PR #20831 shipped the feature with a terse reference page. This adds a proper user guide — ~570 lines of what/why/when/how with use-case walkthroughs, lifecycle coverage from author through installer through update, and recipe snippets for common workflows. New page: website/docs/user-guide/profile-distributions.md Sections: * What this means — the before/after, side-by-side * Why git, not tarballs or a custom format * When to use a distribution (personal, team, community, product) and when NOT to (local backup, sharing credentials, sharing memories) * The lifecycle — dedicated walkthroughs for authors (publish in 4 steps) and installers (install, check, update, remove) * Use cases: personal sync, team internal bot, community publish, commercial product, ephemeral ops agent * Recipes: pin a version, compare installed vs. latest, preserve local customizations through updates, force clean reinstall, fork-and-customize, test before pushing * What is NEVER in a distribution (the user-owned exclude list verbatim) * Security and trust model — what you are trusting, why cron is not auto-scheduled, the browser-extension analogy Cross-linking: * Added to sidebar under Getting Started, right after user-guide/profiles. * Existing Profiles page ends with a Sharing profiles as distributions teaser that links here. * The Distribution section of the reference page gets an admonition pointing newcomers here first. The reference stays as a CLI-flag lookup for people who already know what they want. Validation: * ascii-guard lint --exclude-code-blocks docs -> 0 errors. * All internal links resolve to real pages.
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Profile Commands Reference
This page covers all commands related to Hermes profiles. For general CLI commands, see CLI Commands Reference.
hermes profile
hermes profile <subcommand>
Top-level command for managing profiles. Running hermes profile without a subcommand shows help.
| Subcommand | Description |
|---|---|
list |
List all profiles. |
use |
Set the active (default) profile. |
create |
Create a new profile. |
delete |
Delete a profile. |
show |
Show details about a profile. |
alias |
Regenerate the shell alias for a profile. |
rename |
Rename a profile. |
export |
Export a profile to a tar.gz archive. |
import |
Import a profile from a tar.gz archive. |
hermes profile list
hermes profile list
Lists all profiles. The currently active profile is marked with *.
Example:
$ hermes profile list
default
* work
dev
personal
No options.
hermes profile use
hermes profile use <name>
Sets <name> as the active profile. All subsequent hermes commands (without -p) will use this profile.
| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
<name> |
Profile name to activate. Use default to return to the base profile. |
Example:
hermes profile use work
hermes profile use default
hermes profile create
hermes profile create <name> [options]
Creates a new profile.
| Argument / Option | Description |
|---|---|
<name> |
Name for the new profile. Must be a valid directory name (alphanumeric, hyphens, underscores). |
--clone |
Copy config.yaml, .env, and SOUL.md from the current profile. |
--clone-all |
Copy everything (config, memories, skills, sessions, state) from the current profile. |
--clone-from <profile> |
Clone from a specific profile instead of the current one. Used with --clone or --clone-all. |
--no-alias |
Skip wrapper script creation. |
Creating a profile does not make that profile directory the default project/workspace directory for terminal commands. If you want a profile to start in a specific project, set terminal.cwd in that profile's config.yaml.
Examples:
# Blank profile — needs full setup
hermes profile create mybot
# Clone config only from current profile
hermes profile create work --clone
# Clone everything from current profile
hermes profile create backup --clone-all
# Clone config from a specific profile
hermes profile create work2 --clone --clone-from work
hermes profile delete
hermes profile delete <name> [options]
Deletes a profile and removes its shell alias.
| Argument / Option | Description |
|---|---|
<name> |
Profile to delete. |
--yes, -y |
Skip confirmation prompt. |
Example:
hermes profile delete mybot
hermes profile delete mybot --yes
:::warning This permanently deletes the profile's entire directory including all config, memories, sessions, and skills. Cannot delete the currently active profile. :::
hermes profile show
hermes profile show <name>
Displays details about a profile including its home directory, configured model, gateway status, skills count, and configuration file status.
This shows the profile's Hermes home directory, not the terminal working directory. Terminal commands start from terminal.cwd (or the launch directory on the local backend when cwd: ".").
| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
<name> |
Profile to inspect. |
Example:
$ hermes profile show work
Profile: work
Path: ~/.hermes/profiles/work
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4 (anthropic)
Gateway: stopped
Skills: 12
.env: exists
SOUL.md: exists
Alias: ~/.local/bin/work
hermes profile alias
hermes profile alias <name> [options]
Regenerates the shell alias script at ~/.local/bin/<name>. Useful if the alias was accidentally deleted or if you need to update it after moving your Hermes installation.
| Argument / Option | Description |
|---|---|
<name> |
Profile to create/update the alias for. |
--remove |
Remove the wrapper script instead of creating it. |
--name <alias> |
Custom alias name (default: profile name). |
Example:
hermes profile alias work
# Creates/updates ~/.local/bin/work
hermes profile alias work --name mywork
# Creates ~/.local/bin/mywork
hermes profile alias work --remove
# Removes the wrapper script
hermes profile rename
hermes profile rename <old-name> <new-name>
Renames a profile. Updates the directory and shell alias.
| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
<old-name> |
Current profile name. |
<new-name> |
New profile name. |
Example:
hermes profile rename mybot assistant
# ~/.hermes/profiles/mybot → ~/.hermes/profiles/assistant
# ~/.local/bin/mybot → ~/.local/bin/assistant
hermes profile export
hermes profile export <name> [options]
Exports a profile as a compressed tar.gz archive.
| Argument / Option | Description |
|---|---|
<name> |
Profile to export. |
-o, --output <path> |
Output file path (default: <name>.tar.gz). |
Example:
hermes profile export work
# Creates work.tar.gz in the current directory
hermes profile export work -o ./work-2026-03-29.tar.gz
hermes profile import
hermes profile import <archive> [options]
Imports a profile from a tar.gz archive.
| Argument / Option | Description |
|---|---|
<archive> |
Path to the tar.gz archive to import. |
--name <name> |
Name for the imported profile (default: inferred from archive). |
Example:
hermes profile import ./work-2026-03-29.tar.gz
# Infers profile name from the archive
hermes profile import ./work-2026-03-29.tar.gz --name work-restored
Distribution commands
:::tip New to distributions? Start with the Profile Distributions user guide — it covers the why, when, and how with full examples. The sections below are a dry CLI reference for when you know what you want. :::
Distributions turn a profile into a shareable, versioned artifact published as a git repository. A recipient installs the distribution with a single command and can update it in place later without touching their local memories, sessions, or credentials.
auth.json and .env are never part of a distribution — they stay on the
installing user's machine.
The recipient's user data (memories, sessions, auth, their own edits to
.env) is always preserved across the initial install and subsequent
updates.
:::info
hermes profile export / import are still the right commands for
local backup and restore of a profile on your own machine. Distribution
(install / update / info) is a separate concept: ship a profile via
git so someone else can install it.
:::
hermes profile install
hermes profile install <source> [--name <name>] [--alias] [--force] [--yes]
Installs a profile distribution from a git URL or a local directory.
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
<source> |
Git URL (github.com/user/repo, https://..., git@..., ssh://, git://) or a local directory containing distribution.yaml at its root. |
--name NAME |
Override the profile name from the manifest. |
--alias |
Also create a shell wrapper (e.g. telemetry → hermes -p telemetry). |
--force |
Overwrite an existing profile of the same name. User data is still preserved. |
-y, --yes |
Skip the manifest-preview confirmation prompt. |
The installer shows the manifest, lists required env vars, and warns about
cron jobs before asking for confirmation. Required env vars go into a
.env.EXAMPLE file you copy to .env and fill in.
Examples:
# Install from a GitHub repo (shorthand)
hermes profile install github.com/kyle/telemetry-distribution --alias
# Install from a full HTTPS git URL
hermes profile install https://github.com/kyle/telemetry-distribution.git
# Install from SSH
hermes profile install git@github.com:kyle/telemetry-distribution.git
# Install from a local directory during development
hermes profile install ./telemetry/
hermes profile update
hermes profile update <name> [--force-config] [--yes]
Re-clones the distribution from its recorded source and applies updates. Distribution-owned files (SOUL.md, skills/, cron/, mcp.json) are overwritten; user data (memories, sessions, auth, .env) is never touched.
config.yaml is preserved by default to keep your local overrides.
Pass --force-config to reset it to the distribution's shipped config.
hermes profile info
hermes profile info <name>
Prints the profile's distribution manifest — name, version, required
Hermes version, author, env var requirements, the source URL/path, and
the Installed: timestamp recorded when the distribution was last
install-ed or update-d. Useful for checking what a shared profile
needs before installing it, and for spotting "this profile was installed
6 months ago and hasn't been updated."
hermes profile list also shows the distribution name and version in a
Distribution column, and hermes profile show <name> / delete <name>
surface the source URL so you can tell at a glance which profiles came
from a git repo vs. were created locally.
Private distributions
A private git repository works as a distribution source with no extra
configuration — the install shells out to your normal git binary, so
whatever authentication your shell is already set up for (SSH key,
git credential helper, GitHub CLI's stored HTTPS credentials) applies
transparently.
# Uses your SSH key, the same as any other `git clone`
hermes profile install git@github.com:your-org/internal-assistant.git
# Uses your git credential helper
hermes profile install https://github.com/your-org/internal-assistant.git
If a clone prompts for credentials interactively in your terminal during
install, that prompt flows through. Set up your auth the way you'd
normally use git clone against the same repo first, then install.
Distribution manifest (distribution.yaml)
Every distribution has a distribution.yaml at the root of its repository:
name: telemetry
version: 0.1.0
description: "Compliance monitoring harness"
hermes_requires: ">=0.12.0"
author: "Your Name"
license: "MIT"
env_requires:
- name: OPENAI_API_KEY
description: "OpenAI API key"
required: true
- name: GRAPHITI_MCP_URL
description: "Memory graph URL"
required: false
default: "http://127.0.0.1:8000/sse"
distribution_owned: # optional; defaults to SOUL.md, config.yaml,
# mcp.json, skills/, cron/, distribution.yaml
- SOUL.md
- skills/compliance/
- cron/
hermes_requires supports >=, <=, ==, !=, >, <, or a bare
version (treated as >=). Install fails with a clear error if the current
Hermes version doesn't satisfy the spec.
distribution_owned is optional. If set, only those paths are replaced on
update; anything else in the profile stays user-owned. If omitted, the
defaults above apply.
Publishing a distribution
Authoring a distribution is just a git push:
- In your profile directory, create
distribution.yamlwith at leastnameandversion. - Initialize a git repo (or use an existing one) and push to GitHub / GitLab / any host Hermes can clone from.
- Tell recipients to run
hermes profile install <your-repo-url>.
Use git tags for versioned releases — recipients who clone HEAD get your
latest state, and you can always bump version: in the manifest.
hermes -p / hermes --profile
hermes -p <name> <command> [options]
hermes --profile <name> <command> [options]
Global flag to run any Hermes command under a specific profile without changing the sticky default. This overrides the active profile for the duration of the command.
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
-p <name>, --profile <name> |
Profile to use for this command. |
Examples:
hermes -p work chat -q "Check the server status"
hermes --profile dev gateway start
hermes -p personal skills list
hermes -p work config edit
hermes completion
hermes completion <shell>
Generates shell completion scripts. Includes completions for profile names and profile subcommands.
| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
<shell> |
Shell to generate completions for: bash or zsh. |
Examples:
# Install completions
hermes completion bash >> ~/.bashrc
hermes completion zsh >> ~/.zshrc
# Reload shell
source ~/.bashrc
After installation, tab completion works for:
hermes profile <TAB>— subcommands (list, use, create, etc.)hermes profile use <TAB>— profile nameshermes -p <TAB>— profile names