hermes-agent/website/docs/user-guide/features/curator.md
Teknium 6b3a9b4bfa docs(curator): update CLI docs for synchronous-by-default manual run
Follow-up to the previous commit which flipped 'hermes curator run'
default from async to sync. Updates the curator.md feature page and
cli-commands.md reference to show --background as the opt-in async
flag and note that the default now blocks until the LLM pass finishes.
2026-05-07 05:27:47 -07:00

244 lines
12 KiB
Markdown

---
sidebar_position: 3
title: "Curator"
description: "Background maintenance for agent-created skills — usage tracking, staleness, archival, and LLM-driven review"
---
# Curator
The curator is a background maintenance pass for **agent-created skills**. It tracks how often each skill is viewed, used, and patched, moves long-unused skills through `active → stale → archived` states, and periodically spawns a short auxiliary-model review that proposes consolidations or patches drift.
It exists so that skills created via the [self-improvement loop](/docs/user-guide/features/skills#agent-managed-skills-skill_manage-tool) don't pile up forever. Every time the agent solves a novel problem and saves a skill, that skill lands in `~/.hermes/skills/`. Without maintenance, you end up with dozens of narrow near-duplicates that pollute the catalog and waste tokens.
The curator **never touches** bundled skills (shipped with the repo) or hub-installed skills (from [agentskills.io](https://agentskills.io)). It only reviews skills the agent itself authored. It also **never auto-deletes** — the worst outcome is archival into `~/.hermes/skills/.archive/`, which is recoverable.
Tracks [issue #7816](https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent/issues/7816).
## How it runs
The curator is triggered by an inactivity check, not a cron daemon. On CLI session start, and on a recurring tick inside the gateway's cron-ticker thread, Hermes checks whether:
1. Enough time has passed since the last curator run (`interval_hours`, default **7 days**), and
2. The agent has been idle long enough (`min_idle_hours`, default **2 hours**).
If both are true, it spawns a background fork of `AIAgent` — the same pattern used by the memory/skill self-improvement nudges. The fork runs in its own prompt cache and never touches the active conversation.
:::info First-run behavior
On a brand-new install (or the first time a pre-curator install ticks after `hermes update`), the curator **does not run immediately**. The first observation seeds `last_run_at` to "now" and defers the first real pass by one full `interval_hours`. This gives you a full interval to review your skill library, pin anything important, or opt out entirely before the curator ever touches it.
If you want to see what the curator *would* do before it runs for real, run `hermes curator run --dry-run` — it produces the same review report without mutating the library.
:::
A run has two phases:
1. **Automatic transitions** (deterministic, no LLM). Skills unused for `stale_after_days` (30) become `stale`; skills unused for `archive_after_days` (90) are moved to `~/.hermes/skills/.archive/`.
2. **LLM review** (single aux-model pass, `max_iterations=8`). The forked agent surveys the agent-created skills, can read any of them with `skill_view`, and decides per-skill whether to keep, patch (via `skill_manage`), consolidate overlapping ones, or archive via the terminal tool.
Pinned skills are off-limits to both the curator's auto-transitions and the agent's own `skill_manage` tool. See [Pinning a skill](#pinning-a-skill) below.
## Configuration
All settings live in `config.yaml` under `curator:` (not `.env` — this isn't a secret). Defaults:
```yaml
curator:
enabled: true
interval_hours: 168 # 7 days
min_idle_hours: 2
stale_after_days: 30
archive_after_days: 90
```
To disable entirely, set `curator.enabled: false`.
### Running the review on a cheaper aux model
The curator's LLM review pass is a regular auxiliary task slot — `auxiliary.curator` — alongside Vision, Compression, Session Search, etc. "Auto" means "use my main chat model"; override the slot to pin a specific provider + model for the review pass instead.
**Easiest — `hermes model`:**
```bash
hermes model # → "Auxiliary models — side-task routing"
# → pick "Curator" → pick provider → pick model
```
The same picker is available in the web dashboard under the **Models** tab.
**Direct config.yaml (equivalent):**
```yaml
auxiliary:
curator:
provider: openrouter
model: google/gemini-3-flash-preview
timeout: 600 # generous — reviews can take several minutes
```
Leaving `provider: auto` (the default) routes the review pass through whatever your main chat model is, matching the behavior of every other auxiliary task.
:::note Legacy config
Earlier releases used a one-off `curator.auxiliary.{provider,model}` block. That path still works but emits a deprecation log line — please migrate to `auxiliary.curator` above so the curator shares the same plumbing (`hermes model`, dashboard Models tab, `base_url`, `api_key`, `timeout`, `extra_body`) as every other aux task.
:::
## CLI
```bash
hermes curator status # last run, counts, pinned list, LRU top 5
hermes curator run # trigger a review now (blocks until the LLM pass finishes)
hermes curator run --background # fire-and-forget: start the LLM pass in a background thread
hermes curator run --dry-run # preview only — report without any mutations
hermes curator backup # take a manual snapshot of ~/.hermes/skills/
hermes curator rollback # restore from the newest snapshot
hermes curator rollback --list # list available snapshots
hermes curator rollback --id <ts> # restore a specific snapshot
hermes curator rollback -y # skip the confirmation prompt
hermes curator pause # stop runs until resumed
hermes curator resume
hermes curator pin <skill> # never auto-transition this skill
hermes curator unpin <skill>
hermes curator restore <skill> # move an archived skill back to active
```
## Backups and rollback
Before every real curator pass, Hermes takes a tar.gz snapshot of `~/.hermes/skills/` at `~/.hermes/skills/.curator_backups/<utc-iso>/skills.tar.gz`. If a pass archives or consolidates something you didn't want touched, you can undo the whole run with one command:
```bash
hermes curator rollback # restore newest snapshot (with confirmation)
hermes curator rollback -y # skip the prompt
hermes curator rollback --list # see all snapshots with reason + size
```
The rollback itself is reversible: before replacing the skills tree, Hermes takes another snapshot tagged `pre-rollback to <target-id>`, so a mistaken rollback can be undone by rolling forward to that one with `--id`.
You can also take manual snapshots at any time with `hermes curator backup --reason "before-refactor"`. The `--reason` string lands in the snapshot's `manifest.json` and is shown in `--list`.
Snapshots are pruned to `curator.backup.keep` (default 5) to keep disk usage bounded:
```yaml
curator:
backup:
enabled: true
keep: 5
```
Set `curator.backup.enabled: false` to disable automatic snapshotting. The manual `hermes curator backup` command still works when backups are disabled only if you set `enabled: true` first — the flag gates both paths symmetrically so there's no way to accidentally skip the pre-run snapshot on mutating runs.
`hermes curator status` also lists the five least-recently-used skills — a quick way to see what's likely to become stale next.
The same subcommands are available as the `/curator` slash command inside a running session (CLI or gateway platforms).
## What "agent-created" means
A skill is considered agent-created if its name is **not** in:
- `~/.hermes/skills/.bundled_manifest` (skills copied from the repo on install), and
- `~/.hermes/skills/.hub/lock.json` (skills installed via `hermes skills install`).
Everything else in `~/.hermes/skills/` is fair game for the curator. This includes:
- Skills the agent saved via `skill_manage(action="create")` during a conversation.
- Skills you created manually with a hand-written `SKILL.md`.
- Skills added via external skill directories you've pointed Hermes at.
:::warning Your hand-written skills look the same as agent-saved ones
Provenance here is **binary** (bundled/hub vs. everything else). The curator cannot tell a hand-authored skill you rely on for private workflows apart from a skill the self-improvement loop saved mid-session. Both land in the "agent-created" bucket.
Before the first real pass (7 days after installation by default), take a moment to:
1. Run `hermes curator run --dry-run` to see exactly what the curator would propose.
2. Use `hermes curator pin <name>` to fence off anything you don't want touched.
3. Or set `curator.enabled: false` in `config.yaml` if you'd rather manage the library yourself.
Archives are always recoverable via `hermes curator restore <name>`, but it's easier to pin up-front than to chase down a consolidation after the fact.
:::
If you want to protect a specific skill from ever being touched — for example a hand-authored skill you rely on — use `hermes curator pin <name>`. See the next section.
## Pinning a skill
Pinning protects a skill from deletion — both the curator's automated archive passes and the agent's `skill_manage(action="delete")` tool call. Once a skill is pinned:
- The **curator** skips it during auto-transitions (`active → stale → archived`), and its LLM review pass is instructed to leave it alone.
- The **agent's `skill_manage` tool** refuses `delete` on it, pointing the user at `hermes curator unpin <name>`. Patches and edits still go through, so the agent can improve a pinned skill's content as pitfalls come up without a pin/unpin/re-pin dance.
Pin and unpin with:
```bash
hermes curator pin <skill>
hermes curator unpin <skill>
```
The flag is stored as `"pinned": true` on the skill's entry in `~/.hermes/skills/.usage.json`, so it survives across sessions.
Only **agent-created** skills can be pinned — bundled and hub-installed skills are never subject to curator mutation in the first place, and `hermes curator pin` will refuse with an explanatory message if you try.
If you want a stronger guarantee than "no deletion" — for instance, freezing a skill's content entirely while the agent still reads it — edit `~/.hermes/skills/<name>/SKILL.md` directly with your editor. The pin guards tool-driven deletion, not your own filesystem access.
## Usage telemetry
The curator maintains a sidecar at `~/.hermes/skills/.usage.json` with one entry per skill:
```json
{
"my-skill": {
"use_count": 12,
"view_count": 34,
"last_used_at": "2026-04-24T18:12:03Z",
"last_viewed_at": "2026-04-23T09:44:17Z",
"patch_count": 3,
"last_patched_at": "2026-04-20T22:01:55Z",
"created_at": "2026-03-01T14:20:00Z",
"state": "active",
"pinned": false,
"archived_at": null
}
}
```
Counters increment when:
- `view_count`: the agent calls `skill_view` on the skill.
- `use_count`: the skill is loaded into a conversation's prompt.
- `patch_count`: `skill_manage patch/edit/write_file/remove_file` runs on the skill.
Bundled and hub-installed skills are explicitly excluded from telemetry writes.
## Per-run reports
Every curator run writes a timestamped directory under `~/.hermes/logs/curator/`:
```
~/.hermes/logs/curator/
└── 20260429-111512/
├── run.json # machine-readable: full fidelity, stats, LLM output
└── REPORT.md # human-readable summary
```
`REPORT.md` is a quick way to see what a given run did — which skills transitioned, what the LLM reviewer said, which skills it patched. Good for auditing without having to grep `agent.log`.
## Restoring an archived skill
If the curator archived something you still want:
```bash
hermes curator restore <skill-name>
```
This moves the skill back from `~/.hermes/skills/.archive/` to the active tree and resets its state to `active`. The restore refuses if a bundled or hub-installed skill has since been installed under the same name (would shadow upstream).
## Disabling per environment
The curator is on by default. To turn it off:
- **For one profile only:** edit `~/.hermes/config.yaml` (or the active profile's config) and set `curator.enabled: false`.
- **For just one run:** `hermes curator pause` — the pause persists across sessions; use `resume` to re-enable.
The curator also refuses to run if `min_idle_hours` hasn't elapsed, so on an active dev machine it naturally only runs during quiet stretches.
## See also
- [Skills System](/docs/user-guide/features/skills) — how skills work in general and the self-improvement loop that creates them
- [Memory](/docs/user-guide/features/memory) — a parallel background review that maintains long-term memory
- [Bundled Skills Catalog](/docs/reference/skills-catalog)
- [Issue #7816](https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent/issues/7816) — original proposal and design discussion