hermes-agent/skills/devops/webhook-subscriptions/SKILL.md
Teknium b9bac87d5a feat(skills): declare platforms frontmatter for all 79 undeclared built-in skills
Completes the Windows-gating coverage for the built-in skills/ tree. Every
bundled SKILL.md now carries an explicit platforms: declaration so the
loader (agent.skill_utils.skill_matches_platform) can skip-load skills
that don't fit the current OS.

74 skills declared cross-platform (platforms: [linux, macos, windows]):
  Creative (16): ascii-art, ascii-video, architecture-diagram, baoyu-comic,
    baoyu-infographic, claude-design, creative-ideation, design-md,
    excalidraw, humanizer, manim-video, p5js, pixel-art,
    popular-web-designs, pretext, sketch, songwriting-and-ai-music,
    touchdesigner-mcp
  Autonomous agents: claude-code, codex, hermes-agent, opencode
  Data/devops: jupyter-live-kernel, kanban-orchestrator, kanban-worker,
    webhook-subscriptions, dogfood, codebase-inspection
  GitHub: github-auth, github-code-review, github-issues,
    github-pr-workflow, github-repo-management
  Media: gif-search, heartmula, songsee, spotify, youtube-content
  MCP / email / gaming / notes / smart-home: native-mcp, himalaya,
    pokemon-player, obsidian, openhue
  mlops (non-broken): weights-and-biases, huggingface-hub, llama-cpp,
    outlines, segment-anything-model, dspy, trl-fine-tuning
  Productivity: airtable, google-workspace, linear, maps, nano-pdf,
    notion, ocr-and-documents, powerpoint
  Red-teaming / research: godmode, arxiv, blogwatcher, llm-wiki,
    polymarket
  Software-dev: debugging-hermes-tui-commands, hermes-agent-skill-authoring,
    node-inspect-debugger, plan, requesting-code-review, spike,
    subagent-driven-development, systematic-debugging,
    test-driven-development, writing-plans
  Misc: yuanbao

5 skills gated from Windows (platforms: [linux, macos]):
  mlops/inference/vllm (serving-llms-vllm)
    vLLM is officially Linux-only; Windows requires WSL.
  mlops/training/axolotl
    Axolotl's flash-attn + deepspeed + bitsandbytes stack is Linux-first.
  mlops/training/unsloth
    Requires Triton + xformers + flash-attn — Linux only in practice.
  mlops/models/audiocraft (audiocraft-audio-generation)
    torchaudio ffmpeg backend + encodec dependencies are Linux-first.
  mlops/inference/obliteratus
    Research abliteration workflow; relies on Linux-focused pytorch
    kernels and MLX — no first-class Windows path.

Same strict-over-lenient policy as the optional-skills sweep: when the
underlying tool's Windows support is rough, missing, or WSL-only, gate the
skill. Easier to un-gate after verified Windows support lands than to leak
partial support that manifests as mid-task failures.

Combined with prior commits in this branch, every bundled SKILL.md
(skills/ + optional-skills/) now has a platforms: declaration.
2026-05-08 09:23:27 -07:00

6.7 KiB

name description version platforms metadata
webhook-subscriptions Webhook subscriptions: event-driven agent runs. 1.1.0
linux
macos
windows
hermes
tags
webhook
events
automation
integrations
notifications
push

Webhook Subscriptions

Create dynamic webhook subscriptions so external services (GitHub, GitLab, Stripe, CI/CD, IoT sensors, monitoring tools) can trigger Hermes agent runs by POSTing events to a URL.

Setup (Required First)

The webhook platform must be enabled before subscriptions can be created. Check with:

hermes webhook list

If it says "Webhook platform is not enabled", set it up:

Option 1: Setup wizard

hermes gateway setup

Follow the prompts to enable webhooks, set the port, and set a global HMAC secret.

Option 2: Manual config

Add to ~/.hermes/config.yaml:

platforms:
  webhook:
    enabled: true
    extra:
      host: "0.0.0.0"
      port: 8644
      secret: "generate-a-strong-secret-here"

Option 3: Environment variables

Add to ~/.hermes/.env:

WEBHOOK_ENABLED=true
WEBHOOK_PORT=8644
WEBHOOK_SECRET=generate-a-strong-secret-here

After configuration, start (or restart) the gateway:

hermes gateway run
# Or if using systemd:
systemctl --user restart hermes-gateway

Verify it's running:

curl http://localhost:8644/health

Commands

All management is via the hermes webhook CLI command:

Create a subscription

hermes webhook subscribe <name> \
  --prompt "Prompt template with {payload.fields}" \
  --events "event1,event2" \
  --description "What this does" \
  --skills "skill1,skill2" \
  --deliver telegram \
  --deliver-chat-id "12345" \
  --secret "optional-custom-secret"

Returns the webhook URL and HMAC secret. The user configures their service to POST to that URL.

List subscriptions

hermes webhook list

Remove a subscription

hermes webhook remove <name>

Test a subscription

hermes webhook test <name>
hermes webhook test <name> --payload '{"key": "value"}'

Prompt Templates

Prompts support {dot.notation} for accessing nested payload fields:

  • {issue.title} — GitHub issue title
  • {pull_request.user.login} — PR author
  • {data.object.amount} — Stripe payment amount
  • {sensor.temperature} — IoT sensor reading

If no prompt is specified, the full JSON payload is dumped into the agent prompt.

Common Patterns

GitHub: new issues

hermes webhook subscribe github-issues \
  --events "issues" \
  --prompt "New GitHub issue #{issue.number}: {issue.title}\n\nAction: {action}\nAuthor: {issue.user.login}\nBody:\n{issue.body}\n\nPlease triage this issue." \
  --deliver telegram \
  --deliver-chat-id "-100123456789"

Then in GitHub repo Settings → Webhooks → Add webhook:

  • Payload URL: the returned webhook_url
  • Content type: application/json
  • Secret: the returned secret
  • Events: "Issues"

GitHub: PR reviews

hermes webhook subscribe github-prs \
  --events "pull_request" \
  --prompt "PR #{pull_request.number} {action}: {pull_request.title}\nBy: {pull_request.user.login}\nBranch: {pull_request.head.ref}\n\n{pull_request.body}" \
  --skills "github-code-review" \
  --deliver github_comment

Stripe: payment events

hermes webhook subscribe stripe-payments \
  --events "payment_intent.succeeded,payment_intent.payment_failed" \
  --prompt "Payment {data.object.status}: {data.object.amount} cents from {data.object.receipt_email}" \
  --deliver telegram \
  --deliver-chat-id "-100123456789"

CI/CD: build notifications

hermes webhook subscribe ci-builds \
  --events "pipeline" \
  --prompt "Build {object_attributes.status} on {project.name} branch {object_attributes.ref}\nCommit: {commit.message}" \
  --deliver discord \
  --deliver-chat-id "1234567890"

Generic monitoring alert

hermes webhook subscribe alerts \
  --prompt "Alert: {alert.name}\nSeverity: {alert.severity}\nMessage: {alert.message}\n\nPlease investigate and suggest remediation." \
  --deliver origin

Direct delivery (no agent, zero LLM cost)

For use cases where you just want to push a notification through to a user's chat — no reasoning, no agent loop — add --deliver-only. The rendered --prompt template becomes the literal message body and is dispatched directly to the target adapter.

Use this for:

  • External service push notifications (Supabase/Firebase webhooks → Telegram)
  • Monitoring alerts that should forward verbatim
  • Inter-agent pings where one agent is telling another agent's user something
  • Any webhook where an LLM round trip would be wasted effort
hermes webhook subscribe antenna-matches \
  --deliver telegram \
  --deliver-chat-id "123456789" \
  --deliver-only \
  --prompt "🎉 New match: {match.user_name} matched with you!" \
  --description "Antenna match notifications"

The POST returns 200 OK on successful delivery, 502 on target failure — so upstream services can retry intelligently. HMAC auth, rate limits, and idempotency still apply.

Requires --deliver to be a real target (telegram, discord, slack, github_comment, etc.) — --deliver log is rejected because log-only direct delivery is pointless.

Security

  • Each subscription gets an auto-generated HMAC-SHA256 secret (or provide your own with --secret)
  • The webhook adapter validates signatures on every incoming POST
  • Static routes from config.yaml cannot be overwritten by dynamic subscriptions
  • Subscriptions persist to ~/.hermes/webhook_subscriptions.json

How It Works

  1. hermes webhook subscribe writes to ~/.hermes/webhook_subscriptions.json
  2. The webhook adapter hot-reloads this file on each incoming request (mtime-gated, negligible overhead)
  3. When a POST arrives matching a route, the adapter formats the prompt and triggers an agent run
  4. The agent's response is delivered to the configured target (Telegram, Discord, GitHub comment, etc.)

Troubleshooting

If webhooks aren't working:

  1. Is the gateway running? Check with systemctl --user status hermes-gateway or ps aux | grep gateway
  2. Is the webhook server listening? curl http://localhost:8644/health should return {"status": "ok"}
  3. Check gateway logs: grep webhook ~/.hermes/logs/gateway.log | tail -20
  4. Signature mismatch? Verify the secret in your service matches the one from hermes webhook list. GitHub sends X-Hub-Signature-256, GitLab sends X-Gitlab-Token.
  5. Firewall/NAT? The webhook URL must be reachable from the service. For local development, use a tunnel (ngrok, cloudflared).
  6. Wrong event type? Check --events filter matches what the service sends. Use hermes webhook test <name> to verify the route works.