The MCP SDK discovers OAuth server metadata (token_endpoint, etc.) on
demand and keeps it in memory only. Without disk persistence, a restart
with valid cached refresh tokens forces the SDK to fall back to the
guessed '{server_url}/token' path — which returns 404 on most real
providers (Notion, Atlassian, GitHub remote MCP, etc.) and triggers a
full browser re-authorization even though the refresh token is fine.
Add a .meta.json file next to the existing tokens/client_info files:
HERMES_HOME/mcp-tokens/<server>.json -- tokens (existing)
HERMES_HOME/mcp-tokens/<server>.client.json -- client info (existing)
HERMES_HOME/mcp-tokens/<server>.meta.json -- oauth metadata (new)
Changes:
- HermesTokenStorage.save_oauth_metadata / load_oauth_metadata / _meta_path
— disk layer for the discovered OAuthMetadata.
- HermesTokenStorage.remove() now also clears .meta.json so
'hermes mcp remove <name>' and the manager's remove() path clean up fully.
- HermesMCPOAuthProvider._initialize cold-restores from disk before the
existing pre-flight discovery runs. If disk has metadata we skip the
discovery HTTP round-trips entirely.
- HermesMCPOAuthProvider._prefetch_oauth_metadata now persists ASM as
soon as it's discovered, so even the first pre-flight run seeds disk.
- HermesMCPOAuthProvider._persist_oauth_metadata_if_changed() is called
at the end of async_auth_flow so metadata discovered via the SDK's
lazy 401-branch (not pre-flight) is also saved for next time.
Tests cover the storage roundtrip (save/load/missing/corrupt/remove) and
the manager provider path (cold-load restore, skip-when-in-memory,
persist-on-discover, noop-when-unchanged, end-to-end async_auth_flow).
Co-authored-by: nocturnum91 <50326054+nocturnum91@users.noreply.github.com>
Skills that produce large/lossless images (e.g. info-graph, where a
rendered JPG is 1-2 MB) currently lose quality in Telegram delivery
because `_IMAGE_EXTS` membership routes the file through
`send_multiple_images` → `sendMediaGroup`, which Telegram's server
re-encodes to JPEG @ 1280px max edge. The original bytes only survive
when the file goes through `send_document`, which the dispatch tables
in three places (`_process_message_background`, `_deliver_media_from_response`,
and the `send_message` tool's telegram path) only reach for files
whose extension is NOT in `_IMAGE_EXTS`.
This commit adds an `[[as_document]]` directive that mirrors the
existing `[[audio_as_voice]]` shape: a skill emits the directive once
in its response, and every image-extension MEDIA: file in that response
is delivered via `send_document` instead of `send_multiple_images` /
`sendPhoto`. The directive is detected at the dispatch sites (which see
the raw response) and the directive string is stripped from the
user-visible cleaned text in `extract_media` so it never leaks.
Granularity is intentionally all-or-nothing per response, matching
[[audio_as_voice]]'s scope. Skills that need fine control can split into
two responses.
Verified the targeted use case: info-graph emits
信息图已生成(...)
[[as_document]]
MEDIA:/tmp/info-graph-x/infographic.jpg
→ Telegram receives `infographic.jpg` via sendDocument, original 1MB
JPEG bytes preserved, no recompression. Forwarding and download
filenames stay clean (`infographic.jpg`).
Tests: +3 cases in TestExtractMedia covering directive strip, isolation
from voice flag, and coexistence with [[audio_as_voice]]. All
113 pre-existing media/extract/send tests pass.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The delegate_task tool schema descriptions referenced 'claude --acp --stdio'
as an example, but Claude Code CLI does not support --acp or --stdio flags.
The ACP subprocess transport (agent/copilot_acp_client.py) is specifically
built for GitHub Copilot CLI ('copilot --acp --stdio').
Changes:
- Per-task acp_command example: 'claude' → 'copilot'
- Top-level acp_command description: remove 'Claude Code' reference,
clarify requirement for ACP-compatible CLI (currently Copilot only)
- acp_args description: remove misleading claude-opus-4-6 example
Fixes#19055
The kanban_heartbeat tool called heartbeat_worker but never
heartbeat_claim, so a worker that loops the tool while a single tool
call blocks the agent for >DEFAULT_CLAIM_TTL_SECONDS still got
reclaimed by release_stale_claims. The function name and
heartbeat_claim's own docstring imply otherwise:
"Workers that know they'll exceed 15 minutes should call this
every few minutes to keep ownership."
But there was no caller in the worker tool path. Workers couldn't
invoke heartbeat_claim themselves either — it isn't exposed as a tool.
Fix: _handle_heartbeat now calls heartbeat_claim first, reading
HERMES_KANBAN_CLAIM_LOCK from the worker env (the dispatcher pins
this in _default_spawn). Falls back to _claimer_id() for locally-
driven workers that didn't go through dispatcher spawn.
Test: tests/tools/test_kanban_tools.py::test_heartbeat_extends_claim_expires
rewinds claim_expires into the past, calls the tool, and asserts the
new value is at least now + DEFAULT_CLAIM_TTL_SECONDS // 2. Verified to
fail against the unfixed code (claim_expires stays at the rewound
value).
Closes the root cause underlying the symptom in #21141 (15-min
respawns of long-running workers). #21141 separately addresses
post-reclaim cleanup; this fixes the upstream "shouldn't have been
reclaimed in the first place" half.
When terminal.backend is docker, inbound documents uploaded via messaging
platforms (Telegram, Slack, Discord, Feishu, Email, etc.) are cached at a host
path under ~/.hermes/cache/documents, but the container sandbox only sees them
at the auto-mounted /root/.hermes/cache/documents path.
This PR adds to_agent_visible_cache_path() in tools/credential_files.py (the
natural sibling to get_cache_directory_mounts()) and calls it at the
document-context-injection site in gateway/run.py so the agent always receives
a path it can open directly, matching the mount layout already established
by get_cache_directory_mounts() (#4846).
Scope: only Docker backend for now; other backends use different mount
semantics and are left unchanged until verified.
Fixes#18787
_write_json (the persistence helper used by HermesTokenStorage for both
tokens and client_info) created the temp file via Path.write_text and
only chmod'd it to 0o600 afterward. Between create and chmod the file
existed on disk at the process umask (commonly 0o644 = world-readable),
briefly exposing MCP OAuth access/refresh tokens to other local users.
Use os.open with O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_EXCL and an explicit S_IRUSR|S_IWUSR
mode so the file is created atomically at 0o600, plus tighten the parent
dir to 0o700 so siblings can't traverse to the creds file. The temp name
also gains a per-process random suffix to avoid collisions between
concurrent writers and stale leftovers from a crashed prior write.
Mirrors the fix shipped for agent/google_oauth.py in #19673.
Adds a regression test asserting the resulting file mode is 0o600 and
the parent directory is 0o700 (skipped on Windows where POSIX mode bits
aren't enforced).
Adds SearXNG as a free, self-hosted web search provider. SearXNG is a
privacy-respecting metasearch engine that requires no API key — just a
running instance and SEARXNG_URL pointing at it.
## What this adds
- `tools/web_providers/searxng.py` — `SearXNGSearchProvider` implementing
`WebSearchProvider` (search only; no extract capability)
- `_is_backend_available("searxng")` — gates on SEARXNG_URL
- `_get_backend()` — accepts "searxng" as a configured value; adds it to
auto-detect candidates (lower priority than paid services)
- `web_search_tool` — dispatches to SearXNG when it is the active backend
- `check_web_api_key()` — includes SearXNG in availability check
- `OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS["SEARXNG_URL"]` — registered with tools=["web_search"]
- `tools_config.py` — SearXNG appears in the `hermes tools` provider picker
- `nous_subscription.py` — `direct_searxng` detection, web_active / web_available
- `setup.py` — SEARXNG_URL listed in the missing-credential hint
- 23 tests covering: is_configured, happy-path search, score sorting, limit,
HTTP/request errors, _is_backend_available, _get_backend, check_web_api_key
## Config
```yaml
# Use SearXNG for search, any paid provider for extract
web:
search_backend: "searxng"
extract_backend: "firecrawl"
# Or: SearXNG as the sole backend (web_extract will use the next available)
web:
backend: "searxng"
```
SearXNG is search-only — it does not implement WebExtractProvider. Users
who only configure SEARXNG_URL get web_search available; web_extract falls
back to the next available extract provider (or is unavailable if none).
Closes#19198 (Phase 2 Task 4 — SearXNG provider)
Ref: #11562 (original SearXNG PR)
Introduce the foundation for independently selecting web search and
extract backends — enabling future combinations like SearXNG for
search + Firecrawl for extract.
Architecture:
- tools/web_providers/base.py: WebSearchProvider and WebExtractProvider
ABCs with normalized result contracts (mirrors CloudBrowserProvider)
- tools/web_tools.py: _get_search_backend() and _get_extract_backend()
read per-capability config keys, fall through to shared web.backend
- hermes_cli/config.py: web.search_backend and web.extract_backend in
DEFAULT_CONFIG (empty = inherit from web.backend)
Behavioral change:
- web_search_tool() now dispatches via _get_search_backend()
- web_extract_tool() now dispatches via _get_extract_backend()
- When per-capability keys are empty (default), behavior is identical
to before — _get_search_backend() falls through to _get_backend()
This is purely structural — no new backends are added. SearXNG and
other search-only/extract-only providers can now be added as simple
drop-in modules in follow-up PRs.
12 new tests, 49 existing tests pass with zero regressions.
Ref: #19198
Replaces the per-directory shadow-repo design with a single shared shadow
git store at ~/.hermes/checkpoints/store/. Object DB is now deduplicated
across every working directory the agent has ever touched; a dozen
worktrees of the same project cost near-zero in additional disk.
Why
---
Pre-v2 design had three compounding problems that let ~/.hermes/checkpoints/
grow to multi-GB on active machines:
1. Each working directory got its own full shadow git repo — no object
dedup across projects or across worktrees of the same project.
2. _prune() was a documented no-op: max_snapshots only limited the
/rollback listing. Loose objects accumulated forever.
3. Defaults: enabled=True, auto_prune=False — users paid the disk cost
without ever asking for /rollback.
Field report on a single workstation: 847 MB across 47 shadow repos,
mostly redundant clones of the hermes-agent source tree.
Changes
-------
- tools/checkpoint_manager.py: full rewrite. Single bare store, per-project
refs (refs/hermes/<hash>), per-project indexes (store/indexes/<hash>),
per-project metadata (store/projects/<hash>.json with workdir +
created_at + last_touch). On first v2 init, any pre-v2 per-directory
shadow repos are auto-migrated into legacy-<timestamp>/ so the new
store starts clean. _prune() now actually rewrites the per-project ref
to the last max_snapshots commits and runs git gc --prune=now. New
_enforce_size_cap() drops oldest commits round-robin across projects
when the store exceeds max_total_size_mb. _drop_oversize_from_index()
filters any single file larger than max_file_size_mb out of the snapshot.
- hermes_cli/checkpoints.py: new 'hermes checkpoints' CLI
(status / list / prune / clear / clear-legacy) for managing the store
outside a session.
- hermes_cli/config.py: flipped defaults — enabled=False, max_snapshots=20,
auto_prune=True. Added max_total_size_mb=500, max_file_size_mb=10.
Tightened DEFAULT_EXCLUDES (added target/, *.so/*.dylib/*.dll,
*.mp4/*.mov, *.zip/*.tar.gz, .worktrees/, .mypy_cache/, etc.).
- run_agent.py / cli.py / gateway/run.py: thread the new kwargs through
AIAgent and the startup auto_prune hooks.
- Tests rewritten to match v2 storage while keeping backwards-compat
coverage for the pre-v2 prune path (per-directory shadow repos under
base/ are still swept correctly for anyone mid-migration).
- Docs updated: user-guide/checkpoints-and-rollback.md explains the
shared store, new defaults, migration, and the new CLI;
reference/cli-commands.md documents 'hermes checkpoints'.
E2E validated
-------------
- Legacy migration: pre-v2 shadow repos auto-archived into legacy-<ts>/.
- Object dedup: two projects with an identical shared.py blob resolve to
7 total objects in the store (v1 would have stored the blob twice).
- max_snapshots=3 actually enforced: after 6 commits, list shows 3.
- Orphan prune: deleting a project's workdir + 'hermes checkpoints prune
--retention-days 0' removes its ref, index, and metadata; GC reclaims
the objects.
- max_file_size_mb=1 excludes a 2 MB weights.bin while keeping the
tracked source code files.
- hermes checkpoints {status,prune,clear,clear-legacy} all work from the
CLI without an agent running.
Breaking / migration
--------------------
No in-place data migration — legacy per-directory shadow repos are moved
into legacy-<timestamp>/ on first run. Old /rollback history is still
accessible by inspecting the archive with git; run
'hermes checkpoints clear-legacy' to reclaim the space when ready. Users
relying on /rollback must now set checkpoints.enabled=true (or pass
--checkpoints) explicitly.
Add Lightpanda as an optional browser engine for local mode.
Lightpanda is a headless browser built from scratch in Zig -- faster
navigation than Chrome with significantly less memory.
One config line to enable:
browser:
engine: lightpanda
New functions in browser_tool.py:
- _get_browser_engine() -- config/env reader with validation + caching
- _should_inject_engine() -- only inject in local non-cloud mode
- _needs_lightpanda_fallback() -- detect empty/failed LP results
- _chrome_fallback_screenshot() -- temporary Chrome session for screenshots
- Engine injection in _run_browser_command (--engine flag)
- browser_vision pre-routes screenshots to Chrome when engine=lightpanda
Config:
- browser.engine in DEFAULT_CONFIG (auto/lightpanda/chrome)
- AGENT_BROWSER_ENGINE in OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS
- /browser status shows engine info in local mode
Rebased from PR #7144 onto current main. All existing code preserved --
pure additions only (+520/-2).
25 new tests + 81 total browser tests pass (0 failures).
README:24 claimed "Six terminal backends" while tools/environments/ exposes
seven top-level backend choices through TERMINAL_ENV: local, docker, ssh,
singularity, modal, daytona, vercel_sandbox. Modal additionally has direct
and Nous-managed modes selected via terminal.modal_mode (the
ManagedModalEnvironment class is a Modal sub-mode, not a separate top-level
backend).
The same drift appeared in five other doc and code-comment sites with
inconsistent counts (six, seven, or implicit) and varying lists. Updated
all sites to a consistent seven-backend list in canonical order. The
configuration guide also clarifies how Modal's two modes are selected so
operators do not search for a non-existent backend: managed_modal value.
CONTRIBUTING.md:160 lists six backend filenames in a code tree but does
not carry the "Six terminal" prose; left out of scope per cohesion sweep
guidance to bundle only identical wording.
Files updated:
- README.md (line 24, marketing copy)
- website/docs/index.md (line 49, landing page)
- website/docs/user-guide/configuration.md (line 86, config guide)
- tools/environments/__init__.py (lines 3-6, package docstring)
- tools/file_operations.py (line 6, module docstring)
- environments/README.md (line 43, RL training docs — TERMINAL_ENV list)
The comment at tools/web_tools.py:700-702 stated the runtime default for
auxiliary.web_extract.timeout is 360s. The actual runtime default is 30s
(_DEFAULT_AUX_TIMEOUT in agent/auxiliary_client.py:3140), used by
_get_task_timeout when no auxiliary.web_extract.timeout key is present in
config.yaml.
The 360s figure is the config template default written by
hermes_cli/config.py:697 into freshly-generated config.yaml files. It only
takes effect when that key exists in the user's config — not as a fallback.
Users on configs that predate commit 20b4060d (Apr 5, 2026), or who removed
the key, fall through to the 30s _DEFAULT_AUX_TIMEOUT runtime default.
The comment was introduced in 20b4060d alongside the template-default bump
from 30 to 360. The runtime default in auxiliary_client.py was not changed
in that commit and has remained 30s since 839d9d74 (Mar 28, 2026).
Workers completing a kanban task can now claim the ids of cards they
created via an optional ``created_cards`` field on ``kanban_complete``.
The kernel verifies each id exists and was created by the completing
worker's profile; any phantom id blocks the completion with a
``HallucinatedCardsError`` and records a
``completion_blocked_hallucination`` event on the task so the rejected
attempt is auditable. Successful completions also get a non-blocking
prose-scan pass over their ``summary`` + ``result`` that emits a
``suspected_hallucinated_references`` event for any ``t_<hex>``
reference that doesn't resolve.
Closes#20017.
Recovery UX (kernel + CLI + dashboard)
--------------------------------------
A structural gate alone isn't enough — operators also need to see and
act on stuck workers, especially when a profile's model is the root
cause. This PR ships the full loop:
* ``kanban_db.reclaim_task(task_id)`` — operator-driven reclaim that
releases an active worker claim immediately (unlike
``release_stale_claims`` which only acts after claim_expires has
passed). Emits a ``reclaimed`` event with ``manual: True`` payload.
* ``kanban_db.reassign_task(task_id, profile, reclaim_first=...)`` —
switch a task to a different profile, optionally reclaiming a stuck
running worker in the same call.
* ``hermes kanban reclaim <id> [--reason ...]`` and
``hermes kanban reassign <id> <profile> [--reclaim] [--reason ...]``
CLI subcommands wired through to the same helpers.
* ``POST /api/plugins/kanban/tasks/{id}/reclaim`` and
``POST /api/plugins/kanban/tasks/{id}/reassign`` endpoints on the
dashboard plugin.
Dashboard surfacing
-------------------
* ⚠ **warning badge** on cards with active hallucination events.
* **attention strip** at the top of the board listing all flagged
tasks; dismissible per session.
* **events callout** in the task drawer — hallucination events render
with a red left border, amber icon, and phantom ids as styled chips.
* **recovery section** in the task drawer with three actions: Reclaim,
Reassign (with profile picker + reclaim-first checkbox), and a
copy-to-clipboard hint for ``hermes -p <profile> model`` since
profile config lives on disk and can't be edited from the browser.
Auto-opens when the task has warnings, collapsed otherwise.
Keyed by task id so state doesn't leak between drawers.
Active-vs-stale rule: warnings clear when a clean ``completed`` or
``edited`` event supersedes the hallucination, so recovery is never
permanently stigmatising — the audit events persist for debugging but
the badge goes away once the worker succeeds.
Skill updates
-------------
* ``skills/devops/kanban-worker/SKILL.md`` documents the
``created_cards`` contract with good/bad examples.
* ``skills/devops/kanban-orchestrator/SKILL.md`` gains a "Recovering
stuck workers" section with the three actions and when to use each.
Tests
-----
* Kernel gate: verified-cards manifest, phantom rejection + audit
event, cross-worker rejection, prose scan positive + negative.
* Recovery helpers: reclaim on running task, reclaim on non-running
returns False, reassign refuses running without reclaim_first,
reassign with reclaim_first succeeds on running.
* API endpoints: warnings field present on /board and /tasks/:id,
warnings cleared after clean completion, reclaim 200 + 409 paths,
reassign 200 + 409 + reclaim_first paths.
* CLI smoke: reclaim + reassign subcommands.
Live-verified end-to-end on a dashboard with seeded scenarios:
attention strip renders, badges land on the right cards, drawer
callout shows phantom chips, Reclaim on a running task flips status to
ready + emits manual reclaimed event + refreshes the drawer,
Reassign swaps the assignee and triggers board refresh.
359/359 kanban-suite tests pass
(test_kanban_{db,cli,boards,core_functionality} + dashboard + tools).
* revert(gateway): remove stale-code self-check and auto-restart
Removes the _detect_stale_code / _trigger_stale_code_restart mechanism
introduced in #17648 and iterated in #19740. On every incoming message
the gateway compared the boot-time git HEAD SHA to the current SHA on
disk, and if they differed it would reply with
Gateway code was updated in the background --
restarting this gateway so your next message runs
on the new code. Please retry in a moment.
and then kick off a graceful restart. This is unwanted behaviour:
users who run a long-lived gateway and do their own ad-hoc git
operations on the checkout end up with their chat interrupted and
the current message dropped every time HEAD moves, with no way to
opt out.
If an operator really needs the old protection against stale
sys.modules after "hermes update", the SIGKILL-survivor sweep in
hermes update (hermes_cli/main.py, also tagged #17648) already
handles the supervisor-respawn case on its own.
Removed:
gateway/run.py:
- _STALE_CODE_SENTINELS, _GIT_SHA_CACHE_TTL_SECS
- _read_git_head_sha(), _compute_repo_mtime() module helpers
- class-level _boot_wall_time / _boot_repo_mtime / _boot_git_sha /
_stale_code_restart_triggered defaults
- __init__ boot-snapshot block (_boot_*, _cached_current_sha*,
_repo_root_for_staleness, _stale_code_notified)
- _current_git_sha_cached(), _detect_stale_code(),
_trigger_stale_code_restart() methods
- stale-code check + user-facing restart notice at the top of
_handle_message()
tests/gateway/test_stale_code_self_check.py (deleted, 412 lines)
No new logic added. Zero remaining references to any removed
symbol. Gateway test suite passes the same 4589 tests it passed
before; the 3 pre-existing unrelated failures (discord free-channel,
feishu bot admission, teams typing) are unchanged by this commit.
* feat(i18n): add display.language for static message translation (zh/ja/de/es)
Adds a thin-slice i18n layer covering the highest-impact static user-facing
messages: the CLI dangerous-command approval prompt and a handful of gateway
slash-command replies (restart-drain, goal cleared, approval expired, config
read/save errors).
Out of scope (stays English): agent responses, log lines, tool outputs,
slash-command descriptions, error tracebacks.
Infrastructure:
- agent/i18n.py: catalog loader, t() helper, language resolution
(HERMES_LANGUAGE env var > display.language config > en)
- locales/{en,zh,ja,de,es}.yaml: ~19 translated strings per language
- display.language in DEFAULT_CONFIG (hermes_cli/config.py)
Tests:
- tests/agent/test_i18n.py: 21 tests covering catalog parity, placeholder
parity across locales, fallback behavior, env-var override, alias
normalization, missing-key graceful degradation.
Docs:
- website/docs/user-guide/configuration.md: display.language entry plus a
short section explaining scope so users don't expect agent responses to
translate via this knob.
Sends a lightweight list_tools() probe every 3 minutes during idle
periods to prevent TCP connections from going stale behind LB / NAT
idle timeouts (commonly 300-600s). When the keepalive fails, the
reconnect event fires so the transport rebuilds the session cleanly.
Salvages the keepalive portion of @vominh1919's PR #17016. The
circuit-breaker half-open recovery from the same PR was independently
landed on main via #benbarclay's commit 8cc3cebca ("fix(mcp): add
half-open state to circuit breaker", Apr 21); only the keepalive is
salvaged here.
Fixes#17003.
Previously, pinning a skill blocked every skill_manage write action
(edit, patch, delete, write_file, remove_file). The 'hard fence'
design conflated two concerns:
1. Pin as deletion protection — don't let the curator archive
or the agent delete a stable skill.
2. Pin as content freeze — don't let the agent rewrite it mid-conversation.
In practice (1) is what users pin for: they want a skill to survive
curator passes. (2) created friction — agents finding a new pitfall
in a pinned skill had to ask the user to unpin, then the agent
patches, then the user re-pins. The dance discouraged skill
maintenance and pinned skills went stale.
This narrows the _pinned_guard to skill_manage(action='delete') only.
Patches, edits, and supporting-file writes go through on pinned
skills so the agent can keep improving them. The curator's own
pinned-skip behavior (agent/curator.py:271 for auto-archive,
line 349 for the LLM review prompt) is unchanged — curator still
never touches pinned skills.
Changes:
- tools/skill_manager_tool.py: remove _pinned_guard calls from
_edit_skill, _patch_skill, _write_file, _remove_file; keep on
_delete_skill. Updated _pinned_guard docstring and error message.
- tools/skill_manager_tool.py: updated skill_manage model-facing tool
description to reflect the new semantic.
- website/docs/user-guide/features/curator.md: updated pinning
section.
- tests/tools/test_skill_manager_tool.py: flipped refuses-pinned
tests for edit/patch/write_file/remove_file into allowed-when-pinned;
kept test_delete_refuses_pinned (strengthened assertion to check the
'cannot be deleted' wording).
Closes#18354
Closes the gap where write_file skipped the post-edit syntax check that
patch already ran, so silent file corruption (bad quote escaping,
truncated writes, etc.) would persist on disk until a later read.
## Changes
tools/file_operations.py:
- Add in-process linters for .py, .json, .yaml, .toml (LINTERS_INPROC).
Python uses ast.parse, JSON/YAML/TOML use stdlib/PyYAML parsers.
Zero subprocess overhead; preferred over shell linters when both apply.
- _check_lint() now accepts optional content and routes to in-process
linter first. Shell linter (py_compile, node --check, tsc, go vet,
rustfmt) remains the fallback for languages without an in-process
equivalent.
- New _check_lint_delta() implements the post-first/pre-lazy pattern
borrowed from Cline and OpenCode: lint post-write state first; only
if errors are found AND pre-content was captured does it lint the
pre-state and diff. If the pre-existing file had the SAME errors the
edit didn't introduce anything new, so the file is reported as 'still
broken, pre-existing' with success=False but a message explaining the
errors were pre-existing. If the edit introduced genuinely new errors,
those are surfaced and pre-existing ones are filtered out.
- WriteResult gains a lint field.
- write_file() captures pre-content for in-process-lintable extensions
and calls _check_lint_delta after a successful write.
- patch_replace() switches from _check_lint to _check_lint_delta,
reusing the pre-edit content it already has in scope.
tools/file_tools.py:
- Update write_file schema description to mention the post-write lint.
tests/tools/test_file_operations_edge_cases.py:
- Update existing brace-path tests to use .js (shell linter) now that
.py is in-process.
- Add TestCheckLintInproc (9 tests) covering Python/JSON/YAML/TOML
in-process linters.
- Add TestCheckLintDelta (5 tests) covering the post-first/pre-lazy
short-circuit, new-file path, and the single-error-parser caveat.
## Performance
In-process linters are microseconds per call (ast.parse, json.loads).
The hot path (clean write) runs exactly one lint — matches main's cost
for patch. Pre-state capture is skipped when the file has no applicable
linter. Measured 4.89ms/write average over 100 .py writes including lint.
## Inspiration
- Cline's DiffViewProvider.getNewDiagnosticProblems() — filters pre-write
diagnostics from post-write diagnostics (src/integrations/editor/DiffViewProvider.ts).
- OpenCode's WriteTool — runs lsp.diagnostics() after write and appends
errors to tool output (packages/opencode/src/tool/write.ts).
- Claude Code's DiagnosticTrackingService — captures baseline via
beforeFileEdited() and returns new-diagnostics-only from
getNewDiagnostics() (src/services/diagnosticTracking.ts).
## Validation
- tests/tools/test_file_operations.py + test_file_operations_edge_cases.py
+ test_file_tools.py + test_file_tools_live.py + test_file_write_safety.py
+ test_write_deny.py + test_patch_parser.py + test_file_ops_cwd_tracking.py:
228 passed locally.
- Live E2E reproduction of the tips.py corruption incident: broken
content written; lint field surfaces 'SyntaxError: invalid syntax.
Perhaps you forgot a comma? (line 6, column 5)' — the exact error
that would have self-corrected the bug on the next turn.
MCP servers commonly emit JSON Schema `pattern` (e.g. `\\d{4}-\\d{2}-\\d{2}`
for date-time params) and `format` keywords. llama.cpp's
`json-schema-to-grammar` converter rejects regex escape classes
(\\d/\\w/\\s) and most format values, returning HTTP 400
"parse: error parsing grammar: unknown escape at \\d" — the whole request
fails.
Cloud providers (OpenAI, Anthropic, OpenRouter, Gemini) accept these
keywords fine and use them as prompting hints. Stripping unconditionally
loses useful hints for every cloud user to fix a llama.cpp-only bug.
Approach: classify the llama.cpp grammar-parse 400 in the error
classifier, and on match do a one-shot in-place strip of pattern/format
from `self.tools`, then retry. Follows the existing
`thinking_signature` recovery pattern. Cloud users hit zero overhead;
llama.cpp users pay one failed request per session.
Changes
- agent/error_classifier.py: new `FailoverReason.llama_cpp_grammar_pattern`
+ narrow HTTP-400 branch matching "error parsing grammar",
"json-schema-to-grammar", or "unable to generate parser ... template".
- tools/schema_sanitizer.py: new `strip_pattern_and_format()` helper —
reactive, walks schema nodes, skips property names (search_files.pattern
survives). Returns strip count for logging.
- run_agent.py: new one-shot recovery block in the retry loop. Strips,
logs, continues. Falls through to normal retry if nothing to strip.
- tests: 4 classifier tests (3 variants + 1 non-400 negative), 7 strip
tests including the property-name preservation and idempotency checks.
Co-authored-by: Chris Danis <cdanis@gmail.com>
Follow-up to #19928 which fixed the foreground path in _run_bash.
The background process spawn in process_registry.py had the same
vulnerability: Popen(cwd=session.cwd) and PtyProcess.spawn(cwd=...)
would raise FileNotFoundError if the directory was deleted.
Apply _resolve_safe_cwd() at session creation time so both the PTY
and pipe-mode Popen paths receive a validated cwd.
Address Copilot review on PR #17569:
1. _resolve_safe_cwd never tested the filesystem root because the loop
exited when `os.path.dirname(parent) == parent`, which is true once
`parent == '/'`. Restructure so the root is checked before the
self-equal exit. Adds `test_returns_root_when_only_root_exists` —
regression-guarded by reverting the loop and watching it fail.
2. The fake `Popen.stdout` was a `MagicMock`; `BaseEnvironment._wait_for_process`
calls `proc.stdout.fileno()` then `select.select`/`os.read` against it,
which raised `TypeError: fileno() returned a non-integer` (visible as a
thread exception in test output) and could in theory read from an
unrelated real fd. Hand `fake_popen` a real `os.pipe()` with the write
end pre-closed so the drain loop sees EOF immediately. Helper records
each fd so the test cleans up after itself.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
When a tool call deletes its own working directory (`cd /tmp/foo &&
rm -rf /tmp/foo`), the next `subprocess.Popen(args, cwd=self.cwd)` raised
`FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2]` before bash even started — every subsequent
terminal/file-tool call hit the same wedge until the gateway restarted.
Fix in `LocalEnvironment._run_bash`: before handing `self.cwd` to Popen,
resolve a safe alternative when the path is gone (walk up to the nearest
existing ancestor, falling back to `tempfile.gettempdir()` only as a last
resort). Log a warning so the recovery is visible — not silent — and
update `self.cwd` so the next call doesn't repeat the message.
Defense in depth in `LocalEnvironment._update_cwd`: only adopt the new
cwd when it still exists as a directory. `pwd -P` from a deleted cwd can
leave a stale value in the marker file; refusing to store a missing path
keeps `self.cwd` valid by construction.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
MiniMax deprecated the old v1/t2a_v2 endpoint (api.minimax.io) and
moved to v1/text_to_speech (api.minimax.chat). The new API:
- Uses a flat payload: {model, text, voice_id} instead of nested
voice_setting / audio_setting objects
- Returns raw audio bytes (Content-Type: audio/mpeg) instead of
JSON with hex-encoded audio
- Uses model 'speech-01' instead of 'speech-2.8-hd'
- Updated default voice_id to 'female-shaonv' for Chinese TTS
The implementation detects Content-Type to handle both old and new
API responses, maintaining backward compatibility for any users who
manually configured the legacy base_url.
* feat(cron): add no_agent mode for script-only cron jobs (watchdog pattern)
Adds a no_agent=True option to the cronjob system. When enabled, the
scheduler runs the attached script on schedule and delivers its stdout
directly to the job's target — no LLM, no agent loop, no token spend.
This is the classic bash-watchdog pattern (memory alert every 5 min,
disk alert every 15 min, CI ping) reimplemented as a first-class Hermes
primitive instead of a systemd timer + curl + bot token triplet living
outside the system.
## What
hermes cron create "every 5m" \
--no-agent \
--script memory-watchdog.sh \
--deliver telegram \
--name memory-watchdog
Agent tool:
cronjob(action='create',
schedule='every 5m',
script='memory-watchdog.sh',
no_agent=True,
deliver='telegram')
Semantics:
- Script stdout (trimmed) → delivered verbatim as the message
- Empty stdout → silent tick (no delivery; watchdog pattern)
- wakeAgent=false gate → silent tick (same gate LLM jobs use)
- Non-zero exit/timeout → delivered as an error alert
(broken watchdogs shouldn't fail silently)
- No LLM ever invoked; no tokens spent; no provider fallback applied
## Implementation
cron/jobs.py
* create_job gains no_agent: bool = False
* prompt becomes Optional (no_agent jobs don't need one)
* Validation: no_agent=True requires a script at create time
* Field roundtrips via load_jobs / save_jobs / update_job
cron/scheduler.py
* run_job: new short-circuit branch at the top that runs the script,
wraps its output into the (success, doc, final_response, error)
tuple downstream delivery already expects, and returns before any
AIAgent import or construction
* _run_job_script: picks interpreter by extension — .sh/.bash run
under /bin/bash, anything else under sys.executable (Python).
Shell support unlocks the bash-watchdog pattern without wrapping
scripts in Python. Extension is explicit; we deliberately do NOT
trust the file's own shebang. Path-containment guard (scripts dir)
unchanged.
tools/cronjob_tools.py
* Schema: new no_agent boolean property with clear trigger guidance
* cronjob() accepts no_agent and validates mode-specific shape:
- no_agent=True requires script; prompt/skills optional
- no_agent=False keeps the existing 'prompt or skill required' rule
* update path rejects flipping no_agent=True on a job without a script
* _format_job surfaces no_agent in list output
* Handler lambda forwards no_agent from tool args
hermes_cli/main.py, hermes_cli/cron.py
* 'hermes cron create --no-agent' and edit's --no-agent / --agent
pair for toggling at CLI parity with the agent tool
* Existing --script help text updated to describe both modes
* List / create / edit output now shows 'Mode: no-agent (...)' when set
## Tests
tests/cron/test_cron_no_agent.py — 18 tests covering:
* create_job: no_agent shape, validation, field persistence
* update_job: flag roundtrip across reload
* cronjob tool: schema validation, update toggling, mode-specific
requirements, prompt-relaxation rule
* run_job short-circuit:
- success path delivers stdout verbatim
- empty stdout → SILENT_MARKER (no delivery downstream)
- wakeAgent=false gate → silent
- script failure → error alert
- run_job does NOT import AIAgent (verified via mock)
* _run_job_script:
- .sh executes via bash (no shebang required)
- .bash executes via bash
- .py still runs via sys.executable (regression)
- path-traversal still blocked (security regression)
All 18 new tests pass. 341/342 pre-existing cron tests still pass; the
one failure (test_script_empty_output_noted) was already broken on main
and is unrelated to this change.
## Docs
website/docs/guides/cron-script-only.md — new dedicated guide covering
the watchdog pattern, interpreter rules, delivery mapping, worked
examples (memory / disk alerts), and the comparison table vs hermes send,
regular LLM cron jobs, and OS-level cron.
website/docs/user-guide/features/cron.md — new 'No-agent mode' section
in the cron feature reference, cross-linked to the guide.
website/docs/guides/automate-with-cron.md — new tip box pointing users
to no-agent mode when they don't need LLM reasoning.
## Compatibility
- Existing jobs: unchanged. no_agent defaults to False, existing code
paths untouched until the flag is set.
- Schema additive only; older jobs.json without the field load fine
via .get() with False default.
- New CLI flags are opt-in and don't alter existing flag behavior.
* fix(cron): lazy-import AIAgent + SessionDB so no_agent ticks pay zero
The unconditional `from run_agent import AIAgent` + SessionDB() init at
the top of run_job() meant every no_agent tick still paid the full agent
module load cost (~300ms + transitive imports + DB open) even though it
never touched any of that machinery.
Move both to live under the default (LLM) path, after the no_agent
short-circuit has returned. Now a no_agent tick's sys.modules stays
clean — verified end-to-end:
assert 'run_agent' not in sys.modules # before
run_job(no_agent_job)
assert 'run_agent' not in sys.modules # after
The existing mock-based unit test (test_run_job_no_agent_never_invokes_aiagent)
kept passing because patch() replaces the class AFTER import; the leak
was only visible via real subprocess-style verification. End-to-end
demo confirmed: agent calls cronjob(no_agent=True) → script runs →
stdout delivered → no LLM machinery loaded.
* docs(cron): tighten no_agent tool schema — defaults, silent semantics, pick rule
Previous description buried the important bits in one long sentence.
Agents could plausibly miss three things an LLM-facing schema should
make unmissable:
1. What the default is — now first sentence + JSON Schema `default: false`
2. What 'silent run' actually means for the user — now spelled out:
'nothing is sent to the user and they won't see anything happened'
3. When to pick True vs False — now a concrete decision rule with
examples on both sides (watchdogs/metrics/pollers → True;
summarize/draft/pick/rephrase → False)
Also adds explicit 'prompt and skills are ignored when True' since the
agent could otherwise still pass them out of habit.
No behavior change — schema text only.
On VPS/Docker and some Ubuntu 23.10+ hosts, Chromium refuses to start
without --no-sandbox:
- uid=0 (root): hard requirement (VPS/Docker deployments)
- AppArmor apparmor_restrict_unprivileged_userns=1 (Ubuntu 23.10+):
non-root too, under systemd or unprivileged containers
Detect both conditions and inject AGENT_BROWSER_CHROME_FLAGS with
--no-sandbox --disable-dev-shm-usage when the user hasn't already
set the flags themselves.
Salvage of #15771 — only the browser_tool.py fix is cherry-picked.
The PR's accompanying MCP preset addition (new feature surface)
was dropped so the bug fix can land independently.
Co-authored-by: ygd58 <buraysandro9@gmail.com>
Clear inherited provider preference filters when delegation.provider is set so delegated children do not route back to the parent provider. Add a regression test for cross-provider delegation with parent OpenRouter filters.
Closes#10653
When a delegation child session (e.g. source='telegram') contains the
FTS5 hit but _resolve_to_parent() maps it to a different root session
(source='api_server'), the result entry was still reporting the child's
source because the loop discarded session_meta as `_` and fell back to
match_info.get('source'), which carries the child session's value.
Use the resolved parent's session_meta for source, model, and started_at
with match_info as a fallback, so the output accurately reflects the
session the user actually interacted with.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Reverts ff3d2773e2. Teknium reviewed the merged PR and decided this
behavior isn't wanted — tool-driven kanban_create should not mirror
the slash-command path's auto-subscribe. Orchestrators that want
their originating chat notified can call kanban_notify-subscribe
explicitly; we're not going to make it implicit.
Closes#19479.
When an orchestrator agent calls kanban_create from a gateway session
(e.g. a Telegram user delegating to an orchestrator profile), auto-
subscribe the originating (platform, chat, thread, user) to the new
task's terminal events. Mirrors the behavior of the /kanban create
slash command in gateway/run.py so tool-driven creation is at parity
with human-driven creation.
Without this, a user who interacts with an orchestrator exclusively
via the gateway never receives blocked / completed / gave_up
notifications for tasks the orchestrator created on their behalf —
silently breaking the gateway-first multi-agent flow the reporter
describes.
Reads the context-local HERMES_SESSION_* vars via get_session_env()
(not os.environ — those are contextvars for asyncio concurrency
safety). Falls through cleanly in CLI / cron contexts with no
session active (subscribed=False in the response). Best-effort: if
the gateway module isn't importable (test rigs stubbing gateway.*),
the task still creates, we just skip the subscription.
Response gains a 'subscribed' bool so the orchestrator knows whether
terminal events will land back in the originating chat or whether it
needs to poll / unblock manually.
Tests: 4 new in tests/tools/test_kanban_tools.py covering
CLI/no-subscribe, telegram/gateway-auto-subscribe, discord-DM/no-
thread subscribe, and partial-ctx/no-chat_id no-subscribe. 40/40
kanban tool tests pass.
ENV-assignment and JSON-field regex patterns in redact_sensitive_text()
cause false positives when reading source code files:
- MAX_TOKENS=*** triggers the ENV assignment pattern
- "apiKey": "test" in test fixtures triggers the JSON field pattern
Add code_file=False parameter. When code_file=True, skip only the
ENV-assignment and JSON-field regex passes; all other patterns (prefixes,
auth headers, private keys, DB connstrings, JWTs, URL secrets) are
still applied.
Update file_tools.py (read_file and search_files) to pass code_file=True
so agent code analysis is not polluted by false-positive redactions.
Closes#15934
Closes#19534 (security).
A worker spawned by the kanban dispatcher has HERMES_KANBAN_TASK set
to its own task id. The destructive tools (kanban_complete,
kanban_block, kanban_heartbeat) resolved task_id via
_default_task_id() which preferred an explicit arg over the env var,
with no ownership check — so a buggy or prompt-injected worker could
complete / block / heartbeat any OTHER task (sibling, cross-tenant,
anything) by supplying its id. Reporter's repro: worker for t_A
passed task_id=t_B to kanban_complete and got {"ok": true}.
Fix: add _enforce_worker_task_ownership(tid). If HERMES_KANBAN_TASK
is set and tid doesn't match, return a structured tool error with
guidance to use kanban_comment (for information handoff across tasks)
or kanban_create (for follow-up work). Orchestrator profiles (no env
var, but kanban toolset enabled per #18968) are exempt — their job
is routing and sometimes includes closing out child tasks.
Kept unrestricted (deliberately):
- kanban_show — workers legitimately read parent/sibling handoff context
- kanban_comment — cross-task comments are the handoff mechanism
- kanban_create — orchestrator fan-out, worker follow-up spawning
- kanban_link — parent/child linking
Tests: 5 new regression tests in tests/tools/test_kanban_tools.py
covering the grid (worker-attacks-foreign ×3 tools, worker-own-task
preserved, orchestrator-unrestricted). 36/36 pass.
AnyUrl was imported inside the same try block as mcp.client.auth, so
when the mcp package was not installed, AnyUrl was undefined and
_build_client_metadata raised NameError at runtime.
Moved the AnyUrl import to its own try/except block so it's available
whenever pydantic is installed (which is a core dependency), regardless
of whether the mcp SDK is present.
Also added pytest.importorskip('mcp') to the three
test_build_client_metadata tests that exercise _build_client_metadata,
since that function depends on OAuthClientMetadata from the mcp package.
Set max_result_size_chars=100_000 on the read_file registry entry (was
float('inf')), closing the Layer 2 defense-in-depth gap in
tool_result_storage.py. The existing Layer 1 guard inside
_handle_read_file already returns a JSON error for oversized reads;
this aligns the registry cap with every other tool.
Update test_read_file_never_persisted → test_read_file_result_size_cap
to assert 100_000, and add test_read_file_registry_cap_is_100k as an
explicit regression guard against re-introducing float('inf').
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Treat explicit CDP override mode as a valid browser backend even when agent-browser is absent, and add a regression test to prevent false-negative availability gating.
`_resolve_model_override` treated any non-empty `provider` string from
the LLM as user-specified and skipped the pin-to-current-provider
fallback. When the LLM wrote bare `'custom'` (instead of the canonical
`'custom:<name>'` referring to a custom_providers entry), the value
serialized into jobs.json as `"provider": "custom"` and the scheduler
could never resolve a provider from it — the cron job failed silently
at run time.
Treat bare `'custom'` as "no provider supplied" so the current main
provider gets pinned instead, matching behaviour for the omitted case.
Defence-in-depth complement to a schema-description fix (#15477) that
discourages the LLM from emitting bare `'custom'` in the first place.
YAML parses `delegation: null` as Python None. `dict.get(key, {})`
only uses the default when the key is *missing*, not when it exists with
a None value, so `cfg.get("max_concurrent_children")` crashes with
`'NoneType' object has no attribute 'get'`.
Same pattern as fd9b692d (fix(tui): tolerate null top-level sections).
Use `dict.get(key) or {}` to handle both missing and None-valued keys.
Closes: delegation null config crash (same class as #7215, #7346)
The `provider` field in CRONJOB_SCHEMA only showed examples like
'openrouter' and 'anthropic', with no mention of the canonical
'custom:<name>' form required for custom_providers entries. When the
user has custom providers configured, LLMs tend to write the bare type
name ('custom') because the schema does not advertise the ':<name>'
suffix. The bare value then serializes into jobs.json and causes the
cron job to fail silently at run time — `_resolve_model_override`
treats it as a user-specified provider and skips the pin-to-current
fallback, but no provider ever resolves from the bare 'custom' string.
Clarifying the schema so the canonical form is discoverable addresses
the root cause at the tool-definition boundary.
Adds RFC 5322 Date header to the _send_email tool path in tools/send_message_tool.py.
Issue #15160 noted that both gateway/platforms/email.py and tools/send_message_tool.py
construct MIMEMultipart/MIMEText messages without setting a Date header. RFC 5322
requires the Date header; mail filters reject messages that lack it.
PR #15207 fixed the gateway/platforms/email.py path but did not cover
tools/send_message_tool._send_email, which is used by the send_message tool
for cross-channel messaging.
This change adds msg["Date"] = formatdate(localtime=True) to _send_email,
mirroring the fix applied to the gateway email adapter.
Closes#15160
Tighten the provenance semantics added in #19618: skills a user asks a
foreground agent to write via skill_manage(create) now stay invisible to
the curator. Only skills the background self-improvement review fork
sediments through skill_manage get the created_by=agent marker.
- tools/skill_provenance.py — new ContextVar module mirroring the
_approval_session_key pattern: set_current_write_origin / reset /
get / is_background_review. Default origin is 'foreground'; the
review fork sets 'background_review'.
- run_agent.py — run_conversation() binds the ContextVar from
self._memory_write_origin at the top of each call. The review fork
runs on its own thread (fresh context), so foreground and review
contexts never cross-contaminate.
- tools/skill_manager_tool.py — skill_manage(action='create') now
only calls mark_agent_created() when is_background_review(). All
other cases (foreground create, patch, edit, write_file, delete)
continue as before.
- tests: test_skill_provenance.py (6 tests covering the ContextVar
surface), split test_full_create_via_dispatcher into foreground
vs. review-fork variants, curator status tests now mark-first.
Why: the agent routinely edits existing user skills on the user's
behalf; those writes must never flip provenance. And when a user
explicitly asks the foreground agent to create a skill, that skill
belongs to the user. The curator should only be cleaning up after
its own autonomous sediment from the review nudge loop.
When delegation.model differs from model.default and the provider is
opencode-go or opencode-zen, the wrong api_mode is computed because
resolve_runtime_provider falls back to model_cfg.get('default') — the
main model — instead of the configured delegation model.
For example, with model.default=minimax-m2.7 (anthropic_messages) and
delegation.model=glm-5.1 (chat_completions), subagents get
anthropic_messages, which strips /v1 from the base URL and causes a 404.
resolve_runtime_provider already accepts target_model for exactly this
purpose; _resolve_delegation_credentials just wasn't passing it.
Fixes#15319
Related: #13678
The _check_kanban_mode() gating function only checked for
HERMES_KANBAN_TASK env var, which is only set by the dispatcher
when spawning workers. This prevented orchestrator profiles (like
techlead) from using kanban_create, kanban_link, etc. even when
they had 'kanban' explicitly in their toolsets config.
Now uses load_config() from hermes_cli.config (which has mtime-based
caching) to check if 'kanban' is in the profile's toolsets list.
This enables orchestrators to route work via Kanban while workers
continue using the dispatcher env var.
Fixes#18968
_build_child_agent constructed child AIAgents without passing
fallback_model, leaving _fallback_chain=[] for every subagent.
When a subagent hit a rate-limit or credential exhaustion the
runtime fallback check (run_agent.py:7486 / 12267) found an empty
chain and failed immediately — even though the parent agent was
configured with fallback_providers and would have recovered.
The cron scheduler already propagates fallback_model correctly
(scheduler.py:1038). Fix closes the parity gap by reading the
parent's _fallback_chain (the normalised list form accepted by
AIAgent's fallback_model parameter) and threading it through.
Empty chains coerce to None so AIAgent initialises _fallback_chain=[]
as usual rather than iterating an empty list.
The _send_feishu() function already supports media_files (images, video,
audio, documents) via the adapter's send_image_file/send_video/send_voice
/send_document methods, but _send_to_platform() never routed Feishu into
the early media-handling branch — media attachments were silently dropped
with a "not supported" warning.
Add a Feishu-specific media branch (matching the existing Yuanbao/Signal
pattern) so that MEDIA:<path> tags in send_message calls are correctly
delivered as native Feishu attachments. Also update the two error/warning
message strings to include feishu in the supported platform list.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Before this fix, _chromium_installed() only searched Playwright-style
chromium-* / chromium_headless_shell-* directories, which meant users
with system Chrome or AGENT_BROWSER_EXECUTABLE_PATH configured still
had all browser_* tools gated.
Now checks three sources in priority order:
1. AGENT_BROWSER_EXECUTABLE_PATH env var (if set and points to a real binary)
2. System Chrome/Chromium via shutil.which() (google-chrome, chromium-browser, chrome)
3. Playwright browser cache (existing logic, kept as fallback)
Closes#19294
The _send_qqbot function was hardcoded to use the guild channel
endpoint (/channels/{id}/messages), which fails for C2C private
chats and QQ groups with 'channel does not exist' (code 11263).
This change tries the appropriate endpoints in order:
1. /channels/{id}/messages (guild channels)
2. /v2/users/{id}/messages (C2C private chats)
3. /v2/groups/{id}/messages (QQ groups)
Fixes active sending to QQBot C2C and group recipients.
* feat: add video_analyze tool for native video understanding
Adds a video_analyze tool that sends video files to multimodal LLMs
(e.g. Gemini) for analysis via the OpenRouter-compatible video_url
content type. Mirrors vision_analyze in structure, error handling,
and registration pattern.
Key design:
- Base64 encodes entire video (no frame extraction, no ffmpeg dep)
- Uses 'video_url' content block type (OpenRouter standard)
- Supports mp4, webm, mov, avi, mkv, mpeg formats
- 50 MB hard cap, 20 MB warning threshold
- 180s minimum timeout (videos take longer than images)
- AUXILIARY_VIDEO_MODEL env override, falls back to AUXILIARY_VISION_MODEL
- Same SSRF protection, retry logic, and cleanup as vision_analyze
Default disabled: registered in 'video' toolset (not in _HERMES_CORE_TOOLS).
Users opt in via: hermes tools enable video, or enabled_toolsets=['video'].
* feat(video): add models.dev capability pre-check + CONFIGURABLE_TOOLSETS entry
- Pre-checks model video capability via models.dev modalities.input
before expensive base64 encoding. Fails early with helpful message
suggesting video-capable alternatives (gemini, mimo-v2.5-pro).
- Passes optimistically if model unknown or lookup fails.
- Adds ModelInfo.supports_video_input() helper.
- Adds 'video' to CONFIGURABLE_TOOLSETS and _DEFAULT_OFF_TOOLSETS
so 'hermes tools enable video' works from CLI.
- 8 new tests for the capability check (37 total).
* refactor(video): remove models.dev capability pre-check
Removes _check_video_model_capability and ModelInfo.supports_video_input.
The vision_analyze tool doesn't pre-check image capability either — both
tools rely on the same pattern: send request, handle API errors gracefully
with categorized user-facing messages. The pre-check was inconsistent
(only worked for some providers/models) so drop it for parity.
* cleanup: compress comments, fix fragile timeout coupling
- Replace _VISION_DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT * 2 with hardcoded 60s (no silent
breakage if vision timeout changes independently)
- Strip verbose comments and redundant log lines throughout
- No behavioral changes
Under context pressure, frontier models sometimes emit tool calls with
required fields dropped. Previously _handle_write_file() used
args.get('content', '') which substituted an empty string for the missing
key, returned success with bytes_written=0, and created a zero-byte file
on disk. The model had no way to detect the failure.
Changes:
- Reject calls where 'path' is absent or not a non-empty string
- Reject calls where 'content' key is entirely absent (key-presence check,
not truthiness) — distinguishing a legitimately empty file from a dropped arg
- Reject calls where 'content' is a non-string type
- All error messages include guidance to re-emit the tool call or switch
to execute_code with hermes_tools.write_file() for large payloads
- Explicit empty string content (file truncation) continues to work
Regression tests added for all four cases: missing path, missing content,
explicit-empty content, and wrong content type.
Fixes#19096
Terminal commands can write to shell RC files (~/.bashrc, ~/.zshrc,
~/.profile) and credential files (~/.netrc, ~/.pgpass, ~/.npmrc,
~/.pypirc) via redirection or tee without triggering approval, even
though write_file already blocks these paths in file_safety.py.
This creates an inconsistency: write_file protects these paths but
terminal shell redirections bypass the same protection. An agent
prompted via indirect injection could install persistent backdoors
(e.g. PATH manipulation, alias overrides) or write credential entries
without user approval.
Extend _SENSITIVE_WRITE_TARGET with two new regex groups matching the
same paths that file_safety.py's WRITE_DENIED_PATHS already covers:
_SHELL_RC_FILES — ~/.bashrc, ~/.zshrc, ~/.profile, ~/.bash_profile,
~/.zprofile
_CREDENTIAL_FILES — ~/.netrc, ~/.pgpass, ~/.npmrc, ~/.pypirc
All 130 existing tests pass.
* fix(curator): authoritative absorbed_into declarations on skill delete
Closes#18671. The classification pipeline that feeds cron-ref rewriting
used to infer consolidation vs pruning from two brittle signals: the
curator model's post-hoc YAML summary block, and a substring heuristic
scanning other tool calls for the removed skill's name. Both miss in
real consolidations — the model forgets the YAML under reasoning
pressure, and the heuristic misses when the umbrella's patch content
describes the absorbed behavior abstractly instead of naming the old
slug. When both miss, the skill falls through to 'no-evidence fallback'
pruned, and #18253's cron rewriter drops the cron ref entirely instead
of mapping it to the umbrella. Same observable symptom as pre-#18253:
'Skill(s) not found and skipped' at the next cron run.
The fix makes the model declare intent at the moment of deletion.
skill_manage(action='delete') now accepts absorbed_into:
- absorbed_into='<umbrella>' -> consolidated, target must exist on disk
- absorbed_into='' -> explicit prune, no forwarding target
- missing -> legacy path, falls through to heuristic/YAML
The curator reconciler reads these declarations off llm_meta.tool_calls
BEFORE either the YAML block or the substring heuristic. Declaration
wins. Fallback logic stays intact for backward compat with any caller
(human or older curator conversation) that doesn't populate the arg.
Changes
- tools/skill_manager_tool.py: add absorbed_into param to skill_manage
+ _delete_skill. Validate target exists when non-empty. Reject
absorbed_into=<self>. Wire through dispatcher + registry + schema.
- agent/curator.py: new _extract_absorbed_into_declarations() walks
tool calls for skill_manage(delete) with the arg. _reconcile_classification
accepts absorbed_declarations= and treats them as authoritative. Curator
prompt updated to require the arg on every delete.
- Tests: 7 new skill_manager tests covering the tool contract (valid
target, empty string, nonexistent target, self-reference, whitespace,
backward compat, dispatcher plumbing). 11 new curator tests covering
the extractor + authoritative reconciler path + mixed-legacy-and-
declared runs.
Validation
- 307/307 targeted tests pass (curator + cron + skill_manager suites).
- E2E #18671 repro: 3 narrow skills, 1 umbrella, cron job referencing
all 3. Model emits NO YAML block. Heuristic misses (patch prose
doesn't name old slugs). Delete calls carry absorbed_into. Result:
both PR skills correctly classified 'consolidated' + cron rewritten
['pr-review-format', 'pr-review-checklist', 'stale-junk'] ->
['hermes-agent-dev']; stale-junk pruned via absorbed_into=''.
- E2E backward-compat: delete without absorbed_into, model emits YAML
-> routed via existing 'model' source, cron still rewritten correctly.
* feat(curator): capture + restore cron skill links across snapshot/rollback
Before this, rolling back a curator run restored the skills tree but cron
jobs still pointed at the umbrella skills the curator had rewritten them
to. The user would see their old narrow skills back on disk but their
cron jobs still configured with the merged umbrella — not actually 'back
to how it was'.
Snapshot side: snapshot_skills() now captures ~/.hermes/cron/jobs.json
alongside the skills tarball, as cron-jobs.json. The manifest gets a new
'cron_jobs' block with {backed_up, jobs_count} so rollback (and the CLI
confirm dialog) can surface what's in the snapshot. If jobs.json is
missing/unreadable/malformed, snapshot proceeds without cron data — the
skills backup is the core guarantee; cron is additive.
Rollback side: after the skills extract succeeds, the new
_restore_cron_skill_links() reconciles the backed-up jobs into the live
jobs.json SURGICALLY. Only 'skills' and 'skill' fields are restored, and
only on jobs matched by id. Everything else about a cron job — schedule,
last_run_at, next_run_at, enabled, prompt, workdir, hooks — is live
state the user or scheduler has modified since the snapshot; overwriting
it would regress unrelated activity.
Reconciliation rules:
- Job in backup AND live, skills differ → skills restored.
- Job in backup AND live, skills match → no-op.
- Job in backup, NOT in live → skipped (user deleted it
after snapshot; their choice
is later than the snapshot).
- Job in live, NOT in backup → untouched (user created it
after snapshot).
- Snapshot missing cron-jobs.json at all → rollback still succeeds,
reports 'not captured'
(older pre-feature snapshots
keep working).
Writes go through cron.jobs.save_jobs under the same _jobs_file_lock the
scheduler uses, so rollback doesn't race tick().
Also:
- hermes_cli/curator.py: rollback confirm dialog now shows
'cron jobs: N (will be restored for skill-link fields only)' when the
snapshot has cron data, or 'not in snapshot (<reason>)' otherwise.
- rollback()'s message string includes a 'cron links: ...' clause
summarizing the reconciliation outcome.
Tests
- 9 new cases: snapshot-with-cron, snapshot-without-cron, malformed-json
captured-as-raw, full rollback-restores-skills-and-cron, rollback
touches only skill fields, rollback skips user-deleted jobs, rollback
leaves user-created jobs untouched, rollback still works with
pre-feature snapshot that has no cron-jobs.json, standalone unit test
on _restore_cron_skill_links exercising the full report shape.
Validation
- 484/484 targeted tests pass (curator + cron + skill_manager suites).
- E2E: real snapshot_skills, real cron rewrite, real rollback. Before:
['pr-review-format', 'pr-review-checklist', 'pr-triage-salvage'].
After curator: ['hermes-agent-dev']. After rollback: ['pr-review-format',
'pr-review-checklist', 'pr-triage-salvage']. Non-skill fields (id,
name, prompt) preserved across the round trip.
Widens #16528 to two sibling sites that had the same quoted-boolean
bug: a YAML string "false" (or "0", "no", "off") silently evaluated
truthy under bool() / if-check.
- gateway/run.py _load_show_reasoning: is_truthy_value wrap
- tools/skill_manager_tool.py _guard_agent_created_enabled: is_truthy_value wrap
- regression tests for both
When running on a host with sudoers NOPASSWD configured for the current
user, interactive Hermes sessions were unnecessarily entering the
password prompt path before executing sudo commands. Outside Hermes,
`sudo -n true` exits 0 for that user.
Add `_sudo_nopasswd_works()` that probes `sudo -n true` and, when it
succeeds, lets `_transform_sudo_command()` return the command unchanged
with no stdin password. The probe:
- Is scoped to the `local` terminal backend only, so Docker/SSH/Modal
and other remote backends do not inherit host sudo state.
- Re-probes every call (no process-lifetime cache) so an expired sudo
timestamp cannot silently make a later command block waiting for a
password that Hermes never prompts for.
- Is bypassed entirely when `SUDO_PASSWORD` is configured or a cached
password already exists, preserving existing explicit-password flows.
Co-authored-by: Junting Wu <juntingpublic@gmail.com>
_capability_cache was a single module-level dict shared across all
tokens. If the bot token rotates or multiple tokens are used in one
process, capabilities detected for token A would be returned for
token B, causing wrong schema gating and incorrect runtime behavior.
Replace the single Optional cache with a Dict keyed by token so each
token gets its own isolated capability entry.
_SupervisorRegistry.get_or_start() returned an existing supervisor
whenever the cdp_url matched, without checking if the supervisor's
thread or event loop was still alive. A crashed supervisor would be
silently reused, causing missed dialog/frame updates.
Now checks both _thread.is_alive() and _loop.is_running() before
returning the cached instance. An unhealthy supervisor is torn down
and recreated, matching the existing URL-changed code path.
- order session_search recent-mode results by last activity instead of session start time
- add an opt-in `order_by_last_active` path to `SessionDB.list_sessions_rich`
- add regression coverage for both the database ordering and recent-mode call path
Treat skill views and edits as activity when curator reports and applies lifecycle transitions, so recently loaded or patched skills are not displayed or transitioned as never used.\n\nAdds regression tests for activity derivation, automatic transitions, and CLI status output.
restore_skill() in tools/skill_usage.py used archive_root.iterdir(), which
only walked the top level of .archive/. Skills archived under nested layouts
(e.g. .archive/openclaw-imports/<skill>/ from older archive paths or
external imports) were invisible to both the exact-match and prefix-match
candidate scans, surfacing as a misleading "skill '<name>' not found in
archive" error even though the directory existed on disk.
Switch both candidate scans to archive_root.rglob('*') so the lookup
descends into category subdirectories.
Fixes#17942
Widen #17818 to cover the dominant 'agent actively used this skill' path:
when the model calls the skill_view tool, bump use_count alongside view_count.
The slash-command and --skill preload paths (covered by the cherry-picked
commit) only catch user-initiated invocation; most skill activation happens
via the agent calling skill_view to consume an indexed skill.
Curator's stale-timer keys off last_used_at (agent/curator.py:233), so
without this wire-up agent-created skills would transition to stale
simultaneously regardless of actual use.
Widen #17639 to the fourth sibling site (tools/skills_tool.py _EXCLUDED_SKILL_DIRS)
and register leoneparise in scripts/release.py AUTHOR_MAP so CI release script
resolves the contributor.
Adds a new `send_multiple_images` method to the ``BasePlatformAdapter``
that implements the default "One image per message" loop and allows for
platform-specific overriding.
Implements such an override for the Signal adapter, batching images
and trying (best-effort) to work around rate-limits for voluminous
batches using a specific scheduler.
Also implements batching + rate-limit handling in the `send_message`
tool.
New tests added for the Signal adapter, its rate-limit scheduler and the
`send_message` tool
The sandbox-side `_call()` in both the UDS and file-based transports was
not thread-safe, so scripts that call tools from multiple threads (e.g.
`ThreadPoolExecutor` over `terminal()`) inside a single `execute_code`
run could silently receive each other's responses.
Root cause:
* UDS transport — a single module-level `_sock` was shared across all
threads; the newline-framed protocol has no request-id; and the
server-side RPC loop handles one connection serially. With concurrent
callers, each thread would `sendall()` then race to `recv()` the next
newline-terminated response from the shared buffer, so responses got
delivered to the wrong caller.
* File transport — `_seq += 1` is a non-atomic read-modify-write, so
two threads could allocate the same sequence number and clobber each
other's request/response files.
Fix: guard `_call()` with a `threading.Lock` in the UDS case (covering
send+recv), and guard `_seq` allocation with a lock in the file case.
No protocol change.
Regression tests cover both the generated-source level (lock is present
and used) and an end-to-end concurrency test: running a sandboxed
ThreadPoolExecutor of 10 `terminal()` calls against a slow mock
dispatcher, asserting every caller sees its own tagged response. The
test fails without the fix (10/10 mismatched, matching real-world
repro) and passes with it.
tar xf - -C / extracts the staging directory tree to the remote root.
GNU tar default behavior overwrites metadata (including mode) of existing
directories. When the local umask is 002 (Ubuntu default), the staging
dirs are 0775, and tar chmod's /home/<user> to 0775 — breaking sshd
StrictModes which requires 0755 or stricter for home dirs.
Add --no-overwrite-dir to the remote tar command so existing directory
metadata is preserved.
Fixes#17767
Piper (OHF-Voice/piper1-gpl) is a fast, local neural TTS engine from the
Home Assistant project that supports 44 languages with zero API keys.
Adds it as a native built-in provider alongside edge/neutts/kittentts,
installable via 'hermes tools' with one keystroke.
What ships:
- New 'piper' built-in provider in tools/tts_tool.py
- Lazy import via _import_piper()
- Module-level voice cache keyed on (model_path, use_cuda) so switching
voices doesn't invalidate older cached voices
- _resolve_piper_voice_path() accepts either an absolute .onnx path or a
voice name (auto-downloaded on first use via 'python -m
piper.download_voices --download-dir <cache>')
- Voice cache at ~/.hermes/cache/piper-voices/ (profile-aware via
get_hermes_dir)
- Optional SynthesisConfig knobs: length_scale, noise_scale,
noise_w_scale, volume, normalize_audio, use_cuda — passed through
only when configured, so older piper-tts versions aren't broken
- WAV output then ffmpeg conversion path (same as neutts/kittentts) so
Telegram voice bubbles work when ffmpeg is present
- Piper added to BUILTIN_TTS_PROVIDERS so a user's
tts.providers.piper.command cannot shadow the native provider
(regression test included)
- 'hermes tools' wizard entry
- Piper appears under Voice and TTS as local free, with
'pip install piper-tts' auto-install via post_setup handler
- Prints voice-catalog URL and default-voice info after install
- config.yaml defaults
- tts.piper.voice defaults to en_US-lessac-medium
- Commented advanced knobs for discoverability
- Docs
- New 'Piper (local, 44 languages)' section in features/tts.md
explaining install path, voice switching, pre-downloaded voices,
and advanced knobs
- Piper listed in the ten-provider table and ffmpeg table
- Custom-command-providers section updated to drop the Piper example
(now native) and add a piper-custom example for users with their own
trained .onnx models
- overview.md bumps provider count to ten
- Tests (tests/tools/test_tts_piper.py, 16 tests)
- Registration (BUILTIN_TTS_PROVIDERS, PROVIDER_MAX_TEXT_LENGTH)
- _resolve_piper_voice_path across every branch: direct .onnx path,
cached voice name, fresh download with correct CLI args, download
failure, successful-exit-but-missing-files, empty voice to default
- _generate_piper_tts: loads voice once, reuses cache, voice-name
download wiring, advanced knobs flow through SynthesisConfig
- text_to_speech_tool end-to-end dispatch and missing-package error
- check_tts_requirements: piper availability toggles the return value
- Regression guard: piper cannot be shadowed by a command provider
with the same name
- Pre-existing test_tts_mistral test broadened to mock the new
piper/kittentts/command-provider checks (otherwise it false-passes
when piper is installed in the test venv)
E2E verification (live):
Actual pip install piper-tts, config piper + en_US-lessac-low,
text_to_speech_tool call, voice auto-downloaded from HuggingFace,
WAV synthesized, ffmpeg-converted to Ogg/Opus. Second call hits the
cache (~60ms). Cache dir populated with .onnx and .onnx.json.
This caught a real bug during development: the first pass used '-d' as
the download-dir flag; the actual piper.download_voices CLI wants
'--download-dir'. Fixed before PR opened.
Reshape of PR #17211 (@versun). Lets users wire any local or external
TTS CLI into Hermes without adding engine-specific Python code. Users
declare any number of named providers in config.yaml and switch between
them with tts.provider: <name>, alongside the built-ins (edge, openai,
elevenlabs, …).
Config shape:
tts:
provider: piper-en
providers:
piper-en:
type: command
command: 'piper -m ~/model.onnx -f {output_path} < {input_path}'
output_format: wav
Placeholders: {input_path}, {text_path}, {output_path}, {format},
{voice}, {model}, {speed}. Use {{ / }} for literal braces.
Key behavior:
- Built-in provider names always win — a tts.providers.openai entry
cannot shadow the native OpenAI provider.
- type: command is the default when command: is set.
- Placeholder values are shell-quote-aware (bare / single / double
context), so paths with spaces and shell metacharacters are safe.
- Default delivery is a regular audio attachment. voice_compatible: true
opts in to Telegram voice-bubble delivery via ffmpeg Opus conversion.
- Command failures (non-zero exit, timeout, empty output) surface to
the agent with stderr/stdout included so you can debug from chat.
- Process-tree kill on timeout (Unix killpg, Windows taskkill /T).
- max_text_length defaults to 5000 for command providers; override
under tts.providers.<name>.max_text_length.
Tests: tests/tools/test_tts_command_providers.py — 42 new tests cover
provider resolution, shell-quote context, placeholder rendering with
injection payloads, timeout, non-zero exit, empty output, voice_compatible
opt-in, and end-to-end dispatch through text_to_speech_tool. All 88
pre-existing TTS tests still pass.
Docs: new "Custom command providers" section in
website/docs/user-guide/features/tts.md with three worked examples
(Piper, VoxCPM, MLX-Kokoro), placeholder reference, optional keys,
behavior notes, and security caveat.
E2E-verified live: isolated HERMES_HOME, command provider declared in
config.yaml, text_to_speech_tool dispatches through the registered
shell command and the output file is produced as expected.
Co-authored-by: Versun <me+github7604@versun.org>
Extracted from PR #17211 (@versun) so it can land independently of the
local_command TTS provider redesign.
- Add should_send_media_as_audio(platform, ext, is_voice) in
gateway/platforms/base.py; single source of truth for audio routing.
- Add .flac to recognized audio extensions (MEDIA regex, weixin audio
set, send_message audio set).
- Telegram send_voice() now falls back to send_document for formats
Telegram's Bot API can't play natively (.wav, .flac, ...) instead of
raising; MP3/M4A still go to sendAudio, Opus/OGG still go to sendVoice.
- Route _send_telegram() in send_message_tool through a narrower
_TELEGRAM_SEND_AUDIO_EXTS = {.mp3, .m4a} set.
- cron.scheduler._send_media_via_adapter now delegates the audio
decision to should_send_media_as_audio so it matches the gateway.
- Update the cron live-adapter ogg test to flag [[audio_as_voice]] so
it still routes to sendVoice under the new Telegram-specific policy.
- Tests: unit coverage for should_send_media_as_audio across platforms,
end-to-end MEDIA routing via _process_message_background and
GatewayRunner._deliver_media_from_response, TelegramAdapter.send_voice
fallback for FLAC/WAV.
Co-authored-by: Versun <me+github7604@versun.org>
PR #17660 landed a sweep of CI fixes but left three loose ends:
1. tests/cli/test_cli_loading_indicator.py::test_reload_mcp_sets_busy_state_
and_prints_status — /reload-mcp gained a prompt-cache-invalidation
confirmation (commit 4d7fc0f37) that was never wired into this test.
The test exercises the loading-indicator path, so pre-approve via
config and go straight into _reload_mcp().
2. tools/mcp_tool.py _make_tool_handler — the added
getattr(server, '_rpc_lock', None) + 'skip the lock if missing'
branch is inconsistent with four sibling call sites that still
direct-access server._rpc_lock. The lock is guaranteed by
MCPServerTask.__init__; falling through to an unlocked
session.call_tool would silently serialize-strip RPCs if the guard
ever triggered. Restore direct access.
3. tui_gateway/server.py _messages_as_conversation — the helper
existed only to catch 'TypeError: include_ancestors unexpected'
from mocked SessionDBs that don't actually exist. The real
SessionDB.get_messages_as_conversation has accepted
include_ancestors since introduction, and every test FakeDB in
the repo already declares the kwarg. Remove the shim, inline the
two call sites.
feat(gateway): refine Platform._missing_ and platform-connected dispatch
Restricts plugin-name acceptance to bundled plugin scan + registry
(no arbitrary string -> enum-pollution), pulls per-platform connectivity
checks into a _PLATFORM_CONNECTED_CHECKERS lambda map with a clean
_is_platform_connected method, and adds tests covering the checker map,
plugin platform interface, and IRC setup wizard.
Extends the platform plugin interface from Phase 1 to cover every
touchpoint where built-in platforms have hardcoded behavior.
- allowed_users_env / allow_all_env: per-platform auth env vars
- max_message_length: smart-chunking for send_message tool
- pii_safe: session PII redaction flag
- emoji: CLI/gateway display
- allow_update_command: /update access control
send_message tool (tools/send_message_tool.py):
- Replaced hardcoded platform_map dict with Platform() call
- Added _send_via_adapter() for plugin platforms — routes through
live gateway adapter when available
- Registry-aware max message length for smart chunking
Cron delivery (cron/scheduler.py):
- Replaced hardcoded 15-entry platform_map with Platform() call
- Plugin platforms now work as cron delivery targets
User authorization (gateway/run.py _is_user_authorized):
- Registry fallback: checks PlatformEntry.allowed_users_env and
allow_all_env when platform not in hardcoded maps
- Plugin platforms get per-platform auth support
_UPDATE_ALLOWED_PLATFORMS: checks registry allow_update_command flag
Channel directory: includes plugin platforms in session enumeration
Orphaned config warning: descriptive message when plugin platform is
in config but no plugin registered it
Gateway weakref: _gateway_runner_ref for cross-module adapter access
hermes status: shows plugin platforms with (plugin) tag
hermes gateway setup: plugin platforms appear in menu with setup hints
hermes_cli/platforms.py: get_all_platforms() merges with registry,
platform_label() falls back to registry for plugin names
- 8 new tests (extended fields, cron resolution, platforms merge)
- Updated 3 tests for new Platform() based resolution
- 2829 passed, 24 pre-existing failures, zero new failures
Reloading MCP servers rebuilds the tool set for the active session, which
invalidates the provider prompt cache (tool schemas are baked into the
system prompt). The next message re-sends full input tokens — can be
expensive on long-context or high-reasoning models.
To surface that cost, /reload-mcp now routes through a new slash-confirm
primitive with three options: Approve Once / Always Approve / Cancel.
'Always Approve' persists approvals.mcp_reload_confirm: false so future
reloads run silently.
Coverage:
* Classic CLI (cli.py) — interactive numbered prompt.
* TUI (tui_gateway + Ink ops.ts) — text warning on first call; `now` /
`always` args skip the gate; `always` also persists the opt-out.
* Messenger gateway — button UI on Telegram (inline keyboard), Discord
(discord.ui.View), Slack (Block Kit actions); text fallback on every
other platform via /approve /always /cancel replies intercepted in
gateway/run.py _handle_message.
* Config key: approvals.mcp_reload_confirm (default true).
* Auto-reload paths (CLI file watcher, TUI config-sync mtime poll) pass
confirm=true so they do NOT prompt.
Implementation:
* tools/slash_confirm.py — module-level pending-state store used by all
adapters and by the CLI prompt. Thread-safe register/resolve/clear.
* gateway/platforms/base.py — send_slash_confirm hook (default 'Not
supported' → text fallback).
* gateway/run.py — _request_slash_confirm helper + text intercept in
_handle_message (yields to in-progress tool-exec approvals so
dangerous-command /approve still unblocks the tool thread first).
Tests:
* tests/tools/test_slash_confirm.py — primitive lifecycle + async
resolution + double-click atomicity (16 tests).
* tests/hermes_cli/test_mcp_reload_confirm_gate.py — default-config
shape + deep-merge preserves user opt-out (5 tests).
Targeted runs (hermetic): 89 passed (slash-confirm, config gate,
existing agent cache, existing telegram approval buttons).
Salvage-follow-up to @shannonsands's /reload-skills PR. Trims the feature to
match the design: user-initiated rescan, no prompt-cache reset, no new
schema surface, no phantom user turn, and the next-turn note carries each
added/removed skill's 60-char description (not just its name).
Changes vs the original PR:
* Drop the in-process skills prompt-cache clear in reload_skills(). Skills
are invoked at runtime via /skill-name, skills_list, or skill_view —
they don't need to live in the system prompt for the model to use them.
Keeping the cache intact preserves prefix caching across the reload so
/reload-skills pays no cache-reset cost. (MCP has to break the cache
because tool schemas must be known at conversation start; skills do not.)
* Drop the skills_reload agent tool and SKILLS_RELOAD_SCHEMA from
tools/skills_tool.py, plus the four skills_reload enumerations in
toolsets.py. No new schema surface — agents can already see a freshly-
installed skill via skill_view / skills_list the moment it's on disk.
* Replace the phantom 'role: user' turn injection with a one-shot queued
note. CLI uses self._pending_skills_reload_note (same pattern as
_pending_model_switch_note, prepended to the next API call and cleared).
Gateway uses self._pending_skills_reload_notes[session_key]. The note
is prepended to the NEXT real user message in this session, so message
alternation stays intact and nothing out-of-band is persisted to the
transcript.
* reload_skills() now returns added/removed as
[{'name': str, 'description': str}, ...] (description truncated to 60
chars — matches the curator / gateway adapter budget). The injected
next-turn note formats each entry as 'name — description' so the model
can actually reason about which new skills to call without running
skills_list first.
* Only emit the note when the diff is non-empty. On empty diff, print
'No new skills detected' and do nothing else.
* Tests rewritten to cover the queue semantics, the description payload,
and a regression guard that the prompt-cache snapshot is preserved.
Adds a public reload path for the in-process skill caches so newly
installed (or removed) skills become visible mid-session without a
gateway restart. Mirrors the shape of /reload-mcp.
Three surfaces:
* /reload-skills slash command — CLI (cli.py) and gateway (gateway/run.py),
with /reload_skills alias for Telegram autocomplete and an explicit
Discord registration.
* skills_reload agent tool (tools/skills_tool.py) — lets agents/subagents
pick up freshly-installed skills via tool call.
* agent.skill_commands.reload_skills() — shared helper that clears
_skill_commands, _SKILLS_PROMPT_CACHE (in-process LRU), and the
on-disk .skills_prompt_snapshot.json, then returns an added/removed
diff plus the new total count.
Tested:
* tests/agent/test_skill_commands_reload.py (9 cases)
* tests/cli/test_cli_reload_skills.py (3 cases)
* tests/gateway/test_reload_skills_command.py (4 cases)
Use case: NemoClaw / OpenShell-style sandboxed orchestrators that drop
skills into ~/.hermes/skills mid-session, plus agentic flows where the
agent itself installs a skill via the shell tool and needs it bound
without a gateway restart. The Python helper
clear_skills_system_prompt_cache(clear_snapshot=True) already exists
internally — this PR just exposes it via slash command and tool.
vision_analyze used Path('./temp_vision_images') — a relative path that
resolved against cwd. Under Docker the image's WORKDIR is /opt/hermes,
which is root-owned and only chmoded a+rX (read + traversal). Since
#5811 landed (run as non-root hermes UID 10000, Apr 12), remote-URL
vision calls fail with PermissionError on mkdir.
Switch to get_hermes_dir('cache/vision', 'temp_vision_images'): resolves
to $HERMES_HOME/cache/vision/ (= /opt/data/cache/vision/ in Docker —
the user-owned volume mount). Existing installs with the old dir keep
using it via the get_hermes_dir back-compat path; no migration needed.
Only site in the codebase that stored runtime files via Path('./...').
Reported via Discord: https://juick.com/i/p/3089079.jpg → Telegram →
gateway → [Errno 13] Permission denied: 'temp_vision_images'.
Extend curator's pin flag from 'skip auto-transitions' to 'no agent
edits at all'. All five skill_manage mutation actions (edit, patch,
delete, write_file, remove_file) now refuse pinned skills with a
message pointing the user at `hermes curator unpin <name>`.
Motivation: pin used to only stop the curator's own maintenance pass
from touching a skill. Nothing prevented the main agent from editing
or deleting a pinned skill via skill_manage in-session. This gives
users a hard fence against unwanted agent edits — same semantics as
curator pinning, extended to the write tool.
Create is unaffected (you can't pin a name that doesn't exist yet,
and name collisions already error out). Broken sidecars fail open
rather than lock the agent out.
The schema description advertises the new refusal so models know
not to route around it with rename/recreate tricks.
Closes#4759, closes#4381.
Mutating actions (patch, edit, write_file, remove_file, delete) used to
refuse skills that lived under `skills.external_dirs` with 'Skill X is in
an external directory and cannot be modified. Copy it to your local skills
directory first.' Faced with that error, the agent would fall back to
action='create', which always writes under ~/.hermes/skills/ — producing
a silent duplicate of the external skill in the local store.
Fix: drop the read-only gate. `skills.external_dirs` is configured by the
user; if they pointed it at a directory, they already said 'these are my
skills, treat them the same.' Filesystem permissions handle the genuine
read-only case (write fails, agent sees the error).
- New _containing_skills_root() resolves whichever dir actually contains
the skill; _delete_skill uses it to bound empty-category cleanup so an
external root is never rmdir'd.
- _create_skill behavior is unchanged: new skills still land in local
SKILLS_DIR only. Fewer moving parts.
- Seven new TestExternalSkillMutations tests covering patch/edit/write_file/
remove_file/delete/create against a mocked two-root layout + a category
rmdir-safety check.