MCP (Model Context Protocol)
MCP (Model Context Protocol)
Section titled “MCP (Model Context Protocol)”MCP lets Hermes Agent connect to external tool servers so the agent can use tools that live outside Hermes itself — GitHub, databases, file systems, browser stacks, internal APIs, and more.
If you have ever wanted Hermes to use a tool that already exists somewhere else, MCP is usually the cleanest way to do it.
What MCP gives you
Section titled “What MCP gives you”- Access to external tool ecosystems without writing a native Hermes tool first
- Local stdio servers and remote HTTP MCP servers in the same config
- Automatic tool discovery and registration at startup
- Utility wrappers for MCP resources and prompts when supported by the server
- Per-server filtering so you can expose only the MCP tools you actually want Hermes to see
Quick start
Section titled “Quick start”- Install MCP support (already included if you used the standard install script):
cd ~/.hermes/hermes-agentuv pip install -e ".[mcp]"- Add an MCP server to
~/.hermes/config.yaml:
mcp_servers: filesystem: command: "npx" args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem", "/home/user/projects"]- Start Hermes:
hermes chat- Ask Hermes to use the MCP-backed capability.
For example:
List the files in /home/user/projects and summarize the repo structure.Hermes will discover the MCP server’s tools and use them like any other tool.
Two kinds of MCP servers
Section titled “Two kinds of MCP servers”Stdio servers
Section titled “Stdio servers”Stdio servers run as local subprocesses and talk over stdin/stdout.
mcp_servers: github: command: "npx" args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-github"] env: GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN: "***"Use stdio servers when:
- the server is installed locally
- you want low-latency access to local resources
- you are following MCP server docs that show
command,args, andenv
HTTP servers
Section titled “HTTP servers”HTTP MCP servers are remote endpoints Hermes connects to directly.
mcp_servers: remote_api: url: "https://mcp.example.com/mcp" headers: Authorization: "Bearer ***"Use HTTP servers when:
- the MCP server is hosted elsewhere
- your organization exposes internal MCP endpoints
- you do not want Hermes spawning a local subprocess for that integration
Basic configuration reference
Section titled “Basic configuration reference”Hermes reads MCP config from ~/.hermes/config.yaml under mcp_servers.
Common keys
Section titled “Common keys”| Key | Type | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
command | string | Executable for a stdio MCP server |
args | list | Arguments for the stdio server |
env | mapping | Environment variables passed to the stdio server |
url | string | HTTP MCP endpoint |
headers | mapping | HTTP headers for remote servers |
timeout | number | Tool call timeout |
connect_timeout | number | Initial connection timeout |
enabled | bool | If false, Hermes skips the server entirely |
tools | mapping | Per-server tool filtering and utility policy |
Minimal stdio example
Section titled “Minimal stdio example”mcp_servers: filesystem: command: "npx" args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem", "/tmp"]Minimal HTTP example
Section titled “Minimal HTTP example”mcp_servers: company_api: url: "https://mcp.internal.example.com" headers: Authorization: "Bearer ***"How Hermes registers MCP tools
Section titled “How Hermes registers MCP tools”Hermes prefixes MCP tools so they do not collide with built-in names:
mcp_<server_name>_<tool_name>Examples:
| Server | MCP tool | Registered name |
|---|---|---|
filesystem | read_file | mcp_filesystem_read_file |
github | create-issue | mcp_github_create_issue |
my-api | query.data | mcp_my_api_query_data |
In practice, you usually do not need to call the prefixed name manually — Hermes sees the tool and chooses it during normal reasoning.
MCP utility tools
Section titled “MCP utility tools”When supported, Hermes also registers utility tools around MCP resources and prompts:
list_resourcesread_resourcelist_promptsget_prompt
These are registered per server with the same prefix pattern, for example:
mcp_github_list_resourcesmcp_github_get_prompt
Important
Section titled “Important”These utility tools are now capability-aware:
- Hermes only registers resource utilities if the MCP session actually supports resource operations
- Hermes only registers prompt utilities if the MCP session actually supports prompt operations
So a server that exposes callable tools but no resources/prompts will not get those extra wrappers.
Per-server filtering
Section titled “Per-server filtering”You can control which tools each MCP server contributes to Hermes, allowing fine-grained management of your tool namespace.
Disable a server entirely
Section titled “Disable a server entirely”mcp_servers: legacy: url: "https://mcp.legacy.internal" enabled: falseIf enabled: false, Hermes skips the server completely and does not even attempt a connection.
Whitelist server tools
Section titled “Whitelist server tools”mcp_servers: github: command: "npx" args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-github"] env: GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN: "***" tools: include: [create_issue, list_issues]Only those MCP server tools are registered.
Blacklist server tools
Section titled “Blacklist server tools”mcp_servers: stripe: url: "https://mcp.stripe.com" tools: exclude: [delete_customer]All server tools are registered except the excluded ones.
Precedence rule
Section titled “Precedence rule”If both are present:
tools: include: [create_issue] exclude: [create_issue, delete_issue]include wins.
Filter utility tools too
Section titled “Filter utility tools too”You can also separately disable Hermes-added utility wrappers:
mcp_servers: docs: url: "https://mcp.docs.example.com" tools: prompts: false resources: falseThat means:
tools.resources: falsedisableslist_resourcesandread_resourcetools.prompts: falsedisableslist_promptsandget_prompt
Full example
Section titled “Full example”mcp_servers: github: command: "npx" args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-github"] env: GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN: "***" tools: include: [create_issue, list_issues, search_code] prompts: false
stripe: url: "https://mcp.stripe.com" headers: Authorization: "Bearer ***" tools: exclude: [delete_customer] resources: false
legacy: url: "https://mcp.legacy.internal" enabled: falseWhat happens if everything is filtered out?
Section titled “What happens if everything is filtered out?”If your config filters out all callable tools and disables or omits all supported utilities, Hermes does not create an empty runtime MCP toolset for that server.
That keeps the tool list clean.
Runtime behavior
Section titled “Runtime behavior”Discovery time
Section titled “Discovery time”Hermes discovers MCP servers at startup and registers their tools into the normal tool registry.
Dynamic Tool Discovery
Section titled “Dynamic Tool Discovery”MCP servers can notify Hermes when their available tools change at runtime by sending a notifications/tools/list_changed notification. When Hermes receives this notification, it automatically re-fetches the server’s tool list and updates the registry — no manual /reload-mcp required.
This is useful for MCP servers whose capabilities change dynamically (e.g. a server that adds tools when a new database schema is loaded, or removes tools when a service goes offline).
The refresh is lock-protected so rapid-fire notifications from the same server don’t cause overlapping refreshes. Prompt and resource change notifications (prompts/list_changed, resources/list_changed) are received but not yet acted on.
Reloading
Section titled “Reloading”If you change MCP config, use:
/reload-mcpThis reloads MCP servers from config and refreshes the available tool list. For runtime tool changes pushed by the server itself, see Dynamic Tool Discovery above.
Toolsets
Section titled “Toolsets”Each configured MCP server also creates a runtime toolset when it contributes at least one registered tool:
mcp-<server>That makes MCP servers easier to reason about at the toolset level.
Security model
Section titled “Security model”Stdio env filtering
Section titled “Stdio env filtering”For stdio servers, Hermes does not blindly pass your full shell environment.
Only explicitly configured env plus a safe baseline are passed through. This reduces accidental secret leakage.
Config-level exposure control
Section titled “Config-level exposure control”The new filtering support is also a security control:
- disable dangerous tools you do not want the model to see
- expose only a minimal whitelist for a sensitive server
- disable resource/prompt wrappers when you do not want that surface exposed
Example use cases
Section titled “Example use cases”GitHub server with a minimal issue-management surface
Section titled “GitHub server with a minimal issue-management surface”mcp_servers: github: command: "npx" args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-github"] env: GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN: "***" tools: include: [list_issues, create_issue, update_issue] prompts: false resources: falseUse it like:
Show me open issues labeled bug, then draft a new issue for the flaky MCP reconnection behavior.Stripe server with dangerous actions removed
Section titled “Stripe server with dangerous actions removed”mcp_servers: stripe: url: "https://mcp.stripe.com" headers: Authorization: "Bearer ***" tools: exclude: [delete_customer, refund_payment]Use it like:
Look up the last 10 failed payments and summarize common failure reasons.Filesystem server for a single project root
Section titled “Filesystem server for a single project root”mcp_servers: project_fs: command: "npx" args: ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem", "/home/user/my-project"]Use it like:
Inspect the project root and explain the directory layout.Troubleshooting
Section titled “Troubleshooting”MCP server not connecting
Section titled “MCP server not connecting”Check:
# Verify MCP deps are installed (already included in standard install)cd ~/.hermes/hermes-agent && uv pip install -e ".[mcp]"
node --versionnpx --versionThen verify your config and restart Hermes.
Tools not appearing
Section titled “Tools not appearing”Possible causes:
- the server failed to connect
- discovery failed
- your filter config excluded the tools
- the utility capability does not exist on that server
- the server is disabled with
enabled: false
If you are intentionally filtering, this is expected.
Why didn’t resource or prompt utilities appear?
Section titled “Why didn’t resource or prompt utilities appear?”Because Hermes now only registers those wrappers when both are true:
- your config allows them
- the server session actually supports the capability
This is intentional and keeps the tool list honest.
MCP Sampling Support
Section titled “MCP Sampling Support”MCP servers can request LLM inference from Hermes via the sampling/createMessage protocol. This allows an MCP server to ask Hermes to generate text on its behalf — useful for servers that need LLM capabilities but don’t have their own model access.
Sampling is enabled by default for all MCP servers (when the MCP SDK supports it). Configure it per-server under the sampling key:
mcp_servers: my_server: command: "my-mcp-server" sampling: enabled: true # Enable sampling (default: true) model: "openai/gpt-4o" # Override model for sampling requests (optional) max_tokens_cap: 4096 # Max tokens per sampling response (default: 4096) timeout: 30 # Timeout in seconds per request (default: 30) max_rpm: 10 # Rate limit: max requests per minute (default: 10) max_tool_rounds: 5 # Max tool-use rounds in sampling loops (default: 5) allowed_models: [] # Allowlist of model names the server may request (empty = any) log_level: "info" # Audit log level: debug, info, or warning (default: info)The sampling handler includes a sliding-window rate limiter, per-request timeouts, and tool-loop depth limits to prevent runaway usage. Metrics (request count, errors, tokens used) are tracked per server instance.
To disable sampling for a specific server:
mcp_servers: untrusted_server: url: "https://mcp.example.com" sampling: enabled: falseRunning Hermes as an MCP server
Section titled “Running Hermes as an MCP server”In addition to connecting to MCP servers, Hermes can also be an MCP server. This lets other MCP-capable agents (Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, or any MCP client) use Hermes’s messaging capabilities — list conversations, read message history, and send messages across all your connected platforms.
When to use this
Section titled “When to use this”- You want Claude Code, Cursor, or another coding agent to send and read Telegram/Discord/Slack messages through Hermes
- You want a single MCP server that bridges to all of Hermes’s connected messaging platforms at once
- You already have a running Hermes gateway with connected platforms
Quick start
Section titled “Quick start”hermes mcp serveThis starts a stdio MCP server. The MCP client (not you) manages the process lifecycle.
MCP client configuration
Section titled “MCP client configuration”Add Hermes to your MCP client config. For example, in Claude Code’s ~/.claude/claude_desktop_config.json:
{ "mcpServers": { "hermes": { "command": "hermes", "args": ["mcp", "serve"] } }}Or if you installed Hermes in a specific location:
{ "mcpServers": { "hermes": { "command": "/home/user/.hermes/hermes-agent/venv/bin/hermes", "args": ["mcp", "serve"] } }}Available tools
Section titled “Available tools”The MCP server exposes 10 tools, matching OpenClaw’s channel bridge surface plus a Hermes-specific channel browser:
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
conversations_list | List active messaging conversations. Filter by platform or search by name. |
conversation_get | Get detailed info about one conversation by session key. |
messages_read | Read recent message history for a conversation. |
attachments_fetch | Extract non-text attachments (images, media) from a specific message. |
events_poll | Poll for new conversation events since a cursor position. |
events_wait | Long-poll / block until the next event arrives (near-real-time). |
messages_send | Send a message through a platform (e.g. telegram:123456, discord:#general). |
channels_list | List available messaging targets across all platforms. |
permissions_list_open | List pending approval requests observed during this bridge session. |
permissions_respond | Allow or deny a pending approval request. |
Event system
Section titled “Event system”The MCP server includes a live event bridge that polls Hermes’s session database for new messages. This gives MCP clients near-real-time awareness of incoming conversations:
# Poll for new events (non-blocking)events_poll(after_cursor=0)
# Wait for next event (blocks up to timeout)events_wait(after_cursor=42, timeout_ms=30000)Event types: message, approval_requested, approval_resolved
The event queue is in-memory and starts when the bridge connects. Older messages are available through messages_read.
Options
Section titled “Options”hermes mcp serve # Normal modehermes mcp serve --verbose # Debug logging on stderrHow it works
Section titled “How it works”The MCP server reads conversation data directly from Hermes’s session store (~/.hermes/sessions/sessions.json and the SQLite database). A background thread polls the database for new messages and maintains an in-memory event queue. For sending messages, it uses the same send_message infrastructure as the Hermes agent itself.
The gateway does NOT need to be running for read operations (listing conversations, reading history, polling events). It DOES need to be running for send operations, since the platform adapters need active connections.
Current limits
Section titled “Current limits”- Stdio transport only (no HTTP MCP transport yet)
- Event polling at ~200ms intervals via mtime-optimized DB polling (skips work when files are unchanged)
- No
claude/channelpush notification protocol yet - Text-only sends (no media/attachment sending through
messages_send)