--- sidebar_position: 12 sidebar_label: "Built-in Plugins" title: "Built-in Plugins" description: "Plugins shipped with Hermes Agent that run automatically via lifecycle hooks — disk-cleanup and friends" --- # Built-in Plugins Hermes ships a small set of plugins bundled with the repository. They live under `/plugins//` and load automatically alongside user-installed plugins in `~/.hermes/plugins/`. They use the same plugin surface as third-party plugins — hooks, tools, slash commands — just maintained in-tree. See the [Plugins](/docs/user-guide/features/plugins) page for the general plugin system, and [Build a Hermes Plugin](/docs/guides/build-a-hermes-plugin) to write your own. ## How discovery works The `PluginManager` scans four sources, in order: 1. **Bundled** — `/plugins//` (what this page documents) 2. **User** — `~/.hermes/plugins//` 3. **Project** — `./.hermes/plugins//` (requires `HERMES_ENABLE_PROJECT_PLUGINS=1`) 4. **Pip entry points** — `hermes_agent.plugins` On name collision, later sources win — a user plugin named `disk-cleanup` would replace the bundled one. `plugins/memory/` and `plugins/context_engine/` are deliberately excluded from bundled scanning. Those directories use their own discovery paths because memory providers and context engines are single-select providers configured through `hermes memory setup` / `context.engine` in config. ## Bundled plugins are opt-in Bundled plugins ship disabled. Discovery finds them (they appear in `hermes plugins list` and the interactive `hermes plugins` UI), but none load until you explicitly enable them: ```bash hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup ``` Or via `~/.hermes/config.yaml`: ```yaml plugins: enabled: - disk-cleanup ``` This is the same mechanism user-installed plugins use. Bundled plugins are never auto-enabled — not on fresh install, not for existing users upgrading to a newer Hermes. You always opt in explicitly. To turn a bundled plugin off again: ```bash hermes plugins disable disk-cleanup # or: remove it from plugins.enabled in config.yaml ``` ## Currently shipped ### disk-cleanup Auto-tracks and removes ephemeral files created during sessions — test scripts, temp outputs, cron logs, stale chrome profiles — without requiring the agent to remember to call a tool. **How it works:** | Hook | Behaviour | |---|---| | `post_tool_call` | When `write_file` / `terminal` / `patch` creates a file matching `test_*`, `tmp_*`, or `*.test.*` inside `HERMES_HOME` or `/tmp/hermes-*`, track it silently as `test` / `temp` / `cron-output`. | | `on_session_end` | If any test files were auto-tracked during the turn, run the safe `quick` cleanup and log a one-line summary. Stays silent otherwise. | **Deletion rules:** | Category | Threshold | Confirmation | |---|---|---| | `test` | every session end | Never | | `temp` | >7 days since tracked | Never | | `cron-output` | >14 days since tracked | Never | | empty dirs under HERMES_HOME | always | Never | | `research` | >30 days, beyond 10 newest | Always (deep only) | | `chrome-profile` | >14 days since tracked | Always (deep only) | | files >500 MB | never auto | Always (deep only) | **Slash command** — `/disk-cleanup` available in both CLI and gateway sessions: ``` /disk-cleanup status # breakdown + top-10 largest /disk-cleanup dry-run # preview without deleting /disk-cleanup quick # run safe cleanup now /disk-cleanup deep # quick + list items needing confirmation /disk-cleanup track # manual tracking /disk-cleanup forget # stop tracking (does not delete) ``` **State** — everything lives at `$HERMES_HOME/disk-cleanup/`: | File | Contents | |---|---| | `tracked.json` | Tracked paths with category, size, and timestamp | | `tracked.json.bak` | Atomic-write backup of the above | | `cleanup.log` | Append-only audit trail of every track / skip / reject / delete | **Safety** — cleanup only ever touches paths under `HERMES_HOME` or `/tmp/hermes-*`. Windows mounts (`/mnt/c/...`) are rejected. Well-known top-level state dirs (`logs/`, `memories/`, `sessions/`, `cron/`, `cache/`, `skills/`, `plugins/`, `disk-cleanup/` itself) are never removed even when empty — a fresh install does not get gutted on first session end. **Enabling:** `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup` (or check the box in `hermes plugins`). **Disabling again:** `hermes plugins disable disk-cleanup`. ### observability/langfuse Traces Hermes turns, LLM calls, and tool invocations to [Langfuse](https://langfuse.com) — an open-source LLM observability platform. One span per turn, one generation per API call, one tool observation per tool call. Usage totals, per-type token counts, and cost estimates come out of Hermes' canonical `agent.usage_pricing` numbers, so the Langfuse dashboard sees the same breakdown (input / output / `cache_read_input_tokens` / `cache_creation_input_tokens` / `reasoning_tokens`) that appears in `hermes logs`. The plugin is fail-open: no SDK installed, no credentials, or a transient Langfuse error — all turn into a silent no-op in the hook. The agent loop is never impacted. **Setup (interactive — recommended):** ```bash hermes tools # → Langfuse Observability → Cloud or Self-Hosted ``` The wizard collects your keys, `pip install`s the `langfuse` SDK, and adds `observability/langfuse` to `plugins.enabled` for you. Restart Hermes and the next turn ships a trace. **Setup (manual):** ```bash pip install langfuse hermes plugins enable observability/langfuse ``` Then put the credentials in `~/.hermes/.env`: ```bash HERMES_LANGFUSE_PUBLIC_KEY=pk-lf-... HERMES_LANGFUSE_SECRET_KEY=sk-lf-... HERMES_LANGFUSE_BASE_URL=https://cloud.langfuse.com # or your self-hosted URL ``` **How it works:** | Hook | Behaviour | |---|---| | `pre_api_request` / `pre_llm_call` | Open (or reuse) a per-turn root span "Hermes turn". Start a `generation` child observation for this API call with serialized recent messages as input. | | `post_api_request` / `post_llm_call` | Close the generation, attach `usage_details`, `cost_details`, `finish_reason`, assistant output + tool calls. If no tool calls and non-empty content, close the turn. | | `pre_tool_call` | Start a `tool` child observation with sanitized `args`. | | `post_tool_call` | Close the tool observation with sanitized `result`. `read_file` payloads get summarized (head + tail + omitted-line count) so a huge file read stays under `HERMES_LANGFUSE_MAX_CHARS`. | Session grouping keys off the Hermes session ID (or task ID for sub-agents) via `langfuse.propagate_attributes`, so everything in a single `hermes chat` session lives under one Langfuse session. **Verify:** ```bash hermes plugins list # observability/langfuse should show "enabled" hermes chat -q "hello" # check the Langfuse UI for a "Hermes turn" trace ``` **Optional tuning** (in `.env`): | Variable | Default | Purpose | |---|---|---| | `HERMES_LANGFUSE_ENV` | — | Environment tag on traces (`production`, `staging`, …) | | `HERMES_LANGFUSE_RELEASE` | — | Release/version tag | | `HERMES_LANGFUSE_SAMPLE_RATE` | `1.0` | Sampling rate passed to the SDK (0.0–1.0) | | `HERMES_LANGFUSE_MAX_CHARS` | `12000` | Per-field truncation for message content / tool args / tool results | | `HERMES_LANGFUSE_DEBUG` | `false` | Verbose plugin logging to `agent.log` | Hermes-prefixed and standard SDK env vars (`LANGFUSE_PUBLIC_KEY`, `LANGFUSE_SECRET_KEY`, `LANGFUSE_BASE_URL`) are both accepted — Hermes-prefixed wins when both are set. **Performance:** the Langfuse client is cached after the first hook call. If credentials or SDK are missing, that decision is also cached — subsequent hooks fast-return without re-checking env vars or reloading config. **Disabling:** `hermes plugins disable observability/langfuse`. The plugin module is still discovered, but no module code runs until you re-enable. ## Adding a bundled plugin Bundled plugins are written exactly like any other Hermes plugin — see [Build a Hermes Plugin](/docs/guides/build-a-hermes-plugin). The only differences are: - Directory lives at `/plugins//` instead of `~/.hermes/plugins//` - Manifest source is reported as `bundled` in `hermes plugins list` - User plugins with the same name override the bundled version A plugin is a good candidate for bundling when: - It has no optional dependencies (or they're already `pip install .[all]` deps) - The behaviour benefits most users and is opt-out rather than opt-in - The logic ties into lifecycle hooks that the agent would otherwise have to remember to invoke - It complements a core capability without expanding the model-visible tool surface Counter-examples — things that should stay as user-installable plugins, not bundled: third-party integrations with API keys, niche workflows, large dependency trees, anything that would meaningfully change agent behaviour by default.