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https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent.git
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68e44642c8d126e058ed0bf2fa3c888fe98d7cc5
678 Commits
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68e44642c8 |
fix(stream-retry): collapse two-line drop status, name provider, and let agent.log capture diagnostics (#22993)
Subagent stream drops were spamming the parent terminal with two lines
per blip ('Connection dropped...' + 'Reconnected...') while leaving zero
breadcrumb in agent.log to debug them.
Two underlying bugs, fixed together:
1. quiet_mode raised the run_agent/tools/etc. loggers to ERROR, which
filters records before root-logger file handlers see them. The comment
claimed 'File handlers still capture everything' — that was wrong.
Removed in both run_agent.py and cli.py; console quietness already
comes from hermes_logging not installing a console StreamHandler in
non-verbose mode.
2. The stream-retry blocks emitted two _emit_status calls per drop
('⚠️ Connection dropped... Reconnecting...' + '🔄 Reconnected —
resuming…') with no provider name, so multi-provider sessions had to
dig through agent.log to attribute a drop. Replaced both call sites
with a single _emit_stream_drop helper that emits ONE line naming the
provider and error class, and always writes a structured WARNING to
agent.log with subagent_id, depth, provider, base_url, error_type.
Net UX change: 6 lines per triple-subagent drop → 3 lines, each
naming the provider. agent.log now has a structured breadcrumb per
retry that didn't exist before.
Tests: 6 new tests in tests/run_agent/test_stream_drop_logging.py
covering the logger-level guard, structured WARNING content, single
status line per drop (no Reconnected follow-up), and provider naming.
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b67ea7ff47 |
perf(cli): skip welcome banner on chat -q single-query mode (#22904)
`hermes chat -q "..."` printed the full welcome banner before running the query — kawaii ASCII logo, available toolsets list, available skills list, model name, session ID, working directory, update-available notice. Building it took ~420 ms on cold start (~200 ms version-update probe, the rest is toolset / skill enumeration plus Rich panel rendering). For a one-shot `-q` query the banner is noise: the user already picked the prompt, doesn't need a toolset reference, and gets the session ID + resume hint from `_print_exit_summary()` after the response prints. The fully-quiet `-Q` / `--quiet` machine-readable path was already banner-free; this brings the human-facing single-query path in line so all non-interactive invocations are fast. Measured impact (`hermes chat -q "ok" --max-turns 1`, 10-run percentiles, 9950X3D): median: 1.90 → 1.75 s (-150 ms) min: 1.80 → 1.73 s ( -70 ms) P25: 1.82 → 1.74 s ( -80 ms) Wider variance than expected; the banner cost overlaps with API latency on real `chat -q` runs. Min-time delta of 70 ms is the cleanest signal — that's the deterministic banner-build cost gone. The 150 ms median delta picks up cases where the version-update probe also finishes during the wait. Interactive mode (`hermes` with no `-q`) and the `--list-tools` / `--list-toolsets` one-shot listing commands still show the banner — those are the contexts where it's actually wanted. Tests: 656/656 `tests/cli/` pass on top of latest main (modulo 5 pre- existing flakes in `test_cli_save_config_value.py` that fail with `No module named 'ruamel'` both with and without this change). |
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85383c6363 | fix(cli): preserve config comments on setting writes | ||
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116a1446a4 |
fix(terminal): bridge docker_env config to TERMINAL_DOCKER_ENV
Problem: terminal.docker_env set in config.yaml was silently ignored.
Docker containers never received the user-specified env vars.
Root cause: docker_env was missing from all three config→env bridging
maps (cli.py env_mappings, gateway/run.py _terminal_env_map,
hermes_cli/config.py _config_to_env_sync) and from the terminal_tool
_get_env_config() reader. _create_environment() consumed the key from
container_config correctly, but it was always {} because TERMINAL_DOCKER_ENV
was never set.
Also extend the list-serialisation branches in cli.py and gateway/run.py
to handle dict values via json.dumps (lists already used json.dumps;
plain str() on a dict produces undecodable output).
Fix:
- cli.py: add "docker_env": "TERMINAL_DOCKER_ENV" to env_mappings;
serialise dict values with json.dumps alongside existing list path
- gateway/run.py: same additions to _terminal_env_map and serialisation
- hermes_cli/config.py: add "terminal.docker_env": "TERMINAL_DOCKER_ENV"
to _config_to_env_sync so `hermes config set terminal.docker_env …`
persists to .env correctly
- tools/terminal_tool.py: add docker_env key to _get_env_config() reading
TERMINAL_DOCKER_ENV via _parse_env_var with default "{}"
Tests: add test_docker_env_is_bridged_everywhere to
tests/tools/test_terminal_config_env_sync.py — stash-verified: fails on
origin/main, passes with fix.
Fixes #20537
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c7f0aab949 |
feat(openrouter): wire Pareto Code router with min_coding_score knob (#22838)
Pick openrouter/pareto-code as your model and OpenRouter auto-routes each
request to the cheapest model meeting your coding-quality bar (ranked by
Artificial Analysis). The new openrouter.min_coding_score config key (0.0-1.0,
default 0.65) tunes the floor.
- hermes_cli/models.py: add openrouter/pareto-code to OPENROUTER_MODELS so
it shows up in the picker with a description
- hermes_cli/config.py: add openrouter.min_coding_score (default 0.65 — lands
on a mid-tier coder on the current Pareto frontier)
- plugins/model-providers/openrouter: emit extra_body.plugins =
[{id: pareto-router, min_coding_score: X}] when model is openrouter/pareto-code
AND the score is a valid float in [0.0, 1.0]
- agent/transports/chat_completions.py: same emission on the legacy flag
path (when no provider profile is loaded)
- run_agent.py: openrouter_min_coding_score kwarg + storage; plumbed into
both build_kwargs() invocations and the context-summary extra_body path
- cli.py: read openrouter.min_coding_score once at init, validate float in
[0,1], pass to AIAgent constructions (CLI + background-task paths)
- cron/scheduler.py, batch_runner.py, tools/delegate_tool.py,
tui_gateway/server.py: propagate the kwarg (mirrors providers_order
plumbing — subagents inherit, cron/batch read from config)
- tests: profile-level + transport-level coverage of the model gating,
unset/empty/out-of-range handling, and the legacy flag path
- docs: new 'OpenRouter Pareto Code Router' section in providers.md
Verified end-to-end against api.openrouter.ai: at score=0.65 we land on a
mid-tier coder, at omission we get the strongest. Score is silently dropped
on any model other than openrouter/pareto-code, so it's safe to leave set.
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70bc52e408 |
fix(cli): make Ctrl+Enter insert newline on WSL/SSH/Windows Terminal (#22777)
Native Windows, WSL, SSH sessions, and Windows Terminal all send Ctrl+Enter as bare LF (c-j). Hermes was binding c-j as submit on every POSIX platform, so Ctrl+Enter submitted instead of inserting a newline on those terminals. Reported in #22379. Add _preserve_ctrl_enter_newline() predicate that detects the environments where Ctrl+Enter must produce a newline (sys.platform == 'win32', SSH_CONNECTION/SSH_CLIENT/SSH_TTY env, WT_SESSION, WSL_DISTRO_NAME, /proc/version 'microsoft' marker). Gate the c-j-as-submit binding off in those environments and gate the c-j-as-newline handler on. Local POSIX TTYs without those markers (docker exec, plain ssh from a Mac) keep c-j as submit so plain Enter still works on thin PTYs. Add install_ctrl_enter_alias() in hermes_cli/pt_input_extras.py mapping the three CSI-u / modifyOtherKeys variants of Ctrl+Enter ('\x1b[13;5u', '\x1b[27;5;13~', '\x1b[27;5;13u') to the (Escape, ControlM) tuple Alt+Enter produces. This lets Kitty / mintty / xterm-with-modifyOtherKeys users over SSH get a Ctrl+Enter newline through the existing Alt+Enter handler. 9 new tests + extended existing test_lf_enter_binds_to_submit_handler_posix to cover bare-local vs SSH branches. Closes #22379. |
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b9c001116e |
feat: confirm prompt for destructive slash commands (#4069) (#22687)
/clear, /new, /reset, and /undo now ask the user to confirm before discarding conversation state — three-option prompt routed through the existing tools.slash_confirm primitive. Native yes/no buttons render on Telegram, Discord, and Slack (their adapters already implement send_slash_confirm); other platforms get a text-fallback prompt and reply with /approve, /always, or /cancel. The classic prompt_toolkit CLI uses the same three-option flow via the established _prompt_text_input pattern (see _confirm_and_reload_mcp). TUI keeps its existing modal overlay (#12312). Gated by new config key approvals.destructive_slash_confirm (default true). Picking 'Always Approve' flips the gate to false so subsequent destructive commands run silently — matches the established mcp_reload_confirm UX. Out of scope: /cron remove (separate domain — scheduled jobs, not session history). Existing TUI overlay env-var (HERMES_TUI_NO_CONFIRM) left unchanged; cosmetic unification can come later. Closes #4069. |
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2a7047c2ed |
fix(sqlite): fall back to journal_mode=DELETE on NFS/SMB/FUSE (#22043)
SQLite's WAL mode requires shared-memory (mmap) coordination and fcntl byte-range locks that don't reliably work on network filesystems. Upstream documents this explicitly: https://www.sqlite.org/wal.html#sometimes_queries_return_sqlite_busy_in_wal_mode On NFS / SMB / some FUSE mounts / WSL1, 'PRAGMA journal_mode=WAL' raises 'sqlite3.OperationalError: locking protocol' (SQLITE_PROTOCOL). Before this change, every feature backed by state.db or kanban.db broke silently: - /resume, /title, /history, /branch returned 'Session database not available.' with no cause - gateway logged the init failure at DEBUG (invisible in errors.log) - kanban dispatcher crashed every 60s, driving the known migration race (duplicate column name: consecutive_failures, #21708 / #21374) Changes: - hermes_state.apply_wal_with_fallback(): shared helper that tries WAL and falls back to DELETE on SQLITE_PROTOCOL-style errors with one WARNING explaining why - hermes_state.get_last_init_error() + format_session_db_unavailable(): capture the init failure cause and surface it in user-facing strings (with an NFS/SMB pointer for 'locking protocol') - hermes_cli/kanban_db.connect(): use the shared helper - gateway/run.py: bump SessionDB init failure log DEBUG -> WARNING (matches cli.py's existing correct behavior) - cli.py (4 sites) + gateway/run.py (5 sites): replace bare 'Session database not available.' with format_session_db_unavailable() Tests: 12 new tests in tests/test_hermes_state_wal_fallback.py + 1 new test in tests/hermes_cli/test_kanban_db.py. Existing suites (state, kanban, gateway, cli) remain green for all tests unrelated to pre-existing failures on main. Evidence: real-world user on NFSv3 mount (172.26.224.200:d2dfac12/home, local_lock=none) reporting 'Session database not available.' on /resume; 'locking protocol' appears in 4 distinct log entries across backup, kanban, TUI, and CLI paths in the same session. closes #22032 |
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f5b635f6ab |
feat(cli): recognise Shift+Enter as a newline key
Closes #5346. Most terminals send the same byte sequence for `Enter` and `Shift+Enter` by default, so the application can't tell them apart — this is a terminal protocol limitation, not something Hermes can paper over. But terminals that implement the Kitty keyboard protocol (Kitty / foot / WezTerm / Ghostty by default; iTerm2 / Alacritty / VS Code terminal / Warp once the protocol is enabled) DO emit a distinct sequence for `Shift+Enter`: - `\x1b[13;2u` — Kitty / CSI-u, modifier=2 - `\x1b[27;2;13~` — xterm modifyOtherKeys=2 Stock prompt_toolkit doesn't have the CSI-u sequence in its `ANSI_SEQUENCES` table at all, and it maps the modifyOtherKeys variant to plain `Keys.ControlM` (Enter) — i.e. it strips the Shift modifier, which is the bug users actually hit on iTerm2 and friends. This PR adds `hermes_cli/pt_input_extras.install_shift_enter_alias()`, called once at CLI startup from `cli.py`, which inserts/overwrites those sequences in `ANSI_SEQUENCES` so they decode to `(Keys.Escape, Keys.ControlM)` — the same key tuple `Alt+Enter` produces. The existing Alt+Enter newline handler (`@kb.add('escape', 'enter')` in `cli.py`) then fires unchanged, so there is no new keybinding to register and no behavioral change for terminals that don't emit the distinct sequences. Files ===== * `hermes_cli/pt_input_extras.py` — new module hosting the helper. Lives outside `cli.py` so it's importable in tests without dragging in the full CLI runtime (which depends on `fire`, `rich`, etc.). * `cli.py` — calls `install_shift_enter_alias()` once at module import. Wrapped in try/except so prompt_toolkit version drift can't break CLI startup. * `tests/cli/test_cli_shift_enter_newline.py` — 6 tests: - registration of all three byte sequences - overwrite of stock prompt_toolkit's broken modifyOtherKeys mapping - idempotency - parser equivalence: CSI-u Shift+Enter == Alt+Enter - parser equivalence: modifyOtherKeys Shift+Enter == Alt+Enter - plain Enter remains a single key (submit), distinct from the two-key Alt+Enter / Shift+Enter tuple * `website/docs/user-guide/cli.md` — keybinding table updated; new "Shift+Enter compatibility" subsection with a per-terminal status table noting macOS Terminal / stock Windows Terminal cannot distinguish the keystroke at the protocol level. * `website/docs/getting-started/quickstart.md`, `website/docs/guides/tips.md` — short mention pointing readers at the full compatibility note in `cli.md`. Tested ====== pytest tests/cli/test_cli_shift_enter_newline.py # 6 passed Live-tested by triggering `\x1b[13;2u` against the running Vt100Parser (see test). Not exercised in a real terminal end-to-end because that requires a Kitty-protocol-capable host; the test exercises the parser path that drives the live terminal too. |
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26bac67ef9 |
fix(entry-points): guard hermes_bootstrap import so partial updates don't brick hermes (#22091)
teknium1 hit ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'hermes_bootstrap' after a code update, on both his Windows machine AND his Linux workstation. The failure mode is real and affects every user who updates hermes by any path OTHER than a fully-successful ``hermes update``. ## What happens hermes_bootstrap.py is a top-level module registered via pyproject.toml's ``py-modules`` list (added by Brooklyn's Windows UTF-8 stdio work). It must be registered in the venv's editable-install .pth file before Python can find it as a bare ``import hermes_bootstrap``. ``hermes update`` handles this correctly: (1) git reset --hard, (2) clear __pycache__, (3) uv pip install -e . (re-registers the package including the new py-modules list), (4) restart. BUT if any step AFTER (1) fails — network blip during pip install, PEP 668 on a system Python, venv locked, uv not in PATH, a crash mid-update — the user is left with new code that references hermes_bootstrap and a venv that doesn't know about it. Every hermes invocation after that crashes with ModuleNotFoundError, including ``hermes update`` itself. No recovery path without manual `uv pip install -e .`. Also affects users who ``git pull`` the repo directly without running hermes update — relatively common for developers. ## Fix Wrap ``import hermes_bootstrap`` in a try/except ModuleNotFoundError across all 6 entry points (hermes_cli/main, run_agent, gateway/run, acp_adapter/entry, cli, batch_runner). On Windows, missing bootstrap means the UTF-8 stdio setup doesn't run — degraded behavior (Unicode chars may fail to print) but NOT a crash. POSIX is unaffected either way since the bootstrap is a no-op there. Once hermes is running again, the user can ``hermes update`` to fully recover. ## Test update tests/test_hermes_bootstrap.py::test_entry_point_imports_bootstrap scans for the first top-level import in each entry point and asserts it is hermes_bootstrap. Extended the check to accept a Try block whose body is a lone Import of hermes_bootstrap — that's the recovery-friendly form we just introduced. Verified behavior by ``mv hermes_bootstrap.py hermes_bootstrap.py.bak`` and confirming ``python -c "import hermes_cli.main"`` succeeds. 82/82 tests pass (hermes_bootstrap + windows-native + windows-compat). |
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0ba1e12abc |
fix(windows): browser tool + spurious SIGINT from subprocess spawning
Three related Windows-only fixes that together make the browser toolset
actually usable on Windows. Symptom chain: user invokes browser_navigate
-> tool returns {"success": false, "error": "Daemon process exited
during startup with no error output"} and the CLI exits mid-turn with
the session summary.
Root cause (3 layers):
1. tools/browser_tool.py::_find_agent_browser() resolved
node_modules/.bin/agent-browser to the extensionless POSIX shell
shim via Path.exists(). On Windows, CreateProcessW cannot execute
that script (WinError 193 "not a valid Win32 application"). Fix:
delegate to shutil.which with path=node_modules/.bin so PATHEXT
picks up agent-browser.CMD on Windows and the extensionless shim
stays correct on POSIX.
2. Windows Terminal / Win32 delivers a spurious CTRL_C_EVENT to the
parent hermes.exe whenever a background thread spawns a .cmd
subprocess. Python 3.11's default SIGINT handler raises
KeyboardInterrupt in MainThread, which unwinds prompt_toolkit's
app.run() -> cli.py::run()'s finally block calls _run_cleanup()
-> _emergency_cleanup_all_sessions -> spawns a concurrent
_run_browser_command("close", ...) on the same session the agent
thread just opened. Two agent-browser processes race on the same
--session name, the daemon startup loses, and the tool returns
the "Daemon process exited during startup" error. Fix: install a
Windows-only SIGINT handler that absorbs the signal silently.
Real user Ctrl+C still routes through prompt_toolkit's own c-c
keybinding at the TUI layer, which is how Claude Code handles the
same quirk (driving cancellation via the TUI key handler, not
signals).
3. In tools/browser_tool.py, both Popen sites now pass
creationflags=CREATE_NO_WINDOW | STARTF_USESTDHANDLES with
close_fds=True on Windows. CREATE_NO_WINDOW suppresses the .cmd
console flash; STARTF_USESTDHANDLES + close_fds ensures the child
inherits only our three chosen handles (DEVNULL stdin, temp-file
stdout/stderr) and no leaked parent console handles that could
confuse agent-browser's native daemon spawn. Notably we do NOT
add CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP - on Python 3.11 Windows the flag
interacts badly with asyncio's ProactorEventLoop and makes things
worse.
Verified end-to-end on Windows 10 / Windows Terminal / PowerShell:
browser_navigate to https://example.com returns
{"success": true, "title": "Example Domain"} and the CLI stays alive
for follow-up tool calls and assistant turns.
Refs: earlier Windows quirks commits
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d1838041e5 |
feat: Ctrl+Enter inserts newline on Windows Terminal
Windows Terminal intercepts Alt+Enter for its fullscreen shortcut, leaving Windows users with no Enter-involving way to insert a newline in the Hermes prompt. Fix it by reclaiming c-j on Windows only: - _bind_prompt_submit_keys now binds c-j (LF) to submit only on POSIX, where thin PTYs (docker exec, some SSH configs) deliver Enter as LF. On Windows plain Enter is always c-m, so c-j is free. - Windows-only prompt binding: c-j inserts a newline. Windows Terminal sends Ctrl+Enter as LF, so the user-facing keystroke is Ctrl+Enter — no terminal settings changes required. - Alt+Enter binding unchanged; still works on mac/Linux/WSL. - Test TestPromptToolkitTerminalCompatibility::test_lf_enter_binds_to_submit_handler split into platform-aware assertions for POSIX vs win32. - Fixed the Ctrl+J claim in hermes_cli/tips.py (was wrong before this commit even on POSIX) to point Windows users at Ctrl+Enter. Tradeoff: on Windows, raw Ctrl+J (without Enter) also inserts a newline, since WT collapses Ctrl+Enter and Ctrl+J to the same c-j keycode. No conflicting Hermes binding existed for Ctrl+J, so this is a harmless side effect. |
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cbce5e93fc |
codebase: add encoding='utf-8' to all bare open() calls (PLW1514)
Closes the last Python-on-Windows UTF-8 exposure by making every
text-mode open() call explicit about its encoding.
Before: on Windows, bare open(path, 'r') defaults to the system
locale encoding (cp1252 on US-locale installs). That means reading
any config/yaml/markdown/json file with non-ASCII content either
crashes with UnicodeDecodeError or silently mis-decodes bytes.
After: all 89 affected call sites in production code now pass
encoding='utf-8' explicitly. Works identically on every platform
and every locale, no surprise behavior.
Mechanical sweep via:
ruff check --preview --extend-select PLW1514 --unsafe-fixes --fix --exclude 'tests,venv,.venv,node_modules,website,optional-skills, skills,tinker-atropos,plugins' .
All 89 fixes have the same shape: open(x) or open(x, mode) became
open(x, encoding='utf-8') or open(x, mode, encoding='utf-8'). Nothing
else changed. Every modified file still parses and the Windows/sandbox
test suite is still green (85 passed, 14 skipped, 0 failed across
tests/tools/test_code_execution_windows_env.py +
tests/tools/test_code_execution_modes.py + tests/tools/test_env_passthrough.py +
tests/test_hermes_bootstrap.py).
Scope notes:
- tests/ excluded: test fixtures can use locale encoding intentionally
(exercising edge cases). If we want to tighten tests later that's
a separate PR.
- plugins/ excluded: plugin-specific conventions may differ; plugin
authors own their code.
- optional-skills/ and skills/ excluded: skill scripts are user-authored
and we don't want to mass-edit them.
- website/ and tinker-atropos/ excluded: vendored / generated content.
46 files touched, 89 +/- lines (symmetric replacement). No behavior
change on POSIX or on Windows when the file is ASCII; bug fix on
Windows when the file contains non-ASCII.
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d94fb47717 |
hermes_bootstrap: Windows-only UTF-8 stdio shim for all entry points
Codebase-wide fix for Python-on-Windows UTF-8 footguns, complementing
the earlier execute_code sandbox fixes (which remain load-bearing for
when the sandbox explicitly scrubs child env).
Problem: Python on Windows has two long-standing text-encoding pitfalls:
1. sys.stdout/stderr are bound to the console code page (cp1252 on
US-locale installs) — print('café') crashes with UnicodeEncodeError.
2. Subprocess children don't know to use UTF-8 unless PYTHONUTF8 and/or
PYTHONIOENCODING are set in their env — so any Python we spawn
(linters, sandbox children, delegation workers) hits the same bug.
Solution: A tiny bootstrap module (hermes_bootstrap.py) imported as the
first statement of every Hermes entry point:
- hermes_cli/main.py (hermes / hermes-agent console_script)
- run_agent.py (hermes-agent direct)
- acp_adapter/entry.py (hermes-acp)
- gateway/run.py (messaging gateway)
- batch_runner.py (parallel batch mode)
- cli.py (legacy direct-launch CLI)
On Windows, the bootstrap:
- os.environ.setdefault('PYTHONUTF8', '1') (PEP 540 UTF-8 mode)
- os.environ.setdefault('PYTHONIOENCODING', 'utf-8')
- sys.stdout/stderr/stdin.reconfigure(encoding='utf-8', errors='replace')
Children inherit the env vars → they run in UTF-8 mode.
Current process's stdio is reconfigured → print('café') works now.
On POSIX (Linux/macOS), the bootstrap is a complete no-op. We don't
touch LANG, LC_*, or anything else — users who have intentionally
configured a non-UTF-8 locale aren't affected. POSIX systems are
already UTF-8 by default in 99% of modern setups, so there's nothing
to fix.
setdefault() (not overwrite) means users who explicitly set PYTHONUTF8=0
or PYTHONIOENCODING=cp1252 in their environment are respected.
What this does NOT fix: bare open(path, 'w') calls in the *parent*
process still default to locale encoding because PYTHONUTF8 is only
read at interpreter init. A ruff PLW1514 sweep (separate follow-up)
will add explicit encoding='utf-8' at those ~219 call sites for
belt-and-suspenders.
Tests (17): 16 passed, 1 skipped on Windows.
- Windows: env vars set, stdio reconfigured, child inherits UTF-8 mode
- POSIX: complete no-op (verified on fake POSIX + skipped on real
POSIX since we don't have a Linux box in this session)
- Idempotence: multiple calls safe
- Graceful degradation: non-reconfigurable streams don't crash
- User opt-out: explicit PYTHONUTF8=0 is respected
- Load order: every entry point's FIRST top-level import is
hermes_bootstrap, enforced by an AST-level parametrized test
pyproject.toml: added hermes_bootstrap to py-modules so it ships with
pip installs.
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e93bfc6c93 |
feat(windows): close remaining POSIX-only landmines — TUI crash, kanban waitpid, AF_UNIX sandbox, /bin/bash, npm .cmd shims, cwd tracking, detach flags
Second pass on native Windows support, driven by a systematic audit across
five areas: POSIX-only primitives (signal.SIGKILL/SIGHUP/SIGPIPE, os.WNOHANG,
os.setsid), path translation bugs (/c/Users → C:\Users), subprocess patterns
(npm.cmd batch shims, start_new_session no-op on Windows), subsystem health
(cron, gateway daemon, update flow), and module-level import guards.
Every change is platform-gated — POSIX (Linux/macOS) behaviour is preserved
bit-identical. Explicit "do no harm" test: test_posix_path_preserved_on_linux,
test_posix_noop, test_windows_detach_popen_kwargs_is_posix_equivalent_on_posix.
## New module
- hermes_cli/_subprocess_compat.py — shared helpers (resolve_node_command,
windows_detach_flags, windows_hide_flags, windows_detach_popen_kwargs).
All no-ops on non-Windows.
## CRITICAL fixes (would crash or silently break on Windows)
- tui_gateway/entry.py: SIGPIPE/SIGHUP referenced at module top level would
AttributeError on import on Windows, breaking `hermes --tui` entirely (it
spawns this module as a subprocess). Guard each signal.signal() call with
hasattr() and add SIGBREAK as Windows' SIGHUP equivalent.
- hermes_cli/kanban_db.py: os.waitpid(-1, os.WNOHANG) in dispatcher tick was
unguarded. os.WNOHANG doesn't exist on Windows. Gate the whole reap loop
behind `os.name != "nt"` — Windows has no zombies anyway.
- tools/code_execution_tool.py: AF_UNIX socket for execute_code RPC fails on
most Windows builds. Fall back to loopback TCP (AF_INET on 127.0.0.1:0
ephemeral port) when _IS_WINDOWS. HERMES_RPC_SOCKET env var now accepts
either a filesystem path (POSIX) or `tcp://127.0.0.1:<port>` (Windows).
Generated sandbox client parses both.
- cron/scheduler.py: `argv = ["/bin/bash", str(path)]` hardcoded. Use
shutil.which("bash") so Windows (Git Bash via MinGit) works, with a
readable error when bash is genuinely absent.
- 6 bare npm/npx spawn sites: tools_config.py x2, doctor.py, whatsapp.py
(npm install + node version probe), browser_tool.py x2. On Windows npm
is npm.cmd / npx is npx.cmd (batch shims); subprocess.Popen(["npm", ...])
fails with WinError 193. shutil.which(...) returns the absolute .cmd
path which CreateProcessW accepts because the extension routes through
cmd.exe /c. POSIX behaviour unchanged (shutil.which still returns the
same path subprocess would resolve itself).
## HIGH fixes (silent misbehaviour on Windows)
- tools/environments/local.py get_temp_dir: hardcoded /tmp returned on
Windows meant `_cwd_file = "/tmp/hermes-cwd-*.txt"`, which bash wrote
via MSYS2's virtual /tmp but native Python couldn't open. Result: cwd
tracking silently broken — `cd` in terminal tool did nothing. Windows
branch now returns `%HERMES_HOME%/cache/terminal` with forward slashes
(works in both bash and Python, guaranteed no spaces).
- tools/environments/local.py _make_run_env PATH injection: `/usr/bin not
in split(":")` heuristic mangles Windows PATH (";" separator). Gate
the injection behind `not _IS_WINDOWS`.
- hermes_cli/gateway.py launch_detached_profile_gateway_restart: outer
Popen + watcher-script Popen both used start_new_session=True, which
Windows silently ignores. Watcher stayed attached to CLI's console,
died when user closed terminal after `hermes update`, left gateway
stale. Now branches through windows_detach_popen_kwargs() helper
(CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP | DETACHED_PROCESS | CREATE_NO_WINDOW on
Windows, start_new_session=True on POSIX — identical to main).
## MEDIUM fixes
- gateway/run.py /restart and /update handlers: hardcoded bash/setsid
chain crashes on Windows when user triggers /update in-gateway. Now
has sys.platform=="win32" branch using sys.executable + a tiny
Python watcher with proper detach flags. POSIX path is unchanged.
- cli.py _git_repo_root: Git on Windows sometimes returns /c/Users/...
style paths that break subprocess.Popen(cwd=...) and Path().resolve().
Added _normalize_git_bash_path() helper that translates /c/Users,
/cygdrive/c, /mnt/c variants to native C:\Users form. POSIX no-op.
_git_repo_root() now routes every result through it.
- cli.py worktree .worktreeinclude: os.symlink on directories failed
hard on Windows (requires admin or Developer Mode). Falls back to
shutil.copytree with a warning log.
## Tests
- 29 new tests in tests/tools/test_windows_native_support.py covering:
subprocess_compat helpers, TUI entry signal guards, kanban waitpid
guard, code_execution TCP fallback source-level invariants, cron bash
resolution, npm/npx bare-spawn lint per-file, local env Windows temp
dir, PATH injection gating, git bash path normalization, symlink
fallback, gateway detached watcher flags.
- One existing test assertion adjusted in test_browser_homebrew_paths:
it compared captured Popen argv to the BARE `"npx"` literal; after the
shutil.which() change argv[0] is the absolute path. New assertion
checks the shape (two items, second is `agent-browser`) rather than
the exact first-item string. Behaviour unchanged; test was too strict.
All 56 tests pass on Linux (30 from previous commits + 26 new).
267 tests from the affected files/dirs (browser, code_exec, local_env,
process_registry, kanban_db, windows_compat) all pass — zero regressions.
tests/hermes_cli/ (3909 pass) and tests/gateway/ (5021 pass) unchanged;
all pre-existing test failures confirmed unrelated via `git stash` re-run.
## What's still deferred (LOW priority)
- Visible cmd-window flashes on short-lived console apps (~14 sites) —
cosmetic, needs a follow-up pass once we have user reports.
- agent/file_safety.py POSIX-only security deny patterns — separate
hardening task.
- tools/process_registry.py returning "/tmp" as fallback — theoretical;
reachable only when all env-var candidates fail.
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9de893e3b0 |
feat(windows): close native-Windows install gaps — crash-free startup, UTF-8 stdio, tzdata dep, docs
Native Windows (with Git for Windows installed) can now run the Hermes CLI and gateway end-to-end without crashing. install.ps1 already existed and the Git Bash terminal backend was already wired up — this PR fills the remaining gaps discovered by auditing every Windows-unsafe primitive (`signal.SIGKILL`, `os.kill(pid, 0)` probes, bare `fcntl`/`termios` imports) and by comparing hermes against how Claude Code, OpenCode, Codex, and Cline handle native Windows. ## What changed ### UTF-8 stdio (new module) - `hermes_cli/stdio.py` — single `configure_windows_stdio()` entry point. Flips the console code page to CP_UTF8 (65001), reconfigures `sys.stdout`/`stderr`/`stdin` to UTF-8, sets `PYTHONIOENCODING` + `PYTHONUTF8` for subprocesses. No-op on non-Windows. Opt out via `HERMES_DISABLE_WINDOWS_UTF8=1`. - Called early in `cli.py::main`, `hermes_cli/main.py::main`, and `gateway/run.py::main` so Unicode banners (box-drawing, geometric symbols, non-Latin chat text) don't `UnicodeEncodeError` on cp1252 consoles. ### Crash sites fixed - `hermes_cli/main.py:7970` (hermes update → stuck gateway sweep): raw `os.kill(pid, _signal.SIGKILL)` → `gateway.status.terminate_pid(pid, force=True)` which routes through `taskkill /T /F` on Windows. - `hermes_cli/profiles.py::_stop_gateway_process`: same fix — also converted SIGTERM path to `terminate_pid()` and widened OSError catch on the intermediate `os.kill(pid, 0)` probe. - `hermes_cli/kanban_db.py:2914, 3041`: raw `signal.SIGKILL` → `getattr(signal, "SIGKILL", signal.SIGTERM)` fallback (matches the pattern already used in `gateway/status.py`). ### OSError widening on `os.kill(pid, 0)` probes Windows raises `OSError` (WinError 87) for a gone PID instead of `ProcessLookupError`. Widened the catch at: - `gateway/run.py:15101` (`--replace` wait-for-exit loop — without this, the loop busy-spins the full 10s every Windows gateway start) - `hermes_cli/gateway.py:228, 460, 940` - `hermes_cli/profiles.py:777` - `tools/process_registry.py::_is_host_pid_alive` - `tools/browser_tool.py:1170, 1206` ### Dashboard PTY graceful degradation `hermes_cli/pty_bridge.py` depends on `fcntl`/`termios`/`ptyprocess`, none of which exist on native Windows. Previously a Windows dashboard would crash on `import hermes_cli.web_server` because of a top-level import. Now: - `hermes_cli/web_server.py` wraps the pty_bridge import in `try/except ImportError` and sets `_PTY_BRIDGE_AVAILABLE=False`. - The `/api/pty` WebSocket handler returns a friendly "use WSL2 for this tab" message instead of exploding. - Every other dashboard feature (sessions, jobs, metrics, config editor) runs natively on Windows. ### Dependency - `pyproject.toml`: add `tzdata>=2023.3; sys_platform == 'win32'` so Python's `zoneinfo` works on Windows (which has no IANA tzdata shipped with the OS). Credits @sprmn24 (PR #13182). ### Docs - README.md: removed "Native Windows is not supported"; added PowerShell one-liner and Git-for-Windows prerequisite note. - `website/docs/getting-started/installation.md`: new Windows section with capability matrix (everything native except the dashboard `/chat` PTY tab, which is WSL2-only). - `website/docs/user-guide/windows-wsl-quickstart.md`: reframed as "WSL2 as an alternative to native" rather than "the only way". - `website/docs/developer-guide/contributing.md`: updated cross-platform guidance with the `signal.SIGKILL` / `OSError` rules we enforce now. - `website/docs/user-guide/features/web-dashboard.md`: acknowledged native Windows works for everything except the embedded PTY pane. ## Why this shape Pulled from a survey of how other agent codebases handle native Windows (Claude Code, OpenCode, Codex, Cline): - All four treat Git Bash as the canonical shell on Windows, same as hermes already does in `tools/environments/local.py::_find_bash()`. - None of them force `SetConsoleOutputCP` — but they don't have to, Node/Rust write UTF-16 to the Win32 console API. Python does not get that for free, so we flip CP_UTF8 via ctypes. - None of them ship PowerShell-as-primary-shell (Claude Code exposes PS as a secondary tool; scope creep for this PR). - All of them use `taskkill /T /F` for force-kill on Windows, which is exactly what `gateway.status.terminate_pid(force=True)` does. ## Non-goals (deliberate scope limits) - No PowerShell-as-a-second-shell tool — worth designing separately. - No terminal routing rewrite (#12317, #15461, #19800 cluster) — that's the hardest design call and needs a separate doc. - No wholesale `open()` → `open(..., encoding="utf-8")` sweep (Tianworld cluster) — will do as follow-up if users hit actual breakage; most modern code already specifies it. ## Validation - 28 new tests in `tests/tools/test_windows_native_support.py` — all platform-mocked, pass on Linux CI. Cover: - `configure_windows_stdio` idempotency, opt-out, env-preservation - `terminate_pid` taskkill routing, failure → OSError, FileNotFoundError fallback - `getattr(signal, "SIGKILL", …)` fallback shape - `_is_host_pid_alive` OSError widening (Windows-gone-PID behavior) - Source-level checks that all entry points call `configure_windows_stdio` - pty_bridge import-guard present in `web_server.py` - README no longer says "not supported" - 12 pre-existing tests in `tests/tools/test_windows_compat.py` still pass. - `tests/hermes_cli/` ran fully (3909 passed, 9 failures — all confirmed pre-existing on main by stash-test). - `tests/gateway/` ran fully (5021 passed, 1 pre-existing failure). - `tests/tools/test_process_registry.py` + `test_browser_*` pass. - Manual smoke: `import hermes_cli.stdio; import gateway.run; import hermes_cli.web_server` — all clean, `_PTY_BRIDGE_AVAILABLE=True` on Linux (as expected). ## Files - New: `hermes_cli/stdio.py`, `tests/tools/test_windows_native_support.py` - Modified: `cli.py`, `gateway/run.py`, `hermes_cli/main.py`, `hermes_cli/profiles.py`, `hermes_cli/gateway.py`, `hermes_cli/kanban_db.py`, `hermes_cli/pty_bridge.py`, `hermes_cli/web_server.py`, `tools/browser_tool.py`, `tools/process_registry.py`, `pyproject.toml`, `README.md`, and 4 docs pages. Credits to everyone whose prior PR work informed these fixes — see the co-author trailers. All of the PRs listed in `~/.hermes/plans/windows-support-prs.md` fixing `os.kill` / `signal.SIGKILL` / UTF-8 stdio / tzdata / README patterns found the same issues; this PR consolidates them. Co-authored-by: Philip D'Souza <9472774+PhilipAD@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Arecanon <42595053+ArecaNon@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: XiaoXiao0221 <263113677+XiaoXiao0221@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Lars Hagen <1360677+lars-hagen@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Luan Dias <65574834+luandiasrj@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Ruzzgar <ruzzgarcn@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: sprmn24 <oncuevtv@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: adybag14-cyber <252811164+adybag14-cyber@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Prasanna28Devadiga <54196612+Prasanna28Devadiga@users.noreply.github.com> |
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850413f120 |
feat(computer-use): cua-driver backend, universal any-model schema
Background macOS desktop control via cua-driver MCP — does NOT steal the user's cursor or keyboard focus, works with any tool-capable model. Replaces the Anthropic-native `computer_20251124` approach from the abandoned #4562 with a generic OpenAI function-calling schema plus SOM (set-of-mark) captures so Claude, GPT, Gemini, and open models can all drive the desktop via numbered element indices. - `tools/computer_use/` package — swappable ComputerUseBackend ABC + CuaDriverBackend (stdio MCP client to trycua/cua's cua-driver binary). - Universal `computer_use` tool with one schema for all providers. Actions: capture (som/vision/ax), click, double_click, right_click, middle_click, drag, scroll, type, key, wait, list_apps, focus_app. - Multimodal tool-result envelope (`_multimodal=True`, OpenAI-style `content: [text, image_url]` parts) that flows through handle_function_call into the tool message. Anthropic adapter converts into native `tool_result` image blocks; OpenAI-compatible providers get the parts list directly. - Image eviction in convert_messages_to_anthropic: only the 3 most recent screenshots carry real image data; older ones become text placeholders to cap per-turn token cost. - Context compressor image pruning: old multimodal tool results have their image parts stripped instead of being skipped. - Image-aware token estimation: each image counts as a flat 1500 tokens instead of its base64 char length (~1MB would have registered as ~250K tokens before). - COMPUTER_USE_GUIDANCE system-prompt block — injected when the toolset is active. - Session DB persistence strips base64 from multimodal tool messages. - Trajectory saver normalises multimodal messages to text-only. - `hermes tools` post-setup installs cua-driver via the upstream script and prints permission-grant instructions. - CLI approval callback wired so destructive computer_use actions go through the same prompt_toolkit approval dialog as terminal commands. - Hard safety guards at the tool level: blocked type patterns (curl|bash, sudo rm -rf, fork bomb), blocked key combos (empty trash, force delete, lock screen, log out). - Skill `apple/macos-computer-use/SKILL.md` — universal (model-agnostic) workflow guide. - Docs: `user-guide/features/computer-use.md` plus reference catalog entries. 44 new tests in tests/tools/test_computer_use.py covering schema shape (universal, not Anthropic-native), dispatch routing, safety guards, multimodal envelope, Anthropic adapter conversion, screenshot eviction, context compressor pruning, image-aware token estimation, run_agent helpers, and universality guarantees. 469/469 pass across tests/tools/test_computer_use.py + the affected agent/ test suites. - `model_tools.py` provider-gating: the tool is available to every provider. Providers without multi-part tool message support will see text-only tool results (graceful degradation via `text_summary`). - Anthropic server-side `clear_tool_uses_20250919` — deferred; client-side eviction + compressor pruning cover the same cost ceiling without a beta header. - macOS only. cua-driver uses private SkyLight SPIs (SLEventPostToPid, SLPSPostEventRecordTo, _AXObserverAddNotificationAndCheckRemote) that can break on any macOS update. Pin with HERMES_CUA_DRIVER_VERSION. - Requires Accessibility + Screen Recording permissions — the post-setup prints the Settings path. Supersedes PR #4562 (pyautogui/Quartz foreground backend, Anthropic- native schema). Credit @0xbyt4 for the original #3816 groundwork whose context/eviction/token design is preserved here in generic form. |
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674fad1483 |
fix(goals): Ctrl+C during /goal loop auto-pauses the goal (#21888)
Reported: Ctrl+C during an active /goal loop felt like it did nothing — the agent would interrupt the current turn, then immediately queue another continuation and keep going until the session ended or the 20-turn budget ran out. Root cause: cli.py's _maybe_continue_goal_after_turn() ran in the finally: block around self.chat(...) unconditionally. Whether the turn completed normally, got interrupted, or returned an empty string, the judge ran on whatever was in conversation_history and — because the judge is fail-open — a "continue" verdict pushed another CONTINUATION_PROMPT onto _pending_input. Ctrl+C was invisible to the hook. Fix: - chat() now captures result['interrupted'] onto self._last_turn_interrupted (resets to False at entry so early-returns don't leak prior state). - _maybe_continue_goal_after_turn() checks the flag first: on interrupt, auto-pause via mgr.pause(reason='user-interrupted (Ctrl+C)') and print a one-liner pointing the user at /goal resume or /goal clear. No judge call, no continuation enqueued. - Also added an empty-response guard that mirrors gateway/run.py's _handle_message logic (empty reply → transient failure → skip judging so we don't trip the consecutive-parse-failures backstop unnecessarily). The goal stays in the DB as paused, so /goal resume recovers it after the user has sorted out whatever made them cancel. /goal clear still works as before for a full stop. Tests: tests/cli/test_cli_goal_interrupt.py covers: - interrupted turn pauses + doesn't queue + judge is NOT called - paused goal is resumable - empty / whitespace / missing assistant reply skips judging - healthy turn still enqueues continuation / marks done - chat() resets _last_turn_interrupted at entry (anti-leak guard) All 55 existing goal tests still pass. |
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7338e5d9ba |
fix(model-switch): prevent stale Ollama credentials after provider switch (#21703)
When switching from a custom local provider (e.g. ollama-launch) to a
cloud provider, two bugs caused the CLI to misbehave:
1. _explicit_api_key/_explicit_base_url were only updated when the switch
result had non-empty values (guarded by `if result.api_key:` etc.).
If the previous provider set these to Ollama values ("ollama",
"http://127.0.0.1:11434/v1"), those stale values leaked into the next
turn's _ensure_runtime_credentials() call and were forwarded to the
new provider's API endpoint, causing authentication/routing failures.
Fix: unconditionally write result.api_key/base_url into the explicit
fields after every successful switch. An empty string is the correct
sentinel — it tells _ensure_runtime_credentials to re-resolve from the
auth store / config rather than forwarding a stale override.
2. In AIAgent.switch_model(), `self.base_url = base_url or self.base_url`
kept the old Ollama localhost URL whenever the incoming base_url was an
empty string. For providers that use a native SDK (not an OpenAI-compat
endpoint), the caller passes base_url="" and expects the agent to clear
the field — not silently inherit Ollama's address.
Fix: only update self.base_url when base_url is truthy.
3. _handle_model_picker_selection() was called from the prompt_toolkit
Enter key binding without any exception guard. Any unexpected error
in the model-selection code path propagated through prompt_toolkit's
key-binding dispatcher and caused the entire TUI to exit — which the
user sees as "the terminal exits when I switch providers".
Fix: wrap the call in try/except and close the picker on failure.
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d87c7b99e2 |
fix(analytics): prevent silent token loss and add Claude 4.5–4.7 pricing (#21455)
- Add pricing entries for Claude Opus 4.5/4.6/4.7, Sonnet 4.5/4.6, and Haiku 4.5 with updated source URLs (platform.claude.com) - Add _normalize_anthropic_model_name() to handle dot-notation variants (e.g. claude-opus-4.7 → claude-opus-4-7) for pricing lookups - Fix silent token loss: ensure session row exists before UPDATE in both run_agent.py and hermes_state.py (INSERT OR IGNORE is idempotent) - Log token persistence failures at DEBUG level instead of swallowing them silently — makes undercounted analytics diagnosable - Surface reasoning tokens in CLI /usage and TUI usage panel - Add 'reasoning' and 'cost_status' fields to TUI Usage type |
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edbbc96b55 | fix(cli): replace get_event_loop() with get_running_loop() to silence RuntimeWarning in process_loop thread (#19285) | ||
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6e46f99e7e |
fix(tui): surface backend error as visible text when final_response is empty (#21245)
When the provider rejects a request (e.g. invalid model slug like
'--provider nous --model kimi-k2.6' where the valid slug is
'moonshotai/kimi-k2.6'), run_conversation() returns
{failed: True, error: <detail>, final_response: None}. The TUI gateway
and one-shot CLI mode both dropped the error on the floor and emitted
an empty turn, so the user saw a blank response with no indication
that anything went wrong.
Mirror the interactive CLI's existing pattern (cli.py:9832): when
final_response is empty AND (failed|partial) is set AND error is
populated, surface 'Error: <detail>' as the visible text. Leaves
the None-with-no-error path and the '(empty)' sentinel path
untouched — an empty successful turn still renders empty, and
existing sentinel handlers keep owning their lane.
Reported by @counterposition in PR #20873; taking a minimal fix
rather than the broader structured-failure refactor proposed there.
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f5a232af84 |
refactor: replace 'cmp' text with 🗜️ emoji in status bar
Address review feedback to use the clamp emoji (��️) instead of the plain text 'cmp' prefix for the compression count indicator. Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> |
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103e11926f |
feat(cli): show context compression count in status bar
Display the number of context compressions in the CLI status bar when compressions > 0, helping users understand conversation compression pressure during long sessions. - Wide layout (>=76 cols): shows 'cmp N' between context percent and duration - Medium layout (52-75 cols): shows 'cmp N' between percent and duration - Narrow layout (<52 cols): omitted to save space - Color-coded: dim for 1-4, warn for 5-9, bad for 10+ - Hidden when zero to keep the bar clean for new sessions Closes #18564 |
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fb1ce793e6 |
feat(security): enable secret redaction by default (#17691, #20785) (#21193)
Flip the default for HERMES_REDACT_SECRETS from off to on so the redactor already wired into send_message_tool, logs, and tool output actually runs on a fresh install. - agent/redact.py: env-var default "" → "true" - hermes_cli/config.py: DEFAULT_CONFIG security.redact_secrets True; two config-template comments rewritten - gateway/run.py + cli.py: startup log / banner warning when the user has explicitly opted out, so the downgrade is visible in agent.log and at CLI banner time - docs/reference/environment-variables.md: description reconciled - tests: flipped the default-pin, restructured the force=True regression test to explicit-false instead of unset Users who need raw credential values (redactor development) can still opt out via security.redact_secrets: false in config.yaml or HERMES_REDACT_SECRETS=false in .env. Closes #17691. Addresses #20785 (short-term output-pipeline recommendation). |
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5044e1cbf1 | fix(cli): submit LF enter in thin PTYs (#20896) | ||
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906881c38b |
fix(cli): catch OSError in _resolve_attachment_path to prevent ENAMETOOLONG dropping long slash commands
When the user pastes a long slash command like \`/goal <long prose>\` into
\`hermes chat\`, the input flows into \`_detect_file_drop()\`, whose
\`starts_like_path\` prefilter accepts anything starting with \`/\` and
forwards it to \`_resolve_attachment_path()\`. That helper calls
\`Path.exists()\` which invokes \`os.stat()\`, which raises
\`OSError(errno=ENAMETOOLONG)\` — 63 on macOS, 36 on Linux — when the
candidate exceeds NAME_MAX (typically 255 bytes).
The OSError propagates up to the broad \`except Exception\` in
\`process_loop\` (cli.py:11798), gets logged at WARNING level, and the
user's input is silently dropped. From the user's POV the chat prompt
hangs — the only signal is in agent.log:
WARNING cli: process_loop unhandled error (msg may be lost):
[Errno 63] File name too long: "/goal Drive the space board..."
This affects any slash command with prose-length arguments — \`/goal\`
in particular but also \`/skill\`, \`/cron\`, custom user commands.
Fix: wrap the \`exists()\`/\`is_file()\` calls in try/except OSError so
structurally-invalid path candidates cleanly return None. The slash-
command dispatch path downstream (cli.py:11718) then handles the
input correctly.
Tests: two new regression cases in test_cli_file_drop.py cover the
original \`/goal\` reproducer and a synthetic long path. All 35 file-
drop tests pass.
Reproducer (without the fix):
python -c "from cli import _detect_file_drop;
_detect_file_drop('/goal ' + 'a'*300)"
→ OSError: [Errno 63] File name too long
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a0fedfbb1b |
feat(checkpoints): v2 single-store rewrite with real pruning + disk guardrails (#20709)
Replaces the per-directory shadow-repo design with a single shared shadow
git store at ~/.hermes/checkpoints/store/. Object DB is now deduplicated
across every working directory the agent has ever touched; a dozen
worktrees of the same project cost near-zero in additional disk.
Why
---
Pre-v2 design had three compounding problems that let ~/.hermes/checkpoints/
grow to multi-GB on active machines:
1. Each working directory got its own full shadow git repo — no object
dedup across projects or across worktrees of the same project.
2. _prune() was a documented no-op: max_snapshots only limited the
/rollback listing. Loose objects accumulated forever.
3. Defaults: enabled=True, auto_prune=False — users paid the disk cost
without ever asking for /rollback.
Field report on a single workstation: 847 MB across 47 shadow repos,
mostly redundant clones of the hermes-agent source tree.
Changes
-------
- tools/checkpoint_manager.py: full rewrite. Single bare store, per-project
refs (refs/hermes/<hash>), per-project indexes (store/indexes/<hash>),
per-project metadata (store/projects/<hash>.json with workdir +
created_at + last_touch). On first v2 init, any pre-v2 per-directory
shadow repos are auto-migrated into legacy-<timestamp>/ so the new
store starts clean. _prune() now actually rewrites the per-project ref
to the last max_snapshots commits and runs git gc --prune=now. New
_enforce_size_cap() drops oldest commits round-robin across projects
when the store exceeds max_total_size_mb. _drop_oversize_from_index()
filters any single file larger than max_file_size_mb out of the snapshot.
- hermes_cli/checkpoints.py: new 'hermes checkpoints' CLI
(status / list / prune / clear / clear-legacy) for managing the store
outside a session.
- hermes_cli/config.py: flipped defaults — enabled=False, max_snapshots=20,
auto_prune=True. Added max_total_size_mb=500, max_file_size_mb=10.
Tightened DEFAULT_EXCLUDES (added target/, *.so/*.dylib/*.dll,
*.mp4/*.mov, *.zip/*.tar.gz, .worktrees/, .mypy_cache/, etc.).
- run_agent.py / cli.py / gateway/run.py: thread the new kwargs through
AIAgent and the startup auto_prune hooks.
- Tests rewritten to match v2 storage while keeping backwards-compat
coverage for the pre-v2 prune path (per-directory shadow repos under
base/ are still swept correctly for anyone mid-migration).
- Docs updated: user-guide/checkpoints-and-rollback.md explains the
shared store, new defaults, migration, and the new CLI;
reference/cli-commands.md documents 'hermes checkpoints'.
E2E validated
-------------
- Legacy migration: pre-v2 shadow repos auto-archived into legacy-<ts>/.
- Object dedup: two projects with an identical shared.py blob resolve to
7 total objects in the store (v1 would have stored the blob twice).
- max_snapshots=3 actually enforced: after 6 commits, list shows 3.
- Orphan prune: deleting a project's workdir + 'hermes checkpoints prune
--retention-days 0' removes its ref, index, and metadata; GC reclaims
the objects.
- max_file_size_mb=1 excludes a 2 MB weights.bin while keeping the
tracked source code files.
- hermes checkpoints {status,prune,clear,clear-legacy} all work from the
CLI without an agent running.
Breaking / migration
--------------------
No in-place data migration — legacy per-directory shadow repos are moved
into legacy-<timestamp>/ on first run. Old /rollback history is still
accessible by inspecting the archive with git; run
'hermes checkpoints clear-legacy' to reclaim the space when ready. Users
relying on /rollback must now set checkpoints.enabled=true (or pass
--checkpoints) explicitly.
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76074d9ee6 | fix(cli): recover classic CLI output after resize | ||
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e45df2e81e | fix(ui): reduce status-line jitter while scrolling | ||
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e70e49016f |
fix(cli): guard logger.debug in signal handler (#13710 regression) (#20673)
CPython's logging module is not reentrant-safe. `Logger.isEnabledFor`
caches level results in `Logger._cache`; under shutdown races the cache
can be cleared (`Logger._clear_cache`, triggered by logging config changes
from another thread) or mid-mutation when a signal fires, raising
`KeyError: <level_int>` (e.g. `KeyError: 10` for DEBUG) inside the signal
handler.
When that happens, the KeyError escapes before the `raise KeyboardInterrupt()`
on the next line can fire, which bypasses prompt_toolkit's normal interrupt
unwind and surfaces as the EIO cascade originally reported in #13710.
Issue #13710 shipped two defenses (asyncio exception handler + outer
`except (KeyError, OSError)` with EIO suppression) that cover the EIO
unwind path. This patch closes the remaining escape hatch: the
`logger.debug` call at the top of `_signal_handler` itself. Wrap it in a
bare `try/except Exception: pass` so logging can never raise through a
signal handler.
Observed in the wild: debug report on 0.12.0 (commit
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395dbcc873 |
feat(browser): add Lightpanda engine support with automatic Chrome fallback
Add Lightpanda as an optional browser engine for local mode.
Lightpanda is a headless browser built from scratch in Zig -- faster
navigation than Chrome with significantly less memory.
One config line to enable:
browser:
engine: lightpanda
New functions in browser_tool.py:
- _get_browser_engine() -- config/env reader with validation + caching
- _should_inject_engine() -- only inject in local non-cloud mode
- _needs_lightpanda_fallback() -- detect empty/failed LP results
- _chrome_fallback_screenshot() -- temporary Chrome session for screenshots
- Engine injection in _run_browser_command (--engine flag)
- browser_vision pre-routes screenshots to Chrome when engine=lightpanda
Config:
- browser.engine in DEFAULT_CONFIG (auto/lightpanda/chrome)
- AGENT_BROWSER_ENGINE in OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS
- /browser status shows engine info in local mode
Rebased from PR #7144 onto current main. All existing code preserved --
pure additions only (+520/-2).
25 new tests + 81 total browser tests pass (0 failures).
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3b750715a3 |
fix: resolve lazy session creation regressions (#18370 fallout) (#20363)
Fix three regressions introduced by PR #18370 (lazy session creation): 1. _finalize_session() uses stale session_key after compression (#20001) 2. session_key not synced after auto-compression in run_conversation (#20001) 3. pending_title ValueError leaves title wedged forever (#19029) 4. Gateway silently swallows null responses when agent did work (#18765) 5. One-time cleanup for accumulated ghost compression continuations (#20001) Changes: - tui_gateway/server.py: _finalize_session() now uses agent.session_id (falls back to session_key when agent is None). Refactor _sync_session_key_after_compress() with clear_pending_title and restart_slash_worker policy flags. Call it post-run_conversation() to sync session_key after auto-compression. Add ValueError handler to pending_title flush. - gateway/run.py: Extract _normalize_empty_agent_response() helper that consolidates failed/partial/null response handling. Surfaces user-facing error when agent did work (api_calls > 0) but returned no text. - hermes_state.py: Add finalize_orphaned_compression_sessions() — marks ghost continuation sessions as ended (non-destructive, preserves data). - cli.py: One-time startup migration for orphaned compression sessions. Test changes: - tests/test_tui_gateway_server.py: Update pending_title ValueError test for post-#18370 architecture (title applied post-message, not at create). - tests/test_lazy_session_regressions.py: 14 new regression tests covering all fixed paths. |
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e805380b82 | Discover plugin commands during CLI dispatch | ||
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4e6f51167d | fix(cli): fall back on invalid HERMES_MAX_ITERATIONS | ||
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aacf36e943 | fix(cli): persist manual compress handoff | ||
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20428f5e60 |
fix(tui): respect voice.record_key config (supersedes #19028, #19339) (#19835)
* fix(tui): respect voice.record_key config instead of hardcoded Ctrl+B
Classic CLI loaded ``voice.record_key`` from config.yaml and bound the
prompt-toolkit handler dynamically (``cli.py`` paths). The new TUI hard-
coded ``Ctrl+B`` everywhere — ``isVoiceToggleKey`` (input handler),
``/voice status`` ("Record key: Ctrl+B"), and ``/voice on`` ("Ctrl+B to
start/stop recording"). A user who set ``voice.record_key: ctrl+o``
(or any other key) saw the documented config silently ignored — only
Ctrl+B worked, the displayed shortcut lied about it.
Wire the configured key end to end through the existing channels:
* **Backend** (``tui_gateway/server.py``): ``voice.toggle`` action=status
AND action=on/off responses now include ``record_key``, sourced from
``config.get('voice', {}).get('record_key', 'ctrl+b')``.
* **Backend types** (``ui-tui/src/gatewayTypes.ts``): ``ConfigFullResponse``
now exposes ``config.voice.record_key`` and ``VoiceToggleResponse``
carries ``record_key`` so the TUI can both bind and display it.
* **Frontend parser/formatter** (``ui-tui/src/lib/platform.ts``):
``parseVoiceRecordKey()`` accepts ``ctrl+b`` / ``alt+r`` / ``cmd+space``
and the common aliases (``option``, ``cmd``, ``win``, …); falls back to
the documented Ctrl+B for empty / multi-character / malformed input so
a typo never silently disables the shortcut. ``formatVoiceRecordKey()``
renders for status text. ``isVoiceToggleKey`` now takes a parsed
``ParsedVoiceRecordKey`` argument; the hardcoded ``ch === 'b'`` is
gone. Default arg keeps existing call sites back-compat.
* **Hydration** (``ui-tui/src/app/useConfigSync.ts``,
``useMainApp.ts``): startup ``config.get full`` already runs; extract
``cfg.voice.record_key`` from it, parse, push into a new
``voiceRecordKey`` state, and forward to the input handler ctx
(``InputHandlerContext.voice.recordKey``). Mtime-poll path also
re-applies the parsed key so a hand-edit of config.yaml takes effect
the next tick — matches existing behaviour for display options.
* **Input handler** (``ui-tui/src/app/useInputHandlers.ts``):
``isVoiceToggleKey(key, ch, voice.recordKey)`` so the configured
binding fires.
* **Slash command** (``ui-tui/src/app/slash/commands/session.ts``):
``/voice status`` and ``/voice on`` use ``formatVoiceRecordKey`` on
the response's ``record_key`` instead of the hardcoded label.
Tests:
* ``parseVoiceRecordKey`` covers ctrl/alt/cmd/super aliases, multi-char
rejection, and empty fallback.
* ``formatVoiceRecordKey`` covers the doc examples (``Ctrl+B``,
``Ctrl+O``, ``Alt+R``, ``Cmd+B``).
* ``isVoiceToggleKey`` regression: ``ctrl+o`` configured → only ``o``
matches, not ``b``; ``alt+r`` matches both alt-bit and meta-bit
encodings (terminal protocol parity); omitted-arg call still binds
Ctrl+B for back-compat.
Full TUI suite (555 tests) passes; ``tsc --noEmit`` clean.
Fixes #18994
Co-authored-by: asheriif <ahmedsherif95@gmail.com>
* fix(tui): support named-key tokens in voice.record_key (space, enter, …)
Reviewer caught that the round-1 parser in #18994 rejected every
multi-character token, so a config value like ``ctrl+space`` (which the
CLI happily binds via prompt_toolkit's ``c-space`` rewrite in
``cli.py``) silently fell back to the documented Ctrl+B default —
re-introducing the same false-shortcut bug the PR was meant to fix,
just at a different surface.
Add explicit named-key support that mirrors what the CLI accepts:
* ``space`` (alias: ``spc``) → matches ``ch === ' '``
* ``enter`` (alias: ``return``, ``ret``) → matches ``key.return``
* ``tab`` → matches ``key.tab``
* ``escape`` (alias: ``esc``) → matches ``key.escape``
* ``backspace`` (alias: ``bs``) → matches ``key.backspace``
* ``delete`` (alias: ``del``) → matches ``key.delete``
``ParsedVoiceRecordKey`` gains an optional ``named`` field; ``ch``
holds either a single char (back-compat) or the canonical named token,
and the runtime matcher dispatches on ``named`` before checking the
modifier shape. Aliases collapse to one canonical name so
``ctrl+esc`` and ``ctrl+escape`` behave identically.
Unrecognised multi-character tokens (e.g. ``ctrl+spcae`` typo, or
unsupported keys like ``ctrl+f5``) still fall back to the Ctrl+B
default rather than silently disabling the binding — keeps the "typo
never silently kills the shortcut" guarantee.
Tests:
* ``parseVoiceRecordKey`` parametrised over every named token + each
alias variant.
* New ``isVoiceToggleKey`` cases for space (ch-based match), enter
(``key.return``), tab, escape, backspace, delete, including
modifier-mismatch negatives.
* ``formatVoiceRecordKey`` renders named keys in title case
(``Ctrl+Space``, ``Ctrl+Enter``).
* Existing fall-back-to-Ctrl+B contract preserved for empty input
AND unrecognised multi-char tokens.
Full TUI suite: 559/559 pass; ``tsc --noEmit`` clean.
Refs #18994 (round-1 review feedback)
Co-authored-by: asheriif <ahmedsherif95@gmail.com>
* test(tui): assert voice.toggle returns configured record_key
Salvage the backend regression from #19339 — asserts ``voice.toggle``
action=on AND action=status responses carry the configured
``voice.record_key`` end-to-end through ``_load_cfg()``. Keeps the
CLI→TUI parity contract visible in the Python test suite alongside
the existing frontend parser/matcher/formatter coverage from #19028.
* fix(tui): address Copilot review on #19835 voice.record_key wiring
Five tightenings on the parser + matcher + hydration surface, all
caught by the Copilot review on the PR — each one turns a silent
false-fire or display/binding skew into a deterministic behaviour.
* **isVoiceToggleKey ctrl branch was too permissive for named keys.**
The doc-default macOS Cmd+B muscle-memory fallback
(``isActionMod(key)`` on top of ``key.ctrl``) fired for every
configured key, so bare Esc — which hermes-ink reports with
``key.meta`` on some macOS terminals — triggered ``ctrl+escape``,
and Alt+Space / Alt+Tab triggered ``ctrl+space`` / ``ctrl+tab``.
Gate the fallback to the literal ``ctrl+b`` binding so any custom
chord requires the real Ctrl bit.
* **Alt branch guarded against Ctrl/Cmd co-press.** Without this,
Ctrl+Alt+<letter> and Cmd+Alt+<letter> also fired ``alt+<letter>``.
* **Dropped the ``meta`` modifier variant and its alias.** In
hermes-ink ``key.meta`` is Alt on xterm-style terminals and Cmd on
legacy macOS ones, so a literal ``meta+b`` config displayed as
``Cmd+B`` while matching Alt+B — exactly the kind of false
shortcut the PR was meant to remove. ``cmd`` / ``command`` now
collapse onto ``super`` (kitty-style ``key.super``, with a macOS
``key.meta`` fallback) and render as ``Cmd+B``. Unknown modifier
tokens fall back to the documented Ctrl+B default rather than
silently coercing to Ctrl.
* **Slash-command display/binding skew.** ``/voice status`` and
``/voice on`` rendered from the fresh gateway ``record_key``
response, but ``useInputHandlers()`` still bound the old key
until the next 5s mtime poll. Thread ``setVoiceRecordKey``
through ``SlashHandlerContext.voice`` and push the parsed spec
into frontend state on every response so text and binding stay
consistent.
* **Test coverage for the two paths Copilot flagged.** Added
vitest coverage for (a) the three-case ``/voice`` slash output
in ``createSlashHandler.test.ts`` and (b) the
``applyDisplay → voice.record_key`` hydration + omit-setter
back-compat paths in ``useConfigSync.test.ts``. Plus regression
cases for every false-fire scenario above.
Suite: 575/575 green, tsc --noEmit clean.
* fix(tui): address Copilot round-2 review on #19835
Three tightenings on the surface introduced in the round-1 fix:
* **``/voice tts`` reset custom bindings to Ctrl+B.** The ``tts`` branch
of ``voice.toggle`` omitted ``record_key`` from its response, so the
frontend's ``r.record_key ?? 'ctrl+b'`` coerced a user's custom
binding back to the default on every TTS toggle. Two-sided fix:
the backend now includes ``record_key`` on the ``tts`` branch (parity
with ``status``/``on``/``off``), and the slash handler only pushes
frontend state when the response actually carries ``record_key`` —
belt-and-suspenders against any future branch forgetting to include
it.
* **``super+b`` / ``win+b`` / ``cmd+b`` displayed "Cmd+B" on Linux and
Windows.** ``formatVoiceRecordKey`` rendered ``mod === 'super'`` as
``Cmd`` universally, which told non-mac users the wrong modifier to
press even though ``isVoiceToggleKey`` matched the right event bits.
Gate the label to ``isMac`` so non-mac renders ``Super+B``.
* **``control+b`` / ``ctrl + b`` lost the macOS Cmd+B fallback.**
``_isDefaultVoiceKey`` keyed off ``parsed.raw`` — so
semantically-equal aliases of the documented default dropped into
the strict branch even though they bind Ctrl+B. Compare on the
parsed spec (mod + ch + named) instead.
Coverage added: Linux ``Super+B`` rendering (and macOS ``Cmd+B``),
``control+b`` / ``ctrl + b`` accepting the Cmd+B fallback on darwin,
``/voice tts`` without ``record_key`` not clobbering cached binding,
and a backend regression asserting every ``voice.toggle`` branch
carries the configured key.
Suite: 579/579 TUI vitest green, 2/2 backend voice tests green,
tsc --noEmit clean.
* fix(tui): address Copilot round-3 review on #19835
Three classes of robustness issue caught on the second pass — all
revolve around malformed YAML tipping ``parseVoiceRecordKey`` or
``_voice_record_key`` into a crash instead of the documented
fallback.
* **Parser crashed on non-string YAML scalars.** ``config.get full``
returns raw ``yaml.safe_load`` output, so ``voice.record_key: 1``
or ``voice.record_key: true`` in a hand-edited config would hit
``.trim()`` on a number/bool and throw, breaking startup and
every mtime re-apply. Accept ``unknown`` at the signature, guard
with ``typeof raw !== 'string'``, and fall back to the default.
* **Backend blew up on non-dict ``voice:``.** Same YAML hazard on
the gateway side: ``voice: true`` / ``voice: cmd+b`` left
``_load_cfg().get("voice")`` as a bool/str, so ``.get("record_key")``
raised AttributeError and took every ``voice.toggle`` branch down
with it. Centralised the lookup in a single
``_voice_record_key()`` helper that ``isinstance``-guards both
``voice`` and ``record_key`` and falls back to ``ctrl+b``.
* **Multi-modifier chords silently dropped extras.** The previous
validator only checked the first modifier token, so ``ctrl+alt+r``
silently parsed as ``ctrl+r`` and ``cmd+ctrl+b`` as ``super+b`` —
a typo bound a different shortcut than the user configured.
Reject multi-modifier spellings outright; the classic CLI only
supports single-modifier bindings via prompt_toolkit's ``c-x`` /
``a-x`` rewrite, so this matches CLI parity.
Coverage added:
* ``parseVoiceRecordKey`` fallback on ``1`` / ``true`` / ``null`` /
``undefined`` / ``{}``.
* ``parseVoiceRecordKey`` fallback on ``ctrl+alt+r`` /
``cmd+ctrl+b`` / ``alt+ctrl+space``.
* ``test_voice_toggle_handles_non_dict_voice_cfg`` exercises
every non-dict ``voice:`` shape (bool, str, None, int, list) and
asserts each falls back to ``record_key: 'ctrl+b'``.
Suite: 581/581 TUI vitest green, 3/3 backend voice tests green,
tsc --noEmit clean.
* fix(tui): address Copilot round-4 review on #19835
Four final corners of the voice.record_key surface:
* **Bare-char configs silently coerced to ``ctrl+<key>``.** A config
like ``voice.record_key: o`` / ``space`` / ``escape`` fell through
to the default ``mod = 'ctrl'`` and silently bound Ctrl+O, while
the classic CLI's prompt_toolkit would bind the raw key (no
rewrite) — so the two runtimes silently disagreed on what "o"
means. Require an explicit modifier; bare-char configs fall back
to the documented Ctrl+B default.
* **Reserved ctrl+<letter> bindings would never fire.**
``useInputHandlers()`` intercepts ``ctrl+c`` (interrupt),
``ctrl+d`` (quit), and ``ctrl+l`` (clear screen) before the voice
check runs, so those configs would be advertised in /voice
status but the advertised shortcut never actually triggers
push-to-talk. Added ``_RESERVED_CTRL_CHARS`` at parse time so
the user gets the documented default instead of a dead shortcut.
(``alt+c``, ``cmd+l``, etc. are not intercepted and stay usable.)
* **``_load_cfg()`` root itself may be a non-dict.**
``_voice_record_key()`` isinstance-guarded the ``voice`` subkey
but not the root — a malformed config.yaml that collapsed to a
scalar/list at the top level (``config.yaml: true`` or ``[]``)
would still raise on ``.get("voice")``. Added the top-level
guard too so every malformed shape falls back to ``ctrl+b``.
* **Stale header comment on ``isVoiceToggleKey``.** The doc-comment
still claimed "On macOS we additionally accept the platform
action modifier (Cmd) for the configured letter" even though the
implementation gates the Cmd fallback to the documented default
only. Rewrote to match.
Coverage added:
* ``parseVoiceRecordKey`` fallback on bare chars (``o``, ``b``,
``space``, ``escape``).
* ``parseVoiceRecordKey`` fallback on ``ctrl+c`` / ``ctrl+d`` /
``ctrl+l``; positive case for ``alt+c`` / ``cmd+l`` still usable.
* Backend ``test_voice_toggle_handles_non_dict_voice_cfg`` now
exercises 5 non-dict shapes at the YAML root too.
Suite: 583/583 TUI vitest green, 3/3 backend voice tests green,
tsc --noEmit clean.
* fix(tui): address Copilot round-5 review on #19835
Three follow-ups on the voice matcher's modifier + shift discipline:
* **``super`` branch falsely fired on Alt+<key> / bare Esc on macOS.**
``isVoiceToggleKey`` accepted ``isMac && key.meta`` as a Cmd
fallback for the ``super`` modifier — but hermes-ink sets
``key.meta`` for plain Alt/Option AND for bare Escape on some
macOS terminals. A ``cmd+b`` config silently fired on Alt+B;
``cmd+space`` on Alt+Space; ``cmd+escape`` on bare Esc. Drop the
fallback and require the literal ``key.super`` bit. Legacy-
terminal users who need Cmd should upgrade to a kitty-protocol
terminal or bind ``alt+X`` explicitly.
* **Shift bit was never checked.** The parser rejects multi-
modifier configs like ``ctrl+shift+tab``, but the runtime
matcher didn't check ``key.shift`` — so ``ctrl+tab`` also fired
on Ctrl+Shift+Tab and ``alt+enter`` on Alt+Shift+Enter.
Early-return on ``key.shift === true`` so the runtime only fires
the exact chord the user configured.
* **Test leaked ``HERMES_VOICE=1`` into later tests.**
``voice.toggle`` action=on writes to ``os.environ`` directly
(CLI parity, runtime-only flag); ``test_voice_toggle_returns_
configured_record_key`` dispatched action=on without letting
monkeypatch take ownership of the var first. Any later test
that read voice mode in the same Python process could inherit a
stale enabled state. Added ``monkeypatch.setenv("HERMES_VOICE",
"0")`` up front so monkeypatch restores the original value at
teardown.
Coverage added:
* ``cmd+b`` / ``cmd+space`` / ``cmd+escape`` do NOT fire on
``key.meta``-only events on darwin.
* ``ctrl+tab`` / ``alt+enter`` / ``ctrl+o`` reject matches when
``key.shift`` is held; sanity cases without Shift still fire.
Suite: 585/585 TUI vitest green, 3/3 backend voice tests green,
tsc --noEmit clean.
* fix(tui): address Copilot round-6 review on #19835
Three classes of modifier-discipline tightening + one config-surface
honesty fix:
* **Default ``ctrl+b`` Cmd fallback leaked Alt+B.** The default's
macOS Cmd+B muscle-memory path used ``isActionMod(key)``, which
returns ``key.meta || key.super`` on darwin. hermes-ink also
reports plain Alt as ``key.meta``, so Alt+B silently fired the
default binding. Replaced with strict ``isMac && key.super ===
true`` — kitty-style Cmd+B still works, Alt+B correctly
rejected. Legacy-terminal mac users (Terminal.app without
CSI-u) now get raw Ctrl+B only; the documented default still
works everywhere.
* **ctrl / super branches accepted extra modifier bits.** The
parser rejects multi-modifier configs like ``ctrl+alt+o``, but
the runtime matcher was permissive — ``ctrl+o`` fired on
Ctrl+Alt+O / Ctrl+Cmd+O, and ``super+b`` fired on Cmd+Alt+B /
Ctrl+Cmd+B. Added strict ``!key.alt && !key.meta && key.super
!== true`` on ctrl, and ``!key.ctrl && !key.alt && !key.meta``
on super, so the runtime only fires the exact chord the parser
would let you configure.
* **Dropped ``cmd`` / ``command`` aliases.** They parsed to
``super`` and rendered as ``Cmd+X``, but legacy macOS terminals
report Cmd as ``key.meta`` (same signal as Alt), so a
``cmd+o`` config was advertised as working but never actually
fired on Terminal.app-without-CSI-u. That recreated the
"displayed shortcut does not work" problem this PR was meant to
remove. Users who want the platform action modifier spell it
``super`` / ``win`` — that matches the unambiguous ``key.super``
bit, and kitty-style macOS terminals render it as ``Cmd+X`` via
platform-aware formatter.
Coverage updated:
* Default ctrl+b no longer fires on Alt+B via ``key.meta`` leak;
raw Ctrl+B and kitty-style Cmd+B still fire.
* ``ctrl+o`` rejects Ctrl+Alt+O / Ctrl+Cmd+O / Ctrl+Meta+O chords.
* ``super+b`` rejects Cmd+Alt+B / Cmd+Meta+B / Ctrl+Cmd+B chords.
* ``cmd+b`` / ``command+b`` / ``meta+b`` all fall back to the
documented default at parse time (joined the ambiguous-mac-mod
rejection class).
* Round-2 expectations that asserted ``cmd+b`` parsed as super
and accepted ``key.meta`` on darwin updated to reflect the new
stricter contract.
Suite: 588/588 TUI vitest green, 3/3 backend voice tests green,
tsc --noEmit clean.
* fix(tui): address Copilot follow-up on wire typing + escape precedence
Two follow-ups from the latest Copilot pass:
* **Config wire typing honesty (`gatewayTypes.ts`)**
`config.get full` forwards raw `yaml.safe_load()` output, so
`voice.record_key` can be any scalar/container when hand-edited.
Typing it as `string` suggests a normalized contract that the
backend does not guarantee and makes unsafe callers more likely.
Change `ConfigVoiceConfig.record_key` to `unknown` with an
explicit comment that callers must normalize at runtime.
* **Escape-based voice bindings were swallowed before voice check**
`useInputHandlers()` handled `key.escape` for queue-edit cancel and
selection clear before `isVoiceToggleKey(...)`, so configured
`ctrl+escape` / `alt+escape` / `super+escape` chords were advertised
but never toggled recording in those UI states.
Add an early escape+voice check before generic Esc handlers so
escape-based voice bindings win when configured, while plain Esc
behavior remains unchanged.
Also updated PR #19835 description text to remove stale cmd/command
alias claims and match the current parser contract.
* fix(tui): pass configured voice shortcut through TextInput layer
Thread the live parsed voiceRecordKey into TextInput so configured voice.record_key chords bubble to useInputHandlers instead of being consumed as editor input. This removes the last hardcoded Ctrl+B pass-through in the composer path while preserving existing global control chord behavior.
* fix(tui): require explicit alt bit for escape-based alt chords
Hermes-ink reports bare Escape as meta=true+escape=true on some terminals, so a configured alt+escape binding was firing on bare Esc. Require an explicit key.alt bit when the configured named key is escape so plain Esc stays plain Esc; kitty-style alt+escape still fires.
* fix(tui): harden voice.record + TextInput paste + super-mod reserved list
Three round-7 Copilot follow-ups on #19835:
- voice.record start handler used _load_cfg().get('voice', {}).get(...) without
shape checks, so malformed YAML (bool/scalar/list) returned 5025 instead of
using VAD defaults. Centralized _voice_cfg_dict() helper and type-guarded
silence_threshold/silence_duration with numeric fallbacks.
- TextInput pass-through check moved above paste/copy handling so configured
voice chords (ctrl+v / alt+v / cmd+v) beat the composer's paste/copy
defaults.
- parser now also rejects super+{c,d,l,v} — on macOS those are
copy/exit/clear/paste and would be advertised in /voice status but never
actually toggle recording.
* Potential fix for pull request finding
Co-authored-by: Copilot Autofix powered by AI <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix(tui): round-8 Copilot review — allow ctrl+x, gate super reservations to macOS, preserve voice key on transient RPC failure
Three round-8 Copilot follow-ups on #19835:
- Revert ctrl+x addition to _RESERVED_CTRL_CHARS (landed via Copilot Autofix
commit
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b8fb9270c4 |
refactor(cli): drop dead c-S-c key binding (follow-up to #19895) (#19919)
#19884 added a prompt_toolkit key binding for Ctrl+Shift+C to "prevent Hermes from intercepting the keystroke as an interrupt signal." #19895 then wrapped the binding in try/except after discovering it crashed startup with ValueError on every platform. Both PRs were based on a misreading of how terminal key events propagate: 1. Terminal emulators (GNOME Terminal, iTerm2, kitty, Windows Terminal, etc.) intercept Ctrl+Shift+C before the keystroke reaches the application's stdin. prompt_toolkit never sees it. The binding could never have intercepted anything. 2. prompt_toolkit's key spec parser doesn't recognise 'c-S-c' on any platform — the Shift modifier is meaningless on control-sequence keys. Verified: every prompt_toolkit version raises 'Invalid key: c-S-c' at registration time. The handler is dead code. Delete it and leave a comment explaining why no binding is needed here. Ctrl+Q alias (#19884's other addition) stays — that's a real prompt_toolkit key and a legitimate interrupt shortcut. Verified the CLI starts cleanly — key binding phase no longer raises and the subsequent chat flow reaches the provider setup check without error. |
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429b8eceb4 |
fix(cli): guard c-S-c key binding with try/except to prevent startup crash (#19895)
PR #19884 added @kb.add('c-S-c') unconditionally. prompt_toolkit raises ValueError("Invalid key: c-S-c") during HermesCLI.__init__ on platforms where this key spec is not recognised — the process exits before reaching the prompt loop. Reported on macOS (#19894) and Linux (#19896) immediately after #19884 landed. Fix: wrap the registration in try/except ValueError so that startup continues cleanly on any platform/version that rejects the spec. Where the spec is accepted the binding is registered normally as a no-op, allowing the terminal to handle Ctrl+Shift+C natively as before. Fixes #19894 Fixes #19896 |
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645a2f482d | fix(cli): fix shortcut config conflict in hermes_cli | ||
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026a5e47df | fix(cli): preserve Windows hidden-dir paths in markdown | ||
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5b6d413476 |
fix(cli,gateway): surface title errors from /new <name>
The contributor's PR silently swallowed ValueError from SessionDB.set_session_title() with bare except Exception: pass. Users typing /new <title> with an already-in-use title got an untitled session and no feedback. Changes: - cli.py: catch ValueError from both sanitize_title() and set_session_title(); print the error and mark the session untitled in the banner (never echo the rejected title back). - gateway/run.py: append a warning note to the reset reply on title rejection; reflect the accepted title in the header. - Add regression tests for the duplicate-title path in CLI and gateway. Also map exx@example.com -> @exxmen in scripts/release.py. |
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f720751d79 |
feat(cli,gateway): /new accepts optional session name argument
Allow users to start a fresh session and immediately set its title by
passing a name to /new (or /reset):
/new Refactor auth module
Changes:
- hermes_cli/commands.py: add args_hint='[name]' to /new command
- cli.py: parse title argument in process_command(), pass to new_session()
- cli.py: new_session() accepts title=None, sets title via SessionDB
- gateway/run.py: _handle_reset_command() parses title, sets on new entry
- gateway/session.py: reset_session() accepts optional display_name
- tests: add test_new_session_with_title, test_reset_command_with_title,
test_new_command_in_help_output
All 36 affected tests pass.
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e3461e0b2a |
fix(cli): remove dead 'q' check from quit command resolution
The 'q' alias is defined for 'queue' command in commands.py:93.
The hardcoded 'q' in cli.py:5910 was dead code - resolve_command('q')
returns the queue CommandDef, so canonical would never be 'q'.
Removes the misleading check without changing any behavior:
- /quit and /exit still exit (defined aliases)
- /q still maps to queue (as intended)
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c659a16899 |
fix(cli): detect quoted relative paths in _detect_file_drop
Closes #15197 |
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a1cb811cb8 | fix(cli): avoid voice TTS restart race | ||
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a11aed1acc |
fix(cli): local backend CLI always uses launch directory, stops .env sync of TERMINAL_CWD (#19334)
The old CWD heuristic was fooled by: 1. TERMINAL_CWD persisted to .env by `hermes config set terminal.cwd` 2. Inherited TERMINAL_CWD from parent hermes processes 3. Only resolved when config had a placeholder value (not explicit paths) Fix: - load_cli_config() unconditionally uses os.getcwd() for local backend - TERMINAL_CWD always force-exported in CLI mode (overrides stale values) - Gateway sets _HERMES_GATEWAY=1 marker so lazy cli.py imports don't clobber - Remove terminal.cwd from config-set .env sync map (prevents re-poisoning) - Clarify setup wizard label as 'Gateway working directory' Closes #19214 |
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167b5648ea |
Revert "fix(cli): CLI/TUI on local backend always uses launch directory, ignores terminal.cwd (#19242)" (#19329)
This reverts commit
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9eaddfafa3 |
fix(cli): CLI/TUI on local backend always uses launch directory, ignores terminal.cwd (#19242)
CLI/TUI sessions on the local backend now unconditionally use os.getcwd() as the working directory. The terminal.cwd config value is only consumed by gateway/cron/delegation modes (where there's no shell to cd from). Previously, 'hermes setup' would write an absolute path (e.g. $HOME) into terminal.cwd which then pinned the CLI to that directory regardless of where the user launched hermes from. This was a silent foot-gun — the user's 'cd' was being ignored. Changes: 1. cli.py: Restructured CWD resolution — if TERMINAL_CWD is not already set by the gateway, and the backend is local, always use os.getcwd(). Config terminal.cwd is irrelevant for interactive CLI/TUI sessions. 2. setup.py: Moved the cwd prompt from setup_terminal_backend() to setup_gateway(). It now only appears when configuring messaging platforms and is labeled 'Gateway working directory'. 3. Tests: Rewrote test_cwd_env_respect.py to validate the new behavior: explicit config paths are ignored for CLI, gateway pre-set values are preserved, non-local backends keep their config paths. 4. Docs: Updated configuration.md, profiles.md, and environment-variables.md to clarify that terminal.cwd only affects gateway/cron mode on local backend. Closes #19214 |
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7696ddc59e |
fix(cli): robust paste file expansion and process_loop error handling (#17666)
Two narrow fixes for long pasted messages silently disappearing: 1. _expand_paste_references: replace path.exists() + read_text() with try/except (OSError, IOError). Closes the TOCTOU window where a paste file deleted between check and read raised FileNotFoundError, bubbled up through process_loop's outer except, and silently dropped the user's input. Failures now return the placeholder text and log a warning. 2. process_loop outer except: logger.warning() instead of print(). prompt_toolkit's TUI swallows stdout, so 'Error: …' was invisible to the user. Logged errors are discoverable via hermes logs. Dropped the larger interrupt_queue→pending_input drain that was part of the original PR — that's a separate class of input-drop (in-progress interrupt handling) unrelated to the paste-file TOCTOU reported in the issue, and worth its own review. Salvage of #17939. |