docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
---
sidebar_position: 12
sidebar_label: "Built-in Plugins"
title: "Built-in Plugins"
description: "Plugins shipped with Hermes Agent that run automatically via lifecycle hooks — disk-cleanup and friends"
---
# Built-in Plugins
Hermes ships a small set of plugins bundled with the repository. They live under `<repo>/plugins/<name>/` and load automatically alongside user-installed plugins in `~/.hermes/plugins/` . They use the same plugin surface as third-party plugins — hooks, tools, slash commands — just maintained in-tree.
See the [Plugins ](/docs/user-guide/features/plugins ) page for the general plugin system, and [Build a Hermes Plugin ](/docs/guides/build-a-hermes-plugin ) to write your own.
## How discovery works
The `PluginManager` scans four sources, in order:
1. **Bundled ** — `<repo>/plugins/<name>/` (what this page documents)
2. **User ** — `~/.hermes/plugins/<name>/`
3. **Project ** — `./.hermes/plugins/<name>/` (requires `HERMES_ENABLE_PROJECT_PLUGINS=1` )
4. **Pip entry points ** — `hermes_agent.plugins`
On name collision, later sources win — a user plugin named `disk-cleanup` would replace the bundled one.
`plugins/memory/` and `plugins/context_engine/` are deliberately excluded from bundled scanning. Those directories use their own discovery paths because memory providers and context engines are single-select providers configured through `hermes memory setup` / `context.engine` in config.
feat(plugins): make all plugins opt-in by default
Plugins now require explicit consent to load. Discovery still finds every
plugin — user-installed, bundled, and pip — so they all show up in
`hermes plugins` and `/plugins`, but the loader only instantiates
plugins whose name appears in `plugins.enabled` in config.yaml. This
removes the previous ambient-execution risk where a newly-installed or
bundled plugin could register hooks, tools, and commands on first run
without the user opting in.
The three-state model is now explicit:
enabled — in plugins.enabled, loads on next session
disabled — in plugins.disabled, never loads (wins over enabled)
not enabled — discovered but never opted in (default for new installs)
`hermes plugins install <repo>` prompts "Enable 'name' now? [y/N]"
(defaults to no). New `--enable` / `--no-enable` flags skip the prompt
for scripted installs. `hermes plugins enable/disable` manage both lists
so a disabled plugin stays explicitly off even if something later adds
it to enabled.
Config migration (schema v20 → v21): existing user plugins already
installed under ~/.hermes/plugins/ (minus anything in plugins.disabled)
are auto-grandfathered into plugins.enabled so upgrades don't silently
break working setups. Bundled plugins are NOT grandfathered — even
existing users have to opt in explicitly.
Also: HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS env var removed (redundant with
opt-in default), cmd_list now shows bundled + user plugins together with
their three-state status, interactive UI tags bundled entries
[bundled], docs updated across plugins.md and built-in-plugins.md.
Validation: 442 plugin/config tests pass. E2E: fresh install discovers
disk-cleanup but does not load it; `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup`
activates hooks; migration grandfathers existing user plugins correctly
while leaving bundled plugins off.
2026-04-20 04:40:17 -07:00
## Bundled plugins are opt-in
Bundled plugins ship disabled. Discovery finds them (they appear in `hermes plugins list` and the interactive `hermes plugins` UI), but none load until you explicitly enable them:
```bash
hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup
```
Or via `~/.hermes/config.yaml` :
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
```yaml
plugins:
feat(plugins): make all plugins opt-in by default
Plugins now require explicit consent to load. Discovery still finds every
plugin — user-installed, bundled, and pip — so they all show up in
`hermes plugins` and `/plugins`, but the loader only instantiates
plugins whose name appears in `plugins.enabled` in config.yaml. This
removes the previous ambient-execution risk where a newly-installed or
bundled plugin could register hooks, tools, and commands on first run
without the user opting in.
The three-state model is now explicit:
enabled — in plugins.enabled, loads on next session
disabled — in plugins.disabled, never loads (wins over enabled)
not enabled — discovered but never opted in (default for new installs)
`hermes plugins install <repo>` prompts "Enable 'name' now? [y/N]"
(defaults to no). New `--enable` / `--no-enable` flags skip the prompt
for scripted installs. `hermes plugins enable/disable` manage both lists
so a disabled plugin stays explicitly off even if something later adds
it to enabled.
Config migration (schema v20 → v21): existing user plugins already
installed under ~/.hermes/plugins/ (minus anything in plugins.disabled)
are auto-grandfathered into plugins.enabled so upgrades don't silently
break working setups. Bundled plugins are NOT grandfathered — even
existing users have to opt in explicitly.
Also: HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS env var removed (redundant with
opt-in default), cmd_list now shows bundled + user plugins together with
their three-state status, interactive UI tags bundled entries
[bundled], docs updated across plugins.md and built-in-plugins.md.
Validation: 442 plugin/config tests pass. E2E: fresh install discovers
disk-cleanup but does not load it; `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup`
activates hooks; migration grandfathers existing user plugins correctly
while leaving bundled plugins off.
2026-04-20 04:40:17 -07:00
enabled:
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
- disk-cleanup
```
feat(plugins): make all plugins opt-in by default
Plugins now require explicit consent to load. Discovery still finds every
plugin — user-installed, bundled, and pip — so they all show up in
`hermes plugins` and `/plugins`, but the loader only instantiates
plugins whose name appears in `plugins.enabled` in config.yaml. This
removes the previous ambient-execution risk where a newly-installed or
bundled plugin could register hooks, tools, and commands on first run
without the user opting in.
The three-state model is now explicit:
enabled — in plugins.enabled, loads on next session
disabled — in plugins.disabled, never loads (wins over enabled)
not enabled — discovered but never opted in (default for new installs)
`hermes plugins install <repo>` prompts "Enable 'name' now? [y/N]"
(defaults to no). New `--enable` / `--no-enable` flags skip the prompt
for scripted installs. `hermes plugins enable/disable` manage both lists
so a disabled plugin stays explicitly off even if something later adds
it to enabled.
Config migration (schema v20 → v21): existing user plugins already
installed under ~/.hermes/plugins/ (minus anything in plugins.disabled)
are auto-grandfathered into plugins.enabled so upgrades don't silently
break working setups. Bundled plugins are NOT grandfathered — even
existing users have to opt in explicitly.
Also: HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS env var removed (redundant with
opt-in default), cmd_list now shows bundled + user plugins together with
their three-state status, interactive UI tags bundled entries
[bundled], docs updated across plugins.md and built-in-plugins.md.
Validation: 442 plugin/config tests pass. E2E: fresh install discovers
disk-cleanup but does not load it; `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup`
activates hooks; migration grandfathers existing user plugins correctly
while leaving bundled plugins off.
2026-04-20 04:40:17 -07:00
This is the same mechanism user-installed plugins use. Bundled plugins are never auto-enabled — not on fresh install, not for existing users upgrading to a newer Hermes. You always opt in explicitly.
To turn a bundled plugin off again:
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
```bash
feat(plugins): make all plugins opt-in by default
Plugins now require explicit consent to load. Discovery still finds every
plugin — user-installed, bundled, and pip — so they all show up in
`hermes plugins` and `/plugins`, but the loader only instantiates
plugins whose name appears in `plugins.enabled` in config.yaml. This
removes the previous ambient-execution risk where a newly-installed or
bundled plugin could register hooks, tools, and commands on first run
without the user opting in.
The three-state model is now explicit:
enabled — in plugins.enabled, loads on next session
disabled — in plugins.disabled, never loads (wins over enabled)
not enabled — discovered but never opted in (default for new installs)
`hermes plugins install <repo>` prompts "Enable 'name' now? [y/N]"
(defaults to no). New `--enable` / `--no-enable` flags skip the prompt
for scripted installs. `hermes plugins enable/disable` manage both lists
so a disabled plugin stays explicitly off even if something later adds
it to enabled.
Config migration (schema v20 → v21): existing user plugins already
installed under ~/.hermes/plugins/ (minus anything in plugins.disabled)
are auto-grandfathered into plugins.enabled so upgrades don't silently
break working setups. Bundled plugins are NOT grandfathered — even
existing users have to opt in explicitly.
Also: HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS env var removed (redundant with
opt-in default), cmd_list now shows bundled + user plugins together with
their three-state status, interactive UI tags bundled entries
[bundled], docs updated across plugins.md and built-in-plugins.md.
Validation: 442 plugin/config tests pass. E2E: fresh install discovers
disk-cleanup but does not load it; `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup`
activates hooks; migration grandfathers existing user plugins correctly
while leaving bundled plugins off.
2026-04-20 04:40:17 -07:00
hermes plugins disable disk-cleanup
# or: remove it from plugins.enabled in config.yaml
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
```
## Currently shipped
docs: resync reference, user-guide, developer-guide, and messaging pages against code (#17738)
Broad drift audit against origin/main (b52b63396).
Reference pages (most user-visible drift):
- slash-commands: add /busy, /curator, /footer, /indicator, /redraw, /steer
that were missing; drop non-existent /terminal-setup; fix /q footnote
(resolves to /queue, not /quit); extend CLI-only list with all 24
CLI-only commands in the registry
- cli-commands: add dedicated sections for hermes curator / fallback /
hooks (new subcommands not previously documented); remove stale
hermes honcho standalone section (the plugin registers dynamically
via hermes memory); list curator/fallback/hooks in top-level table;
fix completion to include fish
- toolsets-reference: document the real 52-toolset count; split browser
vs browser-cdp; add discord / discord_admin / spotify / yuanbao;
correct hermes-cli tool count from 36 to 38; fix misleading claim
that hermes-homeassistant adds tools (it's identical to hermes-cli)
- tools-reference: bump tool count 55 -> 68; add 7 Spotify, 5 Yuanbao,
2 Discord toolsets; move browser_cdp/browser_dialog to their own
browser-cdp toolset section
- environment-variables: add 40+ user-facing HERMES_* vars that were
undocumented (--yolo, --accept-hooks, --ignore-*, inference model
override, agent/stream/checkpoint timeouts, OAuth trace, per-platform
batch tuning for Telegram/Discord/Matrix/Feishu/WeCom, cron knobs,
gateway restart/connect timeouts); dedupe the Cron Scheduler section;
replace stale QQ_SANDBOX with QQ_PORTAL_HOST
User-guide (top level):
- cli.md: compression preserves last 20 turns, not 4 (protect_last_n: 20)
- configuration.md: display.platforms is the canonical per-platform
override key; tool_progress_overrides is deprecated and auto-migrated
- profiles.md: model.default is the config key, not model.model
- sessions.md: CLI/TUI session IDs use 6-char hex, gateway uses 8
- checkpoints-and-rollback.md: destructive-command list now matches
_DESTRUCTIVE_PATTERNS (adds rmdir, cp, install, dd)
- docker.md: the container runs as non-root hermes (UID 10000) via
gosu; fix install command (uv pip); add missing --insecure on the
dashboard compose example (required for non-loopback bind)
- security.md: systemctl danger pattern also matches 'restart'
- index.md: built-in tool count 47 -> 68
- integrations/index.md: 6 STT providers, 8 memory providers
- integrations/providers.md: drop fictional dashscope/qwen aliases
Features:
- overview.md: 9 image models (not 8), 9 TTS providers (not 5),
8 memory providers (Supermemory was missing)
- tool-gateway.md: 9 image models
- tools.md: extend common-toolsets list with search / messaging /
spotify / discord / debugging / safe
- fallback-providers.md: add 6 real providers from PROVIDER_REGISTRY
(lmstudio, kimi-coding-cn, stepfun, alibaba-coding-plan,
tencent-tokenhub, azure-foundry)
- plugins.md: Available Hooks table now includes on_session_finalize,
on_session_reset, subagent_stop
- built-in-plugins.md: add the 7 bundled plugins the page didn't
mention (spotify, google_meet, three image_gen providers, two
dashboard examples)
- web-dashboard.md: add --insecure and --tui flags
- cron.md: hermes cron create takes positional schedule/prompt, not
flags
Messaging:
- telegram.md: TELEGRAM_WEBHOOK_SECRET is now REQUIRED when
TELEGRAM_WEBHOOK_URL is set (gateway refuses to start without it
per GHSA-3vpc-7q5r-276h). Biggest user-visible drift in the batch.
- discord.md: HERMES_DISCORD_TEXT_BATCH_SPLIT_DELAY_SECONDS default
is 2.0, not 0.1
- dingtalk.md: document DINGTALK_REQUIRE_MENTION /
FREE_RESPONSE_CHATS / MENTION_PATTERNS / HOME_CHANNEL /
ALLOW_ALL_USERS that the adapter supports
- bluebubbles.md: drop fictional BLUEBUBBLES_SEND_READ_RECEIPTS env
var; the setting lives in platforms.bluebubbles.extra only
- qqbot.md: drop dead QQ_SANDBOX; add real QQ_PORTAL_HOST and
QQ_GROUP_ALLOWED_USERS
- wecom-callback.md: replace 'hermes gateway start' (service-only)
with 'hermes gateway' for first-time setup
Developer-guide:
- architecture.md: refresh tool/toolset counts (61/52), terminal
backend count (7), line counts for run_agent.py (~13.7k), cli.py
(~11.5k), main.py (~10.4k), setup.py (~3.5k), gateway/run.py
(~12.2k), mcp_tool.py (~3.1k); add yuanbao adapter, bump platform
adapter count 18 -> 20
- agent-loop.md: run_agent.py line count 10.7k -> 13.7k
- tools-runtime.md: add vercel_sandbox backend
- adding-tools.md: remove stale 'Discovery import added to
model_tools.py' checklist item (registry auto-discovery)
- adding-platform-adapters.md: mark send_typing / get_chat_info as
concrete base methods; only connect/disconnect/send are abstract
- acp-internals.md: ACP sessions now persist to SessionDB
(~/.hermes/state.db); acp.run_agent call uses
use_unstable_protocol=True
- cron-internals.md: gateway runs scheduler in a dedicated background
thread via _start_cron_ticker, not on a maintenance cycle; locking
is cross-process via fcntl.flock (Unix) / msvcrt.locking (Windows)
- gateway-internals.md: gateway/run.py ~12k lines
- provider-runtime.md: cron DOES support fallback (run_job reads
fallback_providers from config)
- session-storage.md: SCHEMA_VERSION = 11 (not 9); add migrations
10 and 11 (trigram FTS, inline-mode FTS5 re-index); add
api_call_count column to Sessions DDL; document messages_fts_trigram
and state_meta in the architecture tree
- context-compression-and-caching.md: remove the obsolete 'context
pressure warnings' section (warnings were removed for causing
models to give up early)
- context-engine-plugin.md: compress() signature now includes
focus_topic param
- extending-the-cli.md: _build_tui_layout_children signature now
includes model_picker_widget; add to default layout
Also fixed three pre-existing broken links/anchors the build warned
about (docker.md -> api-server.md, yuanbao.md -> cron-jobs.md and
tips#background-tasks, nix-setup.md -> #container-aware-cli).
Regenerated per-skill pages via website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py
so catalog tables and sidebar are consistent with current SKILL.md
frontmatter.
docusaurus build: clean, no broken links or anchors.
2026-04-29 20:55:59 -07:00
The repo ships these bundled plugins under `plugins/` . All are opt-in — enable them via `hermes plugins enable <name>` .
| Plugin | Kind | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| `disk-cleanup` | hooks + slash command | Auto-track ephemeral files and clean them on session end |
| `observability/langfuse` | hooks | Trace turns / LLM calls / tools to [Langfuse ](https://langfuse.com ) |
| `spotify` | backend (7 tools) | Native Spotify playback, queue, search, playlists, albums, library |
| `google_meet` | standalone | Join Meet calls, live-caption transcription, optional realtime duplex audio |
| `image_gen/openai` | image backend | OpenAI `gpt-image-2` image generation backend (alternative to FAL) |
| `image_gen/openai-codex` | image backend | OpenAI image generation via Codex OAuth |
| `image_gen/xai` | image backend | xAI `grok-2-image` backend |
| `example-dashboard` | dashboard example | Reference dashboard plugin for [Extending the Dashboard ](./extending-the-dashboard.md ) |
| `strike-freedom-cockpit` | dashboard skin | Sample custom dashboard skin |
Memory providers (`plugins/memory/*` ) and context engines (`plugins/context_engine/*` ) are listed separately on [Memory Providers ](./memory-providers.md ) — they're managed through `hermes memory` and `hermes plugins` respectively. The full per-plugin detail for the two long-running hooks-based plugins follows.
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
### disk-cleanup
Auto-tracks and removes ephemeral files created during sessions — test scripts, temp outputs, cron logs, stale chrome profiles — without requiring the agent to remember to call a tool.
**How it works:**
| Hook | Behaviour |
|---|---|
| `post_tool_call` | When `write_file` / `terminal` / `patch` creates a file matching `test_*` , `tmp_*` , or `*.test.*` inside `HERMES_HOME` or `/tmp/hermes-*` , track it silently as `test` / `temp` / `cron-output` . |
| `on_session_end` | If any test files were auto-tracked during the turn, run the safe `quick` cleanup and log a one-line summary. Stays silent otherwise. |
**Deletion rules:**
| Category | Threshold | Confirmation |
|---|---|---|
| `test` | every session end | Never |
| `temp` | >7 days since tracked | Never |
| `cron-output` | >14 days since tracked | Never |
| empty dirs under HERMES_HOME | always | Never |
| `research` | >30 days, beyond 10 newest | Always (deep only) |
| `chrome-profile` | >14 days since tracked | Always (deep only) |
| files >500 MB | never auto | Always (deep only) |
**Slash command** — `/disk-cleanup` available in both CLI and gateway sessions:
```
/disk-cleanup status # breakdown + top-10 largest
/disk-cleanup dry-run # preview without deleting
/disk-cleanup quick # run safe cleanup now
/disk-cleanup deep # quick + list items needing confirmation
/disk-cleanup track <path> <category> # manual tracking
/disk-cleanup forget <path> # stop tracking (does not delete)
```
**State** — everything lives at `$HERMES_HOME/disk-cleanup/` :
| File | Contents |
|---|---|
| `tracked.json` | Tracked paths with category, size, and timestamp |
| `tracked.json.bak` | Atomic-write backup of the above |
| `cleanup.log` | Append-only audit trail of every track / skip / reject / delete |
**Safety** — cleanup only ever touches paths under `HERMES_HOME` or `/tmp/hermes-*` . Windows mounts (`/mnt/c/...` ) are rejected. Well-known top-level state dirs (`logs/` , `memories/` , `sessions/` , `cron/` , `cache/` , `skills/` , `plugins/` , `disk-cleanup/` itself) are never removed even when empty — a fresh install does not get gutted on first session end.
feat(plugins): make all plugins opt-in by default
Plugins now require explicit consent to load. Discovery still finds every
plugin — user-installed, bundled, and pip — so they all show up in
`hermes plugins` and `/plugins`, but the loader only instantiates
plugins whose name appears in `plugins.enabled` in config.yaml. This
removes the previous ambient-execution risk where a newly-installed or
bundled plugin could register hooks, tools, and commands on first run
without the user opting in.
The three-state model is now explicit:
enabled — in plugins.enabled, loads on next session
disabled — in plugins.disabled, never loads (wins over enabled)
not enabled — discovered but never opted in (default for new installs)
`hermes plugins install <repo>` prompts "Enable 'name' now? [y/N]"
(defaults to no). New `--enable` / `--no-enable` flags skip the prompt
for scripted installs. `hermes plugins enable/disable` manage both lists
so a disabled plugin stays explicitly off even if something later adds
it to enabled.
Config migration (schema v20 → v21): existing user plugins already
installed under ~/.hermes/plugins/ (minus anything in plugins.disabled)
are auto-grandfathered into plugins.enabled so upgrades don't silently
break working setups. Bundled plugins are NOT grandfathered — even
existing users have to opt in explicitly.
Also: HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS env var removed (redundant with
opt-in default), cmd_list now shows bundled + user plugins together with
their three-state status, interactive UI tags bundled entries
[bundled], docs updated across plugins.md and built-in-plugins.md.
Validation: 442 plugin/config tests pass. E2E: fresh install discovers
disk-cleanup but does not load it; `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup`
activates hooks; migration grandfathers existing user plugins correctly
while leaving bundled plugins off.
2026-04-20 04:40:17 -07:00
**Enabling:** `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup` (or check the box in `hermes plugins` ).
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
feat(plugins): make all plugins opt-in by default
Plugins now require explicit consent to load. Discovery still finds every
plugin — user-installed, bundled, and pip — so they all show up in
`hermes plugins` and `/plugins`, but the loader only instantiates
plugins whose name appears in `plugins.enabled` in config.yaml. This
removes the previous ambient-execution risk where a newly-installed or
bundled plugin could register hooks, tools, and commands on first run
without the user opting in.
The three-state model is now explicit:
enabled — in plugins.enabled, loads on next session
disabled — in plugins.disabled, never loads (wins over enabled)
not enabled — discovered but never opted in (default for new installs)
`hermes plugins install <repo>` prompts "Enable 'name' now? [y/N]"
(defaults to no). New `--enable` / `--no-enable` flags skip the prompt
for scripted installs. `hermes plugins enable/disable` manage both lists
so a disabled plugin stays explicitly off even if something later adds
it to enabled.
Config migration (schema v20 → v21): existing user plugins already
installed under ~/.hermes/plugins/ (minus anything in plugins.disabled)
are auto-grandfathered into plugins.enabled so upgrades don't silently
break working setups. Bundled plugins are NOT grandfathered — even
existing users have to opt in explicitly.
Also: HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS env var removed (redundant with
opt-in default), cmd_list now shows bundled + user plugins together with
their three-state status, interactive UI tags bundled entries
[bundled], docs updated across plugins.md and built-in-plugins.md.
Validation: 442 plugin/config tests pass. E2E: fresh install discovers
disk-cleanup but does not load it; `hermes plugins enable disk-cleanup`
activates hooks; migration grandfathers existing user plugins correctly
while leaving bundled plugins off.
2026-04-20 04:40:17 -07:00
**Disabling again:** `hermes plugins disable disk-cleanup` .
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
2026-04-28 01:57:52 -07:00
### observability/langfuse
Traces Hermes turns, LLM calls, and tool invocations to [Langfuse ](https://langfuse.com ) — an open-source LLM observability platform. One span per turn, one generation per API call, one tool observation per tool call. Usage totals, per-type token counts, and cost estimates come out of Hermes' canonical `agent.usage_pricing` numbers, so the Langfuse dashboard sees the same breakdown (input / output / `cache_read_input_tokens` / `cache_creation_input_tokens` / `reasoning_tokens` ) that appears in `hermes logs` .
The plugin is fail-open: no SDK installed, no credentials, or a transient Langfuse error — all turn into a silent no-op in the hook. The agent loop is never impacted.
**Setup (interactive — recommended):**
```bash
hermes tools # → Langfuse Observability → Cloud or Self-Hosted
```
The wizard collects your keys, `pip install` s the `langfuse` SDK, and adds `observability/langfuse` to `plugins.enabled` for you. Restart Hermes and the next turn ships a trace.
**Setup (manual):**
```bash
pip install langfuse
hermes plugins enable observability/langfuse
```
Then put the credentials in `~/.hermes/.env` :
```bash
HERMES_LANGFUSE_PUBLIC_KEY=pk-lf-...
HERMES_LANGFUSE_SECRET_KEY=sk-lf-...
HERMES_LANGFUSE_BASE_URL=https://cloud.langfuse.com # or your self-hosted URL
```
**How it works:**
| Hook | Behaviour |
|---|---|
| `pre_api_request` / `pre_llm_call` | Open (or reuse) a per-turn root span "Hermes turn". Start a `generation` child observation for this API call with serialized recent messages as input. |
| `post_api_request` / `post_llm_call` | Close the generation, attach `usage_details` , `cost_details` , `finish_reason` , assistant output + tool calls. If no tool calls and non-empty content, close the turn. |
| `pre_tool_call` | Start a `tool` child observation with sanitized `args` . |
| `post_tool_call` | Close the tool observation with sanitized `result` . `read_file` payloads get summarized (head + tail + omitted-line count) so a huge file read stays under `HERMES_LANGFUSE_MAX_CHARS` . |
Session grouping keys off the Hermes session ID (or task ID for sub-agents) via `langfuse.propagate_attributes` , so everything in a single `hermes chat` session lives under one Langfuse session.
**Verify:**
```bash
hermes plugins list # observability/langfuse should show "enabled"
hermes chat -q "hello" # check the Langfuse UI for a "Hermes turn" trace
```
**Optional tuning** (in `.env` ):
| Variable | Default | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| `HERMES_LANGFUSE_ENV` | — | Environment tag on traces (`production` , `staging` , …) |
| `HERMES_LANGFUSE_RELEASE` | — | Release/version tag |
| `HERMES_LANGFUSE_SAMPLE_RATE` | `1.0` | Sampling rate passed to the SDK (0.0– 1.0) |
| `HERMES_LANGFUSE_MAX_CHARS` | `12000` | Per-field truncation for message content / tool args / tool results |
| `HERMES_LANGFUSE_DEBUG` | `false` | Verbose plugin logging to `agent.log` |
Hermes-prefixed and standard SDK env vars (`LANGFUSE_PUBLIC_KEY` , `LANGFUSE_SECRET_KEY` , `LANGFUSE_BASE_URL` ) are both accepted — Hermes-prefixed wins when both are set.
**Performance:** the Langfuse client is cached after the first hook call. If credentials or SDK are missing, that decision is also cached — subsequent hooks fast-return without re-checking env vars or reloading config.
**Disabling:** `hermes plugins disable observability/langfuse` . The plugin module is still discovered, but no module code runs until you re-enable.
docs: two-week gap sweep — platforms, CLI, config, TUI, hooks, providers (#17727)
Covers ~60 merged PRs from Apr 15–29 that shipped user-visible behavior
without docs coverage. No functional code changes; docs + static manifest
regeneration only.
Highlights:
Stale / incorrect:
- configuration.md: auxiliary auto-routing line was wrong since #11900;
now correctly states auto routes to the main model, with a note on the
cost trade-off and per-task override pattern.
- integrations/providers.md + configuration.md compression intro:
removed stale 'Gemini Flash via OpenRouter' claim.
- website/static/api/model-catalog.json: rebuilt from hermes_cli/models.py
so the live manifest picks up tencent/hy3-preview (and remains in sync
for future model-catalog PRs).
Platform messaging (#17417 #16997 #16193 #14315 #13151 #11794 #10610
#10283 #10246 #11564 #13178):
- Signal: native formatting (bodyRanges), reply quotes, reactions.
- Telegram: table rendering (bullets + code-block fallback),
disable_link_previews, group_allowed_chats.
- Slack: strict_mention config.
- Discord: slash_commands disable, send_animation GIF, send_message
native media attachments.
- DingTalk: require_mention + allowed_users.
CLI (#16052 #16539 #16566 #15841 #14798 #10043):
- New 'hermes fallback' interactive manager.
- New 'hermes update --check', '--backup' flag, and pre-update pairing
snapshot behavior.
- 'hermes gateway start/restart --all' multi-profile flag.
- cron.md: 'hermes tools' as a platform, per-job enabled_toolsets,
wakeAgent gate, context_from chaining.
Config keys / env vars (#17305 #17026 #17000 #15077 #14557 #14227
#14166 #14730 #17008):
- terminal.docker_run_as_host_user, display.runtime_metadata_footer,
compression.hygiene_hard_message_limit, HINDSIGHT_TIMEOUT,
skills.guard_agent_created, TAVILY_BASE_URL,
security.allow_private_urls, agent.api_max_retries,
gateway hot-reload of compression/context_length config edits.
TUI / CLI UX (#17130 #17113 #17175 #17150 #16707 #12312 #12305 #12934
#14810 #14045 #17286 #17126):
- HERMES_TUI_RESUME, HERMES_TUI_THEME, LaTeX rendering, busy-indicator
styles, ctrl-x queued-message delete, git branch in status bar, per-
prompt elapsed stopwatch, external-editor keybind, markdown stripping,
TUI voice-mode parity, /agents overlay, /reload + /mouse.
Gateway features (#16506 #15027 #13428 #12116):
- Native multimodal image routing based on vision capability.
- /usage account-limits section.
- /steer slash command (added to reference + explanation in CLI).
Plugins / hooks (#12929 #12972 #10763 #16364):
- transform_tool_result, transform_terminal_output plugin hooks.
- PluginContext.dispatch_tool() documented with slash-command example.
- google_meet bundled plugin entry under built-in-plugins.md.
Other (#16576 #16572 #16383 #15878 #15608 #15606 #14809 #14767 #14231
#14232 #14307 #13683 #12373 #11891 #11291 #10066):
- hermes backup exclusions (WAL/SHM/journal + checkpoints/).
- security.md hardline blocklist (floor below --yolo).
- FHS install layout for root installs.
- openssh-client + docker-cli baked into the Docker image.
- MEDIA: tag supported extensions table (docs/office/archives/pdf).
- Remote-to-host file sync on SSH/Modal/Daytona teardown.
- 'hermes model' -> Configure Auxiliary Models interactive picker.
- Podman support via HERMES_DOCKER_BINARY.
Providers / STT / one-shot (#15045 #14473 #15704):
- alibaba-coding-plan first-class provider entry.
- xAI Grok STT as a 6th transcription option.
- 'hermes -z' scripted one-shot mode + HERMES_INFERENCE_MODEL.
Build: 'docusaurus build' succeeds. No new broken links/anchors;
pre-existing warnings unchanged.
2026-04-29 20:32:37 -07:00
### google_meet
Lets the agent **join, transcribe, and participate in Google Meet calls ** — take notes on a meeting, summarize the back-and-forth after, follow up on specific points, and (optionally) speak replies back into the call via TTS.
**What it adds:**
- A headless virtual participant that joins a Meet URL using browser automation
- Live transcription of the meeting audio via the configured STT provider
- A `meet_summarize` / `meet_speak` / `meet_followup` toolset the agent invokes to act on what it heard
- Post-meeting artifacts (transcript, speaker-attributed notes, action items) saved under `~/.hermes/cache/google_meet/<meeting_id>/`
**Setup:**
```bash
hermes plugins enable google_meet
# Prompts you to sign in via the plugin's OAuth flow on first use —
# needs a Google account with Meet access. Host approval may be required
# if the meeting enforces "only invited participants can join".
```
Usage from chat:
> "Join meet.google.com/abc-defg-hij and take notes. After the call, send me a summary with action items."
The agent kicks off the meeting join, streams the transcription back into its context as the call proceeds, and produces a structured summary when the meeting ends (or when you tell it to stop).
**When to use it:** recurring standups where you want a bot to transcribe + summarize for async attendees; deposition-style interviews where you want structured notes; any case where you'd otherwise need Fireflies / Otter / Grain. When you'd rather not have an AI listening in — don't enable it.
**Disabling:** `hermes plugins disable google_meet` . Any cached transcripts and recordings stay in `~/.hermes/cache/google_meet/` until you remove them.
docs(plugins): rename disk-guardian to disk-cleanup + bundled-plugins docs
The original name was cute but non-obvious; disk-cleanup says what it
does. Plugin directory, script, state path, log lines, slash command,
and test module all renamed. No user-visible state exists yet, so no
migration path is needed.
New website page "Built-in Plugins" documents the <repo>/plugins/<name>/
source, how discovery interacts with user/project plugins, the
HERMES_DISABLE_BUNDLED_PLUGINS escape hatch, disk-cleanup's hook
behaviour and deletion rules, and guidance on when a plugin belongs
bundled vs. user-installable. Added to the Features → Core sidebar next
to the main Plugins page, with a cross-reference from plugins.md.
2026-04-20 03:06:17 -07:00
## Adding a bundled plugin
Bundled plugins are written exactly like any other Hermes plugin — see [Build a Hermes Plugin ](/docs/guides/build-a-hermes-plugin ). The only differences are:
- Directory lives at `<repo>/plugins/<name>/` instead of `~/.hermes/plugins/<name>/`
- Manifest source is reported as `bundled` in `hermes plugins list`
- User plugins with the same name override the bundled version
A plugin is a good candidate for bundling when:
- It has no optional dependencies (or they're already `pip install .[all]` deps)
- The behaviour benefits most users and is opt-out rather than opt-in
- The logic ties into lifecycle hooks that the agent would otherwise have to remember to invoke
- It complements a core capability without expanding the model-visible tool surface
Counter-examples — things that should stay as user-installable plugins, not bundled: third-party integrations with API keys, niche workflows, large dependency trees, anything that would meaningfully change agent behaviour by default.