Adds thread_id and chat_type to the agent:start/end plugin hook context
(via getattr with safe defaults; both are real `source` attrs already used
in gateway/run.py). agent:end inherits them via **hook_ctx. Purely additive
— no prompt/history mutation. Documents the full ctx dict in hooks.py.
Co-authored-by: SNooZyy2 <SNooZyy2@users.noreply.github.com>
The status-bar zap currently toggles per-session approval bypass (the same
scope as the TUI's Shift+Tab). This adds a global escape hatch: Shift+clicking
the zap flips the persistent approvals.mode in config.yaml between "off"
(bypass on) and "manual" (bypass off), affecting every session, the CLI, the
TUI, and cron — and it survives restarts.
- statusbar-controls: thread the click's shiftKey through onSelect via a new
StatusbarSelectModifiers arg.
- yolo-session: add setGlobalYolo() that calls config.set with scope="global".
- use-statusbar-items: branch toggleYolo on modifiers.shiftKey; plain click
stays per-session, Shift+click goes global.
- tui_gateway config.set "yolo" key: add scope="global" that reads/writes
approvals.mode through the gateway's own (mtime-cached) config view, honors
an explicit value, and re-emits session.info to every live session so each
window's zap reflects the flip immediately.
- i18n: tooltip copy in en/ja/zh/zh-hant notes Shift+click toggles globally.
Tests: two new tui_gateway tests cover the global toggle and explicit-value
paths; existing session/process-scope yolo tests still pass.
The todo list is re-injected into the model's context after every
context-compression event (TodoStore.format_for_injection), so an oversized
todo item or an unbounded number of items defeats the compression it is meant
to ride through. TodoStore.write/_validate previously enforced no size or count
bounds, so a single 50KB item produced a ~50KB re-injection block on every
subsequent turn.
Add two caps:
- MAX_TODO_CONTENT_CHARS (4000): per-item content is truncated with a marker.
Routed through a shared _cap_content() so the merge-update path (which writes
content directly, bypassing _validate) is capped too.
- MAX_TODO_ITEMS (256): total list length is bounded, keeping the
highest-priority head (list order is priority).
Both caps are generous relative to real plans — a todo item is a short task
description and active lists are a handful of items.
NOT a security fix. Raised externally via GHSA-5g4g-6jrg-mw3g, which framed a
caller-supplied conversation_history on the authenticated API server replaying
into _hydrate_todo_store as a DoS. That path is authenticated (the API server
refuses to start without API_SERVER_KEY) and self-scoped (the caller supplies
their own entire history and can only inflate their own response chain — forged
role=tool entries are never persisted to the session DB), so it is out of scope
as a vulnerability under SECURITY.md 3.2. These bounds are footgun containment
that also applies to the trusted agent path, where the model itself authors the
todos. Credit to the reporter for the observation.
Co-authored-by: YLChen-007 <30854794+YLChen-007@users.noreply.github.com>
Tool-progress now shows a terminal command in a ```bash fenced block —
full command, no surrounding quotes, no label, no 40-char truncation —
instead of the noisy `terminal: "cmd…"` line, on every platform that
renders markdown code blocks (Telegram, Slack, Matrix, WhatsApp, Feishu,
Weixin, Discord). Plain-text platforms keep the compact preview line.
Gated on a new `BasePlatformAdapter.supports_code_blocks` capability
(default False) rather than a hardcoded platform list, so plugin adapters
(Discord lives in plugins/platforms/) opt in by setting the flag. Applies
to both all/new and verbose progress modes, with a safe fallback when the
command arg is missing or blank.
The desktop chat GUI pinned the viewport to the bottom on every content
growth while a turn streamed, so the window chased tokens as they arrived.
Remove that follow behavior: once a turn is running the viewport stays
exactly where the user left it.
- Delete the streaming ResizeObserver re-pin loop in useThreadScrollAnchor.
- Delete the post-run bottom lock (kept pinning ~1.2s after completion).
- Keep the one-time jump-to-bottom on user submit / new turn / session
change so a freshly submitted message still lands in view.
- Update streaming.test.tsx to assert the viewport no longer follows
streaming growth or snaps down on final code-highlight remeasure.
After sleep/wake, a remote (global-remote) primary backend can become
unreachable, but it has no child process whose 'exit' clears the main
process's cached connectionPromise. The renderer then re-dials the same
dead remote forever and the composer stays stuck on "Starting Hermes…";
only a quit+reopen recovered.
Fix: the renderer's existing backoff-paced reconnect loop now asks the
main process to revalidate the cached connection before re-dialing. The
main process liveness-probes the cached REMOTE backend's public
/api/status and, if unreachable, drops the cache (resetHermesConnection
only nulls connectionPromise for a remote — no child to SIGTERM) so the
next getConnection() rebuilds a reachable descriptor. Local backends are
never touched here; they self-heal via the child 'exit' handler. The
renderer's loop already provides retry pacing and rides out transient
blips, so no streak/episode bookkeeping is needed in the main process.
The boot hook dismisses the boot-progress overlay on the post-rebuild
'open' so an in-place rebuild can't leave it stuck at ~94%.
Reimplements #40135 by @AlchemistChaos on a smaller, more interpretable
path (63 added lines vs 555): no extracted helper module, no
failure-streak / episode-window state, the renderer's backoff loop is
the retry mechanism. Original diagnosis and fix by @AlchemistChaos.
Co-authored-by: AlchemistChaos <alchemistchaos@protonmail.com>
Follow-up to #34306. The provider fix made SearXNG *usable* with a
config-only SEARXNG_URL, but tools/web_tools._has_env still read raw
os.getenv, so the backend auto-detect cascade and check_web_api_key
remained blind to it — SearXNG worked when explicitly selected but was
never auto-selected. Route _has_env (and the SearXNG diagnostic print)
through a config-aware _env_value helper mirroring the provider's
_searxng_url(). Fixing the shared helper covers every provider key in
one place. Adds regression tests for config-only auto-detect and
check_web_api_key. See #34290.
When apps/desktop's `npm ci`/`npm install` fails, install_desktop printed a
single "Desktop workspace npm install failed" line and aborted, leaving the
user with a wall of raw npm output. A common trigger is a root-owned ~/.npm
cache left by an earlier `sudo npm`/`sudo npx`: the non-root install then
cannot write the shared cache, and npm reports it as EEXIST / "File exists"
while the real errno is EACCES (-13) -- so it reads like an installer bug.
Add a targeted remediation hint on that failure path pointing at:
sudo chown -R "$(id -un)" ~/.npm && npm cache verify
followed by the manual rebuild command. The stage stays a hard failure by
design (a silent skip yields a "complete" install with no app); only the
failure output changes.
hermes skills browse capped the hermes-index source at 5000, so it
surfaced ~5.4k of the ~90.7k skills the index actually carries. Raise
the per-source ceiling above catalog size; browse already paginates
client-side and the index is disk-cached, so no extra fetch cost.
Desktop connected to a remote gateway can now attach images and PDFs and
display agent-written images. Previously the desktop passed a LOCAL file path
to image.attach; on a remote gateway that path doesn't exist, so the image was
silently dropped ("skipped unreadable path") and the vision model never saw it.
The reverse direction was also broken — images the agent wrote on the gateway
rendered as dead links in the remote client.
Gateway (tui_gateway/server.py):
- image.attach_bytes: base64 byte upload written into the gateway's own images
dir and queued via the existing native-image-attach pipeline. Magic-byte
extension sniffing, data-URL prefix + whitespace tolerance, 25 MB cap,
structured error codes. Accepts content_base64/filename (canonical) and
data/ext (older-desktop aliases).
- pdf.attach: renders each page to PNG via pdftoppm (poppler-utils) at 150 DPI
and queues the pages as images; 50 MB / 25-page caps. Accepts host path or
base64 upload.
- Shared helpers (_decode_attach_base64, _sniff_image_ext, _queue_attached_image)
so the two methods and the existing image.attach don't duplicate logic.
Gateway (hermes_cli/web_server.py):
- GET /api/media: returns a gateway-local image as a base64 data URL so remote
clients can display it. Auth-gated like every /api route, extension
allowlist + size cap, AND confined to the gateway's own media roots
(images/screenshots/cache, resolved symlink-safe) so an authed caller can't
read image-extension files anywhere on disk.
Desktop (apps/desktop):
- syncImageAttachmentsForSubmit uploads bytes via image.attach_bytes when the
connection mode is 'remote'; the local fast path is unchanged.
- media.ts gains isRemoteGateway() + gatewayMediaDataUrl(); directive-text and
markdown-text fetch images over /api/media in remote mode.
Consolidates the competing remote-media PRs (#38876, #40317, #21908, #39437)
into one coherent implementation, taking the strongest parts of each and adding
shared-helper cleanup plus the /api/media root-confinement hardening on top.
The per-profile gateway switching from #38876 is intentionally left out as a
separable feature. TUI file uploads (#40492) remain a separate surface.
Tested: 11 new tui_gateway tests + 5 /api/media endpoint tests + desktop
media.remote unit tests; full tui_gateway + web_server suites green (472
passed); tsc -b clean; E2E verified the full attach→disk→queue and
gateway-path→data-URL display round-trip plus the out-of-root security block.
Co-authored-by: Max Mitcham <maxmitcham@mac.home>
Co-authored-by: Justlrnal4 <Justlrnal4@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Cook <ccook@nvms.com>
Co-authored-by: Thomas Paquette <thomas.paquette@gmail.com>
* feat(desktop): surface TTS/STT/terminal backends as Settings dropdowns
Every native tool backend that the agent supports now shows up as a
clickable picker in the desktop Settings UI instead of a free-text box.
Desktop Settings renders a config field as a <Select> only if its dotpath
is a key in ENUM_OPTIONS (helpers.ts::enumOptionsFor returns undefined ->
free-text <Input> otherwise). Three backend-selector fields were surfaced
in their sections but missing from the map, so users had to hand-type the
provider name and could reasonably assume it was unsupported:
- tts.provider — now lists all built-in TTS backends incl. xai (Grok)
- stt.provider — local/groq/openai/mistral/elevenlabs
- terminal.backend — local/docker/singularity/modal/daytona/ssh
Each list is kept in sync with its backend source of truth (TTS:
agent/tts_registry.py::_BUILTIN_NAMES + tools/tts_tool.py; STT + terminal:
hermes_cli/config.py / tools/terminal_tool.py). The existing
enumOptionsFor current-value-append keeps any hand-typed/legacy value
selected, and command-type TTS providers still work.
Reported for Grok/xAI TTS, which was already a fully-wired built-in
provider (tts.provider: xai + XAI_API_KEY) with no picker entry.
* feat(desktop): expose per-backend TTS/STT/terminal config fields in Settings
Completes the backend-coverage pass: not just the provider PICKER but every
backend's own config fields are now tunable from desktop Settings, so a user
who picks (e.g.) Grok TTS can also set its voice/language without hand-editing
config.yaml.
Also fixes the STT provider dropdown: added 'xai' (Grok STT), which the
transcription dispatcher (tools/transcription_tools.py) handles but the
config.py comment had omitted — the dispatch ladder is the source of truth.
New Settings fields (Voice section):
- TTS xai (voice_id, language), minimax (model, voice_id), mistral
(model, voice_id), gemini (model, voice), neutts (model, device),
kittentts (model, voice), piper (voice)
- STT openai (model), groq (model), mistral (model)
New Settings fields (Advanced section):
- terminal docker_image / singularity_image / modal_image / daytona_image
New ENUM_OPTIONS dropdowns: stt.provider (+xai), stt.openai.model,
stt.mistral.model, tts.openai.model, tts.elevenlabs.model_id,
tts.neutts.device. Each list mirrors the backend generator's accepted values
(tools/tts_tool.py, tools/transcription_tools.py, hermes_cli/config.py).
i18n: FIELD_LABELS/FIELD_DESCRIPTIONS cover all locales via the English
fallback in config-settings.tsx; added native translations to ja/zh/zh-hant.
Secrets (provider API keys, modal/daytona tokens, ssh host/key) intentionally
stay in Settings -> Keys as env vars, not duplicated as config fields.
The agent-facing cronjob tool scans the user prompt with _scan_cron_prompt()
before creating/updating a job (tools/cronjob_tools.py); the REST cron
endpoints (POST /api/jobs, PATCH /api/jobs/{id}) validated length but not
content. This adds the same scan to both handlers so an exfiltration/injection
prompt is rejected the same way regardless of which surface created the job.
NOT a security boundary, defense-in-depth / parity only: the REST cron
endpoints are authenticated (every handler runs _check_auth, and connect()
refuses to start without API_SERVER_KEY), and _scan_cron_prompt is a documented
in-process heuristic, not a containment boundary (SECURITY.md 3.2).
Raised externally via GHSA-fr3q-rjg3-x6mf (DNS-rebinding pre-auth RCE). The
report's load-bearing 'no auth by default' premise was already closed three
weeks after it was filed by the API_SERVER_KEY-required guard (commit
1a9ef8314); this lands the create/update prompt-validation parity the report
also pointed at. Scanner imported defensively so a missing scanner cannot
disable the cron REST API.
Follow-up on the deferred-cleanup salvage (#33774): _cleanup_workspace
returned early for a non-scratch ('dir'/'worktree') task and never ran the
parent sweep, so a scratch parent waiting on a 'dir' child would leak its
deferred workspace forever. Run the parent sweep before the early return.
Adds regression tests: deferred-while-child-active, swept-after-last-child,
and dir-child-unblocks-scratch-parent.
When a Kanban task with workspace_kind=scratch completes, the
_cleanup_workspace() function immediately deletes the workspace
directory. If the task has children linked via task_links, those
children find the workspace deleted when they start.
This fix adds two checks:
1. Before deleting, check if any children are still active
(todo/ready/running). If so, defer cleanup.
2. After a child completes, check if parent workspace can now
be cleaned up (all children terminal).
FixesNousResearch/hermes-agent#33774
* feat(onboarding): opt-in structured profile-build path on first contact
On a user's very first gateway message, Hermes now optionally offers to
build a short profile of them — then, only with consent, gathers durable
facts and persists them to the user-profile memory store (memory tool,
target="user") so future sessions start already knowing who they are.
Inspired by Poke's zero-input onboarding, but consent-first by design:
- The agent OFFERS, never assumes. Declining stops it immediately.
- Before ANY external lookup it states what it will look up and asks.
- It never reads connected accounts (email/calendar) silently — the
exact privacy concern that made naive implementations feel invasive.
Wiring reuses existing infrastructure end-to-end:
- gateway/run.py first-message hook (was a plain self-intro) now swaps in
the profile-build directive when enabled and not yet offered.
- agent/onboarding.py gains profile_build_mode()/profile_build_directive()
+ PROFILE_BUILD_FLAG, latched once via the existing onboarding.seen
mechanism so the offer fires at most once per install.
- config default onboarding.profile_build: "ask" (set "off" to disable).
Added to an existing section, so no _config_version bump needed.
No new storage layer, no new injection path, no prompt-cache impact.
* fix(dashboard): fold onboarding into agent tab to avoid 1-field category
onboarding.profile_build is the only schema-surfaced onboarding field
(onboarding.seen is an internal latch dict), so the dashboard CONFIG_SCHEMA
single-field-category invariant rejected it. Merge onboarding -> agent like
the other small categories.
Compaction summaries now receive the current date and instruct the
summarizer to rewrite completed actions as absolute, dated, past-tense
facts (e.g. "email John about the proposal" -> "Sent the proposal email
to John on 2026-06-07"). A resumed conversation no longer re-issues work
that already happened or treats a finished action as still pending.
The date is resolved via hermes_time.now() (date-only, user-configured
timezone) inside _generate_summary. The compaction summary is a
mid-conversation message that is never part of the cached prefix, so the
date does not affect prompt-cache stability. Date resolution is
best-effort: a clock failure omits the rule rather than blocking
compaction. The rule rides the shared template, so both first-compaction
and iterative-update prompts carry it.
Inspired by Poke's summarization (temporal anchoring + semantic
preservation).
Three gateway tests broke on main after the component-auth security
hardening (test_discord_component_auth.py) made empty Discord component
allowlists fail-closed: a view built with allowed_user_ids=set() now
rejects every click instead of allowing anyone.
The clarify and model-picker BEHAVIOR tests still constructed their views
with an empty allowlist and expected the click to succeed — a stale
assumption from before the hardening. Fixed by giving each view an
allowlist containing the clicking user (the interaction's own id), which
is the realistic shape and what the security model requires.
Production code unchanged — this only updates the test fixtures to match
the intended (and separately pinned) fail-closed contract. The security
regression suite and these behavior suites now both pass.
Fixes:
- test_discord_clarify_buttons.py: test_choice_falls_back_to_label_text_when_entry_missing, test_other_flips_entry_to_awaiting_text
- test_discord_model_picker.py: test_model_picker_clears_controls_before_running_switch_callback
Salvage of the Discord half of PR #30964 by @LaPhilosophie. Discord
component button callbacks (ExecApprovalView, SlashConfirmView,
UpdatePromptView, ModelPickerView) bypass the normal message dispatch
authorization path. _component_check_auth previously returned True when
both the user and role allowlists were empty, so any guild member who
could see an approval prompt could click Approve on a dangerous command.
Fail closed instead: require DISCORD_ALLOWED_USERS / DISCORD_ALLOWED_ROLES
/ GATEWAY_ALLOWED_USERS membership, or an explicit DISCORD_ALLOW_ALL_USERS
/ GATEWAY_ALLOW_ALL_USERS opt-in for deliberately-open deployments.
Mirrors the Telegram (#24457) and Matrix fail-closed precedent.
The Slack half of #30964 is superseded by PR #33844's helper.
Reported via GHSA-mc26-p6fw-7pp6 (@whyiug).
Co-authored-by: LaPhilosophie <804436395@qq.com>
A non-numeric value in env vars like HERMES_STREAM_RETRIES,
HERMES_KANBAN_SPECIFY_MAX_TOKENS, GOOGLE_CHAT_MAX_BYTES, IRC_PORT, etc.
raised ValueError at import/init and crashed startup. Parse them safely,
falling back to the default.
Unified onto the existing utils.env_int(key, default) helper for core/
hermes_cli/tools modules instead of the original PR's three duplicate
local helpers; plugins keep minimal inline guards (no core-utils import).
All existing max()/min()/`or extra.get()` wrappers preserved.
Co-authored-by: annguyenNous <annguyenNous@users.noreply.github.com>
hermes doctor and hermes honcho status warned 'Honcho config not found'
whenever ~/.honcho/config.json was absent, even though HONCHO_API_KEY in
.env resolves a working config via HonchoClientConfig.from_global_config()
-> from_env(). Both now check hcfg.api_key/base_url before warning.
Co-authored-by: oxngon <98992931+oxngon@users.noreply.github.com>
## What does this PR do?
The trajectory compressor could corrupt training trajectories by cutting a
conversation in the middle of a tool-call/tool-response pair. In the from/value
trajectory format a `tool` turn (carrying `<tool_response>` markers) is always
emitted immediately after the `gpt` turn whose `<tool_call>` it answers, so the
two turns must stay together. The compressible region's end boundary, however,
was chosen purely by token accumulation: the loop stopped at the first turn where
the accumulated tokens met the savings target, with no regard for turn roles. For
any over-budget trajectory whose savings boundary happened to land between a `gpt`
turn and its `tool` turn, the `gpt` (with its `<tool_call>`) was summarised away
into the replacement `human` message while the now-orphaned `tool` turn (with its
`<tool_response>`) was kept verbatim in the tail — producing an unmatched marker
and silently corrupting the training signal. The head boundary had the mirror
problem when the first tool turn was not protected.
This change snaps both compression boundaries to a clean turn boundary before the
region is extracted and replaced, so the summary always covers whole gpt+tool
blocks and a `tool` turn is never separated from the `gpt` turn that precedes it.
The boundary is moved forward when possible (folding an orphaned tool turn into
the region that already holds its gpt) and falls back to moving backward when no
clean boundary exists ahead, such as when the protected tail itself begins on a
tool turn.
## Related Issue
N/A
## Type of Change
- [x] 🐛 Bug fix (non-breaking change that fixes an issue)
## Changes Made
- `trajectory_compressor.py`: added `_is_boundary_clean()` and `_snap_boundary()`
helpers on `TrajectoryCompressor`, and applied them to both the head and tail
compression boundaries in `compress_trajectory()` and
`compress_trajectory_async()`. When snapping collapses the region to nothing
safe to compress, the trajectory is returned unchanged and flagged as still
over the limit rather than being corrupted.
- `tests/test_trajectory_compressor.py`: added `TestCompressionToolPairIntegrity`
covering the sync and async paths plus direct unit tests for the boundary
snapping (forward skip and backward fallback).
## How to Test
1. Run the focused tests: `pytest tests/test_trajectory_compressor.py -q`.
2. The new sync/async cases build a trajectory of gpt/tool pairs with an oversized
middle gpt turn and choose a token target that forces the accumulation
boundary to stop between a `<tool_call>` and its `<tool_response>`. They assert
that `<tool_call>` and `<tool_response>` markers stay balanced after
compression and that every kept `tool` turn is immediately preceded by a `gpt`
turn (never the inserted summary or another tool turn).
## Checklist
### Code
- [x] I've read the [Contributing Guide](https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md)
- [x] My commit messages follow [Conventional Commits](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/) (`fix(scope):`, `feat(scope):`, etc.)
- [x] I searched for [existing PRs](https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent/pulls) to make sure this isn't a duplicate
- [x] My PR contains **only** changes related to this fix/feature (no unrelated commits)
- [x] I've run `pytest tests/ -q` and all tests pass
- [x] I've added tests for my changes (required for bug fixes, strongly encouraged for features)
- [x] I've tested on my platform: macOS 15 (Darwin 25.5)
### Documentation & Housekeeping
- [x] I've updated relevant documentation (README, `docs/`, docstrings) — or N/A
- [x] I've updated `cli-config.yaml.example` if I added/changed config keys — or N/A
- [x] I've updated `CONTRIBUTING.md` or `AGENTS.md` if I changed architecture or workflows — or N/A
- [x] I've considered cross-platform impact (Windows, macOS) per the [compatibility guide](https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md#cross-platform-compatibility) — or N/A
- [x] I've updated tool descriptions/schemas if I changed tool behavior — or N/A
SIMPLEX_ALLOWED_USERS silently denied every contact when operators
listed display names instead of numeric contactIds. The SimpleX UI
never surfaces the numeric id, so display names are what operators
naturally put in the env var. _is_user_authorized only compared
source.user_id (the contactId), so the allowlist never matched.
Expand check_ids to include source.user_name for the simplex platform,
mirroring the existing WhatsApp phone-LID aliasing pattern. Adds doc +
setup-prompt clarification and three regression tests.
Salvaged from PR #40393. Adds manishbyatroy to release.py AUTHOR_MAP.
The desktop statusbar turn timer read a single process-global $turnStartedAt,
set/cleared only for the active session. With multiple same-profile sessions
running at once, switching to session B reset the one shared clock, so
session A's still-running turn "restarted from zero" the moment you left it —
exactly the behaviour @Da7_Tech reported after the profile-scoped session work.
Move turnStartedAt onto ClientSessionState so each session owns its own turn
clock. The global atom now just mirrors whichever session is focused, written
on view-sync (the flush that already stages the active session's state). A
backgrounded turn keeps counting in its own cache entry, and focusing it
restores its real elapsed time instead of zeroing it.
Set/clear sites: message.start (seed), message.complete + error + interrupted
bail (clear), and the session.info running-state path (seed if missing / clear
on stop) so a turn that goes busy via session.info — e.g. resuming a session
that's already running — also gets a clock.
Note: the agent loop itself never froze — every same-profile session runs in
its own backend thread and background deltas are buffered per-session. This
fixes the timer-reset symptom; the "no live progress until you return" is
inherent to a single-view transcript and is out of scope here.
DANGEROUS_PATTERNS and HARDLINE_PATTERNS are matched on the raw command string,
so backslash-escape (r\m) and empty-quote split (r''m) bypass both lists.
_normalize_command_for_detection now strips these before pattern matching.
tui_gateway shell.exec had a bare 'except ImportError: pass' that silently
disabled the entire safety gate if tools.approval wasn't importable. Changed
to fail-closed (return 5001 error). Added detect_hardline_command check.
Fixes#36846, #36847.