Extending the CLI

Hermes exposes protected extension hooks on HermesCLI so wrapper CLIs can add widgets, keybindings, and layout customizations without overriding the 1000+ line run() method. This keeps your extension decoupled from internal changes.

Extension points

There are five extension seams available:

HookPurposeOverride when…
_get_extra_tui_widgets()Inject widgets into the layoutYou need a persistent UI element (panel, status line, mini-player)
_register_extra_tui_keybindings(kb, *, input_area)Add keyboard shortcutsYou need hotkeys (toggle panels, transport controls, modal shortcuts)
_build_tui_layout_children(**widgets)Full control over widget orderingYou need to reorder or wrap existing widgets (rare)
process_command()Add custom slash commandsYou need /mycommand handling (pre-existing hook)
_build_tui_style_dict()Custom prompt_toolkit stylesYou need custom colors or styling (pre-existing hook)

The first three are new protected hooks. The last two already existed.

Quick start: a wrapper CLI

#!/usr/bin/env python3
"""my_cli.py — Example wrapper CLI that extends Hermes."""

from cli import HermesCLI
from prompt_toolkit.layout import FormattedTextControl, Window
from prompt_toolkit.filters import Condition

class MyCLI(HermesCLI):

    def __init__(self, **kwargs):
        super().__init__(**kwargs)
        self._panel_visible = False

    def _get_extra_tui_widgets(self):
        """Add a toggleable info panel above the status bar."""
        cli_ref = self
        return [
            Window(
                FormattedTextControl(lambda: "📊 My custom panel content"),
                height=1,
                filter=Condition(lambda: cli_ref._panel_visible),
            ),
        ]

    def _register_extra_tui_keybindings(self, kb, *, input_area):
        """F2 toggles the custom panel."""
        cli_ref = self

        @kb.add("f2")
        def _toggle_panel(event):
            cli_ref._panel_visible = not cli_ref._panel_visible

    def process_command(self, cmd: str) -> bool:
        """Add a /panel slash command."""
        if cmd.strip().lower() == "/panel":
            self._panel_visible = not self._panel_visible
            state = "visible" if self._panel_visible else "hidden"
            print(f"Panel is now {state}")
            return True
        return super().process_command(cmd)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    cli = MyCLI()
    cli.run()

Run it:

cd ~/.hermes/hermes-agent
source .venv/bin/activate
python my_cli.py

Hook reference

_get_extra_tui_widgets()

Returns a list of prompt_toolkit widgets to insert into the TUI layout. Widgets appear between the spacer and the status bar — above the input area but below the main output.

def _get_extra_tui_widgets(self) -> list:
    return []  # default: no extra widgets

Each widget should be a prompt_toolkit container (e.g., Window, ConditionalContainer, HSplit). Use ConditionalContainer or filter=Condition(...) to make widgets toggleable.

from prompt_toolkit.layout import ConditionalContainer, Window, FormattedTextControl
from prompt_toolkit.filters import Condition

def _get_extra_tui_widgets(self):
    return [
        ConditionalContainer(
            Window(FormattedTextControl("Status: connected"), height=1),
            filter=Condition(lambda: self._show_status),
        ),
    ]

_register_extra_tui_keybindings(kb, *, input_area)

Called after Hermes registers its own keybindings and before the layout is built. Add your keybindings to kb.

def _register_extra_tui_keybindings(self, kb, *, input_area):
    pass  # default: no extra keybindings

Parameters:

def _register_extra_tui_keybindings(self, kb, *, input_area):
    cli_ref = self

    @kb.add("f3")
    def _clear_input(event):
        input_area.text = ""

    @kb.add("f4")
    def _insert_template(event):
        input_area.text = "/search "

Avoid conflicts with built-in keybindings: Enter (submit), Escape Enter (newline), Ctrl-C (interrupt), Ctrl-D (exit), Tab (auto-suggest accept). Function keys F2+ and Ctrl-combinations are generally safe.

_build_tui_layout_children(**widgets)

Override this only when you need full control over widget ordering. Most extensions should use _get_extra_tui_widgets() instead.

def _build_tui_layout_children(self, *, sudo_widget, secret_widget,
    approval_widget, clarify_widget, spinner_widget, spacer,
    status_bar, input_rule_top, image_bar, input_area,
    input_rule_bot, voice_status_bar, completions_menu) -> list:

The default implementation returns:

[
    Window(height=0),       # anchor
    sudo_widget,            # sudo password prompt (conditional)
    secret_widget,          # secret input prompt (conditional)
    approval_widget,        # dangerous command approval (conditional)
    clarify_widget,         # clarify question UI (conditional)
    spinner_widget,         # thinking spinner (conditional)
    spacer,                 # fills remaining vertical space
    *self._get_extra_tui_widgets(),  # YOUR WIDGETS GO HERE
    status_bar,             # model/token/context status line
    input_rule_top,         # ─── border above input
    image_bar,              # attached images indicator
    input_area,             # user text input
    input_rule_bot,         # ─── border below input
    voice_status_bar,       # voice mode status (conditional)
    completions_menu,       # autocomplete dropdown
]

Layout diagram

The default layout from top to bottom:

  1. Output area — scrolling conversation history
  2. Spacer
  3. Extra widgets — from _get_extra_tui_widgets()
  4. Status bar — model, context %, elapsed time
  5. Image bar — attached image count
  6. Input area — user prompt
  7. Voice status — recording indicator
  8. Completions menu — autocomplete suggestions

Tips