Files
hermes-agent/AGENTS.md
teknium1 6134939882 refactor: deduplicate toolsets, unify async bridging, fix approval race condition, harden security
- Replace 4 copy-pasted messaging platform toolsets with shared _HERMES_CORE_TOOLS list
- Consolidate 5 ad-hoc async-bridging patterns into single _run_async() in model_tools.py
  - Removes deprecated get_event_loop()/set_event_loop() calls
  - Makes all tool handlers self-protecting regardless of caller's event loop state
  - RL handler refactored from if/elif chain to dispatch dict
- Fix exec approval race condition: replace module-level globals with thread-safe
  per-session tools/approval.py (submit_pending, pop_pending, approve_session, is_approved)
  - Session A approving "rm" no longer approves it for all other sessions
- Fix config deep merge: user overriding tts.elevenlabs.voice_id no longer clobbers
  tts.elevenlabs.model_id; migration detection now recurses to arbitrary depth
- Gateway default-deny: unauthenticated users denied unless GATEWAY_ALLOW_ALL_USERS=true
- Add 10 dangerous command patterns: rm --recursive, bash -c, python -e, curl|bash,
  xargs rm, find -delete
- Sanitize gateway error messages: users see generic message, full traceback goes to logs
2026-02-21 18:28:49 -08:00

647 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters
This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
# Hermes Agent - Development Guide
Instructions for AI coding assistants (GitHub Copilot, Cursor, etc.) and human developers.
Hermes-Agent is an AI agent harness with tool-calling capabilities, interactive CLI, messaging integrations, and scheduled tasks.
## Development Environment
**IMPORTANT**: Always use the virtual environment if it exists:
```bash
source venv/bin/activate # Before running any Python commands
```
## Project Structure
```
hermes-agent/
├── hermes_cli/ # Unified CLI commands
│ ├── main.py # Entry point, command dispatcher
│ ├── setup.py # Interactive setup wizard
│ ├── config.py # Config management & migration
│ ├── status.py # Status display
│ ├── doctor.py # Diagnostics
│ ├── gateway.py # Gateway management
│ ├── uninstall.py # Uninstaller
│ ├── cron.py # Cron job management
│ └── skills_hub.py # Skills Hub CLI + /skills slash command
├── tools/ # Tool implementations
│ ├── skills_guard.py # Security scanner for external skills
│ ├── skills_hub.py # Source adapters, GitHub auth, lock file (library)
│ ├── todo_tool.py # Planning & task management (in-memory TodoStore)
│ ├── process_registry.py # Background process management (spawn, poll, wait, kill)
│ ├── transcription_tools.py # Speech-to-text (Whisper API)
├── gateway/ # Messaging platform adapters
│ ├── pairing.py # DM pairing code system
│ ├── hooks.py # Event hook system
│ ├── sticker_cache.py # Telegram sticker vision cache
│ ├── platforms/
│ │ └── slack.py # Slack adapter (slack-bolt)
├── cron/ # Scheduler implementation
├── skills/ # Knowledge documents
├── cli.py # Interactive CLI (Rich UI)
├── run_agent.py # Agent runner with AIAgent class
├── model_tools.py # Tool schemas and handlers
├── toolsets.py # Tool groupings
├── toolset_distributions.py # Probability-based tool selection
└── batch_runner.py # Parallel batch processing
```
**User Configuration** (stored in `~/.hermes/`):
- `~/.hermes/config.yaml` - Settings (model, terminal, toolsets, etc.)
- `~/.hermes/.env` - API keys and secrets
- `~/.hermes/pairing/` - DM pairing data
- `~/.hermes/hooks/` - Custom event hooks
- `~/.hermes/image_cache/` - Cached user images
- `~/.hermes/audio_cache/` - Cached user voice messages
- `~/.hermes/sticker_cache.json` - Telegram sticker descriptions
## File Dependency Chain
```
tools/*.py → tools/__init__.py → model_tools.py → toolsets.py → toolset_distributions.py
run_agent.py ──────────────────────────┘
cli.py → run_agent.py (uses AIAgent with quiet_mode=True)
batch_runner.py → run_agent.py + toolset_distributions.py
```
Always ensure consistency between tools, model_tools.py, and toolsets.py when changing any of them.
---
## AIAgent Class
The main agent is implemented in `run_agent.py`:
```python
class AIAgent:
def __init__(
self,
model: str = "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4",
api_key: str = None,
base_url: str = "https://openrouter.ai/api/v1",
max_iterations: int = 60, # Max tool-calling loops
enabled_toolsets: list = None,
disabled_toolsets: list = None,
verbose_logging: bool = False,
quiet_mode: bool = False, # Suppress progress output
tool_progress_callback: callable = None, # Called on each tool use
):
# Initialize OpenAI client, load tools based on toolsets
...
def chat(self, user_message: str, task_id: str = None) -> str:
# Main entry point - runs the agent loop
...
```
### Agent Loop
The core loop in `_run_agent_loop()`:
```
1. Add user message to conversation
2. Call LLM with tools
3. If LLM returns tool calls:
- Execute each tool
- Add tool results to conversation
- Go to step 2
4. If LLM returns text response:
- Return response to user
```
```python
while turns < max_turns:
response = client.chat.completions.create(
model=model,
messages=messages,
tools=tool_schemas,
)
if response.tool_calls:
for tool_call in response.tool_calls:
result = await execute_tool(tool_call)
messages.append(tool_result_message(result))
turns += 1
else:
return response.content
```
### Conversation Management
Messages are stored as a list of dicts following OpenAI format:
```python
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a helpful assistant..."},
{"role": "user", "content": "Search for Python tutorials"},
{"role": "assistant", "content": None, "tool_calls": [...]},
{"role": "tool", "tool_call_id": "...", "content": "..."},
{"role": "assistant", "content": "Here's what I found..."},
]
```
### Reasoning Model Support
For models that support chain-of-thought reasoning:
- Extract `reasoning_content` from API responses
- Store in `assistant_msg["reasoning"]` for trajectory export
- Pass back via `reasoning_content` field on subsequent turns
---
## CLI Architecture (cli.py)
The interactive CLI uses:
- **Rich** - For the welcome banner and styled panels
- **prompt_toolkit** - For fixed input area with history, `patch_stdout`, slash command autocomplete, and floating completion menus
- **KawaiiSpinner** (in run_agent.py) - Animated kawaii faces during API calls; clean `┊` activity feed for tool execution results
Key components:
- `HermesCLI` class - Main CLI controller with commands and conversation loop
- `SlashCommandCompleter` - Autocomplete dropdown for `/commands` (type `/` to see all)
- `load_cli_config()` - Loads config, sets environment variables for terminal
- `build_welcome_banner()` - Displays ASCII art logo, tools, and skills summary
CLI UX notes:
- Thinking spinner (during LLM API call) shows animated kawaii face + verb (`(⌐■_■) deliberating...`)
- When LLM returns tool calls, the spinner clears silently (no "got it!" noise)
- Tool execution results appear as a clean activity feed: `┊ {emoji} {verb} {detail} {duration}`
- "got it!" only appears when the LLM returns a final text response (`⚕ ready`)
- The prompt shows `⚕ ` when the agent is working, `` when idle
- Pasting 5+ lines auto-saves to `~/.hermes/pastes/` and collapses to a reference
- Multi-line input via Alt+Enter or Ctrl+J
- `/commands` - Process user commands like `/help`, `/clear`, `/personality`, etc.
CLI uses `quiet_mode=True` when creating AIAgent to suppress verbose logging.
### Adding CLI Commands
1. Add to `COMMANDS` dict with description
2. Add handler in `process_command()` method
3. For persistent settings, use `save_config_value()` to update config
---
## Hermes CLI Commands
The unified `hermes` command provides all functionality:
| Command | Description |
|---------|-------------|
| `hermes` | Interactive chat (default) |
| `hermes chat -q "..."` | Single query mode |
| `hermes setup` | Configure API keys and settings |
| `hermes config` | View current configuration |
| `hermes config edit` | Open config in editor |
| `hermes config set KEY VAL` | Set a specific value |
| `hermes config check` | Check for missing config |
| `hermes config migrate` | Prompt for missing config interactively |
| `hermes status` | Show configuration status |
| `hermes doctor` | Diagnose issues |
| `hermes update` | Update to latest (checks for new config) |
| `hermes uninstall` | Uninstall (can keep configs for reinstall) |
| `hermes gateway` | Start gateway (messaging + cron scheduler) |
| `hermes gateway install` | Install gateway as system service |
| `hermes cron list` | View scheduled jobs |
| `hermes cron status` | Check if cron scheduler is running |
| `hermes version` | Show version info |
| `hermes pairing list/approve/revoke` | Manage DM pairing codes |
---
## Messaging Gateway
The gateway connects Hermes to Telegram, Discord, and WhatsApp.
### Configuration (in `~/.hermes/.env`):
```bash
# Telegram
TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN=123456:ABC-DEF... # From @BotFather
TELEGRAM_ALLOWED_USERS=123456789,987654 # Comma-separated user IDs (from @userinfobot)
# Discord
DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN=MTIz... # From Developer Portal
DISCORD_ALLOWED_USERS=123456789012345678 # Comma-separated user IDs
# Agent Behavior
HERMES_MAX_ITERATIONS=60 # Max tool-calling iterations
MESSAGING_CWD=/home/myuser # Terminal working directory for messaging
# Tool Progress (optional)
HERMES_TOOL_PROGRESS=true # Send progress messages
HERMES_TOOL_PROGRESS_MODE=new # "new" or "all"
```
### Working Directory Behavior
- **CLI (`hermes` command)**: Uses current directory (`.``os.getcwd()`)
- **Messaging (Telegram/Discord)**: Uses `MESSAGING_CWD` (default: home directory)
This is intentional: CLI users are in a terminal and expect the agent to work in their current directory, while messaging users need a consistent starting location.
### Security (User Allowlists):
**IMPORTANT**: By default, the gateway denies all users who are not in an allowlist or paired via DM.
The gateway checks `{PLATFORM}_ALLOWED_USERS` environment variables:
- If set: Only listed user IDs can interact with the bot
- If unset: All users are denied unless `GATEWAY_ALLOW_ALL_USERS=true` is set
Users can find their IDs:
- **Telegram**: Message [@userinfobot](https://t.me/userinfobot)
- **Discord**: Enable Developer Mode, right-click name → Copy ID
### DM Pairing System
Instead of static allowlists, users can pair via one-time codes:
1. Unknown user DMs the bot → receives pairing code
2. Owner runs `hermes pairing approve <platform> <code>`
3. User is permanently authorized
Security: 8-char codes, 1-hour expiry, rate-limited (1/10min/user), max 3 pending per platform, lockout after 5 failed attempts, `chmod 0600` on data files.
Files: `gateway/pairing.py`, `hermes_cli/pairing.py`
### Event Hooks
Hooks fire at lifecycle points. Place hook directories in `~/.hermes/hooks/`:
```
~/.hermes/hooks/my-hook/
├── HOOK.yaml # name, description, events list
└── handler.py # async def handle(event_type, context): ...
```
Events: `gateway:startup`, `session:start`, `session:reset`, `agent:start`, `agent:step`, `agent:end`, `command:*`
The `agent:step` event fires each iteration of the tool-calling loop with tool names and results.
Files: `gateway/hooks.py`
### Tool Progress Notifications
When `HERMES_TOOL_PROGRESS=true`, the bot sends status messages as it works:
- `💻 \`ls -la\`...` (terminal commands show the actual command)
- `🔍 web_search...`
- `📄 web_extract...`
- `🐍 execute_code...` (programmatic tool calling sandbox)
- `🔀 delegate_task...` (subagent delegation)
- `❓ clarify...` (user question, CLI-only)
Modes:
- `new`: Only when switching to a different tool (less spam)
- `all`: Every single tool call
### Typing Indicator
The gateway keeps the "typing..." indicator active throughout processing, refreshing every 4 seconds. This lets users know the bot is working even during long tool-calling sequences.
### Platform Toolsets:
Each platform has a dedicated toolset in `toolsets.py`:
- `hermes-telegram`: Full tools including terminal (with safety checks)
- `hermes-discord`: Full tools including terminal
- `hermes-whatsapp`: Full tools including terminal
---
## Configuration System
Configuration files are stored in `~/.hermes/` for easy user access:
- `~/.hermes/config.yaml` - All settings (model, terminal, compression, etc.)
- `~/.hermes/.env` - API keys and secrets
### Adding New Configuration Options
When adding new configuration variables, you MUST follow this process:
#### For config.yaml options:
1. Add to `DEFAULT_CONFIG` in `hermes_cli/config.py`
2. **CRITICAL**: Bump `_config_version` in `DEFAULT_CONFIG` when adding required fields
3. This triggers migration prompts for existing users on next `hermes update` or `hermes setup`
Example:
```python
DEFAULT_CONFIG = {
# ... existing config ...
"new_feature": {
"enabled": True,
"option": "default_value",
},
# BUMP THIS when adding required fields
"_config_version": 2, # Was 1, now 2
}
```
#### For .env variables (API keys/secrets):
1. Add to `REQUIRED_ENV_VARS` or `OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS` in `hermes_cli/config.py`
2. Include metadata for the migration system:
```python
OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS = {
# ... existing vars ...
"NEW_API_KEY": {
"description": "What this key is for",
"prompt": "Display name in prompts",
"url": "https://where-to-get-it.com/",
"tools": ["tools_it_enables"], # What tools need this
"password": True, # Mask input
},
}
```
#### Update related files:
- `hermes_cli/setup.py` - Add prompts in the setup wizard
- `cli-config.yaml.example` - Add example with comments
- Update README.md if user-facing
### Config Version Migration
The system uses `_config_version` to detect outdated configs:
1. `check_for_missing_config()` compares user config to `DEFAULT_CONFIG`
2. `migrate_config()` interactively prompts for missing values
3. Called automatically by `hermes update` and optionally by `hermes setup`
---
## Environment Variables
API keys are loaded from `~/.hermes/.env`:
- `OPENROUTER_API_KEY` - Main LLM API access (primary provider)
- `FIRECRAWL_API_KEY` - Web search/extract tools
- `BROWSERBASE_API_KEY` / `BROWSERBASE_PROJECT_ID` - Browser automation
- `FAL_KEY` - Image generation (FLUX model)
- `NOUS_API_KEY` - Vision and Mixture-of-Agents tools
Terminal tool configuration (in `~/.hermes/config.yaml`):
- `terminal.backend` - Backend: local, docker, singularity, modal, or ssh
- `terminal.cwd` - Working directory ("." = host CWD for local only; for remote backends set an absolute path inside the target, or omit to use the backend's default)
- `terminal.docker_image` - Image for Docker backend
- `terminal.singularity_image` - Image for Singularity backend
- `terminal.modal_image` - Image for Modal backend
- SSH: `TERMINAL_SSH_HOST`, `TERMINAL_SSH_USER`, `TERMINAL_SSH_KEY` in .env
Agent behavior (in `~/.hermes/.env`):
- `HERMES_MAX_ITERATIONS` - Max tool-calling iterations (default: 60)
- `MESSAGING_CWD` - Working directory for messaging platforms (default: ~)
- `HERMES_TOOL_PROGRESS` - Enable tool progress messages (`true`/`false`)
- `HERMES_TOOL_PROGRESS_MODE` - Progress mode: `new` (tool changes) or `all`
- `OPENAI_API_KEY` - Voice transcription (Whisper STT)
- `SLACK_BOT_TOKEN` / `SLACK_APP_TOKEN` - Slack integration (Socket Mode)
- `SLACK_ALLOWED_USERS` - Comma-separated Slack user IDs
- `HERMES_HUMAN_DELAY_MODE` - Response pacing: off/natural/custom
- `HERMES_HUMAN_DELAY_MIN_MS` / `HERMES_HUMAN_DELAY_MAX_MS` - Custom delay range
### Dangerous Command Approval
The terminal tool includes safety checks for potentially destructive commands (e.g., `rm -rf`, `DROP TABLE`, `chmod 777`, etc.):
**Behavior by Backend:**
- **Docker/Singularity/Modal**: Commands run unrestricted (isolated containers)
- **Local/SSH**: Dangerous commands trigger approval flow
**Approval Flow (CLI):**
```
⚠️ Potentially dangerous command detected: recursive delete
rm -rf /tmp/test
[o]nce | [s]ession | [a]lways | [d]eny
Choice [o/s/a/D]:
```
**Approval Flow (Messaging):**
- Command is blocked with explanation
- Agent explains the command was blocked for safety
- User must add the pattern to their allowlist via `hermes config edit` or run the command directly on their machine
**Configuration:**
- `command_allowlist` in `~/.hermes/config.yaml` stores permanently allowed patterns
- Add patterns via "always" approval or edit directly
**Sudo Handling (Messaging):**
- If sudo fails over messaging, output includes tip to add `SUDO_PASSWORD` to `~/.hermes/.env`
---
## Background Process Management
The `process` tool works alongside `terminal` for managing long-running background processes:
**Starting a background process:**
```python
terminal(command="pytest -v tests/", background=true)
# Returns: {"session_id": "proc_abc123", "pid": 12345, ...}
```
**Managing it with the process tool:**
- `process(action="list")` -- show all running/recent processes
- `process(action="poll", session_id="proc_abc123")` -- check status + new output
- `process(action="log", session_id="proc_abc123")` -- full output with pagination
- `process(action="wait", session_id="proc_abc123", timeout=600)` -- block until done
- `process(action="kill", session_id="proc_abc123")` -- terminate
- `process(action="write", session_id="proc_abc123", data="y")` -- send stdin
- `process(action="submit", session_id="proc_abc123", data="yes")` -- send + Enter
**Key behaviors:**
- Background processes execute through the configured terminal backend (local/Docker/Modal/SSH/Singularity) -- never directly on the host unless `TERMINAL_ENV=local`
- The `wait` action blocks the tool call until the process finishes, times out, or is interrupted by a new user message
- PTY mode (`pty=true` on terminal) enables interactive CLI tools (Codex, Claude Code)
- In RL training, background processes are auto-killed when the episode ends (`tool_context.cleanup()`)
- In the gateway, sessions with active background processes are exempt from idle reset
- The process registry checkpoints to `~/.hermes/processes.json` for crash recovery
Files: `tools/process_registry.py` (registry), `model_tools.py` (tool definition + handler), `tools/terminal_tool.py` (spawn integration)
---
## Adding New Tools
Follow this strict order to maintain consistency:
1. Create `tools/your_tool.py` with:
- Handler function (sync or async) returning a JSON string via `json.dumps()`
- `check_*_requirements()` function to verify dependencies (e.g., API keys)
- Schema definition following OpenAI function-calling format
2. Export in `tools/__init__.py`:
- Import the handler and check function
- Add to `__all__` list
3. Register in `model_tools.py`:
- Add to `TOOLSET_REQUIREMENTS` if it needs API keys
- Create `get_*_tool_definitions()` function or add to existing
- Add routing in `handle_function_call()` dispatcher
- Update `get_all_tool_names()` with the tool name
- Update `get_toolset_for_tool()` mapping
- Update `get_available_toolsets()` and `check_toolset_requirements()`
4. Add to toolset in `toolsets.py`:
- Add to existing toolset or create new one in TOOLSETS dict
5. If the tool requires an API key:
- Add to `OPTIONAL_ENV_VARS` in `hermes_cli/config.py`
- The tool will be auto-disabled if the key is missing
6. Add `"todo"` to the relevant platform toolsets (`hermes-cli`, `hermes-telegram`, etc.)
7. Optionally add to `toolset_distributions.py` for batch processing
**Special case: tools that need agent-level state** (like `todo`):
If your tool needs access to the AIAgent instance (e.g., in-memory state per session), intercept it directly in `run_agent.py`'s tool dispatch loop *before* `handle_function_call()`. Add a fallback error in `handle_function_call()` for safety. See `todo_tool.py` and the `if function_name == "todo":` block in `run_agent.py` for the pattern. For RL environments, add the same intercept in `environments/agent_loop.py`.
### Tool Implementation Pattern
```python
# tools/example_tool.py
import json
import os
def check_example_requirements() -> bool:
"""Check if required API keys/dependencies are available."""
return bool(os.getenv("EXAMPLE_API_KEY"))
def example_tool(param: str, task_id: str = None) -> str:
"""Execute the tool and return JSON string result."""
try:
result = {"success": True, "data": "..."}
return json.dumps(result, ensure_ascii=False)
except Exception as e:
return json.dumps({"error": str(e)}, ensure_ascii=False)
```
All tool handlers MUST return a JSON string. Never return raw dicts.
### Dynamic Tool Availability
Tools are automatically disabled when their API keys are missing:
```python
# In model_tools.py
TOOLSET_REQUIREMENTS = {
"web": {"env_vars": ["FIRECRAWL_API_KEY"]},
"browser": {"env_vars": ["BROWSERBASE_API_KEY", "BROWSERBASE_PROJECT_ID"]},
"creative": {"env_vars": ["FAL_KEY"]},
}
```
The `check_tool_availability()` function determines which tools to include.
### Stateful Tools
Tools that maintain state (terminal, browser) require:
- `task_id` parameter for session isolation between concurrent tasks
- `cleanup_*()` function to release resources
- Cleanup is called automatically in run_agent.py after conversation completes
---
## Trajectory Format
Conversations are saved in ShareGPT format for training:
```json
{"from": "system", "value": "System prompt with <tools>...</tools>"}
{"from": "human", "value": "User message"}
{"from": "gpt", "value": "<think>reasoning</think>\n<tool_call>{...}</tool_call>"}
{"from": "tool", "value": "<tool_response>{...}</tool_response>"}
{"from": "gpt", "value": "Final response"}
```
Tool calls use `<tool_call>` XML tags, responses use `<tool_response>` tags, reasoning uses `<think>` tags.
### Trajectory Export
```python
agent = AIAgent(save_trajectories=True)
agent.chat("Do something")
# Saves to trajectories/*.jsonl in ShareGPT format
```
---
## Batch Processing (batch_runner.py)
For processing multiple prompts:
- Parallel execution with multiprocessing
- Content-based resume for fault tolerance (matches on prompt text, not indices)
- Toolset distributions control probabilistic tool availability per prompt
- Output: `data/<run_name>/trajectories.jsonl` (combined) + individual batch files
```bash
python batch_runner.py \
--dataset_file=prompts.jsonl \
--batch_size=20 \
--num_workers=4 \
--run_name=my_run
```
---
## Skills System
Skills are on-demand knowledge documents the agent can load. Compatible with the [agentskills.io](https://agentskills.io/specification) open standard.
```
skills/
├── mlops/ # Category folder
│ ├── axolotl/ # Skill folder
│ │ ├── SKILL.md # Main instructions (required)
│ │ ├── references/ # Additional docs, API specs
│ │ ├── templates/ # Output formats, configs
│ │ └── assets/ # Supplementary files (agentskills.io)
│ └── vllm/
│ └── SKILL.md
├── .hub/ # Skills Hub state (gitignored)
│ ├── lock.json # Installed skill provenance
│ ├── quarantine/ # Pending security review
│ ├── audit.log # Security scan history
│ ├── taps.json # Custom source repos
│ └── index-cache/ # Cached remote indexes
```
**Progressive disclosure** (token-efficient):
1. `skills_categories()` - List category names (~50 tokens)
2. `skills_list(category)` - Name + description per skill (~3k tokens)
3. `skill_view(name)` - Full content + tags + linked files
SKILL.md files use YAML frontmatter (agentskills.io format):
```yaml
---
name: skill-name
description: Brief description for listing
version: 1.0.0
metadata:
hermes:
tags: [tag1, tag2]
related_skills: [other-skill]
---
# Skill Content...
```
**Skills Hub** — user-driven skill search/install from online registries (GitHub, ClawHub, Claude marketplaces, LobeHub). Not exposed as an agent tool — the model cannot search for or install skills. Users manage skills via `hermes skills ...` CLI commands or the `/skills` slash command in chat.
Key files:
- `tools/skills_tool.py` — Agent-facing skill list/view (progressive disclosure)
- `tools/skills_guard.py` — Security scanner (regex + LLM audit, trust-aware install policy)
- `tools/skills_hub.py` — Source adapters (GitHub, ClawHub, Claude marketplace, LobeHub), lock file, auth
- `hermes_cli/skills_hub.py` — CLI subcommands + `/skills` slash command handler
---
## Testing Changes
After making changes:
1. Run `hermes doctor` to check setup
2. Run `hermes config check` to verify config
3. Test with `hermes chat -q "test message"`
4. For new config options, test fresh install: `rm -rf ~/.hermes && hermes setup`