Make Ctrl+L non-destructive by redrawing the current screen state instead of starting a new session, and stop auto-appending --global for typed /model commands so session scope remains the default unless explicitly requested.
Route /browser, /reload-mcp, /rollback, /stop, /fast, and /busy through direct TUI RPC handlers so state changes hit the live gateway session instead of slash-worker fallback. Add TUI session finalize/reset parity hooks (memory commit + plugin boundaries) and parity matrix tests to keep mutating commands off fallback.
Route TUI /title through session.title RPC and queue titles when the session DB row is still initializing, so renamed sessions reliably appear in /resume and browse flows.
Follow-up on #16020 salvage. Three corrections:
1. Truth signal for /copy
Before: success was 'OSC 52 sequence was emitted to stdout'. That's
false on local Linux inside tmux (emitSequence=false), so /copy kept
printing 'clipboard copy failed' to users whose xclip/wl-copy had
already succeeded fire-and-forget.
Fix: setClipboard() now returns { sequence, success } where success =
native-fired OR tmux-buffer-loaded OR osc52-emitted. copyNative()
returns a boolean telling setClipboard whether a native attempt was
made. /copy only shows 'failed' when literally no path was taken.
2. Dashboard keybinding
Before: Ctrl+C for copy on non-Mac (Ctrl+Shift+C for paste).
That swallows SIGINT when a stale selection is present and breaks
the xterm/gnome-terminal/konsole/Windows-Terminal convention where
Ctrl+C in a terminal emulator is always SIGINT. The real bug was
that clipboard writes lost user-gesture through OSC-52 round-trips,
which the direct writeText already fixes.
Fix: revert copyModifier to Ctrl+Shift+C on non-Mac. Direct
writeText in the keydown handler preserves user gesture. term.write
Escape replaced with term.clearSelection() (works without relying
on TUI input mode).
3. Error toast text
Before: 'see HERMES_TUI_DEBUG_CLIPBOARD' — tells users how to
debug but not how to fix.
Fix: point users at HERMES_TUI_FORCE_OSC52=1 first (the actual
escape hatch), mention the debug var second.
The cherry-picked approach serialized the UI-shaped transcript on the Node
side, producing a third JSON format alongside cli.py save_conversation and
tui_gateway session.save. Simpler to call the existing session.save method,
which already writes the canonical agent history (raw OpenAI messages +
model) to an absolute-path file.
- /save still short-circuits before the slash worker
- Empty transcript -> 'no conversation yet'
- No active session -> 'no active session - nothing to save'
- Otherwise: rpc('session.save', {session_id}) and echo back the file path
- Tests updated to assert RPC contract; new test covers the no-sid case
- run the requested ui-tui lint+format pass and include resulting formatting updates
- guard text-measure cache eviction key in hermes-ink so ui-tui type-check stays green
Reported during TUI v2 blitz retest: `/history` in the TUI only shows
prompts from non-TUI Hermes runs and can't scroll the window. Root
cause is the slash-worker subprocess: it's a detached HermesCLI that
never sees the TUI's turns, so its `conversation_history` starts empty
and `show_history` surfaces whatever was persisted from earlier CLI
sessions — not what the user just did inside the TUI.
Intercept `/history` as a local slash command so it dumps
`ctx.local.getHistoryItems()` — the TUI's own transcript — routed
through the pager (which scrolls after #13591). Accepts an optional
preview-length argument (default 400 chars per message).
Adds createSlashHandler coverage.
Additional TUI fixes discovered in the same audit:
1. /plan slash command was silently lost — process_command() queues the
plan skill invocation onto _pending_input which nobody reads in the
slash worker subprocess. Now intercepted in slash.exec and routed
through command.dispatch with a new 'send' dispatch type.
Same interception added for /retry, /queue, /steer as safety nets
(these already have correct TUI-local handlers in core.ts, but the
server-side guard prevents regressions if the local handler is
bypassed).
2. Tool results were stripping ANSI escape codes — the messageLine
component used stripAnsi() + plain <Text> for tool role messages,
losing all color/styling from terminal, search_files, etc. Now
uses <Ansi> component (already imported) when ANSI is detected.
3. Terminal tab title now shows model + busy status via useTerminalTitle
hook from @hermes/ink (was never used). Users can identify Hermes
tabs and see at a glance whether the agent is busy or ready.
4. Added 'send' variant to CommandDispatchResponse type + asCommandDispatch
parser + createSlashHandler handler for commands that need to inject
a message into the conversation (plan, queue fallback, steer fallback).
Two TUI fixes:
1. Hyperlinks are now clickable (Cmd+Click / Ctrl+Click) in terminals
that support OSC 8. The markdown renderer was rendering links as
plain colored text — now wraps them in the existing <Link> component
from @hermes/ink which emits OSC 8 escape sequences.
2. Skill slash commands (e.g. /hermes-agent-dev) now work in the TUI.
The slash.exec handler was delegating to the _SlashWorker subprocess
which calls cli.process_command(). For skills, process_command()
queues the invocation message onto _pending_input — a Queue that
nobody reads in the worker subprocess. The skill message was lost.
Now slash.exec detects skill commands early and rejects them so
the TUI falls through to command.dispatch, which correctly builds
and returns the skill payload for the client to send().
/skills install, inspect, search, browse, list now call the typed skills.manage RPC
and render results via panel/page. Previously they fell through to slash.exec which
invokes v1's curses code path — that hangs or crashes inside the Ink worker per the
§2 parity-audit finding.
Also drop Enter-as-install from the Skills Hub action stage since the Hub lists
locally installed skills; primary action is inspect-and-close. x still triggers a
manual reinstall for power users.
Intercept bare /skills locally and flip overlay.skillsHub, so the
overlay opens instantly without waiting on slash.exec. /skills <args>
still forwards to slash.exec and paginates any output. Tests cover
both branches.
The status bar was showing stale lifecycle text ("running…") while the
face+verb stream flickered through the thinking panel as Python pushed
thinking.delta events. That's backwards — the face ticker is the
primary "I'm alive" signal, it belongs in the status bar; the thinking
panel is for substantive reasoning and tool activity.
Status bar now reads `ui.busy`: when true, renders a local `<FaceTicker>`
cycling FACES × VERBS on a 2.5s interval, unaffected by server events.
When false, the bar shows the actual status string (ready, starting
agent…, interrupted, etc.).
Side effect: `scheduleThinkingStatus` still patches `ui.status` with
Python's face text, but while busy the bar ignores that string and uses
the ticker instead. No server-side changes needed — Python keeps
emitting thinking.delta as a liveness heartbeat, the TUI just doesn't
let it fight the status bar.