Commit Graph

592 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Teknium
ac0325c257 diagnostic(cli): log slow bracketed-paste handler (>500ms) for #16263 (#16575)
When a paste takes longer than 500ms to process on the prompt_toolkit
event-loop thread, emit a logger.warning with elapsed time, byte size,
line count, and sys.platform. Gives us concrete repro data for the
recurring 'CLI freezes after paste on macOS' class of reports (issue
#16263, plus sibling reports across Claude Code / Cursor / Lightroom
against macOS Tahoe 26).

Pure diagnostic — no behavior change. Two time.perf_counter() calls
and one conditional per paste event. Log line only fires when the
handler is actually slow, so normal pastes add no log noise.
2026-04-27 06:44:36 -07:00
Teknium
a59a98b180 fix(cli): pass session messages to shutdown_memory_provider (#15165 sibling)
The gateway fix in the previous commit forwards _session_messages on
gateway session teardown.  The CLI exit cleanup path had the same bug:
it read getattr(agent, 'conversation_history', None) or [] — but AIAgent
has no conversation_history attribute, so providers always received [].

Switch to _session_messages (same attribute the gateway now uses),
guarded by isinstance(..., list) to preserve the no-arg fallback for
MagicMock-based CLI test stubs.

Adds tests/cli/test_cli_shutdown_memory_messages.py (4 cases mirroring
the gateway suite).
2026-04-27 06:41:16 -07:00
Teknium
ec671c4154 feat(image-input): native multimodal routing based on model vision capability (#16506)
* feat(image-input): native multimodal routing based on model vision capability

Attach user-sent images as OpenAI-style content parts on the user turn when
the active model supports native vision, so vision-capable models see real
pixels instead of a lossy text description from vision_analyze.

Routing decision (agent/image_routing.py::decide_image_input_mode):

  agent.image_input_mode = auto | native | text  (default: auto)

In auto mode:
  - If auxiliary.vision.provider/model is explicitly configured, keep the
    text pipeline (user paid for a dedicated vision backend).
  - Else if models.dev reports supports_vision=True for the active
    provider/model, attach natively.
  - Else fall back to text (current behaviour).

Call sites updated: gateway/run.py (all messaging platforms), tui_gateway
(dashboard/Ink), cli.py (interactive /attach + drag-drop).

run_agent.py changes:
  - _prepare_anthropic_messages_for_api now passes image parts through
    unchanged when the model supports vision — the Anthropic adapter
    translates them to native image blocks. Previous behaviour
    (vision_analyze → text) only runs for non-vision Anthropic models.
  - New _prepare_messages_for_non_vision_model mirrors the same contract
    for chat.completions and codex_responses paths, so non-vision models
    on any provider get text-fallback instead of failing at the provider.
  - New _model_supports_vision() helper reads models.dev caps.

vision_analyze description rewritten: positions it as a tool for images
NOT already visible in the conversation (URLs, tool output, deeper
inspection). Prevents the model from redundantly calling it on images
already attached natively.

Config default: agent.image_input_mode = auto.

Tests: 35 new (test_image_routing.py + test_vision_aware_preprocessing.py),
all existing tests that reference _prepare_anthropic_messages_for_api
still pass (198 targeted + new tests green).

* feat(image-input): size-cap + resize oversized images, charge image tokens in compressor

Two follow-ups that make the native image routing safer for long / heavy
sessions:

1) Oversize handling in build_native_content_parts:
   - 20 MB ceiling per image (matches vision_tools._MAX_BASE64_BYTES,
     the most restrictive provider — Gemini inline data).
   - Delegates to vision_tools._resize_image_for_vision (Pillow-based,
     already battle-tested) to downscale to 5 MB first-try.
   - If Pillow is missing or resize still overshoots, the image is
     dropped and reported back in skipped[]; caller falls back to text
     enrichment for that image.

2) Image-token accounting in context_compressor:
   - New _IMAGE_TOKEN_ESTIMATE = 1600 (matches Claude Code's constant;
     within the realistic range for Anthropic/GPT-4o/Gemini billing).
   - _content_length_for_budget() helper: sums text-part lengths and
     charges _IMAGE_CHAR_EQUIVALENT (1600 * 4 chars) per image/image_url/
     input_image part.  Base64 payload inside image_url is NOT counted
     as chars — dimensions don't matter, only image-presence.
   - Both tail-cut sites (_prune_old_tool_results L527 and
     _find_tail_cut_by_tokens L1126) now call the helper so multi-image
     conversations don't slip past compression budget.

Tests: 9 new in test_image_routing.py (oversize triggers resize,
resize-fails-returns-None, oversize-skipped-reported), 11 new in
test_compressor_image_tokens.py (flat charge per image, multiple images,
Responses-API / Anthropic-native / OpenAI-chat shapes, no-inflation on
raw base64, bounds-check on the constant, integration test that an
image-heavy tail actually gets trimmed).

* fix(image-input): replace blanket 20MB ceiling with empirically-verified per-provider limits

The previous commit imposed a hardcoded 20 MB base64 ceiling on all
providers, triggering auto-resize on anything larger. This was wrong in
both directions:

  * Too loose for Anthropic — actual limit is 5 MB (returns HTTP 400
    'image exceeds 5 MB maximum' above that).
  * Too strict for OpenAI / Codex / OpenRouter — accept 49 MB+ without
    complaint (empirically verified April 2026 with progressive PNG
    sizes).

New behaviour:

  * _PROVIDER_BASE64_CEILING table: only anthropic and bedrock have a
    ceiling (5 MB, since bedrock-on-Claude shares Anthropic's decoder).
  * Providers NOT in the table get no ceiling — images attach at native
    size and we trust the provider to return its own error if it
    disagrees. A provider-specific 400 message is clearer than us
    guessing wrong and silently degrading image quality.
  * build_native_content_parts() gains a keyword-only provider arg;
    gateway/CLI/TUI pass the active provider so Anthropic users get
    auto-resize protection while OpenAI users don't pay it.
  * Resize target dropped from 5 MB to 4 MB to slide safely under
    Anthropic's boundary with header overhead.

Empirical measurements (direct API, no Hermes in the loop):

    image b64     anthropic   openrouter/gpt5.5   codex-oauth/gpt5.5
    0.19 MB       ✓           ✓                   ✓
    12.37 MB      ✗ 400 5MB   ✓                   ✓
    23.85 MB      ✗ 400 5MB   ✓                   ✓
    49.46 MB      ✗ 413       ✓                   ✓

Tests: rewrote TestOversizeHandling (5 tests): no-ceiling pass-through,
Anthropic resize fires, Anthropic skip on resize-fail, build_native_parts
routes ceiling by provider, unknown provider gets no ceiling. All 52
targeted tests pass.

* refactor(image-input): attempt native, shrink-and-retry on provider reject

Replace proactive per-provider size ceilings with a reactive shrink path
on the provider's actual rejection. All providers now attempt native
full-size attachment first; if the provider returns an image-too-large
error, the agent silently shrinks and retries once.

Why the previous design was wrong: hardcoding provider ceilings
(anthropic=5MB, others=unlimited) meant OpenAI users on a 10MB image
paid no tax, but Anthropic users lost quality on anything >5MB even
though the empirical behaviour at provider-reject time is the same
(shrink + retry). Baking the table into the routing layer also
requires updating Hermes every time a provider's limit changes.

Reactive design:
  - image_routing.py: _file_to_data_url encodes native size, no ceiling.
    build_native_content_parts drops its provider kwarg.
  - error_classifier.py: new FailoverReason.image_too_large + pattern
    match ("image exceeds", "image too large", etc.) checked BEFORE
    context_overflow so Anthropic's 5MB rejection lands in the right
    bucket.
  - run_agent.py: new _try_shrink_image_parts_in_messages walks api
    messages in-place, re-encodes oversized data: URL image parts
    through vision_tools._resize_image_for_vision to fit under 4MB,
    handles both chat.completions (dict image_url) and Responses
    (string image_url) shapes, ignores http URLs (provider-fetched).
    New image_shrink_retry_attempted flag in the retry loop fires the
    shrink exactly once per turn after credential-pool recovery but
    before auth retries.

E2E verified live against Anthropic claude-sonnet-4-6:
  - 17.9MB PNG (23.9MB b64) attached at native size
  - Anthropic returns 400 "image exceeds 5 MB maximum"
  - Agent logs '📐 Image(s) exceeded provider size limit — shrank and
    retrying...'
  - Retry succeeds, correct response delivered in 6.8s total.

Tests: 12 new (8 shrink-helper shapes + 4 classifier signals),
replaces 5 proactive-ceiling tests with 3 simpler 'native attach works'
tests. 181 targeted tests pass. test_enum_members_exist in
test_error_classifier.py updated for the new enum value.
2026-04-27 06:27:59 -07:00
Teknium
bb00b783fb fix(cli): eliminate ghost status-bar + DSR input leaks from terminal drift
The CLI renders through prompt_toolkit in non-full-screen mode, so every
repaint uses the renderer's tracked _cursor_pos.y to cursor_up() + erase
before drawing the new frame. Any time that tracked position drifts from
terminal reality, redraws stack on top of stale content instead of
overwriting it. Four user-visible bugs share this root cause.

Fixes:

- #5474 (SIGWINCH ghosts): the resize wrapper previously only handled
  column-shrink reflow. Generalize it to force a full screen-clear
  (erase_screen + cursor_goto(0,0)) and renderer.reset() on every resize
  — covers widen, row-shrink, and multiplexer SIGWINCH-less redraws.

- #8688 (cmux/tmux tab switch): no SIGWINCH fires on focus regain, so
  prompt_toolkit has no signal to recover. Add a _force_full_redraw()
  helper, bound to Ctrl+L (standard bash/zsh/vim convention) and exposed
  as /redraw. Users can manually clear drift without restarting Hermes.

- #14692 (DSR response leaks — ^[[53;1R): resize storms make
  prompt_toolkit's CSI 6n queries race past the input parser; the
  terminal's reply ends up as literal input text. Add a sibling of the
  bracketed-paste sanitizer that strips \x1b[<row>;<col>R and the
  caret-escape visible form from paste text, buffer text-filter, and
  the input-processing loop.

The idle-redraw removal (#12641) is in the preceding commit from
@foxion37 — keeping them as separate commits preserves attribution.
2026-04-27 05:31:47 -07:00
Q
5e92b67807 fix: stop idle CLI redraws 2026-04-27 05:31:47 -07:00
Teknium
4a2ee6c162 fix(title-gen): surface auxiliary failures via _emit_auxiliary_failure
Closes #15775.

Title generation swallowed exceptions at debug level and returned None,
so a depleted auxiliary provider (e.g. OpenRouter 402) silently left
sessions with NULL titles. Reporter observed 45 untitled sessions
accumulated over 19 days with no user-visible indication.

- agent/title_generator.py: accept optional failure_callback, bump log
  to WARNING, invoke callback on call_llm exception (swallowing callback
  errors so nothing can crash the fire-and-forget worker thread).
- cli.py, gateway/run.py: pass agent._emit_auxiliary_failure as the
  callback so failures route through the existing user-visible warning
  channel.
- tests: cover callback fires / errors are swallowed / no-callback
  legacy behavior / maybe_auto_title forwards kwarg to worker.
2026-04-26 21:49:34 -07:00
romanornr
a0fe73bada fix(cli): strip leaked bracketed-paste wrappers 2026-04-26 21:47:40 -07:00
Teknium
6c87371815 fix(openclaw-migration): case-preserving brand rewrite + one-time ~/.openclaw residue banner (#16327)
Two related fixes for OpenClaw-residue problems after an OpenClaw→Hermes
migration (especially migrations done via OpenClaw's own tool, which
doesn't archive the source directory).

1. optional-skills/migration/openclaw-migration/scripts/openclaw_to_hermes.py:
   rebrand_text() was rewriting ~/.openclaw/config.yaml → ~/.Hermes/config.yaml
   (capital H — a directory that doesn't exist). Now case-preserving:
   "OpenClaw" → "Hermes" (prose), but "openclaw" → "hermes" (so filesystem
   paths land on the real Hermes home). Regex logic unchanged — replacement
   function now checks if the matched text was all-lowercase and emits the
   replacement in the matching case.

2. agent/onboarding.py + cli.py: one-time startup banner the first time
   Hermes launches and finds ~/.openclaw/. Tells the user to run
   `hermes claw cleanup` to archive it, gated on the existing onboarding
   seen-flag framework (onboarding.seen.openclaw_residue_cleanup in
   config.yaml). Fires once per install; re-running requires wiping that
   flag or running cleanup directly.

Tests:
- 4 new TestDetectOpenclawResidue tests (present / absent / file-instead-
  of-dir / default-home smoke)
- 2 TestOpenclawResidueHint tests (content check)
- 2 TestOpenclawResidueSeenFlag tests (flag isolation + round-trip)
- test_rebrand_text_preserves_filesystem_path_casing regression test
  with 4 scenarios including the exact ~/.openclaw/config.yaml case
- Existing test_rebrand_text_* tests updated to the new case-preserving
  contract (lowercase input → lowercase output)

Co-authored-by: teknium1 <teknium@noreply.github.com>
2026-04-26 20:57:26 -07:00
Teknium
478444c262 feat(checkpoints): auto-prune orphan and stale shadow repos at startup (#16303)
Every working dir hermes ever touches gets its own shadow git repo under
~/.hermes/checkpoints/{sha256(abs_dir)[:16]}/.  The per-repo _prune is a
no-op (comment in CheckpointManager._prune says so), so abandoned repos
from deleted/moved projects or one-off tmp dirs pile up forever.  Field
reports put the typical offender at 1000+ repos / ~12 GB on active
contributor machines.

Adds an opt-in startup sweep that mirrors the sessions.auto_prune
pattern from #13861 / #16286:

- tools/checkpoint_manager.py: new prune_checkpoints() and
  maybe_auto_prune_checkpoints() helpers.  Deletes shadow repos that
  are orphan (HERMES_WORKDIR marker points to a path that no longer
  exists) or stale (newest in-repo mtime older than retention_days).
  Idempotent via a CHECKPOINT_BASE/.last_prune marker file so it only
  runs once per min_interval_hours regardless of how many hermes
  processes start up.
- hermes_cli/config.py: new checkpoints.auto_prune /
  retention_days / delete_orphans / min_interval_hours knobs.
  Default auto_prune: false so users who rely on /rollback against
  long-ago sessions never lose data silently.
- cli.py / gateway/run.py: startup hooks gated on checkpoints.auto_prune,
  called right next to the existing state.db maintenance block.
- Docs updated with the new config knobs.
- 11 regression tests: orphan/stale deletion, precedence, byte-freed
  tracking, non-shadow dir skip, interval gating, corrupt marker
  recovery.

Refs #3015 (session-file disk growth was fixed in #16286; this covers
the checkpoint side noted out-of-scope there).
2026-04-26 19:05:52 -07:00
Teknium
5eb6cd82b2 fix(sessions): /save lands under $HERMES_HOME, widen browse+TUI picker, force-refresh ollama-cloud on setup (#16296)
Four independent session-UX bugs reported by an external user (#16294).

/save wrote hermes_conversation_<ts>.json to CWD — invisible to
'hermes sessions browse' and easy to lose. Snapshots now write under
~/.hermes/sessions/saved/ and the command prints the absolute path plus
a 'hermes --resume <id>' hint for the live DB-indexed session.

'hermes sessions browse' default --limit raised from 50 to 500. With the
old ceiling, users with moderately long histories saw only the most
recent 50 rows and assumed older sessions had been lost.

TUI session.list (`/resume` picker) switched from a hardcoded allow-list
of 13 gateway source names to a deny-list of just { 'tool' }. Sessions
tagged acp / webhook / user-defined HERMES_SESSION_SOURCE values and
any newly-added platform now surface. Default limit 20 → 200.

ollama-cloud provider setup passes force_refresh=True to
fetch_ollama_cloud_models() so a user entering their API key sees the
fresh catalog (e.g. deepseek v4 flash, kimi k2.6) immediately instead
of waiting up to an hour for the disk cache TTL to expire.

Closes #16294.
2026-04-26 18:49:48 -07:00
Yang Zhi
3b60abb6bb fix(sessions): delete on-disk transcript files during prune and delete (#3015)
`delete_session()` and `prune_sessions()` only removed SQLite records,
leaving .json/.jsonl transcript files on disk forever. Over time this
causes unbounded disk growth (~27MB/day observed).

Changes:
- Add `_remove_session_files()` static helper that cleans up
  `{session_id}.json`, `.jsonl`, and `request_dump_{session_id}_*.json`
- `delete_session()` accepts optional `sessions_dir` param and removes
  files for the deleted session and its children
- `prune_sessions()` accepts optional `sessions_dir` param and removes
  files for all pruned sessions after the DB transaction
- Wire up CLI `hermes sessions delete` and `hermes sessions prune` to
  pass `sessions_dir`
- File cleanup is best-effort (OSError silenced) so DB operations are
  never blocked by filesystem issues
- Fully backward-compatible: `sessions_dir=None` (default) preserves
  existing behavior
2026-04-26 18:31:07 -07:00
Teknium
635253b918 feat(busy): add 'steer' as a third display.busy_input_mode option (#16279)
Enter while the agent is busy can now inject the typed text via /steer —
arriving at the agent after the next tool call — instead of interrupting
(current default) or queueing for the next turn.

Changes:
- cli.py: keybinding honors busy_input_mode='steer' by calling
  agent.steer(text) on the UI thread (thread-safe), with automatic
  fallback to 'queue' when the agent is missing, steer() is unavailable,
  images are attached, or steer() rejects the payload. /busy accepts
  'steer' as a fourth argument alongside queue/interrupt/status.
- gateway/run.py: busy-message handler and the PRIORITY running-agent
  path both route through running_agent.steer() when the mode is 'steer',
  with the same fallback-to-queue safety net. Ack wording tells users
  their message was steered into the current run. Restart-drain queueing
  now also activates for 'steer' so messages aren't lost across restarts.
- agent/onboarding.py: first-touch hint has a steer branch for both
  CLI and gateway.
- hermes_cli/commands.py: /busy args_hint updated to include steer,
  and 'steer' is registered as a subcommand (completions).
- hermes_cli/web_server.py: dashboard select widget offers steer.
- hermes_cli/config.py, cli-config.yaml.example, hermes_cli/tips.py:
  inline docs updated.
- website/docs/user-guide/cli.md + messaging/index.md: documented.
- Tests: steer set/status path for /busy; onboarding hints;
  _load_busy_input_mode accepts steer; busy-session ack exercises
  steer success + two fallback-to-queue branches.

Requested on X by @CodingAcct.

Default is unchanged (interrupt).
2026-04-26 18:21:29 -07:00
helix4u
10e36188da fix(cli): wire approvals in background tasks 2026-04-26 12:29:48 -07:00
Teknium
0824ba6a9d fix(/branch): redirect session_log_file and expose branch sessions in list (#14854) (#16150)
* fix(/branch): redirect session_log_file and expose branch sessions in list

Two bugs when using /branch:

1. cli.py _handle_branch_command updated agent.session_id but not
   agent.session_log_file, so all messages written after branching
   landed in the original session's JSON file and the branch never
   got its own session_{id}.json on disk.

   Fix: mirror the compression-split path (run_agent.py:7579) and
   update session_log_file immediately after changing session_id.

2. hermes_state.py list_sessions_rich filtered out every session
   with parent_session_id IS NOT NULL to hide sub-agent runs and
   compression continuations. Branch sessions share this column, so
   they became invisible to `hermes sessions list` and `sessions browse`.

   Fix: also include branch children — those whose parent ended with
   end_reason='branched' AND whose started_at >= parent.ended_at
   (the same timing condition that get_compression_tip uses to
   distinguish continuations from live-spawned subagents).

Fixes #14854

Co-Authored-By: Octopus <liyuan851277048@icloud.com>

* chore(release): map octo-patch placeholder email in AUTHOR_MAP

---------

Co-authored-by: octo-patch <octo-patch@github.com>
Co-authored-by: Octopus <liyuan851277048@icloud.com>
2026-04-26 10:28:19 -07:00
Teknium
eaa7e2db67 feat(cli,tui): surface /queue, /bg, /steer in agent-running placeholder (#16118)
* feat(cli,tui): surface /queue, /bg, /steer in agent-running placeholder

While the agent loop is running, the input placeholder previously only
hinted at Enter-to-interrupt. Surface the full set of busy-time actions
(interrupt via new message, /queue, /bg, /steer) so users discover them
without hunting through docs or Teknium's tweets.

- cli.py: "msg=interrupt · /queue · /bg · /steer · Ctrl+C cancel"
- ui-tui/src/components/appLayout.tsx: same string (was "Ctrl+C to interrupt…")

* revert tui placeholder change (cli-only per review)
2026-04-26 08:50:30 -07:00
Teknium
20cb706e03 chore: extend [SYSTEM:→[IMPORTANT: rename + AUTHOR_MAP
Follow-up to #6616 covering the remaining user-injected prompt markers that
the original PR did not touch (reporter's second comment on #6576 explicitly
flagged these). Azure OpenAI Default/DefaultV2 content filters treat any
bracketed [SYSTEM: ...] as prompt-injection and reject with HTTP 400.

Remaining call sites renamed:
- cli.py: background-process notifications (watch_disabled, watch_match,
  completion), MCP reload notice (4 live + 1 docstring)
- gateway/run.py: same notification paths + auto-loaded skill banner +
  MCP reload notice (5 live + 1 docstring)
- tools/process_registry.py: comment reference

Not renamed:
- environments/hermes_base_env.py '[SYSTEM]\n{content}' — RL training
  trajectory rendering only, never sent to Azure, part of a symmetric
  [USER]/[ASSISTANT]/[TOOL] scheme.

AUTHOR_MAP: buraysandro9@gmail.com -> ygd58.
2026-04-26 08:44:58 -07:00
Teknium
06f81752ed Revert "feat(kanban): durable multi-profile collaboration board (#16081)" (#16098)
This reverts commit 15937a6b46.
2026-04-26 08:29:37 -07:00
Teknium
15937a6b46 feat(kanban): durable multi-profile collaboration board (#16081)
New `hermes kanban` CLI subcommand + `/kanban` slash command + skills for
worker and orchestrator profiles. SQLite-backed task board
(~/.hermes/kanban.db) shared across all profiles on the host. Zero
changes to run_agent.py, no new core tools, no tool-schema bloat.

Motivation: delegate_task is a function call — sync fork/join, anonymous
subagent, no resumability, no human-in-the-loop. Kanban is the durable
shape needed for research triage, scheduled ops, digital twins,
engineering pipelines, and fleet work. They coexist (workers may call
delegate_task internally).

What this adds
- hermes_cli/kanban_db.py — schema, CAS claim, dependency resolution,
  dispatcher, workspace resolution, worker-context builder.
- hermes_cli/kanban.py — 15-verb CLI surface and shared run_slash()
  entry point used by both CLI and gateway.
- skills/devops/kanban-worker — how a profile should work a claimed task.
- skills/devops/kanban-orchestrator — "you are a dispatcher, not a
  worker" template with anti-temptation rules.
- /kanban slash command wired into cli.py and gateway/run.py. Bypasses
  the running-agent guard (board writes don't touch agent state), so
  /kanban unblock can free a stuck worker mid-conversation.
- Design spec at docs/hermes-kanban-v1-spec.pdf — comparative analysis
  vs Cline Kanban, Paperclip, NanoClaw, Gemini Enterprise; 8 patterns;
  4 user stories; implementation plan; concurrency correctness.
- Docs: website/docs/user-guide/features/kanban.md, CLI reference
  updated, sidebar entry added.

Architecture highlights
- Three planes: control (user + gateway), state (board + dispatcher),
  execution (pool of profile processes).
- Every worker is a full OS process, spawned as `hermes -p <profile>`.
  No in-process subagent swarms — solves NanoClaw's SDK-lifecycle
  failure class.
- Atomic claim via SQLite CAS in a BEGIN IMMEDIATE transaction; stale
  claims reclaimed 15 min after their TTL expires.
- Tenant namespacing via one nullable column — one specialist fleet
  can serve many businesses with data isolation by workspace path.

Tests: 60 targeted tests (schema, CAS atomicity, dependency resolution,
dispatcher, workspace kinds, tenancy, CLI + slash surface). All pass
hermetic via scripts/run_tests.sh.
2026-04-26 08:24:26 -07:00
Teknium
7fa70b6c87 refactor: /btw is now an alias for /background (#16053)
The ephemeral no-tools side-question variant of /btw confused users who
expected 'by-the-way' to mean 'run this off to the side with tools' —
they'd type /btw and get a toolless agent that couldn't do the work.
/bg worked because it was /background with full tools.

Collapse the two: /btw and /bg both alias to /background. One command,
one behavior, no more gotchas about which variant has tools.

Removed:
- _handle_btw_command in cli.py and gateway/run.py
- _run_btw_task + _active_btw_tasks state in gateway/run.py
- prompt.btw JSON-RPC method + btw.complete event in tui_gateway
- BtwStartResponse type + btw.complete case in ui-tui
- Standalone /btw slash tree registration in Discord
- Standalone btw CommandDef in hermes_cli/commands.py

Updated:
- background CommandDef aliases: (bg,) -> (bg, btw)
- TUI session.ts: local btw handler merged into background
- Docs and tips updated to describe /btw as a /background alias
2026-04-26 07:11:08 -07:00
Teknium
83c1c201f6 feat(onboarding): contextual first-touch hints for /busy and /verbose (#16046)
Instead of a blocking first-run questionnaire, show a one-time hint the first
time the user hits each behavior fork:

1. First message while the agent is working — appends a hint to the busy-ack
   explaining the /busy queue vs /busy interrupt knob, phrased to match the
   mode that was just applied (don't tell a queue-mode user to switch to
   queue).

2. First tool that runs for >= 30s in the noisiest progress mode
   (tool_progress: all) — prints a hint about /verbose to cycle display
   modes (all -> new -> off -> verbose). Gated on /verbose actually being
   usable on the surface: always shown on CLI; on gateway only shown when
   display.tool_progress_command is enabled.

Each hint is latched in config.yaml under onboarding.seen.<flag>, so it
fires exactly once per install across CLI, gateway, and cron, then never
again. Users can wipe the section to re-see hints.

New:
- agent/onboarding.py — is_seen / mark_seen / hint strings, shared by
  both CLI and gateway.
- onboarding.seen in DEFAULT_CONFIG (hermes_cli/config.py) and in
  load_cli_config defaults (cli.py). No _config_version bump — deep
  merge handles new keys.

Wired:
- gateway/run.py: _handle_active_session_busy_message appends the hint
  after building the ack.  progress_callback tracks tool.completed
  duration and queues the tool-progress hint into the progress bubble.
- cli.py: CLI input loop appends the busy-input hint on the first busy
  Enter; _on_tool_progress appends the tool-progress hint on the first
  >=30s tool completion.  In-memory CLI_CONFIG is also updated so
  subsequent fires in the same process are suppressed immediately.

All writes go through atomic_yaml_write and are wrapped in try/except
so onboarding can never break the input/busy-ack paths.
2026-04-26 06:06:27 -07:00
Teknium
438db0c7b0 fix(cli): /model picker honors provider-specific context caps (#16030)
`_apply_model_switch_result` (the interactive `/model` picker's
confirmation path) printed `ModelInfo.context_window` straight from
models.dev, which reports the vendor-wide value (1.05M for gpt-5.5 on
openai). ChatGPT Codex OAuth caps the same slug at 272K, so the picker
showed 1M while the runtime (compressor, gateway `/model`, typed
`/model <name>`) correctly used 272K — the classic 'sometimes 1M,
sometimes 272K' mismatch on a single model.

Both display paths now go through `resolve_display_context_length()`,
matching the fix that `_handle_model_switch` received earlier.

Also bump the stale last-resort fallback in DEFAULT_CONTEXT_LENGTHS
(`gpt-5.5: 400000 -> 1050000`) to match the real OpenAI API value; the
272K Codex cap is already enforced via the Codex-OAuth branch, so the
fallback now reflects what every non-Codex probe-miss should see.

Tests: adds `test_apply_model_switch_result_context.py` with three
scenarios (Codex cap wins, OpenRouter shows 1.05M, resolver-empty falls
back to ModelInfo). Updates the existing non-Codex fallback test to
assert 1.05M (the correct value).

## Validation
| path                          | before    | after     |
|-------------------------------|-----------|-----------|
| picker -> gpt-5.5 on Codex    | 1,050,000 | 272,000   |
| picker -> gpt-5.5 on OpenAI   | 1,050,000 | 1,050,000 |
| picker -> gpt-5.5 on OpenRouter | 1,050,000 | 1,050,000 |
| typed /model gpt-5.5 on Codex | 272,000   | 272,000   |
2026-04-26 05:43:31 -07:00
brooklyn!
ff851ba7b9 Merge pull request #15821 from NousResearch/fix/tui-ctrl-g-editor
fix: external editor handoff in CLI/TUI
2026-04-25 20:37:05 -05:00
voidborne-d
45e1228a8a fix(cli): suppress OSError EIO on interrupt shutdown
When the user interrupts a long-running task, prompt_toolkit tries to
flush stdout during emergency shutdown.  If stdout is in a broken state
(redirected to /dev/null, pipe closed, terminal gone), the flush raises
`OSError: [Errno 5] Input/output error` which propagates unhandled and
crashes the CLI.

Two defense layers:

1. `_suppress_closed_loop_errors`: add `OSError` with `errno.EIO` to
   the asyncio exception handler, matching the existing pattern for
   `RuntimeError("Event loop is closed")` and `KeyError("is not
   registered")`.

2. Outer `except (KeyError, OSError)` block: add `errno.EIO` check
   before the existing string-match guards, silently suppressing the
   error instead of printing a misleading stdin-related message.

Fixes #13710.
2026-04-25 18:25:13 -07:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
7fd8dc0bfb fix: preserve prompt_toolkit editor picker and mirror it in TUI
Base CLI's editor UX was better because prompt_toolkit picks the system
editor first, then friendly terminal editors before vi. Do not override
that with a vim-first chain.

Keep the CLI on prompt_toolkit's picker and only set tempfile_suffix='.md'
to avoid the complex-tempfile EEXIST path. Update the TUI resolver to
match prompt_toolkit's fallback order: $VISUAL, $EDITOR, editor, nano,
pico, vi, emacs.
2026-04-25 20:20:05 -05:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
d056b610b7 fix: avoid prompt_toolkit complex tempfile bug and prefer nvim first
Setting buffer.tempfile = 'prompt.md' pushed prompt_toolkit into its
complex-tempfile path, which creates a temp dir and then calls
os.makedirs() on that same path when no subdirectory is present. That
raises EEXIST before the editor can launch.

Keep prompt_toolkit on the simple tempfile path with .md suffix, and
make the editor fallback chain explicit on both surfaces:
$VISUAL -> $EDITOR -> nvim -> vim -> vi -> nano.
2026-04-25 20:16:50 -05:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
db7c5735f0 fix: prefer vim over nano for $EDITOR fallback (CLI + TUI)
prompt_toolkit's default editor list is: $VISUAL, $EDITOR, /usr/bin/editor,
/usr/bin/nano, /usr/bin/pico, /usr/bin/vi, /usr/bin/emacs — so when
neither env var is set, the base CLI launched nano. The TUI fell back
to a literal 'vi'. Same Ctrl+G keystroke, two different editors.

Pick the same chain on both surfaces:
  $VISUAL → $EDITOR → vim → vi → nano

CLI: override input_area.buffer._open_file_in_editor on the TextArea
once at app build time. Local to that buffer; doesn't touch
os.environ or affect other subprocesses.

TUI: extract resolveEditor() into ui-tui/src/lib/editor.ts. PATH walk
with accessSync(X_OK), no shelling out. Six-line unit test verifies
the priority order and the multi-entry PATH walk.
2026-04-25 20:11:25 -05:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
5fac6c3440 fix(cli): write editor draft to prompt.md so syntax highlighting works
Base CLI was handing prompt_toolkit's Buffer.open_in_editor() a default
config — Buffer.tempfile_suffix and .tempfile both empty — so it
created /tmp/tmpXXXXXX with no extension. nano/vim/helix all key
syntax highlighting off the file extension, so the buffer rendered
plain.

The TUI already writes to <mkdtemp>/prompt.md and gets full markdown
highlighting + a sensible title bar. Set buffer.tempfile = 'prompt.md'
on the TextArea so prompt_toolkit's complex-tempfile path produces
<mkdtemp>/prompt.md to match. shutil.rmtree cleanup is built-in.
2026-04-25 20:04:04 -05:00
kshitijk4poor
2c56dce0ed fix(model): preserve custom endpoint credentials and accept cloud models not in /v1/models
When switching models on a custom endpoint (ollama-launch):
- Same-provider switches no longer re-resolve credentials (fixes base_url
  being lost for 'custom' provider on subsequent switches)
- Named providers (ollama-launch) are resolved via user_providers so
  switch_model can find their base_url from config
- Models not in the /v1/models probe but present in the user's saved
  provider config are accepted with a warning instead of rejected
- CLI /model and TUI /model both pass user_providers/custom_providers
  to switch_model so the config model list is available for validation

Closes #15088
2026-04-25 18:03:47 -07:00
Brooklyn Nicholson
4c797bfae9 fix(cli): accept Alt+G as Ctrl+G fallback in VSCode/Cursor terminals
Same problem as the TUI: Cursor and VSCode bind Ctrl+G to "Find Next"
at the editor level, so the keystroke never reaches the terminal and
the prompt_toolkit-driven Hermes CLI sees nothing.

Register ('escape', 'g') alongside the existing 'c-g' on the same
handler so the editor handoff works inside Cursor/VSCode too. The
filter (no clarify/approval/sudo/secret prompt active) is unchanged.
2026-04-25 20:01:03 -05:00
Teknium
ea01bdcebe refactor(memory): remove flush_memories entirely (#15696)
The AIAgent.flush_memories pre-compression save, the gateway
_flush_memories_for_session, and everything feeding them are
obsolete now that the background memory/skill review handles
persistent memory extraction.

Problems with flush_memories:

- Pre-dates the background review loop.  It was the only memory-save
  path when introduced; the background review now fires every 10 user
  turns on CLI and gateway alike, which is far more frequent than
  compression or session reset ever triggered flush.
- Blocking and synchronous.  Pre-compression flush ran on the live agent
  before compression, blocking the user-visible response.
- Cache-breaking.  Flush built a temporary conversation prefix
  (system prompt + memory-only tool list) that diverged from the live
  conversation's cached prefix, invalidating prompt caching.  The
  gateway variant spawned a fresh AIAgent with its own clean prompt
  for each finalized session — still cache-breaking, just in a
  different process.
- Redundant.  Background review runs in the live conversation's
  session context, gets the same content, writes to the same memory
  store, and doesn't break the cache.  Everything flush_memories
  claimed to preserve is already covered.

What this removes:

- AIAgent.flush_memories() method (~248 LOC in run_agent.py)
- Pre-compression flush call in _compress_context
- flush_memories call sites in cli.py (/new + exit)
- GatewayRunner._flush_memories_for_session + _async_flush_memories
  (and the 3 call sites: session expiry watcher, /new, /resume)
- 'flush_memories' entry from DEFAULT_CONFIG auxiliary tasks,
  hermes tools UI task list, auxiliary_client docstrings
- _memory_flush_min_turns config + init
- #15631's headroom-deduction math in
  _check_compression_model_feasibility (headroom was only needed
  because flush dragged the full main-agent system prompt along;
  the compression summariser sends a single user-role prompt so
  new_threshold = aux_context is safe again)
- The dedicated test files and assertions that exercised
  flush-specific paths

What this renames (with read-time backcompat on sessions.json):

- SessionEntry.memory_flushed -> SessionEntry.expiry_finalized.
  The session-expiry watcher still uses the flag to avoid re-running
  finalize/eviction on the same expired session; the new name
  reflects what it now actually gates.  from_dict() reads
  'expiry_finalized' first, falls back to the legacy 'memory_flushed'
  key so existing sessions.json files upgrade seamlessly.

Supersedes #15631 and #15638.

Tested: 383 targeted tests pass across run_agent/, agent/, cli/,
and gateway/ session-boundary suites.  No behavior regressions —
background memory review continues to handle persistent memory
extraction on both CLI and gateway.
2026-04-25 08:21:14 -07:00
Yindong
9fde22d233 fix the reset of model change by /model. 2026-04-25 04:49:07 -07:00
Teknium
05d8f11085 fix(/model): show provider-enforced context length, not raw models.dev (#15438)
/model gpt-5.5 on openai-codex showed 'Context: 1,050,000 tokens' because
the display block used ModelInfo.context_window directly from models.dev.
Codex OAuth actually enforces 272K for the same slug, and the agent's
compressor already runs at 272K via get_model_context_length() — so the
banner + real context budget said 272K while /model lied with 1M.

Route the display context through a new resolve_display_context_length()
helper that always prefers agent.model_metadata.get_model_context_length
(which knows about Codex OAuth, Copilot, Nous caps) and only falls back
to models.dev when that returns nothing.

Fix applied to all 3 /model display sites:
  cli.py _handle_model_switch
  gateway/run.py picker on_model_selected callback
  gateway/run.py text-fallback confirmation

Reported by @emilstridell (Telegram, April 2026).
2026-04-24 17:21:38 -07:00
Cyprian Kowalczyk
fd3864d8bd feat(cli): wrap /compress in _busy_command to block input during compression
Before this, typing during /compress was accepted by the classic CLI
prompt and landed in the next prompt after compression finished,
effectively consuming a keystroke for a prompt that was about to be
replaced. Wrapping the body in self._busy_command('Compressing
context...') blocks input rendering for the duration, matching the
pattern /skills install and other slow commands already use.

Salvages the useful part of #10303 (@iRonin). The `_compressing` flag
added to run_agent.py in the original PR was dead code (set in 3 spots,
read nowhere — not by cli.py, not by run_agent.py, not by the Ink TUI
which doesn't use _busy_command at all) and was dropped.
2026-04-24 15:21:22 -07:00
Teknium
ed91b79b7e fix(cli): keep Ctrl+D no-op when only attachments pending
Follow-up to @iRonin's Ctrl+D EOF fix. If the input text is empty but
the user has pending attached images, do nothing rather than exiting —
otherwise a stray Ctrl+D silently discards the attachments.
2026-04-24 15:17:09 -07:00
CK iRonin.IT
08d5c9c539 fix: Ctrl+D deletes char under cursor, only exits on empty input (bash/zsh behaviour) 2026-04-24 15:17:09 -07:00
Julia Bennet
1dcf79a864 feat: add slash command for busy input mode 2026-04-24 15:15:26 -07:00
Devzo
813dbd9b40 fix(codex): route auth failures to fallback provider chain
Two related paths where Codex auth failures silently swallowed the
fallback chain instead of switching to the next provider:

1. cli.py — _ensure_runtime_credentials() calls resolve_runtime_provider()
   before each turn. When provider is explicitly configured (not "auto"),
   an AuthError from token refresh is re-raised and printed as a bold-red
   error, returning False before the agent ever starts. The fallback chain
   was never tried. Fix: on AuthError, iterate fallback_providers and
   switch to the first one that resolves successfully.

2. run_agent.py — inside the codex_responses validity gate (inner retry
   loop), response.status in {"failed","cancelled"} with non-empty output
   items was treated as a valid response and broke out of the retry loop,
   reaching _normalize_codex_response() outside the fallback machinery.
   That function raises RuntimeError on status="failed", which propagates
   to the outer except with no fallback logic. Fix: detect terminal status
   codes before the output_items check and set response_invalid=True so
   the existing fallback chain fires normally.
2026-04-24 04:53:32 -07:00
Teknium
b2e124d082 refactor(commands): drop /provider, /plan handler, and clean up slash registry (#15047)
* refactor(commands): drop /provider and clean up slash registry

* refactor(commands): drop /plan special handler — use plain skill dispatch
2026-04-24 03:10:52 -07:00
Teknium
f24956ba12 fix(resume): redirect --resume to the descendant that actually holds the messages
When context compression fires mid-session, run_agent's _compress_context
ends the current session, creates a new child session linked by
parent_session_id, and resets the SQLite flush cursor. New messages land
in the child; the parent row ends up with message_count = 0. A user who
runs 'hermes --resume <original_id>' sees a blank chat even though the
transcript exists — just under a descendant id.

PR #12920 already fixed the exit banner to print the live descendant id
at session end, but that didn't help users who resume by a session id
captured BEFORE the banner update (scripts, sessions list, old terminal
scrollback) or who type the parent id manually.

Fix: add SessionDB.resolve_resume_session_id() which walks the
parent→child chain forward and returns the first descendant with at
least one message row. Wire it into all three resume entry points:

  - HermesCLI._preload_resumed_session() (early resume at run() time)
  - HermesCLI._init_agent() (the classical resume path)
  - /resume slash command

Semantics preserved when the chain has no descendants with messages,
when the requested session already has messages, or when the id is
unknown. A depth cap of 32 guards against malformed loops.

This does NOT concatenate the pre-compression parent transcript into
the child — the whole point of compression is to shrink that, so
replaying it would blow the cache budget we saved. We just jump to
the post-compression child. The summary already reflects what was
compressed away.

Tests: tests/hermes_state/test_resolve_resume_session_id.py covers
  - the exact 6-session shape from the issue
  - passthrough when session has messages / no descendants
  - passthrough for nonexistent / empty / None input
  - middle-of-chain redirects
  - fork resolution (prefers most-recent child)

Closes #15000
2026-04-24 03:04:42 -07:00
Teknium
5a1c599412 feat(browser): CDP supervisor — dialog detection + response + cross-origin iframe eval (#14540)
* docs: browser CDP supervisor design (for upcoming PR)

Design doc ahead of implementation — dialog + iframe detection/interaction
via a persistent CDP supervisor. Covers backend capability matrix (verified
live 2026-04-23), architecture, lifecycle, policy, agent surface, PR split,
non-goals, and test plan.

Supersedes #12550.

No code changes in this commit.

* feat(browser): add persistent CDP supervisor for dialog + frame detection

Single persistent CDP WebSocket per Hermes task_id that subscribes to
Page/Runtime/Target events and maintains thread-safe state for pending
dialogs, frame tree, and console errors.

Supervisor lives in its own daemon thread running an asyncio loop;
external callers use sync API (snapshot(), respond_to_dialog()) that
bridges onto the loop.

Auto-attaches to OOPIF child targets via Target.setAutoAttach{flatten:true}
and enables Page+Runtime on each so iframe-origin dialogs surface through
the same supervisor.

Dialog policies: must_respond (default, 300s safety timeout),
auto_dismiss, auto_accept.

Frame tree capped at 30 entries + OOPIF depth 2 to keep snapshot
payloads bounded on ad-heavy pages.

E2E verified against real Chrome via smoke test — detects + responds
to main-frame alerts, iframe-contentWindow alerts, preserves frame
tree, graceful no-dialog error path, clean shutdown.

No agent-facing tool wiring in this commit (comes next).

* feat(browser): add browser_dialog tool wired to CDP supervisor

Agent-facing response-only tool. Schema:
  action: 'accept' | 'dismiss' (required)
  prompt_text: response for prompt() dialogs (optional)
  dialog_id: disambiguate when multiple dialogs queued (optional)

Handler:
  SUPERVISOR_REGISTRY.get(task_id).respond_to_dialog(...)

check_fn shares _browser_cdp_check with browser_cdp so both surface and
hide together. When no supervisor is attached (Camofox, default
Playwright, or no browser session started yet), tool is hidden; if
somehow invoked it returns a clear error pointing the agent to
browser_navigate / /browser connect.

Registered in _HERMES_CORE_TOOLS and the browser / hermes-acp /
hermes-api-server toolsets alongside browser_cdp.

* feat(browser): wire CDP supervisor into session lifecycle + browser_snapshot

Supervisor lifecycle:
  * _get_session_info lazy-starts the supervisor after a session row is
    materialized — covers every backend code path (Browserbase, cdp_url
    override, /browser connect, future providers) with one hook.
  * cleanup_browser(task_id) stops the supervisor for that task first
    (before the backend tears down CDP).
  * cleanup_all_browsers() calls SUPERVISOR_REGISTRY.stop_all().
  * /browser connect eagerly starts the supervisor for task 'default'
    so the first snapshot already shows pending_dialogs.
  * /browser disconnect stops the supervisor.

CDP URL resolution for the supervisor:
  1. BROWSER_CDP_URL / browser.cdp_url override.
  2. Fallback: session_info['cdp_url'] from cloud providers (Browserbase).

browser_snapshot merges supervisor state (pending_dialogs + frame_tree)
into its JSON output when a supervisor is active — the agent reads
pending_dialogs from the snapshot it already requests, then calls
browser_dialog to respond. No extra tool surface.

Config defaults:
  * browser.dialog_policy: 'must_respond' (new)
  * browser.dialog_timeout_s: 300 (new)
No version bump — new keys deep-merge into existing browser section.

Deadlock fix in supervisor event dispatch:
  * _on_dialog_opening and _on_target_attached used to await CDP calls
    while the reader was still processing an event — but only the reader
    can set the response Future, so the call timed out.
  * Both now fire asyncio.create_task(...) so the reader stays pumping.
  * auto_dismiss/auto_accept now actually close the dialog immediately.

Tests (tests/tools/test_browser_supervisor.py, 11 tests, real Chrome):
  * supervisor start/snapshot
  * main-frame alert detection + dismiss
  * iframe.contentWindow alert
  * prompt() with prompt_text reply
  * respond with no pending dialog -> clean error
  * auto_dismiss clears on event
  * registry idempotency
  * registry stop -> snapshot reports inactive
  * browser_dialog tool no-supervisor error
  * browser_dialog invalid action
  * browser_dialog end-to-end via tool handler

xdist-safe: chrome_cdp fixture uses a per-worker port.
Skipped when google-chrome/chromium isn't installed.

* docs(browser): document browser_dialog tool + CDP supervisor

- user-guide/features/browser.md: new browser_dialog section with
  workflow, availability gate, and dialog_policy table
- reference/tools-reference.md: row for browser_dialog, tool count
  bumped 53 -> 54, browser tools count 11 -> 12
- reference/toolsets-reference.md: browser_dialog added to browser
  toolset row with note on pending_dialogs / frame_tree snapshot fields

Full design doc lives at
developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md (committed earlier).

* fix(browser): reconnect loop + recent_dialogs for Browserbase visibility

Found via Browserbase E2E test that revealed two production-critical issues:

1. **Supervisor WebSocket drops when other clients disconnect.** Browserbase's
   CDP proxy tears down our long-lived WebSocket whenever a short-lived
   client (e.g. agent-browser CLI's per-command CDP connection) disconnects.
   Fixed with a reconnecting _run loop that re-attaches with exponential
   backoff on drops. _page_session_id and _child_sessions are reset on each
   reconnect; pending_dialogs and frames are preserved across reconnects.

2. **Browserbase auto-dismisses dialogs server-side within ~10ms.** Their
   Playwright-based CDP proxy dismisses alert/confirm/prompt before our
   Page.handleJavaScriptDialog call can respond. So pending_dialogs is
   empty by the time the agent reads a snapshot on Browserbase.

   Added a recent_dialogs ring buffer (capacity 20) that retains a
   DialogRecord for every dialog that opened, with a closed_by tag:
     * 'agent'       — agent called browser_dialog
     * 'auto_policy' — local auto_dismiss/auto_accept fired
     * 'watchdog'    — must_respond timeout auto-dismissed (300s default)
     * 'remote'      — browser/backend closed it on us (Browserbase)

   Agents on Browserbase now see the dialog history with closed_by='remote'
   so they at least know a dialog fired, even though they couldn't respond.

3. **Page.javascriptDialogClosed matching bug.** The event doesn't include a
   'message' field (CDP spec has only 'result' and 'userInput') but our
   _on_dialog_closed was matching on message. Fixed to match by session_id
   + oldest-first, with a safety assumption that only one dialog is in
   flight per session (the JS thread is blocked while a dialog is up).

Docs + tests updated:
  * browser.md: new availability matrix showing the three backends and
    which mode (pending / recent / response) each supports
  * developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md: three-field snapshot schema
    with closed_by semantics
  * test_browser_supervisor.py: +test_recent_dialogs_ring_buffer (12/12
    passing against real Chrome)

E2E verified both backends:
  * Local Chrome via /browser connect: detect + respond full workflow
    (smoke_supervisor.py all 7 scenarios pass)
  * Browserbase: detect via recent_dialogs with closed_by='remote'
    (smoke_supervisor_browserbase_v2.py passes)

Camofox remains out of scope (REST-only, no CDP) — tracked for
upstream PR 3.

* feat(browser): XHR bridge for dialog response on Browserbase (FIXED)

Browserbase's CDP proxy auto-dismisses native JS dialogs within ~10ms, so
Page.handleJavaScriptDialog calls lose the race. Solution: bypass native
dialogs entirely.

The supervisor now injects Page.addScriptToEvaluateOnNewDocument with a
JavaScript override for window.alert/confirm/prompt. Those overrides
perform a synchronous XMLHttpRequest to a magic host
('hermes-dialog-bridge.invalid'). We intercept those XHRs via Fetch.enable
with a requestStage=Request pattern.

Flow when a page calls alert('hi'):
  1. window.alert override intercepts, builds XHR GET to
     http://hermes-dialog-bridge.invalid/?kind=alert&message=hi
  2. Sync XHR blocks the page's JS thread (mirrors real dialog semantics)
  3. Fetch.requestPaused fires on our WebSocket; supervisor surfaces
     it as a pending dialog with bridge_request_id set
  4. Agent reads pending_dialogs from browser_snapshot, calls browser_dialog
  5. Supervisor calls Fetch.fulfillRequest with JSON body:
     {accept: true|false, prompt_text: '...', dialog_id: 'd-N'}
  6. The injected script parses the body, returns the appropriate value
     from the override (undefined for alert, bool for confirm, string|null
     for prompt)

This works identically on Browserbase AND local Chrome — no native dialog
ever fires, so Browserbase's auto-dismiss has nothing to race. Dialog
policies (must_respond / auto_dismiss / auto_accept) all still work.

Bridge is installed on every attached session (main page + OOPIF child
sessions) so iframe dialogs are captured too.

Native-dialog path kept as a fallback for backends that don't auto-dismiss
(so a page that somehow bypasses our override — e.g. iframes that load
after Fetch.enable but before the init-script runs — still gets observed
via Page.javascriptDialogOpening).

E2E VERIFIED:
  * Local Chrome: 13/13 pytest tests green (12 original + new
    test_bridge_captures_prompt_and_returns_reply_text that asserts
    window.__ret === 'AGENT-SUPPLIED-REPLY' after agent responds)
  * Browserbase: smoke_bb_bridge_v2.py runs 4/4 PASS:
    - alert('BB-ALERT-MSG') dismiss → page.alert_ret = undefined ✓
    - prompt('BB-PROMPT-MSG', 'default-xyz') accept with 'AGENT-REPLY'
      → page.prompt_ret === 'AGENT-REPLY' ✓
    - confirm('BB-CONFIRM-MSG') accept → page.confirm_ret === true ✓
    - confirm('BB-CONFIRM-MSG') dismiss → page.confirm_ret === false ✓

Docs updated in browser.md and developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md —
availability matrix now shows Browserbase at full parity with local
Chrome for both detection and response.

* feat(browser): cross-origin iframe interaction via browser_cdp(frame_id=...)

Adds iframe interaction to the CDP supervisor PR (was queued as PR 2).

Design: browser_cdp gets an optional frame_id parameter. When set, the
tool looks up the frame in the supervisor's frame_tree, grabs its child
cdp_session_id (OOPIF session), and dispatches the CDP call through the
supervisor's already-connected WebSocket via run_coroutine_threadsafe.

Why not stateless: on Browserbase, each fresh browser_cdp WebSocket
must re-negotiate against a signed connectUrl. The session info carries
a specific URL that can expire while the supervisor's long-lived
connection stays valid. Routing via the supervisor sidesteps this.

Agent workflow:
  1. browser_snapshot → frame_tree.children[] shows OOPIFs with is_oopif=true
  2. browser_cdp(method='Runtime.evaluate', frame_id=<OOPIF frame_id>,
                 params={'expression': 'document.title', 'returnByValue': True})
  3. Supervisor dispatches the call on the OOPIF's child session

Supervisor state fixes needed along the way:
  * _on_frame_detached now skips reason='swap' (frame migrating processes)
  * _on_frame_detached also skips when the frame is an OOPIF with a live
    child session — Browserbase fires spurious remove events when a
    same-origin iframe gets promoted to OOPIF
  * _on_target_detached clears cdp_session_id but KEEPS the frame record
    so the agent still sees the OOPIF in frame_tree during transient
    session flaps

E2E VERIFIED on Browserbase (smoke_bb_iframe_agent_path.py):
  browser_cdp(method='Runtime.evaluate',
              params={'expression': 'document.title', 'returnByValue': True},
              frame_id=<OOPIF>)
  → {'success': True, 'result': {'value': 'Example Domain'}}

  The iframe is <iframe src='https://example.com/'> inside a top-level
  data: URL page on a real Browserbase session. The agent Runtime.evaluates
  INSIDE the cross-origin iframe and gets example.com's title back.

Tests (tests/tools/test_browser_supervisor.py — 16 pass total):
  * test_browser_cdp_frame_id_routes_via_supervisor — injects fake OOPIF,
    verifies routing via supervisor, Runtime.evaluate returns 1+1=2
  * test_browser_cdp_frame_id_missing_supervisor — clean error when no
    supervisor attached
  * test_browser_cdp_frame_id_not_in_frame_tree — clean error on bad
    frame_id

Docs (browser.md and developer-guide/browser-supervisor.md) updated with
the iframe workflow, availability matrix now shows OOPIF eval as shipped
for local Chrome + Browserbase.

* test(browser): real-OOPIF E2E verified manually + chrome_cdp uses --site-per-process

When asked 'did you test the iframe stuff' I had only done a mocked
pytest (fake injected OOPIF) plus a Browserbase E2E. Closed the
local-Chrome real-OOPIF gap by writing /tmp/dialog-iframe-test/
smoke_local_oopif.py:

  * 2 http servers on different hostnames (localhost:18905 + 127.0.0.1:18906)
  * Chrome with --site-per-process so the cross-origin iframe becomes a
    real OOPIF in its own process
  * Navigate, find OOPIF in supervisor.frame_tree, call
    browser_cdp(method='Runtime.evaluate', frame_id=<OOPIF>) which routes
    through the supervisor's child session
  * Asserts iframe document.title === 'INNER-FRAME-XYZ' (from the
    inner page, retrieved via OOPIF eval)

PASSED on 2026-04-23.

Tried to embed this as a pytest but hit an asyncio version quirk between
venv (3.11) and the system python (3.13) — Page.navigate hangs in the
pytest harness but works in standalone. Left a self-documenting skip
test that points to the smoke script + describes the verification.

chrome_cdp fixture now passes --site-per-process so future iframe tests
can rely on OOPIF behavior.

Result: 16 pass + 1 documented-skip = 17 tests in
tests/tools/test_browser_supervisor.py.

* docs(browser): add dialog_policy + dialog_timeout_s to configuration.md, fix tool count

Pre-merge docs audit revealed two gaps:

1. user-guide/configuration.md browser config example was missing the
   two new dialog_* knobs. Added with a short table explaining
   must_respond / auto_dismiss / auto_accept semantics and a link to
   the feature page for the full workflow.

2. reference/tools-reference.md header said '54 built-in tools' — real
   count on main is 54, this branch adds browser_dialog so it's 55.
   Fixed the header.  (browser count was already correctly bumped
   11 -> 12 in the earlier docs commit.)

No code changes.
2026-04-23 22:23:37 -07:00
Teknium
a2a8092e90 feat(cli): add --ignore-user-config and --ignore-rules flags
Port from openai/codex#18646.

Adds two flags to 'hermes chat' that fully isolate a run from user-level
configuration and rules:

* --ignore-user-config: skip ~/.hermes/config.yaml and fall back to
  built-in defaults. Credentials in .env are still loaded so the agent
  can actually call a provider.
* --ignore-rules: skip auto-injection of AGENTS.md, SOUL.md,
  .cursorrules, and persistent memory (maps to AIAgent(skip_context_files=True,
  skip_memory=True)).

Primary use cases:
- Reproducible CI runs that should not pick up developer-local config
- Third-party integrations (e.g. Chronicle in Codex) that bring their
  own config and don't want user preferences leaking in
- Bug-report reproduction without the reporter's personal overrides
- Debugging: bisect 'was it my config?' vs 'real bug' in one command

Both flags are registered on the parent parser AND the 'chat' subparser
(with argparse.SUPPRESS on the subparser to avoid overwriting the parent
value when the flag is placed before the subcommand, matching the
existing --yolo/--worktree/--pass-session-id pattern).

Env vars HERMES_IGNORE_USER_CONFIG=1 and HERMES_IGNORE_RULES=1 are set
by cmd_chat BEFORE 'from cli import main' runs, which is critical
because cli.py evaluates CLI_CONFIG = load_cli_config() at module import
time. The cli.py / hermes_cli.config.load_cli_config() function checks
the env var and skips ~/.hermes/config.yaml when set.

Tests: 11 new tests in tests/hermes_cli/test_ignore_user_config_flags.py
covering the env gate, constructor wiring, cmd_chat simulation, and
argparse flag registration. All pass; existing hermes_cli + cli suites
unaffected (3005 pass, 2 pre-existing unrelated failures).
2026-04-22 19:58:42 -07:00
Teknium
c345ec9a63 fix(display): strip standalone tool-call XML tags from visible text
Port from openclaw/openclaw#67318. Some open models (notably Gemma
variants served via OpenRouter) emit tool calls as XML blocks inside
assistant content instead of via the structured tool_calls field:

  <function name="read_file"><parameter name="path">/tmp/x</parameter></function>
  <tool_call>{"name":"x"}</tool_call>
  <function_calls>[{...}]</function_calls>

Left unstripped, this raw XML leaked to gateway users (Discord, Telegram,
Matrix, Feishu, Signal, WhatsApp, etc.) and the CLI, since hermes-agent's
existing reasoning-tag stripper handled only <think>/<thinking>/<thought>
variants.

Extend _strip_think_blocks (run_agent.py) and _strip_reasoning_tags
(cli.py) to cover:
  * <tool_call>, <tool_calls>, <tool_result>
  * <function_call>, <function_calls>
  * <function name="..."> ... </function> (Gemma-style)

The <function> variant is boundary-gated (only strips when the tag sits
at start-of-line or after sentence punctuation AND carries a name="..."
attribute) so prose mentions like 'Use <function> declarations in JS'
are preserved. Dangling <function name="..."> with no close is
intentionally left visible — matches OpenClaw's asymmetry so a truncated
streaming tail still reaches the user.

Tests: 9 new cases in TestStripThinkBlocks (run_agent) + 9 in new file
tests/run_agent/test_strip_reasoning_tags_cli.py. Covers Qwen-style
<tool_call>, Gemma-style <function name="...">, multi-line payloads,
prose preservation, stray close tags, dangling open tags, and mixed
reasoning+tool_call content.

Note: this port covers the post-streaming final-text path, which is what
gateway adapters and CLI display consume. Extending the per-delta stream
filter in gateway/stream_consumer.py to hide these tags live as they
stream is a separate follow-up; for now users may see raw XML briefly
during a stream before the final cleaned text replaces it.

Refs: openclaw/openclaw#67318
2026-04-22 18:12:42 -07:00
Teknium
b8663813b6 feat(state): auto-prune old sessions + VACUUM state.db at startup (#13861)
* feat(state): auto-prune old sessions + VACUUM state.db at startup

state.db accumulates every session, message, and FTS5 index entry forever.
A heavy user (gateway + cron) reported 384MB with 982 sessions / 68K messages
causing slowdown; manual 'hermes sessions prune --older-than 7' + VACUUM
brought it to 43MB. The prune command and VACUUM are not wired to run
automatically anywhere — sessions grew unbounded until users noticed.

Changes:
- hermes_state.py: new state_meta key/value table, vacuum() method, and
  maybe_auto_prune_and_vacuum() — idempotent via last-run timestamp in
  state_meta so it only actually executes once per min_interval_hours
  across all Hermes processes for a given HERMES_HOME. Never raises.
- hermes_cli/config.py: new 'sessions:' block in DEFAULT_CONFIG
  (auto_prune=True, retention_days=90, vacuum_after_prune=True,
  min_interval_hours=24). Added to _KNOWN_ROOT_KEYS.
- cli.py: call maintenance once at HermesCLI init (shared helper
  _run_state_db_auto_maintenance reads config and delegates to DB).
- gateway/run.py: call maintenance once at GatewayRunner init.
- Docs: user-guide/sessions.md rewrites 'Automatic Cleanup' section.

Why VACUUM matters: SQLite does NOT shrink the file on DELETE — freed
pages get reused on next INSERT. Without VACUUM, a delete-heavy DB stays
bloated forever. VACUUM only runs when the prune actually removed rows,
so tight DBs don't pay the I/O cost.

Tests: 10 new tests in tests/test_hermes_state.py covering state_meta,
vacuum, idempotency, interval skipping, VACUUM-only-when-needed,
corrupt-marker recovery. All 246 existing state/config/gateway tests
still pass.

Verified E2E with real imports + isolated HERMES_HOME: DEFAULT_CONFIG
exposes the new block, load_config() returns it for fresh installs,
first call prunes+vacuums, second call within min_interval_hours skips,
and the state_meta marker persists across connection close/reopen.

* sessions.auto_prune defaults to false (opt-in)

Session history powers session_search recall across past conversations,
so silently pruning on startup could surprise users. Ship the machinery
disabled and let users opt in when they notice state.db is hurting
performance.

- DEFAULT_CONFIG.sessions.auto_prune: True → False
- Call-site fallbacks in cli.py and gateway/run.py match the new default
  (so unmigrated configs still see off)
- Docs: flip 'Enable in config.yaml' framing + tip explains the tradeoff
2026-04-22 05:21:49 -07:00
Societus
52a79d99d2 fix(security): TUI approval overlay accepts blind keystrokes, CLI thread-local callback invisible to agent
Two bugs that allow dangerous commands to execute without informed user consent.

TUI (Ink): useInputHandlers consumes the isBlocked return path, but Ink's
EventEmitter delivers keystrokes to ALL registered useInput listeners. The
ApprovalPrompt component receives arrow keys, number keys, and Enter even
though the overlay appears frozen. The user sees no visual feedback, but
keystrokes are processed — allowing blind approval, session-wide auto-approve
(choice "session"), or permanent allowlist writes (choice "always") without
the user knowing.

Discovered while replicating #13618 (TUI approval overlay freezes terminal).

Fix: in useInputHandlers, when overlay.approval/clarify/confirm is active,
only intercept Ctrl+C. All other keys pass through. This makes the overlay
visually responsive so the user can see what they are selecting.

CLI (prompt_toolkit): _callback_tls in terminal_tool.py is threading.local().
set_approval_callback() is called in the main thread during run(), but the
agent executes in a background thread. _get_approval_callback() returns None
in the agent thread, falling back to stdin input() which prompt_toolkit
blocks. The user sees the approval text but cannot respond — the terminal is
unusable until the 60s timeout expires with a default "deny".

Fix: set callbacks inside run_agent() (the thread target), matching the
pattern already used by acp_adapter/server.py. Clear on thread exit to avoid
stale references.

Closes #13618
2026-04-21 14:29:08 -07:00
pefontana
631e8793f4 refactor(delegate): drop dead default_toolsets from CLI default config
delegation.default_toolsets was declared in cli.py's CLI_CONFIG default
dict and documented in cli-config.yaml.example, but never read: none of
tools/delegate_tool.py, _load_config(), or any call site ever looked it
up. The live fallback is the DEFAULT_TOOLSETS module constant at
tools/delegate_tool.py:101, which stays as-is.

hermes_cli/config.py's DEFAULT_CONFIG["delegation"] already omits the
key — this commit aligns cli.py with that.

Adds a regression test in tests/hermes_cli/test_config_drift.py so a
future refactor that re-adds the key without wiring it up to
_load_config() fails loudly.

Part of Initiative 2 / M0.5.
2026-04-21 13:44:27 -07:00
IAvecilla
aa61831a14 fix(cli): keep snake_case underscores intact in strip markdown mode 2026-04-21 15:32:59 -03:00
kshitijk4poor
9556fef5a1 fix(tui): improve macOS paste and shortcut parity
- support Cmd-as-super and readline-style fallback shortcuts on macOS
- add layered clipboard/OSC52 paste handling and immediate image-path attach
- add IDE terminal setup helpers, terminal parity hints, and aligned docs
2026-04-21 08:00:00 -07:00
Teknium
bcc5d7b67d feat(/usage): append account limits section in CLI and gateway
Wires the agent/account_usage module from the preceding commit into
/usage so users see provider-side quota/credit info alongside the
existing session token report.

CLI:
- `_show_usage` appends account lines under the token table. Fetch
  runs in a 1-worker ThreadPoolExecutor with a 10s timeout so a slow
  provider API can never hang the prompt.

Gateway:
- `_handle_usage_command` resolves provider from the live agent when
  available, else from the persisted billing_provider/billing_base_url
  on the SessionDB row, so /usage still returns account info between
  turns when no agent is resident. Fetch runs via asyncio.to_thread.
- Account section is appended to all three return branches: running
  agent, no-agent-with-history, and the new no-agent-no-history path
  (falls back to account-only output instead of "no data").

Tests:
- 2 new tests in tests/gateway/test_usage_command.py cover the live-
  agent account section and the persisted-billing fallback path.

Salvaged from PR #2486 by @kshitijk4poor. The original branch had
drifted ~2615 commits behind main and rewrote _show_usage wholesale,
which would have dropped the rate-limit and cached-agent blocks added
in PRs #6541 and #7038. This commit re-adds only the new behavior on
top of current main.
2026-04-21 01:56:35 -07:00
Franci Penov
d1ed6f4fb4 feat(cli): add numbered keyboard shortcuts to approval and clarify prompts 2026-04-21 01:38:15 -07:00
alt-glitch
28b3f49aaa refactor: remove remaining redundant local imports (comprehensive sweep)
Full AST-based scan of all .py files to find every case where a module
or name is imported locally inside a function body but is already
available at module level.  This is the second pass — the first commit
handled the known cases from the lint report; this one catches
everything else.

Files changed (19):

  cli.py                — 16 removals: time as _time/_t/_tmod (×10),
                           re / re as _re (×2), os as _os, sys,
                           partial os from combo import,
                           from model_tools import get_tool_definitions
  gateway/run.py        —  8 removals: MessageEvent as _ME /
                           MessageType as _MT (×3), os as _os2,
                           MessageEvent+MessageType (×2), Platform,
                           BasePlatformAdapter as _BaseAdapter
  run_agent.py          —  6 removals: get_hermes_home as _ghh,
                           partial (contextlib, os as _os),
                           cleanup_vm, cleanup_browser,
                           set_interrupt as _sif (×2),
                           partial get_toolset_for_tool
  hermes_cli/main.py    —  4 removals: get_hermes_home, time as _time,
                           logging as _log, shutil
  hermes_cli/config.py  —  1 removal:  get_hermes_home as _ghome
  hermes_cli/runtime_provider.py
                        —  1 removal:  load_config as _load_bedrock_config
  hermes_cli/setup.py   —  2 removals: importlib.util (×2)
  hermes_cli/nous_subscription.py
                        —  1 removal:  from hermes_cli.config import load_config
  hermes_cli/tools_config.py
                        —  1 removal:  from hermes_cli.config import load_config, save_config
  cron/scheduler.py     —  3 removals: concurrent.futures, json as _json,
                           from hermes_cli.config import load_config
  batch_runner.py       —  1 removal:  list_distributions as get_all_dists
                           (kept print_distribution_info, not at top level)
  tools/send_message_tool.py
                        —  2 removals: import os (×2)
  tools/skills_tool.py  —  1 removal:  logging as _logging
  tools/browser_camofox.py
                        —  1 removal:  from hermes_cli.config import load_config
  tools/image_generation_tool.py
                        —  1 removal:  import fal_client
  environments/tool_context.py
                        —  1 removal:  concurrent.futures
  gateway/platforms/bluebubbles.py
                        —  1 removal:  httpx as _httpx
  gateway/platforms/whatsapp.py
                        —  1 removal:  import asyncio
  tui_gateway/server.py —  2 removals: from datetime import datetime,
                           import time

All alias references (_time, _t, _tmod, _re, _os, _os2, _json, _ghh,
_ghome, _sif, _ME, _MT, _BaseAdapter, _load_bedrock_config, _httpx,
_logging, _log, get_all_dists) updated to use the top-level names.
2026-04-21 00:50:58 -07:00