hermes-agent/website/docs/reference/mcp-config-reference.md
Teknium c6c8abbadb
refactor: remove agent-callable send_message tool (#47856)
* feat(mcp): raise default tool-call timeout 120s -> 300s

Port from openai/codex#28234. Long-running MCP tools (web fetches,
sandboxed builds, deep-research servers) routinely exceed 120s, causing
spurious timeout failures. Codex bumped its default MCP tool timeout from
120 to 300 for the same reason.

- _DEFAULT_TOOL_TIMEOUT 120 -> 300 in tools/mcp_tool.py (per-server
  'timeout' config override unchanged)
- update test_default_timeout assertion
- document the default in mcp-config-reference.md

* refactor: remove agent-callable send_message tool

The agent should not decide on its own to fire off cross-platform
messages or reactions. Outbound platform messaging is handled outside
the agent loop — cron delivery, the gateway kanban notifier
(dashboard-toggled), and the `hermes send` CLI.

Removes the model-tool registration only; the send engine in
send_message_tool.py (_send_to_platform, _send_via_adapter,
_parse_target_ref, per-platform _send_* helpers) is kept intact for
those non-agent callers. Drops the now-empty 'messaging' toolset and
its `hermes tools` toggle. Yuanbao DM guidance now points at the
native yb_send_dm tool.
2026-06-17 07:11:23 -07:00

291 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown

---
sidebar_position: 8
title: "MCP Config Reference"
description: "Reference for Hermes Agent MCP configuration keys, filtering semantics, and utility-tool policy"
---
# MCP Config Reference
This page is the compact reference companion to the main MCP docs.
For conceptual guidance, see:
- [MCP (Model Context Protocol)](/user-guide/features/mcp)
- [Use MCP with Hermes](/guides/use-mcp-with-hermes)
## Root config shape
```yaml
mcp_servers:
<server_name>:
command: "..." # stdio servers
args: []
env: {}
# OR
url: "..." # HTTP servers
headers: {}
# Optional HTTP/SSE TLS settings:
ssl_verify: true # bool or path to a CA bundle (PEM)
client_cert: "/path/to/cert.pem" # mTLS client certificate (see below)
# client_key: "/path/to/key.pem" # optional, when key lives in a separate file
enabled: true
timeout: 120
connect_timeout: 60
supports_parallel_tool_calls: false
tools:
include: []
exclude: []
resources: true
prompts: true
```
## Server keys
| Key | Type | Applies to | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| `command` | string | stdio | Executable to launch |
| `args` | list | stdio | Arguments for the subprocess |
| `env` | mapping | stdio | Environment passed to the subprocess |
| `url` | string | HTTP | Remote MCP endpoint |
| `headers` | mapping | HTTP | Headers for remote server requests |
| `ssl_verify` | bool or string | HTTP | TLS verification. `true` (default) uses system CAs, `false` disables verification (insecure), or a string path to a custom CA bundle (PEM) |
| `client_cert` | string or list | HTTP | mTLS client certificate. String = path to a PEM file containing cert + key. List `[cert, key]` = separate files. List `[cert, key, password]` = encrypted key |
| `client_key` | string | HTTP | Path to the client private key, when `client_cert` is a string and the key is in a separate file |
| `enabled` | bool | both | Skip the server entirely when false |
| `timeout` | number | both | Tool call timeout in seconds (default: `300`) |
| `connect_timeout` | number | both | Initial connection timeout in seconds (default: `60`) |
| `supports_parallel_tool_calls` | bool | both | Allow tools from this server to run concurrently |
| `tools` | mapping | both | Filtering and utility-tool policy |
| `auth` | string | HTTP | Authentication method. Set to `oauth` to enable OAuth 2.1 with PKCE |
| `sampling` | mapping | both | Server-initiated LLM request policy (see MCP guide) |
## `tools` policy keys
| Key | Type | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| `include` | string or list | Whitelist server-native MCP tools |
| `exclude` | string or list | Blacklist server-native MCP tools |
| `resources` | bool-like | Enable/disable `list_resources` + `read_resource` |
| `prompts` | bool-like | Enable/disable `list_prompts` + `get_prompt` |
## Filtering semantics
### `include`
If `include` is set, only those server-native MCP tools are registered.
```yaml
tools:
include: [create_issue, list_issues]
```
### `exclude`
If `exclude` is set and `include` is not, every server-native MCP tool except those names is registered.
```yaml
tools:
exclude: [delete_customer]
```
### Precedence
If both are set, `include` wins.
```yaml
tools:
include: [create_issue]
exclude: [create_issue, delete_issue]
```
Result:
- `create_issue` is still allowed
- `delete_issue` is ignored because `include` takes precedence
## Utility-tool policy
Hermes may register these utility wrappers per MCP server:
Resources:
- `list_resources`
- `read_resource`
Prompts:
- `list_prompts`
- `get_prompt`
### Disable resources
```yaml
tools:
resources: false
```
### Disable prompts
```yaml
tools:
prompts: false
```
### Capability-aware registration
Even when `resources: true` or `prompts: true`, Hermes only registers those utility tools if the MCP session actually exposes the corresponding capability.
So this is normal:
- you enable prompts
- but no prompt utilities appear
- because the server does not support prompts
## `enabled: false`
```yaml
mcp_servers:
legacy:
url: "https://mcp.legacy.internal"
enabled: false
```
Behavior:
- no connection attempt
- no discovery
- no tool registration
- config remains in place for later reuse
## Empty result behavior
If filtering removes all server-native tools and no utility tools are registered, Hermes does not create an empty MCP runtime toolset for that server.
## Example configs
### Safe GitHub allowlist
```yaml
mcp_servers:
github:
command: "npx"
args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-github"]
env:
GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN: "***"
tools:
include: [list_issues, create_issue, update_issue, search_code]
resources: false
prompts: false
```
### Stripe blacklist
```yaml
mcp_servers:
stripe:
url: "https://mcp.stripe.com"
headers:
Authorization: "Bearer ***"
tools:
exclude: [delete_customer, refund_payment]
```
### Resource-only docs server
```yaml
mcp_servers:
docs:
url: "https://mcp.docs.example.com"
tools:
include: []
resources: true
prompts: false
```
### TLS client certificate (mTLS)
For HTTP/SSE servers that require a client certificate, set `client_cert` (and optionally `client_key`):
```yaml
mcp_servers:
# Combined cert + key in a single PEM file
internal_api:
url: "https://mcp.internal.example.com/mcp"
client_cert: "~/secrets/mcp-client.pem"
# Separate cert and key files
partner_api:
url: "https://mcp.partner.example.com/mcp"
client_cert: "~/secrets/client.crt"
client_key: "~/secrets/client.key"
# Encrypted key with a passphrase (3-element list form)
bank_api:
url: "https://mcp.bank.example.com/mcp"
client_cert: ["~/secrets/client.crt", "~/secrets/client.key", "my-passphrase"]
# Custom CA bundle (private CA / self-signed server)
lab_api:
url: "https://mcp.lab.local/mcp"
ssl_verify: "~/secrets/lab-ca.pem"
client_cert: "~/secrets/lab-client.pem"
```
Notes:
- Paths support `~` expansion. Missing files fail fast at connect time with a server-scoped error message.
- `ssl_verify: false` disables server certificate verification entirely. Don't use this with real services.
- Works on both Streamable HTTP and SSE transports.
## Reloading config
After changing MCP config, reload servers with:
```text
/reload-mcp
```
## Tool naming
Server-native MCP tools become:
```text
mcp_<server>_<tool>
```
Examples:
- `mcp_github_create_issue`
- `mcp_filesystem_read_file`
- `mcp_my_api_query_data`
Utility tools follow the same prefixing pattern:
- `mcp_<server>_list_resources`
- `mcp_<server>_read_resource`
- `mcp_<server>_list_prompts`
- `mcp_<server>_get_prompt`
### Name sanitization
Hyphens (`-`) and dots (`.`) in both server names and tool names are replaced with underscores before registration. This ensures tool names are valid identifiers for LLM function-calling APIs.
For example, a server named `my-api` exposing a tool called `list-items.v2` becomes:
```text
mcp_my_api_list_items_v2
```
Keep this in mind when writing `include` / `exclude` filters — use the **original** MCP tool name (with hyphens/dots), not the sanitized version.
## OAuth 2.1 authentication
For HTTP servers that require OAuth, set `auth: oauth` on the server entry:
```yaml
mcp_servers:
protected_api:
url: "https://mcp.example.com/mcp"
auth: oauth
```
Behavior:
- Hermes uses the MCP SDK's OAuth 2.1 PKCE flow (metadata discovery, dynamic client registration, token exchange, and refresh)
- On first connect, a browser window opens for authorization
- Tokens are persisted to `~/.hermes/mcp-tokens/<server>.json` and reused across sessions
- Token refresh is automatic; re-authorization only happens when refresh fails
- Only applies to HTTP/StreamableHTTP transport (`url`-based servers)