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hermes-agent/website/docs/user-guide/features/tools.md
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1 Tools & Toolsets Overview of Hermes Agent's tools — what's available, how toolsets work, and terminal backends

Tools & Toolsets

Tools are functions that extend the agent's capabilities. They're organized into logical toolsets that can be enabled or disabled per platform.

Available Tools

Hermes ships with a broad built-in tool registry covering web search, browser automation, terminal execution, file editing, memory, delegation, RL training, messaging delivery, Home Assistant, Honcho memory, and more.

High-level categories:

Category Examples Description
Web web_search, web_extract Search the web and extract page content.
Terminal & Files terminal, process, read_file, patch Execute commands and manipulate files.
Browser browser_navigate, browser_snapshot, browser_vision Interactive browser automation with text and vision support.
Media vision_analyze, image_generate, text_to_speech Multimodal analysis and generation.
Agent orchestration todo, clarify, execute_code, delegate_task Planning, clarification, code execution, and subagent delegation.
Memory & recall memory, session_search, honcho_* Persistent memory, session search, and Honcho cross-session context.
Automation & delivery schedule_cronjob, send_message Scheduled tasks and outbound messaging delivery.
Integrations ha_*, MCP server tools, rl_* Home Assistant, MCP, RL training, and other integrations.

For the authoritative code-derived registry, see Built-in Tools Reference and Toolsets Reference.

Using Toolsets

# Use specific toolsets
hermes chat --toolsets "web,terminal"

# See all available tools
hermes tools

# Configure tools per platform (interactive)
hermes tools

Common toolsets include web, terminal, file, browser, vision, image_gen, moa, skills, tts, todo, memory, session_search, cronjob, code_execution, delegation, clarify, honcho, homeassistant, and rl.

See Toolsets Reference for the full set, including platform presets such as hermes-cli, hermes-telegram, and dynamic MCP toolsets like mcp-<server>.

Terminal Backends

The terminal tool can execute commands in different environments:

Backend Description Use Case
local Run on your machine (default) Development, trusted tasks
docker Isolated containers Security, reproducibility
ssh Remote server Sandboxing, keep agent away from its own code
singularity HPC containers Cluster computing, rootless
modal Cloud execution Serverless, scale
daytona Cloud sandbox workspace Persistent remote dev environments

Configuration

# In ~/.hermes/config.yaml
terminal:
  backend: local    # or: docker, ssh, singularity, modal, daytona
  cwd: "."          # Working directory
  timeout: 180      # Command timeout in seconds

Docker Backend

terminal:
  backend: docker
  docker_image: python:3.11-slim

SSH Backend

Recommended for security — agent can't modify its own code:

terminal:
  backend: ssh
# Set credentials in ~/.hermes/.env
TERMINAL_SSH_HOST=my-server.example.com
TERMINAL_SSH_USER=myuser
TERMINAL_SSH_KEY=~/.ssh/id_rsa

Singularity/Apptainer

# Pre-build SIF for parallel workers
apptainer build ~/python.sif docker://python:3.11-slim

# Configure
hermes config set terminal.backend singularity
hermes config set terminal.singularity_image ~/python.sif

Modal (Serverless Cloud)

uv pip install "swe-rex[modal]"
modal setup
hermes config set terminal.backend modal

Container Resources

Configure CPU, memory, disk, and persistence for all container backends:

terminal:
  backend: docker  # or singularity, modal, daytona
  container_cpu: 1              # CPU cores (default: 1)
  container_memory: 5120        # Memory in MB (default: 5GB)
  container_disk: 51200         # Disk in MB (default: 50GB)
  container_persistent: true    # Persist filesystem across sessions (default: true)

When container_persistent: true, installed packages, files, and config survive across sessions.

Container Security

All container backends run with security hardening:

  • Read-only root filesystem (Docker)
  • All Linux capabilities dropped
  • No privilege escalation
  • PID limits (256 processes)
  • Full namespace isolation
  • Persistent workspace via volumes, not writable root layer

Background Process Management

Start background processes and manage them:

terminal(command="pytest -v tests/", background=true)
# Returns: {"session_id": "proc_abc123", "pid": 12345}

# Then manage with the process tool:
process(action="list")       # Show all running processes
process(action="poll", session_id="proc_abc123")   # Check status
process(action="wait", session_id="proc_abc123")   # Block until done
process(action="log", session_id="proc_abc123")    # Full output
process(action="kill", session_id="proc_abc123")   # Terminate
process(action="write", session_id="proc_abc123", data="y")  # Send input

PTY mode (pty=true) enables interactive CLI tools like Codex and Claude Code.

Sudo Support

If a command needs sudo, you'll be prompted for your password (cached for the session). Or set SUDO_PASSWORD in ~/.hermes/.env.

:::warning On messaging platforms, if sudo fails, the output includes a tip to add SUDO_PASSWORD to ~/.hermes/.env. :::