Files
Teknium e3921e7ca4 docs(skills): compress 74 built-in skill descriptions to <=60 chars
Target: every skill's description fits in a one-line gateway menu and
leads with trigger keywords an agent would match on. Drops filler like
'Use this skill to', 'A skill for', 'This skill provides'.

Before: max description length was 791 chars (architecture-diagram),
74 of 81 built-in skills were >60 chars.

After: max 60, mean 54, all 81 built-in skills <=60.

Rewritten with double-quoted YAML scalars to preserve Chinese/arrow
glyphs (baoyu-comic, yuanbao, youtube-content).
2026-04-26 21:50:56 -07:00

13 KiB

name, description, version, author, license, metadata
name description version author license metadata
python-debugpy Debug Python: pdb REPL + debugpy remote (DAP). 1.0.0 Hermes Agent MIT
hermes
tags related_skills
debugging
python
pdb
debugpy
breakpoints
dap
post-mortem
systematic-debugging
node-inspect-debugger
debugging-hermes-tui-commands

Python Debugger (pdb + debugpy)

Overview

Three tools, picked by situation:

Tool When
breakpoint() + pdb Local, interactive, simplest. Add breakpoint() in the source, run normally, get a REPL at that line.
python -m pdb Launch an existing script under pdb with no source edits. Useful for quick poking.
debugpy Remote / headless / "attach to already-running process." Talks DAP, scriptable from terminal, works for long-lived processes (gateway, daemon, PTY children).

Start with breakpoint(). It's the cheapest thing that works.

When to Use

  • A test fails and the traceback doesn't reveal why a value is wrong
  • You need to step through a function and watch a collection mutate
  • A long-running process (hermes gateway, tui_gateway) misbehaves and you can't restart it
  • Post-mortem: an exception fired in prod-ish code and you want to inspect locals at the crash site
  • A subprocess / child (Python _SlashWorker, PTY bridge worker) is the actual bug site

Don't use for: things print() / logging.debug solve in under a minute, or things pytest -vv --tb=long --showlocals already reveals.

pdb Quick Reference

Inside any pdb prompt ((Pdb)):

Command Action
h / h cmd help
n next line (step over)
s step into
r return from current function
c continue
unt N continue until line N
j N jump to line N (same function only)
l / ll list source around current line / full function
w where (stack trace)
u / d move up / down in the stack
a print args of the current function
p expr / pp expr print / pretty-print expression
display expr auto-print expr on every stop
b file:line set breakpoint
b func break on function entry
b file:line, cond conditional breakpoint
cl N clear breakpoint N
tbreak file:line one-shot breakpoint
!stmt execute arbitrary Python (assignments included)
interact drop into full Python REPL in current scope (Ctrl+D to exit)
q quit

The interact command is the most powerful — you can import anything, inspect complex objects, even call methods that mutate state. Locals are read-only by default; use !x = 42 from the (Pdb) prompt to mutate.

Recipe 1: Local breakpoint

Easiest. Edit the file:

def compute(x, y):
    result = some_helper(x)
    breakpoint()           # <-- drops into pdb here
    return result + y

Run the code normally. You land at the breakpoint() line with full access to locals.

Don't forget to remove breakpoint() before committing. Use git diff or a pre-commit grep:

rg -n 'breakpoint\(\)' --type py

Recipe 2: Launch a script under pdb (no source edits)

python -m pdb path/to/script.py arg1 arg2
# Lands at first line of script
(Pdb) b path/to/script.py:42
(Pdb) c

Recipe 3: Debug a pytest test

The hermes test runner and pytest both support this:

# Drop to pdb on failure (or on any raised exception):
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/path/to/test_file.py::test_name --pdb

# Drop to pdb at the START of the test:
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/path/to/test_file.py::test_name --trace

# Show locals in tracebacks without pdb:
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/path/to/test_file.py --showlocals --tb=long

Note: scripts/run_tests.sh uses xdist (-n 4) by default, and pdb does NOT work under xdist. Add -p no:xdist or run a single test with -n 0:

scripts/run_tests.sh tests/foo_test.py::test_bar --pdb -p no:xdist
# or
source .venv/bin/activate
python -m pytest tests/foo_test.py::test_bar --pdb

This bypasses the hermetic-env guarantees — fine for debugging, but re-run under the wrapper to confirm before pushing.

Recipe 4: Post-mortem on any exception

import pdb, sys
try:
    run_the_thing()
except Exception:
    pdb.post_mortem(sys.exc_info()[2])

Or wrap a whole script:

python -m pdb -c continue script.py
# When it crashes, pdb catches it and you're in the frame of the exception

Or set a global hook in a repl/jupyter:

import sys
def excepthook(etype, value, tb):
    import pdb; pdb.post_mortem(tb)
sys.excepthook = excepthook

Recipe 5: Remote debug with debugpy (attach to running process)

For long-lived processes: Hermes gateway, tui_gateway, a daemon, a process that's already misbehaving and can't be restarted clean.

Setup

source /home/bb/hermes-agent/.venv/bin/activate
pip install debugpy

Pattern A: Source-edit — process waits for debugger at launch

Add near the top of the entry point (or inside the function you want to debug):

import debugpy
debugpy.listen(("127.0.0.1", 5678))
print("debugpy listening on 5678, waiting for client...", flush=True)
debugpy.wait_for_client()
debugpy.breakpoint()       # optional: pause immediately once attached

Start the process; it blocks on wait_for_client().

Pattern B: No source edit — launch with -m debugpy

python -m debugpy --listen 127.0.0.1:5678 --wait-for-client your_script.py arg1

Equivalent for module entry:

python -m debugpy --listen 127.0.0.1:5678 --wait-for-client -m your.module

Pattern C: Attach to an already-running process

Needs the PID and debugpy preinstalled in the target's environment:

python -m debugpy --listen 127.0.0.1:5678 --pid <pid>
# debugpy injects itself into the process. Then attach a client as below.

Some kernels/security configs block the ptrace-based injection (/proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope). Fix with:

echo 0 | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope

Connecting a client from the terminal

The easiest terminal-side DAP client is VS Code CLI or a small script. From inside Hermes you have two practical options:

Option 1: debugpy's own CLI REPL — not an official feature, but a tiny DAP client script:

# /tmp/dap_client.py
import socket, json, itertools, time, sys

HOST, PORT = "127.0.0.1", 5678
s = socket.create_connection((HOST, PORT))
seq = itertools.count(1)

def send(msg):
    msg["seq"] = next(seq)
    body = json.dumps(msg).encode()
    s.sendall(f"Content-Length: {len(body)}\r\n\r\n".encode() + body)

def recv():
    header = b""
    while b"\r\n\r\n" not in header:
        header += s.recv(1)
    length = int(header.decode().split("Content-Length:")[1].split("\r\n")[0].strip())
    body = b""
    while len(body) < length:
        body += s.recv(length - len(body))
    return json.loads(body)

send({"type": "request", "command": "initialize", "arguments": {"adapterID": "python"}})
print(recv())
send({"type": "request", "command": "attach", "arguments": {}})
print(recv())
send({"type": "request", "command": "setBreakpoints",
      "arguments": {"source": {"path": sys.argv[1]},
                    "breakpoints": [{"line": int(sys.argv[2])}]}})
print(recv())
send({"type": "request", "command": "configurationDone"})
# ... loop reading events and sending continue/stepIn/etc.

This is fine for one-off automation but painful as an interactive UX.

Option 2: Attach from VS Code / Cursor / Zed — if the user has one open, they can add a launch.json:

{
  "name": "Attach to Hermes",
  "type": "debugpy",
  "request": "attach",
  "connect": { "host": "127.0.0.1", "port": 5678 },
  "justMyCode": false,
  "pathMappings": [
    { "localRoot": "${workspaceFolder}", "remoteRoot": "/home/bb/hermes-agent" }
  ]
}

Option 3: Ditch DAP, use remote-pdb — usually what you actually want from a terminal agent:

pip install remote-pdb

In your code:

from remote_pdb import set_trace
set_trace(host="127.0.0.1", port=4444)   # blocks until connection

Then from the terminal:

nc 127.0.0.1 4444
# You get a (Pdb) prompt exactly as if debugging locally.

remote-pdb is the cleanest agent-friendly choice when debugpy's DAP protocol is overkill. Use debugpy only when you actually need IDE integration.

Debugging Hermes-specific Processes

Tests

See Recipe 3. Always add -p no:xdist or run single tests without xdist.

run_agent.py / CLI — one-shot

Easiest: add breakpoint() near the suspect line, then run hermes normally. Control returns to your terminal at the pause point.

tui_gateway subprocess (spawned by hermes --tui)

The gateway runs as a child of the Node TUI. Options:

A. Source-edit the gateway:

# tui_gateway/server.py near the top of serve()
import debugpy
debugpy.listen(("127.0.0.1", 5678))
debugpy.wait_for_client()

Start hermes --tui. The TUI will appear frozen (its backend is waiting). Attach a client; execution resumes when you continue.

B. Use remote-pdb at a specific handler:

from remote_pdb import set_trace
set_trace(host="127.0.0.1", port=4444)   # in the RPC handler you want to trap

Trigger the matching slash command from the TUI, then nc 127.0.0.1 4444 in another terminal.

_SlashWorker subprocess

Same pattern — remote-pdb with set_trace() inside the worker's exec path. The worker is persistent across slash commands, so the first trigger blocks until you connect; subsequent slash commands pass through normally unless you re-arm.

Gateway (gateway/run.py)

Long-lived. Use remote-pdb at a handler, or debugpy with --wait-for-client if you're restarting the gateway anyway.

Common Pitfalls

  1. pdb under pytest-xdist silently does nothing. You won't see the prompt, the test just hangs. Always use -p no:xdist or -n 0.

  2. breakpoint() in CI / non-TTY contexts hangs the process. Safe locally; never commit it. Add a pre-commit grep as a safety net.

  3. PYTHONBREAKPOINT=0 disables all breakpoint() calls. Check the env if your breakpoint isn't hitting:

    echo $PYTHONBREAKPOINT
    
  4. debugpy.listen blocks only if you also call wait_for_client(). Without it, execution continues and your first breakpoint may fire before the client is attached.

  5. Attach to PID fails on hardened kernels. ptrace_scope=1 (Ubuntu default) allows only same-user ptrace of child processes. Workaround: echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope (needs root) or launch under debugpy from the start.

  6. Threads. pdb only debugs the current thread. For multithreaded code, use debugpy (thread-aware DAP) or set threading.settrace() per thread.

  7. asyncio. pdb works in coroutines but await inside pdb requires Python 3.13+ or await from interact mode on older versions. For 3.11/3.12, use asyncio.run_coroutine_threadsafe tricks or !stmt-based awaits via asyncio.ensure_future.

  8. scripts/run_tests.sh strips credentials and sets HOME=<tmpdir>. If your bug depends on user config or real API keys, it won't reproduce under the wrapper. Debug with raw pytest first to repro, then re-confirm under the wrapper.

  9. Forking / multiprocessing. pdb does not follow forks. Each child needs its own breakpoint() or set_trace(). For Hermes subagents, debug one process at a time.

Verification Checklist

  • After pip install debugpy, confirm: python -c "import debugpy; print(debugpy.__version__)"
  • For remote debug, confirm the port is actually listening: ss -tlnp | grep 5678
  • First breakpoint actually hits (if it doesn't, you likely have PYTHONBREAKPOINT=0, you're under xdist, or execution finished before attach)
  • where / w shows the expected call stack
  • Post-debug cleanup: no stray breakpoint() / set_trace() in committed code
    rg -n 'breakpoint\(\)|set_trace\(|debugpy\.listen' --type py
    

One-Shot Recipes

"Why is this dict missing a key?"

# add above the KeyError site
breakpoint()
# then in pdb:
(Pdb) pp d
(Pdb) pp list(d.keys())
(Pdb) w                # how did we get here

"This test passes in isolation but fails in the suite."

scripts/run_tests.sh tests/the_test.py --pdb -p no:xdist
# But if it only fails WITH other tests:
source .venv/bin/activate
python -m pytest tests/ -x --pdb -p no:xdist
# Now it pdb-traps at the exact failing test after state accumulated.

"My async handler deadlocks."

# Add at handler entry
import remote_pdb; remote_pdb.set_trace(host="127.0.0.1", port=4444)

Trigger the handler. nc 127.0.0.1 4444, then w to see the suspended frame, !import asyncio; asyncio.all_tasks() to see what else is pending.

"Post-mortem on a crash in an Ink child process / subprocess."

PYTHONFAULTHANDLER=1 python -m pdb -c continue path/to/entrypoint.py
# On crash, pdb lands at the frame of the exception with full locals