--- sidebar_position: 6 title: "Event Hooks" description: "Run custom code at key lifecycle points — log activity, send alerts, post to webhooks" --- # Event Hooks The hooks system lets you run custom code at key points in the agent lifecycle — session creation, slash commands, each tool-calling step, and more. Hooks fire automatically during gateway operation without blocking the main agent pipeline. ## Creating a Hook Each hook is a directory under `~/.hermes/hooks/` containing two files: ``` ~/.hermes/hooks/ └── my-hook/ ├── HOOK.yaml # Declares which events to listen for └── handler.py # Python handler function ``` ### HOOK.yaml ```yaml name: my-hook description: Log all agent activity to a file events: - agent:start - agent:end - agent:step ``` The `events` list determines which events trigger your handler. You can subscribe to any combination of events, including wildcards like `command:*`. ### handler.py ```python import json from datetime import datetime from pathlib import Path LOG_FILE = Path.home() / ".hermes" / "hooks" / "my-hook" / "activity.log" async def handle(event_type: str, context: dict): """Called for each subscribed event. Must be named 'handle'.""" entry = { "timestamp": datetime.now().isoformat(), "event": event_type, **context, } with open(LOG_FILE, "a") as f: f.write(json.dumps(entry) + "\n") ``` **Handler rules:** - Must be named `handle` - Receives `event_type` (string) and `context` (dict) - Can be `async def` or regular `def` — both work - Errors are caught and logged, never crashing the agent ## Available Events | Event | When it fires | Context keys | |-------|---------------|--------------| | `gateway:startup` | Gateway process starts | `platforms` (list of active platform names) | | `session:start` | New messaging session created | `platform`, `user_id`, `session_id`, `session_key` | | `session:reset` | User ran `/new` or `/reset` | `platform`, `user_id`, `session_key` | | `agent:start` | Agent begins processing a message | `platform`, `user_id`, `session_id`, `message` | | `agent:step` | Each iteration of the tool-calling loop | `platform`, `user_id`, `session_id`, `iteration`, `tool_names` | | `agent:end` | Agent finishes processing | `platform`, `user_id`, `session_id`, `message`, `response` | | `command:*` | Any slash command executed | `platform`, `user_id`, `command`, `args` | ### Wildcard Matching Handlers registered for `command:*` fire for any `command:` event (`command:model`, `command:reset`, etc.). Monitor all slash commands with a single subscription. ## Examples ### Telegram Alert on Long Tasks Send yourself a message when the agent takes more than 10 steps: ```yaml # ~/.hermes/hooks/long-task-alert/HOOK.yaml name: long-task-alert description: Alert when agent is taking many steps events: - agent:step ``` ```python # ~/.hermes/hooks/long-task-alert/handler.py import os import httpx THRESHOLD = 10 BOT_TOKEN = os.getenv("TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN") CHAT_ID = os.getenv("TELEGRAM_HOME_CHANNEL") async def handle(event_type: str, context: dict): iteration = context.get("iteration", 0) if iteration == THRESHOLD and BOT_TOKEN and CHAT_ID: tools = ", ".join(context.get("tool_names", [])) text = f"⚠️ Agent has been running for {iteration} steps. Last tools: {tools}" async with httpx.AsyncClient() as client: await client.post( f"https://api.telegram.org/bot{BOT_TOKEN}/sendMessage", json={"chat_id": CHAT_ID, "text": text}, ) ``` ### Command Usage Logger Track which slash commands are used: ```yaml # ~/.hermes/hooks/command-logger/HOOK.yaml name: command-logger description: Log slash command usage events: - command:* ``` ```python # ~/.hermes/hooks/command-logger/handler.py import json from datetime import datetime from pathlib import Path LOG = Path.home() / ".hermes" / "logs" / "command_usage.jsonl" def handle(event_type: str, context: dict): LOG.parent.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True) entry = { "ts": datetime.now().isoformat(), "command": context.get("command"), "args": context.get("args"), "platform": context.get("platform"), "user": context.get("user_id"), } with open(LOG, "a") as f: f.write(json.dumps(entry) + "\n") ``` ### Session Start Webhook POST to an external service on new sessions: ```yaml # ~/.hermes/hooks/session-webhook/HOOK.yaml name: session-webhook description: Notify external service on new sessions events: - session:start - session:reset ``` ```python # ~/.hermes/hooks/session-webhook/handler.py import httpx WEBHOOK_URL = "https://your-service.example.com/hermes-events" async def handle(event_type: str, context: dict): async with httpx.AsyncClient() as client: await client.post(WEBHOOK_URL, json={ "event": event_type, **context, }, timeout=5) ``` ## How It Works 1. On gateway startup, `HookRegistry.discover_and_load()` scans `~/.hermes/hooks/` 2. Each subdirectory with `HOOK.yaml` + `handler.py` is loaded dynamically 3. Handlers are registered for their declared events 4. At each lifecycle point, `hooks.emit()` fires all matching handlers 5. Errors in any handler are caught and logged — a broken hook never crashes the agent :::info Hooks only fire in the **gateway** (Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp). The CLI does not currently load hooks. :::