Commit graph

3 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ben
cae6b5486f feat(dashboard): always enable embedded chat; remove dashboard --tui flag
The dashboard's embedded Chat surface (/chat, /api/ws, /api/pty) was gated
behind `hermes dashboard --tui` / HERMES_DASHBOARD_TUI=1. The desktop app and
the dashboard's own Chat tab both drive the agent over the /api/ws + /api/pty
WebSockets, so a dashboard started without the flag would pass the /api/status
health check but slam the chat WebSocket shut with WS code 4403 — the app
connects, reports "ready", and chat stays dead. This was the root cause behind
multiple user reports of the desktop app failing to connect to a self-hosted
gateway/dashboard, and it bit Docker and host installs alike.

Make the embedded chat unconditional:

- web_server.py: _DASHBOARD_EMBEDDED_CHAT_ENABLED defaults to True; drop the
  embedded_chat parameter and the runtime reassignment from start_server().
  The WS gates still read the constant (now always true) so the seam — and its
  "rejects when disabled" contract test — stays meaningful.
- main.py: remove the `--tui` argument from the dashboard subparser and the
  `embedded_chat = args.tui or HERMES_DASHBOARD_TUI==1` derivation.
- web/: isDashboardEmbeddedChatEnabled() returns true unconditionally; drop the
  deprecated __HERMES_DASHBOARD_TUI__ alias and the dead LEGACY_TUI_RE scrape in
  the vite dev-token plugin.
- apps/desktop/electron/main.cjs: drop `--tui` from the spawned dashboardArgs
  (it would now error with "unrecognized arguments: --tui") and the redundant
  HERMES_DASHBOARD_TUI env injection.
- Docker: no s6 run-script change needed — the script never passed --tui; the
  HERMES_DASHBOARD_TUI env var is now simply a no-op, so the image works out of
  the box with no extra var.
- Docs: remove every dashboard --tui / HERMES_DASHBOARD_TUI reference across the
  CLI reference, env-var reference, docker/desktop/web-dashboard guides, in-app
  tips, and the zh-Hans translations. The terminal `hermes --tui` / HERMES_TUI
  references are intentionally left untouched.

Tests: 270 passing across web_server, dashboard lifecycle, host-header,
auth-gate, and docker-override-scripts suites.
2026-06-04 03:03:35 -07:00
kshitijk4poor
66827f8947 chore: prune unused imports and duplicate import redefinitions
Remove unused imports (F401) and duplicate/shadowed import
redefinitions (F811) across the codebase using ruff's safe
autofixes. No behavioral changes -- imports only.

- ~1400 safe autofixes applied across 644 files (net -1072 lines)
- __init__.py re-exports preserved (excluded from F401 removal so
  public re-export surfaces stay intact)
- Re-exports that are imported or monkeypatched by tests but look
  unused in their defining module are kept with explicit # noqa:
  F401 (gateway/run.py load_dotenv; run_agent re-exports from
  agent.message_sanitization, agent.context_compressor,
  agent.retry_utils, agent.prompt_builder, agent.process_bootstrap,
  agent.codex_responses_adapter)
- Unsafe F841 (unused-variable) fixes deliberately skipped -- those
  can change behavior when the RHS has side effects
- ruff lints remain disabled in pyproject.toml (only PLW1514 is
  selected); this is a one-time cleanup, not a config change

Verification:
- python -m compileall: clean
- pytest --collect-only: all 27161 tests collect (zero import errors)
- core entry points import clean (run_agent, model_tools, cli,
  toolsets, hermes_state, batch_runner, gateway)
- static scan: every name any test imports directly from an edited
  module still resolves
2026-05-28 22:26:25 -07:00
Teknium
0ad4f55aa8
feat(dashboard): add --stop and --status flags (#17840)
`hermes dashboard` is a long-lived foreground server that users often
start and forget about, sometimes in a shell they've since closed.  We
didn't have a way to stop it — users had to find the PID manually.

Adds two lifecycle flags that reuse the same detection + termination
path the post-`hermes update` cleanup (PR #17832) uses:

  hermes dashboard --status
    List running hermes dashboard processes with PID + cmdline.
    Exit 0, informational.

  hermes dashboard --stop
    Terminate all running dashboards (3s grace then force-kill survivors).
    Exit 0 if none remain, 1 if any couldn't be stopped.
    Windows uses `taskkill /F` as before.

Both flags short-circuit before any fastapi/uvicorn import so they work
even on installations where the dashboard extras aren't installed —
useful when you're cleaning up after uninstalling.

The kill helper gained an optional `reason=...` param so the output
reads "(requested via --stop)" instead of the post-update-specific
"running backend no longer matches the updated frontend" wording.

E2E: `hermes dashboard --status` with nothing running prints the
empty message; with a fake `hermes dashboard ...` cmdline spawned via
`exec -a`, `--status` lists it, `--stop` terminates it (exit -15),
and a follow-up `--status` returns empty.
2026-04-30 02:30:20 -07:00