude-model> because every probe 401'd.
- probe_api_models: add api_mode param; use x-api-key + anthropic-version
headers for anthropic_messages mode (Anthropic's native Models API auth)
- probe_api_models: add User-Agent header to avoid Cloudflare 403 blocks
on third-party OpenAI-compatible endpoints
- validate_requested_model: pass api_mode through from switch_model
- validate_requested_model: for anthropic_messages mode, attempt probe with
correct auth; if probe fails (many proxies don't implement /v1/models),
accept the model with an informational warning instead of rejecting
- fetch_api_models: propagate api_mode to probe_api_models
Regression test for #14981. Verifies that _session_expiry_watcher fires
on_session_finalize for each session swept out of the store, matching
the contract documented for /new, /reset, CLI shutdown, and gateway stop.
Verified the test fails cleanly on pre-fix code (hook call list missing
sess-expired) and passes with the fix applied.
The initial Spotify docs page shipped in #15130 was a setup guide. This
expands it into a full feature reference:
- Per-tool parameter table for all 9 tools, extracted from the real
schemas in tools/spotify_tool.py (actions, required/optional args,
premium gating).
- Free vs Premium feature matrix — which actions work on which tier,
so Free users don't assume Spotify tools are useless to them.
- Active-device prerequisite called out at the top; this is the #1
cause of '403 no active device' reports for every Spotify
integration.
- SSH / headless section explaining that browser auto-open is skipped
when SSH_CLIENT/SSH_TTY is set, and how to tunnel the callback port.
- Token lifecycle: refresh on 401, persistence across restarts, how
to revoke server-side via spotify.com/account/apps.
- Example prompt list so users know what to ask the agent.
- Troubleshooting expanded: no-active-device, Premium-required, 204
now_playing, INVALID_CLIENT, 429, 401 refresh-revoked, wizard not
opening browser.
- 'Where things live' table mapping auth.json / .env / Spotify app.
Verified with 'node scripts/prebuild.mjs && npx docusaurus build'
— page compiles, no new warnings.
When the primary provider raises AuthError (expired OAuth token,
revoked API key), the error was re-raised before AIAgent was created,
so fallback_model was never consulted. Now both gateway/run.py and
cron/scheduler.py catch AuthError specifically and attempt to resolve
credentials from the fallback_providers/fallback_model config chain
before propagating the error.
Closes#7230
Try to activate fallback model after errors was calling get_model_context_length()
without the config_context_length parameter, causing it to fall through to
DEFAULT_FALLBACK_CONTEXT (128K) even when config.yaml has an explicit
model.context_length value (e.g. 204800 for MiniMax-M2.7).
This mirrors the fix already present in switch_model() at line 1988, which
correctly passes config_context_length. The fallback path was missed.
Fixes: context_length forced to 128K on fallback activation
ssl.SSLError (and its subclass ssl.SSLCertVerificationError) inherits from
OSError *and* ValueError via Python's MRO. The is_local_validation_error
check used isinstance(api_error, (ValueError, TypeError)) to detect
programming bugs that should abort immediately — but this inadvertently
caught ssl.SSLError, treating a TLS transport failure as a non-retryable
client error.
The error classifier already maps SSLCertVerificationError to
FailoverReason.timeout with retryable=True (its type name is in
_TRANSPORT_ERROR_TYPES), but the inline isinstance guard was overriding
that classification and triggering an unnecessary abort.
Fix: add ssl.SSLError to the exclusion list alongside the existing
UnicodeEncodeError carve-out so TLS errors fall through to the
classifier's retryable path.
Closes#14367
Two small fixes triggered by a support report where the user saw a
cryptic 'HTTP 400 - Error 400 (Bad Request)!!1' (Google's GFE HTML
error page, not a real API error) on every gemini-2.5-pro request.
The underlying cause was an empty GOOGLE_API_KEY / GEMINI_API_KEY, but
nothing in our output made that diagnosable:
1. hermes_cli/dump.py: the api_keys section enumerated 23 providers but
omitted Google entirely, so users had no way to verify from 'hermes
dump' whether the key was set. Added GOOGLE_API_KEY and GEMINI_API_KEY
rows.
2. agent/gemini_native_adapter.py: GeminiNativeClient.__init__ accepted
an empty/whitespace api_key and stamped it into the x-goog-api-key
header, which made Google's frontend return a generic HTML 400 long
before the request reached the Generative Language backend. Now we
raise RuntimeError at construction with an actionable message
pointing at GOOGLE_API_KEY/GEMINI_API_KEY and aistudio.google.com.
Added a regression test that covers '', ' ', and None.
Claude-style and some Anthropic-tuned models occasionally emit tool
names as class-like identifiers: TodoTool_tool, Patch_tool,
BrowserClick_tool, PatchTool. These failed strict-dict lookup in
valid_tool_names and triggered the 'Unknown tool' self-correction
loop, wasting a full turn of iteration and tokens.
_repair_tool_call already handled lowercase / separator / fuzzy
matches but couldn't bridge the CamelCase-to-snake_case gap or the
trailing '_tool' suffix that Claude sometimes tacks on. Extend it
with two bounded normalization passes:
1. CamelCase -> snake_case (via regex lookbehind).
2. Strip trailing _tool / -tool / tool suffix (case-insensitive,
applied twice so TodoTool_tool reduces all the way: strip
_tool -> TodoTool, snake -> todo_tool, strip 'tool' -> todo).
Cheap fast-paths (lowercase / separator-normalized) still run first
so the common case stays zero-cost. Fuzzy match remains the last
resort unchanged.
Tests: tests/run_agent/test_repair_tool_call_name.py covers the
three original reports (TodoTool_tool, Patch_tool, BrowserClick_tool),
plus PatchTool, WriteFileTool, ReadFile_tool, write-file_Tool,
patch-tool, and edge cases (empty, None, '_tool' alone, genuinely
unknown names).
18 new tests + 17 existing arg-repair tests = 35/35 pass.
Closes#14784
Previously 'hermes auth spotify' crashed with 'HERMES_SPOTIFY_CLIENT_ID
is required' if the user hadn't manually created a Spotify developer
app and set env vars. Now the command detects a missing client_id and
walks the user through the one-time app registration inline:
- Opens https://developer.spotify.com/dashboard in the browser
- Tells the user exactly what to paste into the Spotify form
(including the correct default redirect URI, 127.0.0.1:43827)
- Prompts for the Client ID
- Persists HERMES_SPOTIFY_CLIENT_ID to ~/.hermes/.env so subsequent
runs skip the wizard
- Continues straight into the PKCE OAuth flow
Also prints the docs URL at both the start of the wizard and the end
of a successful login so users can find the full guide.
Adds website/docs/user-guide/features/spotify.md with the complete
setup walkthrough, tool reference, and troubleshooting, and wires it
into the sidebar under User Guide > Features > Advanced.
Fixes a stale redirect URI default in the hermes_cli/tools_config.py
TOOL_CATEGORIES entry (was 8888/callback from the PR description
instead of the actual DEFAULT_SPOTIFY_REDIRECT_URI value
43827/spotify/callback defined in auth.py).
Streamable HTTP MCP servers may garbage-collect their server-side
session state while the OAuth token remains valid — idle TTL, server
restart, pod rotation, etc. Before this fix, the tool-call handler
treated the resulting "Invalid or expired session" error as a plain
tool failure with no recovery path, so **every subsequent call on
the affected server failed until the gateway was manually
restarted**. Reporter: #13383.
The OAuth-based recovery path (``_handle_auth_error_and_retry``)
already exists for 401s, but it only fires on auth errors. Session
expiry slipped through because the access token is still valid —
nothing 401'd, so the existing recovery branch was skipped.
Fix
---
Add a sibling function ``_handle_session_expired_and_retry`` that
detects MCP session-expiry via ``_is_session_expired_error`` (a
narrow allow-list of known-stable substrings: ``"invalid or expired
session"``, ``"session expired"``, ``"session not found"``,
``"unknown session"``, etc.) and then uses the existing transport
reconnect mechanism:
* Sets ``MCPServerTask._reconnect_event`` — the server task's
lifecycle loop already interprets this as "tear down the current
``streamablehttp_client`` + ``ClientSession`` and rebuild them,
reusing the existing OAuth provider instance".
* Waits up to 15 s for the new session to come back ready.
* Retries the original call once. If the retry succeeds, returns
its result and resets the circuit-breaker error count. If the
retry raises, or if the reconnect doesn't ready in time, falls
through to the caller's generic error path.
Unlike the 401 path, this does **not** call ``handle_401`` — the
access token is already valid and running an OAuth refresh would be
a pointless round-trip.
All 5 MCP handlers (``call_tool``, ``list_resources``, ``read_resource``,
``list_prompts``, ``get_prompt``) now consult both recovery paths
before falling through:
recovered = _handle_auth_error_and_retry(...) # 401 path
if recovered is not None: return recovered
recovered = _handle_session_expired_and_retry(...) # new
if recovered is not None: return recovered
# generic error response
Narrow scope — explicitly not changed
-------------------------------------
* **Detection is string-based on a 5-entry allow-list.** The MCP
SDK wraps JSON-RPC errors in ``McpError`` whose exception type +
attributes vary across SDK versions, so matching on message
substrings is the durable path. Kept narrow to avoid false
positives — a regular ``RuntimeError("Tool failed")`` will NOT
trigger spurious reconnects (pinned by
``test_is_session_expired_rejects_unrelated_errors``).
* **No change to the existing 401 recovery flow.** The new path is
consulted only after the auth path declines (returns ``None``).
* **Retry count stays at 1.** If the reconnect-then-retry also
fails, we don't loop — the error surfaces normally so the model
sees a failed tool call rather than a hang.
* **``InterruptedError`` is explicitly excluded** from session-expired
detection so user-cancel signals always short-circuit the same
way they did before (pinned by
``test_is_session_expired_rejects_interrupted_error``).
Regression coverage
-------------------
``tests/tools/test_mcp_tool_session_expired.py`` (new, 16 cases):
Unit tests for ``_is_session_expired_error``:
* ``test_is_session_expired_detects_invalid_or_expired_session`` —
reporter's exact wpcom-mcp text.
* ``test_is_session_expired_detects_expired_session_variant`` —
"Session expired" / "expired session" variants.
* ``test_is_session_expired_detects_session_not_found`` — server GC
variant ("session not found", "unknown session").
* ``test_is_session_expired_is_case_insensitive``.
* ``test_is_session_expired_rejects_unrelated_errors`` — narrow-scope
canary: random RuntimeError / ValueError / 401 don't trigger.
* ``test_is_session_expired_rejects_interrupted_error`` — user cancel
must never route through reconnect.
* ``test_is_session_expired_rejects_empty_message``.
Handler integration tests:
* ``test_call_tool_handler_reconnects_on_session_expired`` — reporter's
full repro: first call raises "Invalid or expired session", handler
signals ``_reconnect_event``, retries once, returns the retry's
success result with no ``error`` key.
* ``test_call_tool_handler_non_session_expired_error_falls_through``
— preserved-behaviour canary: random tool failures do NOT trigger
reconnect.
* ``test_session_expired_handler_returns_none_without_loop`` —
defensive: cold-start / shutdown race.
* ``test_session_expired_handler_returns_none_without_server_record``
— torn-down server falls through cleanly.
* ``test_session_expired_handler_returns_none_when_retry_also_fails``
— no retry loop on repeated failure.
Parametrised across all 4 non-``tools/call`` handlers:
* ``test_non_tool_handlers_also_reconnect_on_session_expired``
[list_resources / read_resource / list_prompts / get_prompt].
**15 of 16 fail on clean ``origin/main`` (``6fb69229``)** with
``ImportError: cannot import name '_is_session_expired_error'``
— the fix's surface symbols don't exist there yet. The 1 passing
test is an ordering artefact of pytest-xdist worker collection.
Validation
----------
``source venv/bin/activate && python -m pytest
tests/tools/test_mcp_tool_session_expired.py -q`` → **16 passed**.
Broader MCP suite (5 files:
``test_mcp_tool.py``, ``test_mcp_tool_401_handling.py``,
``test_mcp_tool_session_expired.py``, ``test_mcp_reconnect_signal.py``,
``test_mcp_oauth.py``) → **230 passed, 0 regressions**.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Add event hook to httpx.AsyncClient in MCP HTTP transport that strips
Authorization headers when a redirect targets a different origin,
preventing credential leakage to third-party servers.
``tools/mcp_oauth.py`` relied on ``assert _oauth_port is not None`` to
guard the module-level port set by ``build_oauth_auth``. Python's
``-O`` / ``-OO`` optimization flags strip ``assert`` statements
entirely, so a deployment that runs ``python -O -m hermes ...``
silently loses the check: ``_oauth_port`` stays ``None`` and the
failure surfaces much later as an obscure ``int()`` or
``http.server.HTTPServer((host, None))`` TypeError rather than the
intended "OAuth callback port not set" signal.
Replace with an explicit ``if … raise RuntimeError(...)`` so the
invariant is preserved regardless of the interpreter's optimization
level. Docstring updated to document the new exception.
Found during a proactive audit of ``assert`` statements in
non-test code paths.
OAuth client information and token responses from the MCP SDK contain
Pydantic AnyUrl fields (client_uri, redirect_uris, etc.). The previous
model_dump() call returned a dict with these AnyUrl objects still as
their native Python type, which then crashed json.dumps with:
TypeError: Object of type AnyUrl is not JSON serializable
This caused any OAuth-based MCP server (e.g. alphaxiv) to fail
registration with an "OAuth flow error" traceback during startup.
Adding mode="json" tells Pydantic to serialize all fields to
JSON-compatible primitives (AnyUrl -> str, datetime -> ISO string, etc.)
before returning the dict, so the standard json.dumps can handle it.
Three call sites fixed:
- HermesTokenStorage.set_tokens
- HermesTokenStorage.set_client_info
- build_oauth_auth pre-registration write
`_normalize_for_deepseek` was mapping every non-reasoner input into
`deepseek-chat` on the assumption that DeepSeek's API accepts only two
model IDs. That assumption no longer holds — `deepseek-v4-pro` and
`deepseek-v4-flash` are first-class IDs accepted by the direct API,
and on aggregators `deepseek-chat` routes explicitly to V3 (DeepInfra
backend returns `deepseek-chat-v3`). So a user picking V4 Pro through
the model picker was being silently downgraded to V3.
Verified 2026-04-24 against Nous portal's OpenAI-compat surface:
- `deepseek/deepseek-v4-flash` → provider: DeepSeek,
model: deepseek-v4-flash-20260423
- `deepseek/deepseek-chat` → provider: DeepInfra,
model: deepseek/deepseek-chat-v3
Fix:
- Add `deepseek-v4-pro` and `deepseek-v4-flash` to
`_DEEPSEEK_CANONICAL_MODELS` so exact matches pass through.
- Add `_DEEPSEEK_V_SERIES_RE` (`^deepseek-v\d+(...)?$`) so future
V-series IDs (`deepseek-v5-*`, dated variants) keep passing through
without another code change.
- Update docstring + module header to reflect the new rule.
Tests:
- New `TestDeepseekVSeriesPassThrough` — 8 parametrized cases covering
bare, vendor-prefixed, case-variant, dated, and future V-series IDs
plus end-to-end `normalize_model_for_provider(..., "deepseek")`.
- New `TestDeepseekCanonicalAndReasonerMapping` — regression coverage
for canonical pass-through, reasoner-keyword folding, and
fall-back-to-chat behaviour.
- 77/77 pass.
Reported on Discord (Ufonik, Don Piedro): `/model > Deepseek >
deepseek-v4-pro` surfaced
`Normalized 'deepseek-v4-pro' to 'deepseek-chat'`. Picker listing
showed the v4 names, so validation also rejected the post-normalize
`deepseek-chat` as "not in provider listing" — the contradiction
users saw. Normalizer now respects the picker's choice.
Install tini in the container image and route ENTRYPOINT through
`/usr/bin/tini -g -- /opt/hermes/docker/entrypoint.sh`.
Without a PID-1 init, orphans reparented to hermes (MCP stdio servers,
git, bun, browser daemons) never get waited() on and accumulate as
zombies. Long-running gateway containers eventually exhaust the PID
table and hit "fork: cannot allocate memory".
tini is the standard container init (same pattern Docker's --init flag
and Kubernetes pause container use). It handles SIGCHLD, reaps orphans,
and forwards SIGTERM/SIGINT to the entrypoint so hermes's existing
graceful-shutdown handlers still run. The -g flag sends signals to the
whole process group so `docker stop` cleanly terminates hermes and its
descendants, not just direct children.
Closes#15012.
E2E-verified with a minimal reproducer image: spawning 5 orphans that
reparent to PID 1 leaves 5 zombies without tini and 0 with tini.
Follow-up on top of #15096 cherry-pick:
- Remove spotify_* from _HERMES_CORE_TOOLS (keep only in the 'spotify'
toolset, so the 9 Spotify tool schemas are not shipped to every user).
- Add 'spotify' to CONFIGURABLE_TOOLSETS + _DEFAULT_OFF_TOOLSETS so new
installs get it opt-in via 'hermes tools', matching homeassistant/rl.
- Wire TOOL_CATEGORIES entry pointing at 'hermes auth spotify' for the
actual PKCE login (optional HERMES_SPOTIFY_CLIENT_ID /
HERMES_SPOTIFY_REDIRECT_URI env vars).
- scripts/release.py: map contributor email to GitHub login.
Concurrent Hermes processes (e.g. cron jobs) refreshing a Nous OAuth token
via resolve_nous_runtime_credentials() write the rotated tokens to auth.json.
The calling process's pool entry becomes stale, and the next refresh against
the already-rotated token triggers a 'refresh token reuse' revocation on
the Nous Portal.
_sync_nous_entry_from_auth_store() reads auth.json under the same lock used
by resolve_nous_runtime_credentials, and adopts the newer token pair before
refreshing the pool entry. This complements #15111 (which preserved the
obtained_at timestamps through seeding).
Partial salvage of #10160 by @konsisumer — only the agent/credential_pool.py
changes + the 3 Nous-specific regression tests. The PR also touched 10
unrelated files (Dockerfile, tips.py, various tool tests) which were
dropped as scope creep.
Regression tests:
- test_sync_nous_entry_from_auth_store_adopts_newer_tokens
- test_sync_nous_entry_noop_when_tokens_match
- test_nous_exhausted_entry_recovers_via_auth_store_sync
Extracts pool-rotation-room logic into `_pool_may_recover_from_rate_limit`
so single-credential pools no longer block the eager-fallback path on 429.
The existing check `pool is not None and pool.has_available()` lets
fallback fire only after the pool marks every entry as exhausted. With
exactly one credential in the pool (the common shape for Gemini OAuth,
Vertex service accounts, and any personal-key setup), `has_available()`
flips back to True as soon as the cooldown expires — Hermes retries
against the same entry, hits the same daily-quota 429, and burns the
retry budget in a tight loop before ever reaching the configured
`fallback_model`. Observed in the wild as 4+ hours of 429 noise on a
single Gemini key instead of falling through to Vertex as configured.
Rotation is only meaningful with more than one credential — gate on
`len(pool.entries()) > 1`. Multi-credential pools keep the current
wait-for-rotation behaviour unchanged.
Fixes#11314. Related to #8947, #10210, #7230. Narrower scope than
open PRs #8023 (classifier change) and #11492 (503/529 credential-pool
bypass) — this addresses the single-credential 429 case specifically
and does not conflict with either.
Tests: 6 new unit tests in tests/run_agent/test_provider_fallback.py
covering (a) None pool, (b) single-cred available, (c) single-cred in
cooldown, (d) 2-cred available rotates, (e) multi-cred all cooling-down
falls back, (f) many-cred available rotates. All 18 tests in the file
pass.
Previously _handle_credential_pool_error handled 401, 402, and 429
but silently ignored 403. When a provider returns 403 for a revoked or
unauthorised credential (e.g. Nous agent_key invalidated by a newer
login), the pool was never rotated and every subsequent request
continued to use the same failing credential.
Treat 403 the same as 402: immediately mark the current credential
exhausted and rotate to the next pool entry, since a Forbidden response
will not resolve itself with a retry.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
The least_used strategy selected entries via min(request_count) but
never incremented the counter. All entries stayed at count=0, so the
strategy degenerated to fill_first behavior with no actual load balancing.
Now increments request_count after each selection and persists the update.
The Copilot provider resolved context windows via models.dev static data,
which does not include account-specific models (e.g. claude-opus-4.6-1m
with 1M context). This adds the live Copilot /models API as a higher-
priority source for copilot/copilot-acp/github-copilot providers.
New helper get_copilot_model_context() in hermes_cli/models.py extracts
capabilities.limits.max_prompt_tokens from the cached catalog. Results
are cached in-process for 1 hour.
In agent/model_metadata.py, step 5a queries the live API before falling
through to models.dev (step 5b). This ensures account-specific models
get correct context windows while standard models still have a fallback.
Part 1 of #7731.
Refs: #7272
Raw GitHub tokens (gho_/github_pat_/ghu_) are now exchanged for
short-lived Copilot API tokens via /copilot_internal/v2/token before
being used as Bearer credentials. This is required to access
internal-only models (e.g. claude-opus-4.6-1m with 1M context).
Implementation:
- exchange_copilot_token(): calls the token exchange endpoint with
in-process caching (dict keyed by SHA-256 fingerprint), refreshed
2 minutes before expiry. No disk persistence — gateway is long-running
so in-memory cache is sufficient.
- get_copilot_api_token(): convenience wrapper with graceful fallback —
returns exchanged token on success, raw token on failure.
- Both callers (hermes_cli/auth.py and agent/credential_pool.py) now
pipe the raw token through get_copilot_api_token() before use.
12 new tests covering exchange, caching, expiry, error handling,
fingerprinting, and caller integration. All 185 existing copilot/auth
tests pass.
Part 2 of #7731.