Drop the Responses-API native compaction path and its opt-in umbrella
flag from the salvaged feature. On the Codex OAuth chat route Hermes
owns the message list and the summary compressor works (and stays
provider-portable — encrypted compaction items would lock the session
history to chatgpt.com and break /model switches and provider
fallback). On the app-server runtime (codex CLI/agent) the codex agent
owns the real thread context, so thread/compact/start is the only
mechanism that can actually shrink it (#36801) — that path is now the
default behavior for codex_app_server sessions, controlled by
compression.codex_app_server_auto (native|hermes|off), no umbrella
flag.
Removed: responses.compact() call path, codex_compaction_items replay/
persistence plumbing, codex_native_compaction + codex_responses_threshold
config keys, desktop settings fields, and their tests. Kept: everything
app-server (compact_thread(), compaction notifications, bookkeeping,
docs, tests) plus cache-busting keys for the surviving knobs.
Port from openclaw/openclaw#91950: normalize LLM-generated URLs like 'https:// docs.example' before web tool safety checks while preserving path and query encoding semantics.
* fix: cool down transient Telegram typing failures
Port from openclaw/openclaw#93020: add per-chat cooldown for transient sendChatAction failures so keep-typing refreshes do not hammer Telegram during network blips or rate limits.
* fix: support bare Telegram adapters in typing cooldown
* test: update typing backoff imports for relocated Telegram adapter
The Telegram adapter moved from gateway/platforms/telegram.py to
plugins/platforms/telegram/adapter.py since this branch was created;
point the test imports and monkeypatch targets at the new module.
--safe-mode promised to disable ALL customizations, but shell hooks
declared in config.yaml's hooks: block registered anyway —
register_from_config() runs independently of plugin discovery and
load_config() does not honor HERMES_IGNORE_USER_CONFIG. Gate it on
HERMES_SAFE_MODE at the single chokepoint so troubleshooting runs fire
zero user-configured code (plugins, MCP, and hooks).
Docs (en + zh) updated; positive + negative tests added.
The salvaged fix added a post-worker _interrupt_requested re-check to the
main OpenAI/Anthropic streaming poll loop. The Bedrock Converse poll loop
(interruptible_streaming_api_call, api_mode='bedrock_converse') has the same
bug class: its worker calls stream_converse_with_callbacks(on_interrupt_check=
...), which breaks out of the event loop on interrupt and returns a PARTIAL
response WITHOUT raising (bedrock_adapter.py). The worker sets result[
'response'] and exits with _interrupt_requested still True, so the in-loop
raise never fires and the poll loop returns the partial — silently swallowing
/stop on Bedrock exactly as it was on the paths the salvaged commit fixed.
Add the identical post-worker re-check before the Bedrock loop's return.
The non-streaming loop (interruptible_api_call) is structurally immune: its
worker's only early return fires off _request_cancelled, which is set by the
main loop immediately before it raises in-loop, so no swallow window exists.
Guard test flips _interrupt_requested True mid-stream (after the pre-flight
check) and asserts InterruptedError is raised; verified RED without the fix
(DID NOT RAISE) and GREEN with it.
The provider-mismatch guard now checks pool_provider and
current_provider != pool_provider. MagicMock.provider returns
a truthy child mock by default, which would trigger the guard
and skip the pool recovery tests. Set pool.provider='' explicitly.
Review findings: (a) an absolute path outside trusted roots passes
through unchanged and gets rejected downstream by skill_view — add a
debug log at the pass-through so the cron 'skill not found' symptom is
diagnosable next time; (b) test_relative_path_unchanged patched
get_skills_dir although the relative branch early-returns before any
root lookup — drop the misleading patch.
The extracted normalize_skill_lookup_name() resolved trusted roots via
agent.skill_utils.get_skills_dir(), but skill_view() enforces
tools.skills_tool.SKILLS_DIR — a separate module attribute that callers
and 60+ existing tests patch directly. With the helper reading a
different symbol than the enforcer, any SKILLS_DIR patch (or future
divergence between the two resolvers) makes normalization disagree with
enforcement and absolute-path loads regress silently. Read SKILLS_DIR at
call time (deferred import, cycle-safe) with get_skills_dir() as the
fallback, and align the new tests to patch the enforced symbol.
Follow-up to the salvage of #59829 by @HexLab98.
Add unit tests for normalize_skill_lookup_name and a cron scheduler
regression that absolute paths under the skills dir reach skill_view as
relative lookups.
Port from nearai/ironclaw#4547: treat a JSON null memory target as omitted so strict providers that fill optional fields with null use the documented default target instead of failing validation.
Deleting the matched user message breaks the strict role-alternation
invariant on the exact incident tail this fix targets — user(confirm) →
assistant('OK, restarting') becomes two consecutive assistant messages,
which strict providers reject and which the alternation-repair passes
upstream don't cover. Replace the message content with an explicit
'confirmation EXPIRED, re-confirm before any destructive action'
sentinel instead: the trigger text is still neutralized, the model gets
an affirmative instruction not to act, and the message sequence stays
valid. Adds an alternation-preservation regression test.
Follow-up to the salvage of #59640 by @knoal.
When a high-risk side effect (e.g. host restart via shutdown.exe) runs,
the user's plain-text confirmation phrase is persisted in the conversation
transcript. If the host restart killed the gateway process before the
assistant's tool result was written, the transcript tail ends on the
assistant's text response - and the dangerous confirmation text remains
in the user role.
On the next inbound message - possibly a casual 'are you there?' from
the user minutes later - the LLM sees the stale confirmation and may
interpret the new turn as a fresh re-confirmation, re-executing the
destructive action. This is the failure mode reported in #59607.
Fix:
- Add strip_stale_dangerous_confirmations() in agent/replay_cleanup.py
that removes user messages whose content matches a known dangerous
confirmation pattern AND whose timestamp is older than 60 seconds.
- Add is_dangerous_confirmation() helper with the matched patterns
(i18n-aware: covers 確認強制重開機 from the original incident).
- Wire the stripper into _build_gateway_agent_history() right after the
existing 75ed07ace strippers, so the strip chain is:
strip_interrupted_tool_tails -> strip_dangling_tool_call_tail ->
strip_stale_dangerous_confirmations.
- Update _build_replay_entry() to preserve the timestamp on user
messages (it was previously dropped), since the new stripper needs it.
Complements 75ed07ace (which strips the assistant side of the broken
tail) by handling the user side: a stale plain-text confirmation that
the assistant has not yet responded to in a way the resume logic
recognises.
Failing-test-first discipline: the bug-detection test
test_stale_confirmation_text_is_stripped_on_resume fails on unfixed
code (proves the test catches the bug) and passes after the fix.
Five additional safety tests confirm no regression on:
- fresh confirmations (within expiry) are preserved
- non-confirmation text is preserved
- non-matching histories are untouched
- dangerous-pattern detection works in all cases (case, i18n, None)
- direct unit test of the strip helper
Refs: #59607
The repair UPDATE ('SET active = 1 WHERE active IS NULL') was gated at
schema_version < 12, so already-v12+ databases — the exact population hit
by #51646, where the reconciler-added active column lacks its NOT NULL
DEFAULT 1 — never healed rows written as NULL by the pre-fix INSERTs.
Move the idempotent repair into unconditional startup so historical
gateway transcripts become visible again after upgrading.
Follow-up to the salvage of #59832 by @HexLab98.
* fix(gateway): use process-level HERMES_HOME for identity files
Gateway identity files (PID, lock, runtime status, takeover/stop markers)
were written via get_hermes_home() which honours the _HERMES_HOME_OVERRIDE
contextvar used for per-session profile dispatch. When a profile-context
task happened to be active at write time, files landed in the wrong profile
directory.
Add _get_process_hermes_home() that skips the contextvar and uses only the
HERMES_HOME env var or platform default, and route all gateway identity file
paths through it.
Fixes#56986
* chore(release): map liuhao1024 author email for PR #56993 salvage
---------
Co-authored-by: liuhao1024 <sunsky.lau@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ben <ben@nousresearch.com>
* fix(dashboard): use loopback host for in-container WebSocket client (#58993)
Fixes#58993 - the in-container Dashboard's WebSocket client was dialing
the bind host (0.0.0.0) instead of 127.0.0.1, hijacking the host browser
when the container port was exposed.
* `hermes_cli/web_server.py::resolve_dashboard_ws_url()` now substitutes
127.0.0.1 for any 0.0.0.0 bind host discovered via the existing
`find_unused_port` / `get_listen_address` path. LAN IPs and explicit
`DASHBOARD_WS_HOST` overrides pass through unchanged.
* Existing tests preserved (no regression on the explicit-bind case).
Tests in `tests/dashboard/test_ws_client_host.py` cover:
- Bind host 0.0.0.0 → ws URL uses 127.0.0.1
- Bind host 127.0.0.1 → ws URL uses 127.0.0.1 (no regression)
- Bind host 192.168.1.5 → ws URL preserves the LAN IP
- DASHBOARD_WS_HOST env override wins over auto-detection
AI-assisted fix by https://github.com/SquabbyZ/peaks-loop
(cherry picked from commit 5501dd38d6)
* chore(release): map SquabbyZ email for AUTHOR_MAP attribution (#59682)
---------
Co-authored-by: SquabbyZ <601709253@qq.com>
* fix(auth): resolve Anthropic OAuth file per-profile + close port-binding platform gaps
Two focused pieces salvaged from PR #57563:
1. _HERMES_OAUTH_FILE was computed at module import time — frozen before
HERMES_HOME/profile overrides, so multiplexed profile turns read and
wrote the DEFAULT profile's .anthropic_oauth.json (OAuth path hijack).
Replaced with a lazy _get_hermes_oauth_file(); all web_server.py call
sites updated.
2. _PORT_BINDING_PLATFORM_VALUES was missing whatsapp_cloud and line —
both bind aiohttp TCP listeners, so a secondary multiplex profile
enabling them would collide with the primary's listener instead of
failing fast at startup.
Original work by @austinlaw076. The rest of #57563 was redundant on
main (adapter routing sweep superseded by #56854's salvage; cron secret
scope landed in fdab380a1; nested-config fallback in from_dict).
* chore(release): map austinlaw076 author email for PR #57563 salvage
* test(hermes_cli): patch _get_hermes_oauth_file instead of removed _HERMES_OAUTH_FILE constant
---------
Co-authored-by: Austin <austin@openvm067.space>
Co-authored-by: Ben <ben@nousresearch.com>
* fix(gateway): per-profile pairing whitelist isolation for multiplex gateways
Pairing approvals are stored per profile (profiles/<name>/pairing/) and
authz routes pairing checks through the serving profile's store, so one
profile's approved users no longer authorize against every other
profile's whitelist in multiplex mode.
The global store remains for the hermes pairing CLI and single-profile
gateways; unregistered/unstamped sources fall back to it, preserving
existing behavior.
Salvaged from PR #53045 (pairing half). The SOUL.md half was dropped:
the agent turn already runs inside _profile_runtime_scope on main, so
load_soul_md() resolves per-profile without changes.
Original work by @soddy022.
* ci: redispatch after arm64 docker dashboard-slot flake (unrelated to this PR)
---------
Co-authored-by: soddy022 <290613374+soddy022@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix(gateway): scope reset banners' session info to the serving profile
The auto-reset notice and the manual /reset //new banner both appended
_format_session_info() outside any profile scope, so a multiplexed
gateway advertised the base config's model/provider/context while the
session actually ran on the profile's.
Route both call sites through a new _reset_notice_session_info(source),
which enters _profile_runtime_scope for the source's profile when
gateway.multiplex_profiles is on (mirroring _run_agent's gating), so
_load_gateway_config()/_resolve_gateway_model() resolve the profile's
config.yaml via the existing context-local home override. Single-profile
gateways never enter the scope — behavior unchanged.
Both call sites invoke the helper via asyncio.to_thread: under the
scope, resolution can do blocking work (credential refresh,
context-length HTTP probes) that previously failed fast unscoped and
must not run on the event loop.
Fixes#59003
Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
* chore(release): map irresi author email for PR #59048 salvage
---------
Co-authored-by: irresi <blueirobin02@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
A hosted agent whose Nous bootstrap session dies terminally (invalid_grant /
quarantine) looks HEALTHY to every liveness/connectivity probe — the machine,
relay ws, and dashboard all stay up — yet every inference turn hard-fails with
a provider-auth error until a human re-logs-in. Nothing currently surfaces that
condition to NAS.
Add get_nous_session_validity() (valid|terminal|unknown), classified from local
auth-store state (no working token required), and report it on the public
/api/status payload. NAS's 2-min health sweep reads it and re-mints the
bootstrap session in place on 'terminal'.
Anti-flap: only a terminal failure (relogin_required / persisted quarantine
marker with tokens cleared) maps to 'terminal'; transient/mid-rotation blips and
merely-expiring tokens report 'unknown' so a healthy box never triggers a
spurious re-mint.
Part of the hosted-agent bootstrap-session self-heal (NAS side reads this field).
The test_module_resolves_to_this_worktree guard asserted auth.__file__ contained
'worktrees/bootstrap-h2-logging' — a local dev crutch to defeat the editable-
install trap (venv points at the main checkout). In CI the code lives at
/home/runner/work/... so the assertion always fails. It never belonged in the
committed suite; the 5 behavioural tests are what matter.
A NAS-hosted Fly agent's Nous bootstrap session can take a terminal
invalid_grant and get quarantined in _quarantine_nous_oauth_state, which
clears the dead tokens from auth.json. Until now this quarantine was
completely silent: the only signal was a downstream "No access token found"
WARNING once the credential pool was already empty, which is too late to
root-cause. Because the Fly log drain is WARNING-only, nothing about the
terminal death reached centralized logging, and a real incident could not be
diagnosed because the evidence was never recorded.
Emit a WARNING+ forensic record AT the quarantine point, before the token
material is cleared. Fields: refresh_token hash prefix (12-char SHA-256 hex,
correlates to NAS's refreshTokenHash), client_id, agent_key_id, error code,
reason, auth.json path/size/mtime/exists, and whether the token was already
past its own expiry. WARNING level is deliberate — INFO never reaches the Fly
drain.
Redaction safety (load-bearing): the log dict is built only from computed
values (hash prefix, sizes, booleans). No raw refresh_token, access_token, or
agent_key bytes are ever passed into the log call, avoiding Hermes's known
credential-literal corruption bug class. A test asserts the raw refresh token
substring is absent from all emitted log output.
Note: no session_id field exists on Nous auth state; provenance is captured
via client_id + agent_key_id, which are non-secret routing identifiers.
The stage2-hook auth.json seed is first-boot-only ([ ! -f auth.json ]) to avoid
clobbering rotated refresh tokens on restart. That guard means a container whose
Nous bootstrap session took a terminal invalid_grant (tokens cleared,
providers.nous.last_auth_error.relogin_required stamped) cannot recover from a
restart — it stays unauthenticated until the credential is replaced.
Add a self-heal path: an orchestrator that manages the container supplies a
freshly-issued session via HERMES_AUTH_JSON_REBOOTSTRAP (distinct from the
create-only *_BOOTSTRAP var). On boot, scripts/docker_rebootstrap_nous_session.py
swaps ONLY the providers.nous entry, and ONLY when the on-disk entry is provably
terminal (quarantine marker + no usable tokens). Healthy/rotating/absent/
unparseable auth.json is always a no-op, so the env is safe to leave set across
restarts and never clobbers a good token. Pure stdlib, runs as its own
subprocess, always exits 0 so a re-seed error never fails the boot.
Reuses the same terminal predicate as get_nous_session_validity() so we re-seed
only a session that is genuinely dead.
Follow-up hardening on the cherry-picked pool-fallback fix. The original
_resolve_codex_usage_credentials wrapped BOTH resolve_codex_runtime_credentials()
and the separate _read_codex_tokens() account_id read in one broad
'except Exception: pass', which had three problems:
1. A transient refresh/network failure (non-AuthError) from the resolver was
silently swallowed and downgraded to pool.select(), which could report
/usage limits for a DIFFERENT pool account than the one actually running.
On main that error surfaced. This is a real behavior regression for the
multi-account/pool case.
2. If the resolver succeeded but only the account_id read raised, the whole
singleton tier was abandoned in favor of a pool token that carries no
ChatGPT-Account-Id header (PooledCredential has no account_id concept),
risking a wrong-account read or 401.
3. 'except Exception' masked genuine programming errors.
Fix: narrow the outer catch to AuthError (the documented 'no creds' failure
mode of both functions), and read account_id in a best-effort inner try so a
partial/missing singleton store can't sink an otherwise-usable credential.
Transient errors now propagate and fail open via the outer fetch_account_usage
guard rather than mis-routing to the wrong account. Adds debug breadcrumbs and
a comment characterizing when the tier-3 pool path actually fires.
Guard tests: a non-AuthError resolver failure must NOT swap to the pool
(fail-open, no snapshot); an account_id read failure keeps the singleton token.
Updated the existing pool-fallback test to use AuthError (the real failure
mode) instead of a generic RuntimeError.
Follow-up on the salvage of #59523. Two low-risk cleanups surfaced by review:
- Extract _ZAI_CODING_OVERLOAD_SHORT_ATTEMPTS as a module constant so
adaptive_rate_limit_backoff() and zai_coding_overload_retry_ceiling()
share one source of truth. Previously both hardcoded short_attempts=3
independently; tuning one without the other would silently desync the
retry ceiling from the backoff schedule.
- Replace the tautological formula-mirroring assert in
test_zai_overload_retry_ceiling_exceeds_short_attempts with a behavior
invariant (ceiling leaves headroom for every long-backoff entry), per the
repo's contracts-over-snapshots testing rule.
Assert the invariant that the Z.AI overload retry ceiling exceeds the
short-retry threshold (the original bug had them equal, so the long tier
was dead code), and walk the attempt range the retry loop actually
traverses to prove the full 30/60/90/120s long-backoff schedule now runs.
A fallback candidate can itself carry a stale credential (e.g. an
expired ANTHROPIC_TOKEN picked up by _try_anthropic). Its 401 previously
propagated out of the fallback call site and aborted the auxiliary task
— for compression: a 60s cooldown + context marker while the session
kept growing past the context cap. Live case: mattalachia debug dump
(Jul 2026), Codex timeout → Anthropic 401 x5 → 296K 'Cannot compress
further'.
Now each fallback candidate call is wrapped: on auth error, refresh the
candidate's provider credentials and retry once; if unrefreshable, mark
the provider unhealthy and walk the discovery chain again so the next
viable candidate serves. Sync + async paths. Non-auth errors still
raise unchanged.
Infer the concrete auxiliary auth provider from the selected client base
URL so provider:auto routes can refresh Copilot/Codex/Anthropic/Nous
credentials after auth errors, instead of skipping refresh because
resolved_provider stayed 'auto'. Adds the copilot branch to
_refresh_provider_credentials and evicts the stale auto-route cache
before retrying.
Fixes#20832. Salvaged from PR #20837, reapplied surgically onto current
main (branch predated the _retry_same_provider_sync/async extraction).
The -m flag seeds HERMES_MODEL/HERMES_INFERENCE_MODEL for the launched TUI
process only. But the per-turn config sync (_sync_agent_model_with_config)
computed its target via _config_model_target(), which fell back to those
env vars whenever config.yaml had no model.default — the normal state for
custom-provider-only setups. The sync then replayed the -m model as a
/model switch, and with model.persist_switch_by_default (default true)
_persist_model_switch wrote model.default/provider/base_url into
config.yaml. A one-shot CLI flag became the permanent global model,
visible in every new session and every model picker.
Two-sided fix:
- _config_model_target() no longer falls back to the env seed. Empty
model = config expresses no preference = sync is a no-op. The agent
keeps the session-scoped -m model; config.yaml edits still sync.
- _apply_model_switch() gains persist_override; all three internal
callers (config sync, /moa one-shot swap, /moa post-turn restore) pass
persist_override=False so session-mechanical switches can never write
config.yaml regardless of the persist-by-default setting. User-typed
/model keeps its existing flag/config behavior.
E2E-verified against an isolated HERMES_HOME with a custom-provider-only
config + -m env seed: sync no longer fires, config.yaml byte-identical,
_resolve_model() still returns the seed for the session's own agent.
When context.engine selects a plugin engine (e.g. LCM), the host
compression threshold — including the Codex gpt-5.5 50% -> 85%
autoraise — only configures the built-in ContextCompressor and never
reaches the plugin. The autoraise notice still fired, telling the user
auto-compaction was raised when nothing actually changed, and the
startup context-limit line printed the host percent next to the
engine's own threshold_tokens, contradicting itself.
- Clear _compression_threshold_autoraised when a plugin engine is
selected, suppressing both the CLI startup notice and the gateway
turn-1 replay via _compression_warning.
- Print the active engine's own threshold_percent in the startup
context-limit line so percent and token count agree.
- Built-in behavior is preserved, including the fallback path where a
configured engine fails to load and the built-in compressor takes
over.
Fixes#44439
The Codex gpt-5.5 compaction-threshold autoraise notice re-fired on every
agent init. Because the gateway rebuilds the agent per inbound message, the
notice spammed long-running Discord/Telegram/etc. sessions, and the only
documented remedy (`compression.codex_gpt55_autoraise false`) disables the
useful autoraise behavior itself.
Gate both emission surfaces — the CLI startup print and the gateway
`_compression_warning` replay — on a persisted per-profile marker under
`$HERMES_HOME` (`.codex_gpt55_autoraise_notice`), keyed on the from→to
percentages the notice displays. The notice now shows at most once per
profile; the autoraise still fires and `codex_gpt55_autoraise: false` still
disables it; and a later change to the raised threshold re-notifies once.
Docs updated to match.
The Codex gpt-5.5 compaction autoraise (#40957) overrode the effective
threshold unconditionally. If a user had set compression.threshold above
0.85, agent_init dropped them down to 0.85. That wastes usable window and
contradicts the feature's whole point: use more of the context, not less.
It happened silently too, since the one-time notice is suppressed when the
override doesn't raise.
The override is an autoraise. It must only raise. Pulled the apply logic
into a small pure helper that clamps the Codex case to never lower a
higher-or-equal user threshold, and emits the notice only when it actually
fires. Other overrides (Arcee Trinity) keep their existing unconditional
behavior.
Fixes the Codex gpt-5.5 compaction autoraise lowering a user's higher
configured threshold. A user on the Codex OAuth route with
compression.threshold > 0.85 was silently clamped to 0.85, compacting
earlier than they asked and using less of the 272K window the feature was
meant to unlock. The autoraise now only ever raises.
N/A
- [x] 🐛 Bug fix (non-breaking change that fixes an issue)
- [ ] ✨ New feature (non-breaking change that adds functionality)
- [ ] 🔒 Security fix
- [ ] 📝 Documentation update
- [ ] ✅ Tests (adding or improving test coverage)
- [ ] ♻️ Refactor (no behavior change)
- [ ] 🎯 New skill (bundled or hub)
- `agent/agent_init.py`: added `_resolve_compression_threshold()`, a pure
helper that combines the global threshold with a per-model override. The
Codex gpt-5.5 autoraise never lowers a higher-or-equal user threshold;
the notice is returned only when it actually raises. Rewired `init_agent`
to call it, replacing the unconditional `compression_threshold = _model_cthresh`.
- `tests/agent/test_arcee_trinity_overrides.py`: added 5 cases for the
helper — raise from default, never-lower regression, equal-is-noop,
no-override passthrough, and non-codex (Trinity) unconditional apply.
1. Set `compression.threshold: 0.90` and run gpt-5.5 on provider `openai-codex`.
2. Before: effective threshold drops to 0.85, no notice. After: stays 0.90.
3. Run `scripts/run_tests.sh tests/agent/test_arcee_trinity_overrides.py`.
Stash `agent/agent_init.py` and the new cases fail; restore and they pass.
- [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)
- [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
gpt-5.3-codex-spark has a native 128K context window but the default
50% compaction trigger fires at ~64K, wasting half the usable window
before the session has accumulated enough turns to summarize
meaningfully. This raises the trigger to 70% (~90K) on the Codex OAuth
route only, leaving ~38K headroom for the summary and continued
conversation before the 128K hard limit.
The override is not gated by allow_codex_gpt55_autoraise because 128K
is the model's native window (unlike gpt-5.5's artificial 272K Codex
cap). Non-Codex routes are unaffected.
Also adds a boundary regression test verifying the short-session
scenario from the issue always yields a non-empty compressible window
(no silent context wipe).
The ChatGPT Codex OAuth backend caps both gpt-5.4 and gpt-5.5 at a 272K
context window, but the autoraise that lifts the compaction trigger to 85%
only matched gpt-5.5. On gpt-5.4 the global 50% threshold fired at ~136K —
half the usable window — compacting far earlier than necessary.
Rename _is_codex_gpt55 -> _is_codex_gpt54_or_gpt55 and match both families.
The one-time user notice is now model-aware (shows the actual slug). The
config key codex_gpt55_autoraise is kept as-is for backward compatibility.
Adds gpt-5.4 coverage to the autoraise tests.
Surfaces the usage_report()/provenance() data layer added in #36701 as a
user-facing CLI command. Unlike `hermes curator status` (scoped to
curator-managed agent-created candidates), `usage` lists every skill on disk
— bundled built-ins and hub-installed included — with per-skill use/view/patch
counts and an agent/bundled/hub provenance tag.
Flags: --sort {activity,recent,name}, --provenance {agent,bundled,hub} filter,
--json for machine-readable output.