* docs: add Configuration Options section to Slack docs Documents all config.yaml options for the Slack bot: - Thread & reply behavior (reply_to_mode, reply_broadcast) - Session isolation (group_sessions_per_user) - Mention & trigger behavior (require_mention, mention_patterns, reply_prefix) - Unauthorized user handling (unauthorized_dm_behavior) - Voice transcription (stt_enabled) - Full example config showing all options together Includes a note about Slack's hardcoded @mention requirement in channels (no free_response_channels equivalent like Discord/Telegram). * docs: consolidate reply_in_thread into Configuration Options section Folds the standalone Reply Threading subsection from PR #4643 into the Thread & Reply Behavior subsection, keeping all config options in one place. Adds reply_in_thread to the table and full example.
463 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
463 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
---
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sidebar_position: 4
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title: "Slack"
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description: "Set up Hermes Agent as a Slack bot using Socket Mode"
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---
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# Slack Setup
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Connect Hermes Agent to Slack as a bot using Socket Mode. Socket Mode uses WebSockets instead of
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public HTTP endpoints, so your Hermes instance doesn't need to be publicly accessible — it works
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behind firewalls, on your laptop, or on a private server.
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:::warning Classic Slack Apps Deprecated
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Classic Slack apps (using RTM API) were **fully deprecated in March 2025**. Hermes uses the modern
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Bolt SDK with Socket Mode. If you have an old classic app, you must create a new one following
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the steps below.
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:::
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## Overview
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| Component | Value |
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|-----------|-------|
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| **Library** | `slack-bolt` / `slack_sdk` for Python (Socket Mode) |
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| **Connection** | WebSocket — no public URL required |
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| **Auth tokens needed** | Bot Token (`xoxb-`) + App-Level Token (`xapp-`) |
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| **User identification** | Slack Member IDs (e.g., `U01ABC2DEF3`) |
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---
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## Step 1: Create a Slack App
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1. Go to [https://api.slack.com/apps](https://api.slack.com/apps)
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2. Click **Create New App**
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3. Choose **From scratch**
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4. Enter an app name (e.g., "Hermes Agent") and select your workspace
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5. Click **Create App**
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You'll land on the app's **Basic Information** page.
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---
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## Step 2: Configure Bot Token Scopes
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Navigate to **Features → OAuth & Permissions** in the sidebar. Scroll to **Scopes → Bot Token Scopes** and add the following:
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| Scope | Purpose |
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|-------|---------|
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| `chat:write` | Send messages as the bot |
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| `app_mentions:read` | Detect when @mentioned in channels |
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| `channels:history` | Read messages in public channels the bot is in |
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| `channels:read` | List and get info about public channels |
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| `groups:history` | Read messages in private channels the bot is invited to |
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| `im:history` | Read direct message history |
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| `im:read` | View basic DM info |
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| `im:write` | Open and manage DMs |
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| `users:read` | Look up user information |
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| `files:write` | Upload files (images, audio, documents) |
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:::caution Missing scopes = missing features
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Without `channels:history` and `groups:history`, the bot **will not receive messages in channels** —
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it will only work in DMs. These are the most commonly missed scopes.
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:::
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**Optional scopes:**
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| Scope | Purpose |
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|-------|---------|
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| `groups:read` | List and get info about private channels |
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---
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## Step 3: Enable Socket Mode
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Socket Mode lets the bot connect via WebSocket instead of requiring a public URL.
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1. In the sidebar, go to **Settings → Socket Mode**
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2. Toggle **Enable Socket Mode** to ON
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3. You'll be prompted to create an **App-Level Token**:
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- Name it something like `hermes-socket` (the name doesn't matter)
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- Add the **`connections:write`** scope
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- Click **Generate**
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4. **Copy the token** — it starts with `xapp-`. This is your `SLACK_APP_TOKEN`
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:::tip
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You can always find or regenerate app-level tokens under **Settings → Basic Information → App-Level Tokens**.
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:::
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---
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## Step 4: Subscribe to Events
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This step is critical — it controls what messages the bot can see.
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1. In the sidebar, go to **Features → Event Subscriptions**
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2. Toggle **Enable Events** to ON
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3. Expand **Subscribe to bot events** and add:
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| Event | Required? | Purpose |
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|-------|-----------|---------|
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| `message.im` | **Yes** | Bot receives direct messages |
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| `message.channels` | **Yes** | Bot receives messages in **public** channels it's added to |
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| `message.groups` | **Recommended** | Bot receives messages in **private** channels it's invited to |
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| `app_mention` | **Yes** | Prevents Bolt SDK errors when bot is @mentioned |
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4. Click **Save Changes** at the bottom of the page
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:::danger Missing event subscriptions is the #1 setup issue
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If the bot works in DMs but **not in channels**, you almost certainly forgot to add
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`message.channels` (for public channels) and/or `message.groups` (for private channels).
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Without these events, Slack simply never delivers channel messages to the bot.
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:::
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---
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## Step 5: Enable the Messages Tab
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This step enables direct messages to the bot. Without it, users see **"Sending messages to this app has been turned off"** when trying to DM the bot.
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1. In the sidebar, go to **Features → App Home**
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2. Scroll to **Show Tabs**
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3. Toggle **Messages Tab** to ON
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4. Check **"Allow users to send Slash commands and messages from the messages tab"**
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:::danger Without this step, DMs are completely blocked
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Even with all the correct scopes and event subscriptions, Slack will not allow users to send direct messages to the bot unless the Messages Tab is enabled. This is a Slack platform requirement, not a Hermes configuration issue.
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:::
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---
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## Step 6: Install App to Workspace
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1. In the sidebar, go to **Settings → Install App**
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2. Click **Install to Workspace**
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3. Review the permissions and click **Allow**
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4. After authorization, you'll see a **Bot User OAuth Token** starting with `xoxb-`
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5. **Copy this token** — this is your `SLACK_BOT_TOKEN`
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:::tip
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If you change scopes or event subscriptions later, you **must reinstall the app** for the changes
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to take effect. The Install App page will show a banner prompting you to do so.
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:::
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---
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## Step 7: Find User IDs for the Allowlist
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Hermes uses Slack **Member IDs** (not usernames or display names) for the allowlist.
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To find a Member ID:
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1. In Slack, click on the user's name or avatar
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2. Click **View full profile**
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3. Click the **⋮** (more) button
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4. Select **Copy member ID**
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Member IDs look like `U01ABC2DEF3`. You need your own Member ID at minimum.
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---
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## Step 8: Configure Hermes
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Add the following to your `~/.hermes/.env` file:
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```bash
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# Required
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SLACK_BOT_TOKEN=xoxb-your-bot-token-here
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SLACK_APP_TOKEN=xapp-your-app-token-here
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SLACK_ALLOWED_USERS=U01ABC2DEF3 # Comma-separated Member IDs
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# Optional
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SLACK_HOME_CHANNEL=C01234567890 # Default channel for cron/scheduled messages
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SLACK_HOME_CHANNEL_NAME=general # Human-readable name for the home channel (optional)
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```
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Or run the interactive setup:
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```bash
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hermes gateway setup # Select Slack when prompted
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```
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Then start the gateway:
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```bash
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hermes gateway # Foreground
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hermes gateway install # Install as a user service
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sudo hermes gateway install --system # Linux only: boot-time system service
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```
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---
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## Step 9: Invite the Bot to Channels
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After starting the gateway, you need to **invite the bot** to any channel where you want it to respond:
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```
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/invite @Hermes Agent
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```
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The bot will **not** automatically join channels. You must invite it to each channel individually.
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---
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## How the Bot Responds
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Understanding how Hermes behaves in different contexts:
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| Context | Behavior |
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|---------|----------|
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| **DMs** | Bot responds to every message — no @mention needed |
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| **Channels** | Bot **only responds when @mentioned** (e.g., `@Hermes Agent what time is it?`). In channels, Hermes replies in a thread attached to that message. |
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| **Threads** | If you @mention Hermes inside an existing thread, it replies in that same thread. |
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:::tip
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In channels, always @mention the bot. Simply typing a message without mentioning it will be ignored.
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This is intentional — it prevents the bot from responding to every message in busy channels.
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:::
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---
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## Configuration Options
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Beyond the required environment variables from Step 8, you can customize Slack bot behavior through `~/.hermes/config.yaml`.
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### Thread & Reply Behavior
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```yaml
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platforms:
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slack:
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# Controls how multi-part responses are threaded
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# "off" — never thread replies to the original message
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# "first" — first chunk threads to user's message (default)
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# "all" — all chunks thread to user's message
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reply_to_mode: "first"
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extra:
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# Whether to reply in a thread (default: true).
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# When false, channel messages get direct channel replies instead
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# of threads. Messages inside existing threads still reply in-thread.
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reply_in_thread: true
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# Also post thread replies to the main channel
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# (Slack's "Also send to channel" feature).
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# Only the first chunk of the first reply is broadcast.
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reply_broadcast: false
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```
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| Key | Default | Description |
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|-----|---------|-------------|
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| `platforms.slack.reply_to_mode` | `"first"` | Threading mode for multi-part messages: `"off"`, `"first"`, or `"all"` |
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| `platforms.slack.extra.reply_in_thread` | `true` | When `false`, channel messages get direct replies instead of threads. Messages inside existing threads still reply in-thread. |
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| `platforms.slack.extra.reply_broadcast` | `false` | When `true`, thread replies are also posted to the main channel. Only the first chunk is broadcast. |
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### Session Isolation
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```yaml
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# Global setting — applies to Slack and all other platforms
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group_sessions_per_user: true
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```
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When `true` (the default), each user in a shared channel gets their own isolated conversation session. Two people talking to Hermes in `#general` will have separate histories and contexts.
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Set to `false` if you want a collaborative mode where the entire channel shares one conversation session. Be aware this means users share context growth and token costs, and one user's `/reset` clears the session for everyone.
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### Mention & Trigger Behavior
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```yaml
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slack:
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# Require @mention in channels (this is the default behavior;
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# the Slack adapter enforces @mention gating in channels regardless,
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# but you can set this explicitly for consistency with other platforms)
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require_mention: true
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# Custom mention patterns that trigger the bot
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# (in addition to the default @mention detection)
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mention_patterns:
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- "hey hermes"
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- "hermes,"
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# Text prepended to every outgoing message
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reply_prefix: ""
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```
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:::info
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Unlike Discord and Telegram, Slack does not have a `free_response_channels` equivalent. The Slack adapter always requires `@mention` in channels — this is hardcoded behavior. In DMs, the bot always responds without needing a mention.
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:::
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### Unauthorized User Handling
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```yaml
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slack:
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# What happens when an unauthorized user (not in SLACK_ALLOWED_USERS) DMs the bot
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# "pair" — prompt them for a pairing code (default)
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# "ignore" — silently drop the message
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unauthorized_dm_behavior: "pair"
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```
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You can also set this globally for all platforms:
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```yaml
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unauthorized_dm_behavior: "pair"
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```
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The platform-specific setting under `slack:` takes precedence over the global setting.
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### Voice Transcription
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```yaml
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# Global setting — enable/disable automatic transcription of incoming voice messages
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stt_enabled: true
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```
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When `true` (the default), incoming audio messages are automatically transcribed using the configured STT provider before being processed by the agent.
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### Full Example
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```yaml
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# Global gateway settings
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group_sessions_per_user: true
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unauthorized_dm_behavior: "pair"
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stt_enabled: true
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# Slack-specific settings
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slack:
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require_mention: true
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unauthorized_dm_behavior: "pair"
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# Platform config
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platforms:
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slack:
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reply_to_mode: "first"
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extra:
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reply_in_thread: true
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reply_broadcast: false
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```
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---
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## Home Channel
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Set `SLACK_HOME_CHANNEL` to a channel ID where Hermes will deliver scheduled messages,
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cron job results, and other proactive notifications. To find a channel ID:
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1. Right-click the channel name in Slack
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2. Click **View channel details**
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3. Scroll to the bottom — the Channel ID is shown there
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```bash
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SLACK_HOME_CHANNEL=C01234567890
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```
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Make sure the bot has been **invited to the channel** (`/invite @Hermes Agent`).
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---
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## Multi-Workspace Support
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Hermes can connect to **multiple Slack workspaces** simultaneously using a single gateway instance. Each workspace is authenticated independently with its own bot user ID.
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### Configuration
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Provide multiple bot tokens as a **comma-separated list** in `SLACK_BOT_TOKEN`:
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```bash
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# Multiple bot tokens — one per workspace
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SLACK_BOT_TOKEN=xoxb-workspace1-token,xoxb-workspace2-token,xoxb-workspace3-token
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# A single app-level token is still used for Socket Mode
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SLACK_APP_TOKEN=xapp-your-app-token
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```
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Or in `~/.hermes/config.yaml`:
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```yaml
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platforms:
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slack:
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token: "xoxb-workspace1-token,xoxb-workspace2-token"
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```
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### OAuth Token File
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In addition to tokens in the environment or config, Hermes also loads tokens from an **OAuth token file** at:
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```
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~/.hermes/platforms/slack/slack_tokens.json
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```
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This file is a JSON object mapping team IDs to token entries:
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```json
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{
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"T01ABC2DEF3": {
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"token": "xoxb-workspace-token-here",
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"team_name": "My Workspace"
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}
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}
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```
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Tokens from this file are merged with any tokens specified via `SLACK_BOT_TOKEN`. Duplicate tokens are automatically deduplicated.
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### How it works
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- The **first token** in the list is the primary token, used for the Socket Mode connection (AsyncApp).
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- Each token is authenticated via `auth.test` on startup. The gateway maps each `team_id` to its own `WebClient` and `bot_user_id`.
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- When a message arrives, Hermes uses the correct workspace-specific client to respond.
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- The primary `bot_user_id` (from the first token) is used for backward compatibility with features that expect a single bot identity.
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---
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## Voice Messages
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Hermes supports voice on Slack:
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- **Incoming:** Voice/audio messages are automatically transcribed using the configured STT provider: local `faster-whisper`, Groq Whisper (`GROQ_API_KEY`), or OpenAI Whisper (`VOICE_TOOLS_OPENAI_KEY`)
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- **Outgoing:** TTS responses are sent as audio file attachments
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---
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## Troubleshooting
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| Problem | Solution |
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|---------|----------|
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| Bot doesn't respond to DMs | Verify `message.im` is in your event subscriptions and the app is reinstalled |
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| Bot works in DMs but not in channels | **Most common issue.** Add `message.channels` and `message.groups` to event subscriptions, reinstall the app, and invite the bot to the channel with `/invite @Hermes Agent` |
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| Bot doesn't respond to @mentions in channels | 1) Check `message.channels` event is subscribed. 2) Bot must be invited to the channel. 3) Ensure `channels:history` scope is added. 4) Reinstall the app after scope/event changes |
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| Bot ignores messages in private channels | Add both the `message.groups` event subscription and `groups:history` scope, then reinstall the app and `/invite` the bot |
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| "Sending messages to this app has been turned off" in DMs | Enable the **Messages Tab** in App Home settings (see Step 5) |
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| "not_authed" or "invalid_auth" errors | Regenerate your Bot Token and App Token, update `.env` |
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| Bot responds but can't post in a channel | Invite the bot to the channel with `/invite @Hermes Agent` |
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| "missing_scope" error | Add the required scope in OAuth & Permissions, then **reinstall** the app |
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| Socket disconnects frequently | Check your network; Bolt auto-reconnects but unstable connections cause lag |
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| Changed scopes/events but nothing changed | You **must reinstall** the app to your workspace after any scope or event subscription change |
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### Quick Checklist
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If the bot isn't working in channels, verify **all** of the following:
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1. ✅ `message.channels` event is subscribed (for public channels)
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2. ✅ `message.groups` event is subscribed (for private channels)
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3. ✅ `app_mention` event is subscribed
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4. ✅ `channels:history` scope is added (for public channels)
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5. ✅ `groups:history` scope is added (for private channels)
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6. ✅ App was **reinstalled** after adding scopes/events
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7. ✅ Bot was **invited** to the channel (`/invite @Hermes Agent`)
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8. ✅ You are **@mentioning** the bot in your message
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---
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## Security
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:::warning
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**Always set `SLACK_ALLOWED_USERS`** with the Member IDs of authorized users. Without this setting,
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the gateway will **deny all messages** by default as a safety measure. Never share your bot tokens —
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treat them like passwords.
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:::
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- Tokens should be stored in `~/.hermes/.env` (file permissions `600`)
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- Rotate tokens periodically via the Slack app settings
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- Audit who has access to your Hermes config directory
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- Socket Mode means no public endpoint is exposed — one less attack surface
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