Hermes Agent is a sophisticated autonomous agent that lives on your server, accessed via a terminal or messaging apps, that remembers what it learns and gets more capable the longer it runs.
Hermes WebUI is a lightweight, dark-themed web app interface in your browser for Hermes Agent.
Full parity with the CLI experience - everything you can do from a terminal,
you can do from this UI. No build step, no framework, no bundler. Just Python
and vanilla JS.
Layout: three-panel. Left sidebar for sessions and navigation, center for chat,
right for workspace file browsing. Model, profile, and workspace controls live in
the composer footer — always visible while composing. A circular context ring
shows token usage at a glance. All settings and session tools are in the
Hermes Control Center (launcher at the sidebar bottom).
|
Light mode with full profile support |
Customize your settings, configure a password |
Workspace file browser with inline preview |
Session projects, tags, and tool call cards |
This gives you nearly 1:1 parity with Hermes CLI from a convenient web UI which you can access securely through an SSH tunnel from your Hermes setup. Single command to start this up, and a single command to SSH tunnel for access on your computer. Every single part of the web UI uses your existing Hermes agent and existing models, without requiring any additional setup.
bootstrap.py / start.sh / ctl.shMost AI tools reset every session. They don’t know who you are, what you worked on, or what
conventions your project follows. You re-explain yourself every time.
Hermes retains context across sessions, runs scheduled jobs while you’re offline, and gets
smarter about your environment the longer it runs. It uses your existing Hermes agent setup,
your existing models, and requires no additional configuration to start.
What makes it different from other agentic tools:
vs. the field (landscape is actively shifting — see docs/why-hermes.md for the full breakdown):
| OpenClaw | Claude Code | Codex CLI | OpenCode | Hermes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Persistent memory (auto) | Yes | Partial† | Partial | Partial | Yes |
| Scheduled jobs (self-hosted) | Yes | No‡ | No | No | Yes |
| Messaging app access | Yes (15+ platforms) | Partial (Telegram/Discord preview) | No | No | Yes (10+) |
| Web UI (self-hosted) | Dashboard only | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Self-improving skills | Partial | No | No | No | Yes |
| Python / ML ecosystem | No (Node.js) | No | No | No | Yes |
| Provider-agnostic | Yes | No (Claude only) | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Open source | Yes (MIT) | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
† Claude Code has CLAUDE.md / MEMORY.md project context and rolling auto-memory, but not full automatic cross-session recall
‡ Claude Code has cloud-managed scheduling (Anthropic infrastructure) and session-scoped /loop; no self-hosted cron
The closest competitor is OpenClaw — both are always-on, self-hosted, open-source agents
with memory, cron, and messaging. The key differences: Hermes writes and saves its own skills
automatically as a core behavior (OpenClaw’s skill system centers on a community marketplace);
Hermes is more stable across updates (OpenClaw has documented release regressions and ClawHub
has had security incidents involving malicious skills); and Hermes runs natively in the Python
ecosystem. See docs/why-hermes.md for the full side-by-side.
Run the repo bootstrap:
git clone https://github.com/nesquena/hermes-webui.git hermes-webui
cd hermes-webui
python3 bootstrap.py
Or keep using the shell launcher:
./start.sh
For self-hosted VM or homelab installs, ctl.sh wraps the common daemon lifecycle commands without requiring fuser or pkill:
./ctl.sh start # background daemon, PID at ~/.hermes/webui.pid
./ctl.sh status # PID, uptime, bound host/port, log path, /health
./ctl.sh logs --lines 100 # tail ~/.hermes/webui.log
./ctl.sh restart
./ctl.sh stop
ctl.sh start runs the bootstrap in foreground/no-browser mode behind the daemon wrapper, writes logs to ~/.hermes/webui.log, and respects .env plus inline overrides such as HERMES_WEBUI_HOST=0.0.0.0 ./ctl.sh start.
Two optional, self-hosted-deployment features — attaching dynamic session-recall prefill to browser turns (Joplin/Obsidian/Notion/llm-wiki routers), and routing browser chat through a running Hermes Gateway — are documented in docs/advanced-chat-setup.md. Most users need neither.
The bootstrap will:
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent/main/scripts/install.sh | bash)./health.--no-browser.Native Windows is not supported for this bootstrap yet. Use Linux, macOS, or WSL2.
For Windows / WSL auto-start at login, seedocs/wsl-autostart.md.
A community-maintained native Windows setup is documented at @markwang2658/hermes-windows-native-guide (companion setup repo: @markwang2658/hermes-windows-native). Notes from the community report in #1952:
python -m venv venv → pip install -r requirements.txt → pwsh .\start.ps1 (it auto-discovers venv\Scripts\python.exe).venv/bin/python, ELF) isn’t invokable by native Windows Python, so use the native setup above. WSL2 stays useful as a parallel install if you want the full bootstrap.py + Linux runtime.If provider setup is still incomplete after install, the onboarding wizard will point you to finish it with hermes model instead of trying to replicate the full CLI setup in-browser.
For a step-by-step walkthrough of the wizard, provider choices, local model server Base URLs, and safe re-runs, see docs/onboarding.md.
If an AI assistant is helping with install, reinstall, bootstrap, provider setup, or first-run support, have it read docs/onboarding-agent-checklist.md before running commands or inspecting logs.
~/.hermes/webui/attachments/<session_id>/, or HERMES_WEBUI_ATTACHMENT_DIR/<session_id>/ when configured)⋯ dropdown per session — pin, move to project, archive, duplicate, delete/usage command)workspace://path/to/file open files in the right-side preview paneconfig.yaml at creation time, so Ollama, LMStudio, and other local endpoints can be configured without editing files manuallyHERMES_WEBUI_PASSWORD env var or Settings panel/loginsystem, dark, light) and Skindefault, ares, mono, slate, poseidon, sisyphus, charizard,sienna, catppuccin, nous, geist-contrast / Geist Contrast)/theme <theme-or-skin>data-skin plus CSS variables; dark mode resolves through the.dark class, not a data-theme custom-theme axis — see THEMES.md/usage command)/ in the composer for autocomplete dropdown/help, /clear, /compress [focus topic], /compact (alias), /model <name>, /workspace <name>, /new, /usage, /themestart.sh auto-detects almost everything; the subsections below cover the knobs for when it can’t, and how to reach the UI remotely.
| Thing | How it finds it |
|---|---|
| Hermes agent dir | HERMES_WEBUI_AGENT_DIR env, then $HERMES_HOME/hermes-agent (Windows default %LOCALAPPDATA%\hermes\hermes-agent, POSIX default ~/.hermes/hermes-agent), then sibling ../hermes-agent |
| Python executable | Agent venv first, then .venv in this repo, then system python3 |
| State directory | HERMES_WEBUI_STATE_DIR env, then $HERMES_HOME/webui (Windows default %LOCALAPPDATA%\hermes\webui, POSIX default ~/.hermes/webui) |
| Default workspace | HERMES_WEBUI_DEFAULT_WORKSPACE env, then ~/workspace, then state dir |
| Port | HERMES_WEBUI_PORT env or first argument, default 8787 |
If discovery finds everything, nothing else is required.
export HERMES_WEBUI_AGENT_DIR=/path/to/hermes-agent
export HERMES_WEBUI_PYTHON=/path/to/python
export HERMES_WEBUI_PORT=9000
export HERMES_WEBUI_AUTO_INSTALL=1 # enable auto-install of agent deps (disabled by default)
./start.sh
Or inline:
HERMES_WEBUI_AGENT_DIR=/custom/path ./start.sh 9000
Full list of environment variables:
| Variable | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
HERMES_WEBUI_AGENT_DIR |
auto-discovered | Path to the hermes-agent checkout |
HERMES_WEBUI_PYTHON |
auto-discovered | Python executable |
HERMES_WEBUI_HOST |
127.0.0.1 |
Bind address (0.0.0.0 for all IPv4, :: for all IPv6, ::1 for IPv6 loopback) |
HERMES_WEBUI_PORT |
8787 |
Port |
HERMES_WEBUI_STATE_DIR |
$HERMES_HOME/webui (Windows default %LOCALAPPDATA%\hermes\webui, POSIX default ~/.hermes/webui) |
Where sessions and state are stored |
HERMES_WEBUI_DEFAULT_WORKSPACE |
~/workspace |
Default workspace |
HERMES_WEBUI_DEFAULT_MODEL |
(provider default) | Optional model override; leave unset to use the active Hermes provider default |
HERMES_WEBUI_PASSWORD |
(unset) | Set to enable password authentication |
HERMES_WEBUI_CSP_CONNECT_EXTRA |
(unset) | Optional space-separated http(s):// or ws(s):// origins to append to the report-only CSP connect-src directive for reverse-proxy or tunnel deployments |
HERMES_WEBUI_EXTENSION_DIR |
(unset) | Optional local directory served at /extensions/; must point to an existing directory before extension injection is enabled |
HERMES_WEBUI_EXTENSION_SCRIPT_URLS |
(unset) | Optional comma-separated same-origin script URLs to inject; see WebUI Extensions |
HERMES_WEBUI_EXTENSION_STYLESHEET_URLS |
(unset) | Optional comma-separated same-origin stylesheet URLs to inject; see WebUI Extensions |
HERMES_HOME |
Windows: %LOCALAPPDATA%\hermes; POSIX: ~/.hermes |
Base directory for Hermes state (affects all paths) |
HERMES_CONFIG_PATH |
$HERMES_HOME/config.yaml |
Path to Hermes config file |
HERMES_WEBUI_AGENT_CACHE_MAX |
25 |
Max live agent instances kept warm in the in-memory LRU. Each pins a full conversation transcript, so this is the dominant lever on resident memory — lower it on installs with many long sessions to cap RAM (at the cost of more cold reloads) |
HERMES_WEBUI_SESSIONS_MAX |
100 |
Max compact Session objects held in the in-memory LRU. Lighter than the agent cache; lower it on installs with hundreds of sessions |
The server binds to 127.0.0.1 by default. To reach it from another machine use an SSH tunnel (ssh -N -L 8787:127.0.0.1:8787 user@host, which start.sh prints for you over SSH), or join your server and phone to a Tailscale network and browse to http://<server-tailscale-ip>:8787 with HERMES_WEBUI_HOST=0.0.0.0 + HERMES_WEBUI_PASSWORD set. Full walkthrough (incl. a community ARM64-Android field report): docs/remote-access.md.
If you prefer to launch the server directly:
cd /path/to/hermes-agent # or wherever sys.path can find Hermes modules
HERMES_WEBUI_PORT=8787 venv/bin/python /path/to/hermes-webui/server.py
Note: use the agent venv Python (or any Python environment that has the Hermes agent dependencies installed). System Python will be missing openai, httpx, and other required packages.
Health check:
curl http://127.0.0.1:8787/health
Pre-built images (amd64 + arm64) are published to GHCR on every release.
For a comprehensive setup guide covering all 3 compose files, common failure modes, and bind-mount migration, see docs/docker.md. The README covers the 5-minute happy path.
The simplest setup: one WebUI container that runs the agent in-process.
git clone https://github.com/nesquena/hermes-webui
cd hermes-webui
cp .env.docker.example .env
# Edit .env if your host UID isn't 1000 (e.g. macOS where UIDs start at 501)
docker compose up -d
# Open http://localhost:8787
Run Compose as the user who owns your Hermes home. sudo docker compose up -d can make ${HOME} expand to the root user’s home, so Docker mounts the wrong .hermes directory instead of your real ~/.hermes and the WebUI starts with config.yaml (not found, using defaults). Prefer adding your user to the Docker group and running docker compose up -d; if you must use sudo, set absolute paths first, for example HERMES_HOME=/home/you/.hermes HERMES_WORKSPACE=/home/you/workspace sudo -E docker compose up -d, then verify with docker compose config.
The container auto-detects your UID/GID from the mounted ~/.hermes volume so files written by the agent stay readable by you on the host.
To enable password protection (required if you expose the port outside 127.0.0.1):
echo "HERMES_WEBUI_PASSWORD=change-me-to-something-strong" >> .env
docker compose up -d --force-recreate
docker run (no compose)docker pull ghcr.io/nesquena/hermes-webui:latest
docker run -d \
-e WANTED_UID=$(id -u) -e WANTED_GID=$(id -g) \
-v ~/.hermes:/home/hermeswebui/.hermes \
-e HERMES_WEBUI_STATE_DIR=/home/hermeswebui/.hermes/webui \
-v ~/workspace:/workspace \
-p 127.0.0.1:8787:8787 \
ghcr.io/nesquena/hermes-webui:latest
docker build -t hermes-webui .
docker run -d \
-e WANTED_UID=$(id -u) -e WANTED_GID=$(id -g) \
-v ~/.hermes:/home/hermeswebui/.hermes \
-e HERMES_WEBUI_STATE_DIR=/home/hermeswebui/.hermes/webui \
-v ~/workspace:/workspace \
-p 127.0.0.1:8787:8787 \
hermes-webui
If you want the agent and WebUI in separate containers (for isolation, or because you’re already running an agent gateway elsewhere):
# Agent + WebUI
docker compose -f docker-compose.two-container.yml up -d
# Agent + Dashboard + WebUI
docker compose -f docker-compose.three-container.yml up -d
Both compose files use named Docker volumes by default, which solves the UID/GID problem by construction. If you need bind mounts to share an existing host directory, see docs/docker.md for the full migration recipe.
Known limitation (#681): in the two-container setup, tools triggered from the WebUI run in the WebUI container, not the agent container. If you need git/node/etc. on the WebUI’s filesystem, either use the single-container setup, extend the WebUI Dockerfile, or use the community all-in-one image.
Source boundary note (#2453): the multi-container setup mounts
hermes-agent-srcread-only into the WebUI by default. This prevents WebUI-side source rewrites but is still an implementation-coupling bridge, not a stable Agent API boundary. Seedocs/rfcs/agent-source-boundary.mdfor the current source/API decoupling inventory.
| Symptom | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
PermissionError at startup |
UID mismatch on bind mount | Set UID=$(id -u) in .env |
.env: permission denied (#1389) |
fix_credential_permissions() enforced 0600 |
Set HERMES_SKIP_CHMOD=1 in .env |
| Workspace appears empty | UID mismatch on /workspace mount |
Set UID=$(id -u) in .env |
git: command not found in chat |
Two-container architectural limit (#681) | Use single-container or extend Dockerfile |
| WebUI can’t find agent source | hermes-agent-src volume misconfigured |
Use the named volumes from compose files as-is |
Podman shared .hermes fails |
Podman 3.4 keep-id limitation |
Use Podman 4+ or single-container |
Host API at localhost fails from WebUI |
Container localhost means the container, not your host (#3012) |
Use http://host.docker.internal:<port> on Docker Desktop, or http://host.containers.internal:<port> on Podman |
WebUI can’t see ~/.hermes after sudo docker compose |
${HOME} expanded to the root user’s home (#3006) |
Run Compose as your user, or pass absolute HERMES_HOME/HERMES_WORKSPACE with sudo -E |
For the deep dive on each of these, see docs/docker.md.
Note: By default, Docker Compose binds to
127.0.0.1(localhost only).
To expose on a network, change the port to"8787:8787"indocker-compose.yml
and setHERMES_WEBUI_PASSWORDto enable authentication.
Tests discover the repo and the Hermes agent dynamically – no hardcoded paths.
cd hermes-webui
pytest tests/ -v --timeout=60
Or using the agent venv explicitly:
/path/to/hermes-agent/venv/bin/python -m pytest tests/ -v
Tests run against an isolated server with a separate state directory.
Production data and real cron jobs are never touched. Current snapshot:
~7,150 tests collected across ~700 test files, run in CI on Python 3.11,
3.12, and 3.13 (3 parallel shards each).
No build step, no framework, no bundler — a Python standard-library HTTP server
and vanilla JS. The backend lives in api/, the frontend in static/.
Backend (api/)
server.py HTTP routing shell + auth middleware
api/
auth.py Optional password authentication, signed cookies, passkeys
config.py Discovery, globals, model detection, reloadable config
helpers.py HTTP helpers, security headers
models.py Session model + CRUD + CLI/state.db bridge
onboarding.py First-run onboarding wizard, OAuth provider support
profiles.py Profile state management, hermes_cli wrapper
routes.py All GET + POST route handlers (if/elif dispatch, no decorators)
state_sync.py /insights sync — message_count to state.db
streaming.py SSE engine, run_agent, cancellation, compression
updates.py Self-update check and release notes
upload.py Multipart parser, file upload handler
workspace.py File ops, workspace helpers, git detection
Frontend (static/)
index.html HTML template
style.css All CSS incl. mobile responsive, themes + skins
ui.js DOM helpers, renderMd, tool cards, context indicator
workspace.js File preview, file ops, git badge, central api() fetch wrapper
sessions.js Session CRUD, collapsible groups, search, reload recovery
messages.js send(), SSE handlers, live streaming, session recovery
panels.js Cron, skills, memory, profiles, settings (Control Center)
commands.js Slash command autocomplete
boot.js Mobile nav, voice input, theme/skin boot, bfcache handler
Tests + packaging
tests/ Pytest suite (~7,150 tests; isolated server/state fixtures)
pyproject.toml Tooling config (ruff lint gate) — not a packaged distribution
Dockerfile python:3.12-slim container image
docker-compose.yml Compose with named volume and optional auth
.github/workflows/ CI: ruff + sharded pytest, browser smoke, Docker smoke,
multi-arch Docker build + GitHub Release on tag
State lives outside the repo at ~/.hermes/webui/ by default
(sessions, workspaces, settings, projects, last_workspace). Override with HERMES_WEBUI_STATE_DIR.
Full design notes and the endpoint catalog are in ARCHITECTURE.md.
The version shown in the WebUI runtime status is the WebUI version only (build/image/tag currently running). It is not a full compatibility map.
The WebUI is still coupled to Hermes Agent internals for runtime execution, provider/model access, and state/schema usage until the stable agent boundary work in #1925 and #2491 land. In practice, the WebUI imports Agent modules directly (api/config.py, api/providers.py, api/streaming.py) and reads Agent state layout directly, so version skew can cause import or behavior drift.
Compatibility policy
hermes-agent + hermes-webui versions in issue reports when upgrade mismatches are suspected.Docker users: pin both image tags (or corresponding pinned source revisions) rather than using latest on one side and a fixed tag on the other. When upgrading the multi-container setup, follow the agent-image upgrade procedure in docs/docker.md (which requires dropping the hermes-agent-src volume before recreating). The current source-boundary status is tracked in docs/rfcs/agent-source-boundary.md.
Start here
docs/why-hermes.md — why Hermes, the mental model, and a detailed comparison to Claude Code / Codex / OpenCode / Cursordocs/onboarding.md — first-run wizard, provider setup, local model server Base URLs, and safe re-runsdocs/troubleshooting.md — diagnostic flows for common failures (e.g. “AIAgent not available”)Using & customizing
THEMES.md — theme + skin system, custom theme guidedocs/workspace-git.md — the workspace Git controlsdocs/EXTENSIONS.md — administrator-controlled WebUI extension injectionDeploying & operating
docs/remote-access.md — SSH tunnel, Tailscale, and phone access (incl. a community ARM64-Android field report)docs/advanced-chat-setup.md — optional dynamic recall-prefill and Gateway-backed browser chat for self-hosted deploymentsdocs/docker.md — Docker compose setup, common failures, and bind-mount migrationdocs/supervisor.md — launchd, systemd, supervisord, runit, and s6 process-supervisor setupdocs/wsl-autostart.md — WSL2 auto-start at Windows logindocs/onboarding-agent-checklist.md — safety rules and pass/fail checks for assistant-led install/reinstall supportContributing & design
CONTRIBUTING.md — contribution style, PR expectations, and local verificationARCHITECTURE.md — system design, all API endpoints, implementation notesTESTING.md — manual browser test plan and automated coverage referenceDESIGN.md — design tokens and the calm-console directiondocs/UIUX-GUIDE.md — UI/UX principles sourced from the design docs and visual inventoriesdocs/CONTRACTS.md — project contract/RFC/design index for contributors and agentsdocs/rfcs/README.md — RFC index for larger architecture and durability proposalsRelease history & plan
CHANGELOG.md — release notes per versionROADMAP.md — feature roadmap and sprint historySPRINTS.md — forward sprint plan with CLI + Claude parity targetsCONTRIBUTORS.md — the full community credit rollHermes WebUI is built with help from the open-source community. Every PR — whether merged directly, absorbed into a batch release, or salvaged from a larger proposal — shapes the project, and we’re grateful to everyone who has taken the time to contribute.
Over 190 contributors have shipped code that landed in a release tag. The full,
continuously-updated credit roll — including everyone with one or two PRs and the
special-thanks roll for design and architectural work — lives in
CONTRIBUTORS.md. A snapshot of the most prolific contributors:
| # | Contributor | PRs | First → latest release |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | @franksong2702 | 148 | v0.49.3 → v0.51.153 |
| 2 | @Michaelyklam | 117 | v0.50.240 → v0.51.139 |
| 3 | @bergeouss | 70 | v0.48.0 → v0.51.46 |
| 4 | @ai-ag2026 | 67 | v0.50.279 → v0.51.190 |
| 5 | @dso2ng | 25 | v0.50.227 → v0.51.153 |
| 6 | @AJV20 | 24 | v0.51.93 → v0.51.188 |
| 7 | @starship-s | 19 | v0.50.123 → v0.51.153 |
| 8 | @jasonjcwu | 16 | v0.50.227 → v0.51.132 |
| 9 | @dobby-d-elf | 15 | v0.51.38 → v0.51.161 |
| 10 | @Jordan-SkyLF | 12 | v0.50.18 → v0.51.66 |
See CONTRIBUTORS.md for the full ranked list of all 194 contributors, including everyone with one or two PRs and the special-thanks roll for design and architectural contributions.
@franksong2702 — Most prolific external contributor (148 PRs, v0.49.3 → v0.51.153)
Across the longest tenure of any external contributor: the session title guard (#301), breadcrumb workspace navigation (#302), embedded workspace terminal (#1099), worktree-backed session creation (#2053), onboarding documentation (#2052), composer footer container queries, streaming-session sidebar exemption (#1327), session sidecar repair, cron output preservation (#1295), profile default workspace persistence, manual /compress async start/status endpoints (#2128), worktree status surface (#2109) + guarded remove (#2156) for the lifecycle umbrella #2057, session post-render dedup (#2166), native-WebUI fast path (#2170), tail-window response trim (#2171), stale-stream guard extension (#2158), CSP report collector (#2160), and a long tail of polish across mobile/responsive, the session sidebar, and the workspace state machine.
@Michaelyklam — Most prolific contributor of recent releases (117 PRs, v0.50.240 → v0.51.139)
Production Docker hardening (#1921, drops sudo-capable staging user), profile-scoped skills endpoints (#1903), gateway PID resolution under profile-scoped HERMES_HOME (#1901), profile-aware AIAgent cache (#1898/#1904), backslash LaTeX delimiters (#1848), Codex quota error surfacing (#1770), shell-route HTML 503 (#1836), stale Kanban client recovery (#1828), context auto-compression toast lifetime (#1988), /goal command (#1866), Kanban detail-view scrolling (#1916), CLI session tool metadata preservation (#1778), Traditional Chinese kanban locale backfill (#1979), v0.51.51 mobile Insights bucketing/layout (#2120/#2121), Hermes run adapter RFC (#2105 for #1925), fork-from-here absolute index (#2198 for #2184), opencode-go custom-provider overlap routing (#2204 for #1894).
@bergeouss — Provider management UI + Docker hardening (70 PRs, v0.48.0 → v0.51.46)
Provider management UI for adding/editing custom providers from Settings, OAuth provider status detection (#1552), two-container Docker setup, profile isolation hardening (per-profile .env secrets), the bulk of what users see when they touch Settings → Providers, Reveal-in-Finder context menu (#1551), gateway status card (#1552), auto-assign session to active project filter (#1550), “What’s new?” link in update banner (#1549), OpenRouter free-tier live fetch (#1548), credential pool 401 self-heal (#1553), inline provider chip + group model count in model picker (#1644).
@ai-ag2026 — Session recovery + audit infrastructure (67 PRs, v0.50.279 → v0.51.190)
Autonomous-AI contributor (Hermes Agent-driven) focused on durability: state.db-backed sidecar reconciliation (#2041), orphan .json.bak recovery on startup (#2035), read-only session recovery audit endpoints (#2036, #2040), active run lifecycle in /health (#2039), crash-safe turn-journal RFC at docs/rfcs/turn-journal.md (#2042), append-only turn-journal helper (#2059), lifecycle events layer (#2062), Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only header (#2084), per-cron toast toggle (#2100), fork-session compression lineage isolation (#2014).
@dso2ng — Session lineage + diagnostics (25 PRs, v0.50.227 → v0.51.153)
/api/session/lineage-report/<sid> endpoint for bounded session graph diagnostics (#2012), stale Mermaid render error cleanup (#1337), session_source="fork" continuation-chain isolation (#2063), lazy lineage-report fetch on sidebar badge expand (#2130), and a long tail of frontend reliability fixes around session loading.
@jasonjcwu — Composer + transcript polish (16 PRs, v0.50.227 → v0.51.132)
Sidebar collapse via active-rail click (#2054, fuses #1884 + #1924), composer chip lightbox (#1758), title fixes for tool-heavy first turns, silent compress-status during session switch (#2185), concurrent-send loss fix (#2186), in-transcript steer message badges (#2187), and a string of frontend polish fixes.
@Jordan-SkyLF — Live streaming + UX polish (12 PRs, v0.50.18 → v0.51.66)
Original sprint of workspace fallback resolution, live reasoning cards (#366, #367, #394–#397), then a recent burst: manual “Refresh usage” button on the Provider quota card (#2150), cancelled-turn status classification (#2151), Firefox sidebar scroll stabilization (#2200), early provisional session titles (#2202), target-aware “What’s new?” update-banner links (#2207), and MCP tools overflow fix in Settings (#2210).
@aronprins — v0.50.0 UI overhaul (PR #242, plus 9 follow-ups)
The biggest single contribution to the project: a complete UI redesign that moved model/profile/workspace controls into the composer footer, replaced the gear-icon settings panel with the Hermes Control Center (tabbed modal), removed the activity bar in favor of inline composer status, redesigned the session list with a ⋯ action dropdown, and added the workspace panel state machine. Plus chat transcript redesign (#587), sidebar declutter (#584), three-column layout refactor (#899), light/dark theme + accent skins (#627), and shared confirm()/prompt() dialog replacement (PR #251 extracted from #242).
@iRonin — Security hardening sprint (PRs #196–#204)
Six consecutive, focused security PRs: session memory leak fix (expired token pruning), CSP + Permissions-Policy headers, 30-second slow-client connection timeout, optional HTTPS/TLS support via environment variables, upstream branch tracking fix for self-update, and CLI session support in the file-browser API. The kind of focused, high-quality security work that makes a self-hosted tool trustworthy.
@lucasrc — Auth-hardening trilogy (PRs #2191, #2192, #2193)
Three coordinated security PRs that all landed in v0.51.57: thread-safe login rate limiter with PBKDF2 key separation, password-hash cache invalidation on Settings save, and the full 64-char HMAC-SHA256 session signature with a backwards-compatible migration bridge. The kind of cleanly-decomposed security work that’s reviewable as three independent pieces.
@LumenYoung — Streaming hot-path correctness (8 PRs, v0.51.47 → v0.51.99)
The original stale-stream writeback guard (#2136 — the bug class the next two releases extended), gateway-state alive-null classification (#2075), compression-banner anchor alignment (#2182), and context-progress ring auto-refresh on compression complete (#2188). Each PR opened a small surgical fix in one of the most fragile subsystems in the codebase.
@dobby-d-elf — Frontend reliability + motion polish (15 PRs, v0.51.38 → v0.51.161)
Workspace fallback on deleted directories (#2138), iPhone PWA bottom-scroll fix (#2143), the new “Activity: X tools” composer footer shimmer animation (#2203), and follow-up animation tuning (#2212).
@JKJameson — Composer + session polish (10 PRs)
Persistent composer draft per session (#1956), and a long tail of polish across the composer and session sidebar.
@gabogabucho — Spanish locale + onboarding wizard
Full Spanish (es) locale covering all UI strings, plus the one-shot bootstrap onboarding wizard that guides new users through provider setup on first launch.
@deboste — Reverse-proxy auth + mobile responsive layout (PRs #3, #4, #5)
Three of the very first community PRs: fixed EventSource/fetch to use URL origin for reverse-proxy setups, corrected model provider routing from config, and added mobile responsive layout with dvh viewport fix. Early foundation work.
@indigokarasu — Visual redesign proposal (PR #213)
A CSS-only redesign of the full UI — proper design tokens, an icon rail sidebar replacing the emoji tab strip, consistent form cards, breadcrumb nav, and 7 built-in themes as custom properties. The PR didn’t merge as-is but shaped the design language and theme architecture that shipped in v0.50.0.
@zenc-cp — Anti-hallucination guard for the ReAct loop (PR #133)
A three-layer approach (ephemeral anti-hallucination prompt, live token filtering, session-history cleanup) that the streaming pipeline still uses.
@Hinotoi-agent — Profile + session security (PRs #351, #2048)
Profile .env secret isolation fix (PR #351) preventing API key leakage between profiles, and session-import workspace validation (PR #2048) blocking a crafted-JSON file-read against /.
@Sanjays2402 — Endless-scroll + Start-jump race fix (PR #1949)
A generation-token + mutex pair fixing the v0.51.30 race between endless-scroll prefetch and Start-jump’s _ensureAllMessagesLoaded. The naive same-flag-check approach (proposed in #1942 and #1962) was a no-op for the post-await race — Sanjays2402’s fix was the correct shape.
@fxd-jason — Real-time approval + clarify via SSE (PRs #1350, #1355)
Replaced 1.5s HTTP polling with SSE long-connections for both approval and clarify, cutting latency from up to 1.5s to near-instant. Got all the correctness details right (atomic subscribe + snapshot, notify-inside-lock, head-of-queue payload, trailing event re-emission).
@happy5318 — Custom provider model dedup (PR #1947)
Fixed the same model from different named custom providers being silently deduplicated in the picker, with Opus catching a race in the original tests that needed augmentation.
@NocGeek — Streaming scroll + manual cron output persistence (7 PRs)
Streaming scroll viewport stability when tool/queue cards insert (#1360), manual cron-run output and metadata persistence (#1372, split from held #1352).
@DavidSchuchert — German translation (PR #190)
Complete German locale (de) covering all UI strings, settings labels, commands, and system messages — and stress-tested the i18n system, exposing several elements that weren’t yet translatable and getting them fixed as part of the same PR.
@Bobby9228 — Mobile Profiles button (PR #265)
Added the Profiles entry to the mobile navigation flow, making profile switching reachable on phones.
@kevin-ho — OLED theme (PR #168)
The 7th built-in theme: pure black backgrounds with warm accents tuned to reduce burn-in risk.
@andrewy-wizard — Chinese localization (PR #177)
Initial Simplified Chinese (zh) locale. One of the first non-English locales.
@DelightRun — session_search fix for WebUI sessions (PR #356)
Tracked down the missing SessionDB injection in the streaming path that was silently breaking the tool for every WebUI session.
@lawrencel1ng — Bandit security fixes (PR #354)
Systematic bandit-scan fixes: URL scheme validation before urlopen, MD5 usedforsecurity=False, and 40+ bare except: pass blocks replaced with proper logging.
@shaoxianbilly — Unicode filename downloads (PR #378)
Proper Content-Disposition with RFC 5987 filename*=UTF-8''... encoding so non-ASCII filenames download without crashing.
@lx3133584 — CSRF fix for reverse proxy (PR #360)
A real-world blocker for anyone hosting behind Nginx Proxy Manager or similar on a port other than 80/443.
@betamod — Security audit (PR #171)
A comprehensive CSRF / SSRF / XSS / env-race-condition audit that shipped in v0.39.0.
@TaraTheStar — Bot name + thinking blocks + login refactor (PRs #132, #176, #181)
Configurable assistant display name, thinking/reasoning block display, and a login page refactor.
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