The extension-less MEDIA delivery guards short-circuited on
"MEDIA: not in text and [[audio_as_voice]] not in text", so a
response carrying only [[as_document]] (an image-only reply requesting
unmodified document delivery) leaked the directive as visible text.
Add [[as_document]] to both guard conditions (_strip_media_tag_directives
and strip_media_directives_for_display) and cover it with a regression
test.
Files like Caddyfile or Makefile have no extension, so MEDIA_TAG_CLEANUP_RE
never matched them and Telegram showed the raw MEDIA: line as text. Extract
and strip validated extension-less tags via a second pass.
Follow-up to liuhao1024's #46924. Route plain-text approval replies
through the canonical /approve and /deny handlers (resolve thread, resume
typing, return localized confirmation) and deliver that confirmation back
to the user — previously a plain 'yes' resolved silently. Synthesize a
literal '/'-prefixed command so get_command_args() parses always/session
modifiers on every platform (is_command() only recognizes '/'). Add E2E
tests covering approve/deny/always/session vocab plus the no-pending and
unrelated-text fall-through cases.
When the agent is blocked waiting for a dangerous-command approval,
plain-text responses like "yes" or "approve" were being steered into
the running agent instead of being delivered to the approval handler.
This meant approval via messaging platforms (Signal, Telegram, etc.)
never succeeded — the user's response was consumed by the steer logic
and the approval timed out.
Add an early check in `_handle_active_session_busy_message` that routes
approval-like responses ("yes", "approve", "deny", etc.) to the
approval handler when `has_blocking_approval()` is true for the session.
Fixes#46866
(cherry picked from commit b37ec1e0fd)
The judge gate added for kanban_complete (Issue #38367, PR #38388) only
covers one of the two exit paths out of run_kanban_goal_loop(). The loop
treats status == "blocked" as terminal identically to "done" (and any
other status outside running/ready/done/blocked also stops the loop —
see goals.py's status dispatch). A goal_mode worker that has learned
kanban_complete is gated can simply call kanban_block(reason="anything")
to escape the loop with zero judge involvement, fully defeating the
intent of #38367's fix.
This is Issue #38696, filed as the explicit follow-up by a reviewer on
PR #38388: "kanban_complete is one way out; kanban_block is another...
A worker that learns the complete path is gated can shift to calling
block to escape the loop with the same effect."
Implements the issue's "Option B" (deterministic allowlist, no extra
judge LLM call) using the kind taxonomy that already exists in
kb.VALID_BLOCK_KINDS, rather than inventing a new judge_goal() outcome
type (judge_goal only returns done/continue/wait/skipped — there's no
"is this block legitimate" verdict to hook the issue's "Option A"
pseudocode onto without expanding the judge's contract).
goal_mode tasks may only block with kind in {dependency, needs_input} —
the two kinds that represent a genuine external blocker the worker
cannot resolve itself. `capability`, `transient`, and an unset kind are
rejected with a message directing the worker to kanban_complete instead,
which the judge now gates. Non-goal_mode tasks are completely unaffected.
Render the pet as an absolute overlay riding the bottom-right corner (just above
the status bar) instead of a full-width band that ate a whole row. It reserves
no layout rows; the transcript keeps its text clear of it responsively — a right
gutter on wide terminals (lines wrap to the pet's left) collapsing to reserved
bottom rows on narrow ones (full-width lines sit above it).
kitty fits an image to its cell rect preserving aspect, so a frame whose pixel
size isn't a whole multiple of the cell rounds up — clipping the bottom row
("clipped feet") and letterboxing a blank row. Trim each frame to its union
alpha bbox, then snap to an exact cell multiple before transmit so the sprite
hugs its box and renders full-body. (ratatui-image#57: render in multiples of
the font-size.)
The last welded composer engine. The `@`/`/` trigger state, detection
(refreshTrigger), the adapter-driven item list + its effects, popover selection,
closeTrigger, commitTypedSlashDirective, and the contentEditable chip insertion
(replaceTriggerWithChip) move verbatim into hooks/use-composer-trigger.ts behind a
hook that takes the editor refs + the two completion sources (at/slash). ChatBar's
input/keydown/keyup paths + the popover render consume the returned API; the
keydown navigation block stays in place (no key-handling restructure), and
triggerKeyConsumedRef is exposed so keyup still skips its post-consume refresh.
ChatBar 1,248 → 1,047. Behaviour-preserving: typecheck 0 errors, eslint clean,
and the composer DOM repro suite (slash-nav, enter-submit, IME composition,
trigger-popover) is green — the documented IME/caret/focus edge fixes ride along
verbatim. (The 1 attachments.test.tsx failure is pre-existing on main.)
fallback-model.ts (1,696) folded into assistant-ui/tool/fallback-model/ with
three cohesive, self-contained leaf modules extracted (verbatim moves):
- types.ts (83) — the shared tool-view types/interfaces.
- format.ts (133) — pure value formatting/parsing (isRecord, compactPreview,
clampForDisplay, prettyJson, parseMaybeObject, unwrapToolPayload, numberValue,
contextValue, formatDurationSeconds).
- targets.ts (75) — url/path/preview detection + disclosure ids (looksLikeUrl,
findFirstUrl, hostnameOf, isPreviewableTarget, toolPart/GroupDisclosureId).
index.ts (1,434) keeps the tool-specific assembler (TOOL_META, titles, the count
machinery, subtitle/detail/diff, buildToolView) and re-exports the leaf modules,
so consumers importing `./fallback-model` are unchanged (folder index resolution)
— no importer or channel edits needed. The count/result/detail helpers reach
across each other around buildToolView, so they stay together to avoid a circular
split; the three leaves are the clean cut.
Behaviour-preserving: typecheck 0 errors, eslint clean, fallback-model test 24/26
(the 2 browser_navigate title failures are pre-existing on main — `hostnameOf`
intentionally includes the pathname; verified identical on the un-split file).
Assert a journey edit leaves MEMORY.md byte-identical to MemoryStore's
own §-join (no trailing-newline drift) and round-trips through
MemoryStore._read_file, so the two surfaces can never diverge on format.
learning_mutations re-implemented the §-delimited read/write that
tools/memory_tool already owns, and its writer used a plain write_text
(truncate-then-write) — reintroducing exactly the partial-file race that
MemoryStore._write_file engineered away with atomic temp-file + rename.
Reuse MemoryStore._read_file/_write_file so the format is single-sourced,
the write is atomic against concurrent readers, and journey indices stay
aligned with the graph.
The merged #55859 left the star-map NodeContextMenu import and the
canvas onContextMenu prop out of perfectionist's required order, failing
`npm run lint` in the desktop workspace. Reorder both.
TUI /journey gets d/e with confirm + $EDITOR; desktop gets a right-click
context menu with inline edit modal. Both refresh the graph after mutation.
Extract openInEditor into the shared TUI editor helper.
Bring Hermes-Setup.exe's UI onto the shared design tokens (self-contained, no
desktop-component coupling) and add two capabilities:
- design: flat stage rows (running step opaque, rest muted), neutral check /
destructive cross, running fourier-flow Loader, hairline --stroke-nous
borders, fill-less log panel; ported BrandMark (nous-girl) + HackeryButton +
Loader standalone; re-synced button variants; de-boxed success/failure.
- theme: follow the OS light/dark via the authoritative Tauri window theme
(theme.ts + onThemeChanged, core🪟allow-theme), with Nous dark seed
colors in styles.css so the --ui-*/--dt-* chain derives correctly.
- updates: split the monolithic "Updating" bar into handoff -> download ->
rebuild (+ install on macOS) stages via a shared update_stages() builder, a
live elapsed timer on the running stage, and a dev-only fake-boot preview
(gated on import.meta.env.DEV, stripped from the shipped bundle).
Adds hooks/use-composer-url-dialog.test.tsx (renderHook): @url: directive
fallback, host onAddUrl preference + clear/close, and the blank-input no-op.
First unit coverage for an extracted composer engine — previously none of this
logic was testable while welded into the DOM-coupled ChatBar.
Moves the docked↔floating state, dock/float/toggle actions, drag-gesture wiring,
and the on-screen re-clamp effect out of ChatBar into
hooks/use-composer-popout.ts, verbatim. ChatBar passes its composerRef in and
consumes the returned popout state/handlers; the secondary-window gate and the
shared persisted atom stay encapsulated in the hook.
Moves the resting-placeholder state + the conversation-change re-roll effect +
the disabled/reconnecting/starting derivation out of ChatBar into
hooks/use-composer-placeholder.ts, verbatim. The hook owns its own i18n + browse
reset; ChatBar just reads the derived string.
Moves the URL dialog's open/value state, autofocus-on-open effect, and submit
(host onAddUrl or an @url: directive) out of ChatBar into
hooks/use-composer-url-dialog.ts, verbatim. ChatBar just wires the returned
openUrlDialog into the context menu and the state into <UrlDialog>.
Moves the chat-focused Esc-cancel listener (the latest-handler ref + the
register-once window keydown effect) out of ChatBar into
hooks/use-composer-esc-cancel.ts, verbatim. Encapsulating the latest-closure ref
inside its own hook is the first of the plan's "delete the latest-closure refs"
cleanups: it's no longer a loose ref in the 1.4k-line component, just an
implementation detail of a focused side-effect hook keyed on busy/awaitingInput/
onCancel.
Moves the CodingStatusRow hand-offs (openInWorktree + branch-off / convert /
list / switch) out of ChatBar into hooks/use-composer-branch.ts, verbatim. The
hook depends only on cwd + draftRef + clearDraft (backend coupling via the
projects store); nothing about ChatBar's render. Dead projects/composer-store
imports drop out of index.tsx.
MoA sessions could not stream: the gateway streaming toggle was a no-op for
provider "moa", so users saw nothing until the entire response finished — minutes
of silence on long turns. The aggregator's reply was always fetched whole.
Root cause was twofold:
1. conversation_loop hard-disabled streaming for provider in {"copilot-acp",
"moa"} (MoA grouped with the ACP client, whose facade isn't a stream).
2. MoAChatCompletions.create() fetched the aggregator response whole via
call_llm(), which had no streaming mode.
For provider "moa", _create_request_openai_client() returns the MoAClient facade
itself, so the existing streaming consumer already calls
MoAChatCompletions.create(stream=True). We reuse that battle-tested consumer
(text-delta delivery, tool_call reassembly, stale-stream detection, non-streaming
fallback) instead of adding a parallel streaming path.
Changes:
- call_llm() gains stream/stream_options. When streaming it returns the raw SDK
stream iterator directly, bypassing _validate_llm_response and the
temperature/max_tokens/payment fallback chain (which assume a complete
response). The caller owns reassembly and fallback.
- MoAChatCompletions.create() runs the references first (unchanged), then when
stream=True returns the aggregator's raw stream, forwarding stream_options and
the consumer's per-request read timeout. stream=False is byte-identical to
before (no stream/stream_options/timeout forwarded).
- conversation_loop streams MoA only when a display/TTS consumer is present;
quiet/subagent/health-check paths keep the complete-response path.
Tests: tests/run_agent/test_moa_streaming.py — create() stream/non-stream
branches, stream_options + timeout forwarding, call_llm raw-stream return vs
validated non-stream. Existing MoA tests unchanged (20 passed).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
_build_gemini_contents emitted one contents entry per source message and
never merged adjacent same-role entries. Gemini's generateContent requires
strict user/model alternation and rejects consecutive same-role turns with
HTTP 400 ("Please ensure that multiturn requests alternate between user and
model"). A parallel tool call turns into two tool results in a row, which
become two consecutive user functionResponse contents, so every multi-tool
turn produced an unsendable history.
Fold adjacent same-role contents into one by concatenating their parts after
the per-message loop, matching the Anthropic and Bedrock converters. For a
parallel call this yields the grouped multi-functionResponse user turn Gemini
expects.
Memories are the only drillable rows, so give them the primary "clickable"
ink and demote skills (dead-ends) to the muted complement — previously the
non-openable skills wore the link-looking primary color. Flipped in both
the TUI and CLI palettes for parity.
The renderer kept a braille canvas, char-field scene, star-glyph/orbital
helpers, and seed/links params from earlier visual iterations that the
final timeline bar chart never uses. Remove them (~190 lines), simplify
the empty-state placeholder, and refresh the module + RPC docstrings to
describe what actually ships.
Add a non-selectable spacer row before each slice (except the first) so
groups breathe — the CSS `group + group { margin-top }` equivalent. The
gap counts toward the scroll window but cursor navigation skips it.
Collapse the two-step slice list → detail page into one scrollable tree:
each timeline slice is a parent header with its skills + memories nested
under ├─/└─ branch chars, ordered oldest → newest (children now sorted
chronologically in the renderer). One cursor walks the whole tree; Enter
still opens a memory's body. Drops the separate detail mode.
Skill nodes carry no body in the learning_graph payload, so opening one
dead-ended on "No additional detail recorded yet." Gate Enter/→ to nodes
with body (memories), mark those rows with a › affordance, and only show
the "open" hint when the selected row is drillable.
A single 'hermes update' / 'hermes -p' could rewrite a hand-curated config.yaml
into a near-full DEFAULT_CONFIG dump (the 'you blow up my profile config on one
tweak' reports). Root cause: migrate_config() had ~16 independent save_config()
call sites, each author deciding ad hoc whether to materialise a value, and many
persisted pure schema defaults with strip_defaults=False. Defaults already merge
transparently at read time via load_config(), so writing them is pure bloat that
also shadows future default changes (see save_config's docstring).
Architectural fix (not a per-site patch): introduce a single _persist_migration()
chokepoint that enforces one invariant — a migration may persist only values that
DIFFER from the current schema default, plus explicit removals/renames of user
data; pure defaults are never written. Every migration write (all 17 sites incl.
the version-bump finalizer) now routes through it. The invariant is mechanically
correct for all cases and verified empirically:
- pure-default seeds (timezone='', curator/auxiliary.curator blocks, interim
flag, curator.consolidate=False, empty plugins.enabled) are stripped → merged
in at read time;
- non-default values (write_approval=True, model_catalog.ttl_hours=1) preserved
via explicit-raw-path preservation;
- behaviour flips (agent.verify_on_stop=False, schema default still 'auto')
preserved because False != 'auto';
- data transforms (custom_providers->providers, stt.model relocation,
write_mode->write_approval, compression.summary_* removal, MCP-disable)
persist their removals/renames.
An explicitly user-set non-default value (e.g. matrix.require_mention: false) is
preserved across the bump.
Guard tests lock the architecture: an AST check asserts migrate_config() makes no
direct save_config() call (all writes go through _persist_migration), and a
full-range v1->latest test asserts a lean config is never dumped. Two existing
change-detector tests that froze the on-disk representation of default-valued
keys are rewritten to assert the effective value via load_config() (behaviour
contract, not snapshot).
Validation: lean v1->latest migration drops from ~567 bytes to ~196 bytes;
148 config+setup and 196 profile/curator/migrate tests pass on scripts/run_tests.sh.
Builds on the zero-match feedback fix (previous commit) to close the silent-hang
symptom: when memory is at capacity, a failed `add`/`replace`/`remove`
consolidation could loop the whole turn to iteration-budget exhaustion and
deliver no user-facing reply.
#41755 turned the at-capacity overflow error into a *commanded* in-turn retry
("...then retry this add — all in this turn"); combined with the fragile
substring-only `replace`/`remove` matching (LLMs can't reliably re-quote a long
entry verbatim), the model loops add↔replace on inexact guesses until the turn
dies. The existing tool_guardrails halt would catch this, but hard_stop_enabled
is opt-in (off by default), so a default install still hangs.
This fixes it at the memory layer without changing global guardrail behavior:
- MemoryStore tracks per-turn consolidation failures; after a cap (3) it drops
the "retry in this turn" instruction and returns a terminal "leave memory
unchanged, continue your reply" result, so a failed memory side effect can
never block the turn's reply.
- The counter resets on any successful write (progress) and at each turn
boundary (turn_context.reset_consolidation_failures, guarded via getattr so
plugin memory stores without the method are a no-op).
Co-authored-by: liuhao1024 <sunsky.lau@gmail.com>
- replace() and remove() now return entry previews and current_entries
when no entry matches old_text, matching the multi-match and add-limit
error behavior
- add() limit error also now returns previews for consistency
- Agent can self-correct after a failed replace/remove instead of looping
blindly until turn budget is exhausted with no user response