Files
hermes/website/docs/user-guide/skills/bundled/software-development/software-development-python-debugpy.md
Teknium 252d68fd45 docs: deep audit — fix stale config keys, missing commands, and registry drift (#22784)
* docs: deep audit — fix stale config keys, missing commands, and registry drift

Cross-checked ~80 high-impact docs pages (getting-started, reference, top-level
user-guide, user-guide/features) against the live registries:

  hermes_cli/commands.py    COMMAND_REGISTRY (slash commands)
  hermes_cli/auth.py        PROVIDER_REGISTRY (providers)
  hermes_cli/config.py      DEFAULT_CONFIG (config keys)
  toolsets.py               TOOLSETS (toolsets)
  tools/registry.py         get_all_tool_names() (tools)
  python -m hermes_cli.main <subcmd> --help (CLI args)

reference/
- cli-commands.md: drop duplicate hermes fallback row + duplicate section,
  add stepfun/lmstudio to --provider enum, expand auth/mcp/curator subcommand
  lists to match --help output (status/logout/spotify, login, archive/prune/
  list-archived).
- slash-commands.md: add missing /sessions and /reload-skills entries +
  correct the cross-platform Notes line.
- tools-reference.md: drop bogus '68 tools' headline, drop fictional
  'browser-cdp toolset' (these tools live in 'browser' and are runtime-gated),
  add missing 'kanban' and 'video' toolset sections, fix MCP example to use
  the real mcp_<server>_<tool> prefix.
- toolsets-reference.md: list browser_cdp/browser_dialog inside the 'browser'
  row, add missing 'kanban' and 'video' toolset rows, drop the stale
  '38 tools' count for hermes-cli.
- profile-commands.md: add missing install/update/info subcommands, document
  fish completion.
- environment-variables.md: dedupe GMI_API_KEY/GMI_BASE_URL rows (kept the
  one with the correct gmi-serving.com default).
- faq.md: Anthropic/Google/OpenAI examples — direct providers exist (not just
  via OpenRouter), refresh the OpenAI model list.

getting-started/
- installation.md: PortableGit (not MinGit) is what the Windows installer
  fetches; document the 32-bit MinGit fallback.
- installation.md / termux.md: installer prefers .[termux-all] then falls
  back to .[termux].
- nix-setup.md: Python 3.12 (not 3.11), Node.js 22 (not 20); fix invalid
  'nix flake update --flake' invocation.
- updating.md: 'hermes backup restore --state pre-update' doesn't exist —
  point at the snapshot/quick-snapshot flow; correct config key
  'updates.pre_update_backup' (was 'update.backup').

user-guide/
- configuration.md: api_max_retries default 3 (not 2); display.runtime_footer
  is the real key (not display.runtime_metadata_footer); checkpoints defaults
  enabled=false / max_snapshots=20 (not true / 50).
- configuring-models.md: 'hermes model list' / 'hermes model set ...' don't
  exist — hermes model is interactive only.
- tui.md: busy_indicator -> tui_status_indicator with values
  kaomoji|emoji|unicode|ascii (not kawaii|minimal|dots|wings|none).
- security.md: SSH backend keys (TERMINAL_SSH_HOST/USER/KEY) live in .env,
  not config.yaml.
- windows-wsl-quickstart.md: there is no 'hermes api' subcommand — the
  OpenAI-compatible API server runs inside hermes gateway.

user-guide/features/
- computer-use.md: approvals.mode (not security.approval_level); fix broken
  ./browser-use.md link to ./browser.md.
- fallback-providers.md: top-level fallback_providers (not
  model.fallback_providers); the picker is subcommand-based, not modal.
- api-server.md: API_SERVER_* are env vars — write to per-profile .env,
  not 'hermes config set' which targets YAML.
- web-search.md: drop web_crawl as a registered tool (it isn't); deep-crawl
  modes are exposed through web_extract.
- kanban.md: failure_limit default is 2, not '~5'.
- plugins.md: drop hard-coded '33 providers' count.
- honcho.md: fix unclosed quote in echo HONCHO_API_KEY snippet; document
  that 'hermes honcho' subcommand is gated on memory.provider=honcho;
  reconcile subcommand list with actual --help output.
- memory-providers.md: legacy 'hermes honcho setup' redirect documented.

Verified via 'npm run build' — site builds cleanly; broken-link count went
from 149 to 146 (no regressions, fixed a few in passing).

* docs: round 2 audit fixes + regenerate skill catalogs

Follow-up to the previous commit on this branch:

Round 2 manual fixes:
- quickstart.md: KIMI_CODING_API_KEY mentioned alongside KIMI_API_KEY;
  voice-mode and ACP install commands rewritten — bare 'pip install ...'
  doesn't work for curl-installed setups (no pip on PATH, not in repo
  dir); replaced with 'cd ~/.hermes/hermes-agent && uv pip install -e
  ".[voice]"'. ACP already ships in [all] so the curl install includes it.
- cli.md / configuration.md: 'auxiliary.compression.model' shown as
  'google/gemini-3-flash-preview' (the doc's own claimed default);
  actual default is empty (= use main model). Reworded as 'leave empty
  (default) or pin a cheap model'.
- built-in-plugins.md: added the bundled 'kanban/dashboard' plugin row
  that was missing from the table.

Regenerated skill catalogs:
- ran website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py to refresh all 163 per-skill
  pages and both reference catalogs (skills-catalog.md,
  optional-skills-catalog.md). This adds the entries that were genuinely
  missing — productivity/teams-meeting-pipeline (bundled),
  optional/finance/* (entire category — 7 skills:
  3-statement-model, comps-analysis, dcf-model, excel-author, lbo-model,
  merger-model, pptx-author), creative/hyperframes,
  creative/kanban-video-orchestrator, devops/watchers,
  productivity/shop-app, research/searxng-search,
  apple/macos-computer-use — and rewrites every other per-skill page from
  the current SKILL.md. Most diffs are tiny (one line of refreshed
  metadata).

Validation:
- 'npm run build' succeeded.
- Broken-link count moved 146 -> 155 — the +9 are zh-Hans translation
  shells that lag every newly-added skill page (pre-existing pattern).
  No regressions on any en/ page.
2026-05-09 13:19:51 -07:00

394 lines
14 KiB
Markdown

---
title: "Python Debugpy — Debug Python: pdb REPL + debugpy remote (DAP)"
sidebar_label: "Python Debugpy"
description: "Debug Python: pdb REPL + debugpy remote (DAP)"
---
{/* This page is auto-generated from the skill's SKILL.md by website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py. Edit the source SKILL.md, not this page. */}
# Python Debugpy
Debug Python: pdb REPL + debugpy remote (DAP).
## Skill metadata
| | |
|---|---|
| Source | Bundled (installed by default) |
| Path | `skills/software-development/python-debugpy` |
| Version | `1.0.0` |
| Author | Hermes Agent |
| License | MIT |
| Platforms | linux, macos |
| Tags | `debugging`, `python`, `pdb`, `debugpy`, `breakpoints`, `dap`, `post-mortem` |
| Related skills | [`systematic-debugging`](/docs/user-guide/skills/bundled/software-development/software-development-systematic-debugging), [`node-inspect-debugger`](/docs/user-guide/skills/bundled/software-development/software-development-node-inspect-debugger), [`debugging-hermes-tui-commands`](/docs/user-guide/skills/bundled/software-development/software-development-debugging-hermes-tui-commands) |
## Reference: full SKILL.md
:::info
The following is the complete skill definition that Hermes loads when this skill is triggered. This is what the agent sees as instructions when the skill is active.
:::
# Python Debugger (pdb + debugpy)
## Overview
Three tools, picked by situation:
| Tool | When |
|---|---|
| **`breakpoint()` + pdb** | Local, interactive, simplest. Add `breakpoint()` in the source, run normally, get a REPL at that line. |
| **`python -m pdb`** | Launch an existing script under pdb with no source edits. Useful for quick poking. |
| **`debugpy`** | Remote / headless / "attach to already-running process." Talks DAP, scriptable from terminal, works for long-lived processes (gateway, daemon, PTY children). |
**Start with `breakpoint()`.** It's the cheapest thing that works.
## When to Use
- A test fails and the traceback doesn't reveal why a value is wrong
- You need to step through a function and watch a collection mutate
- A long-running process (hermes gateway, tui_gateway) misbehaves and you can't restart it
- Post-mortem: an exception fired in prod-ish code and you want to inspect locals at the crash site
- A subprocess / child (Python `_SlashWorker`, PTY bridge worker) is the actual bug site
**Don't use for:** things `print()` / `logging.debug` solve in under a minute, or things `pytest -vv --tb=long --showlocals` already reveals.
## pdb Quick Reference
Inside any pdb prompt (`(Pdb)`):
| Command | Action |
|---|---|
| `h` / `h cmd` | help |
| `n` | next line (step over) |
| `s` | step into |
| `r` | return from current function |
| `c` | continue |
| `unt N` | continue until line N |
| `j N` | jump to line N (same function only) |
| `l` / `ll` | list source around current line / full function |
| `w` | where (stack trace) |
| `u` / `d` | move up / down in the stack |
| `a` | print args of the current function |
| `p expr` / `pp expr` | print / pretty-print expression |
| `display expr` | auto-print expr on every stop |
| `b file:line` | set breakpoint |
| `b func` | break on function entry |
| `b file:line, cond` | conditional breakpoint |
| `cl N` | clear breakpoint N |
| `tbreak file:line` | one-shot breakpoint |
| `!stmt` | execute arbitrary Python (assignments included) |
| `interact` | drop into full Python REPL in current scope (Ctrl+D to exit) |
| `q` | quit |
The `interact` command is the most powerful — you can import anything, inspect complex objects, even call methods that mutate state. Locals are read-only by default; use `!x = 42` from the `(Pdb)` prompt to mutate.
## Recipe 1: Local breakpoint
Easiest. Edit the file:
```python
def compute(x, y):
result = some_helper(x)
breakpoint() # <-- drops into pdb here
return result + y
```
Run the code normally. You land at the `breakpoint()` line with full access to locals.
**Don't forget to remove `breakpoint()` before committing.** Use `git diff` or a pre-commit grep:
```bash
rg -n 'breakpoint\(\)' --type py
```
## Recipe 2: Launch a script under pdb (no source edits)
```bash
python -m pdb path/to/script.py arg1 arg2
# Lands at first line of script
(Pdb) b path/to/script.py:42
(Pdb) c
```
## Recipe 3: Debug a pytest test
The hermes test runner and pytest both support this:
```bash
# Drop to pdb on failure (or on any raised exception):
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/path/to/test_file.py::test_name --pdb
# Drop to pdb at the START of the test:
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/path/to/test_file.py::test_name --trace
# Show locals in tracebacks without pdb:
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/path/to/test_file.py --showlocals --tb=long
```
Note: `scripts/run_tests.sh` uses xdist (`-n 4`) by default, and pdb does NOT work under xdist. Add `-p no:xdist` or run a single test with `-n 0`:
```bash
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/foo_test.py::test_bar --pdb -p no:xdist
# or
source .venv/bin/activate
python -m pytest tests/foo_test.py::test_bar --pdb
```
This bypasses the hermetic-env guarantees — fine for debugging, but re-run under the wrapper to confirm before pushing.
## Recipe 4: Post-mortem on any exception
```python
import pdb, sys
try:
run_the_thing()
except Exception:
pdb.post_mortem(sys.exc_info()[2])
```
Or wrap a whole script:
```bash
python -m pdb -c continue script.py
# When it crashes, pdb catches it and you're in the frame of the exception
```
Or set a global hook in a repl/jupyter:
```python
import sys
def excepthook(etype, value, tb):
import pdb; pdb.post_mortem(tb)
sys.excepthook = excepthook
```
## Recipe 5: Remote debug with debugpy (attach to running process)
For long-lived processes: Hermes gateway, tui_gateway, a daemon, a process that's already misbehaving and can't be restarted clean.
### Setup
```bash
source /home/bb/hermes-agent/.venv/bin/activate
pip install debugpy
```
### Pattern A: Source-edit — process waits for debugger at launch
Add near the top of the entry point (or inside the function you want to debug):
```python
import debugpy
debugpy.listen(("127.0.0.1", 5678))
print("debugpy listening on 5678, waiting for client...", flush=True)
debugpy.wait_for_client()
debugpy.breakpoint() # optional: pause immediately once attached
```
Start the process; it blocks on `wait_for_client()`.
### Pattern B: No source edit — launch with `-m debugpy`
```bash
python -m debugpy --listen 127.0.0.1:5678 --wait-for-client your_script.py arg1
```
Equivalent for module entry:
```bash
python -m debugpy --listen 127.0.0.1:5678 --wait-for-client -m your.module
```
### Pattern C: Attach to an already-running process
Needs the PID and debugpy preinstalled in the target's environment:
```bash
python -m debugpy --listen 127.0.0.1:5678 --pid <pid>
# debugpy injects itself into the process. Then attach a client as below.
```
Some kernels/security configs block the ptrace-based injection (`/proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope`). Fix with:
```bash
echo 0 | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope
```
### Connecting a client from the terminal
The easiest terminal-side DAP client is VS Code CLI or a small script. From inside Hermes you have two practical options:
**Option 1: `debugpy`'s own CLI REPL** — not an official feature, but a tiny DAP client script:
```python
# /tmp/dap_client.py
import socket, json, itertools, time, sys
HOST, PORT = "127.0.0.1", 5678
s = socket.create_connection((HOST, PORT))
seq = itertools.count(1)
def send(msg):
msg["seq"] = next(seq)
body = json.dumps(msg).encode()
s.sendall(f"Content-Length: {len(body)}\r\n\r\n".encode() + body)
def recv():
header = b""
while b"\r\n\r\n" not in header:
header += s.recv(1)
length = int(header.decode().split("Content-Length:")[1].split("\r\n")[0].strip())
body = b""
while len(body) < length:
body += s.recv(length - len(body))
return json.loads(body)
send({"type": "request", "command": "initialize", "arguments": {"adapterID": "python"}})
print(recv())
send({"type": "request", "command": "attach", "arguments": {}})
print(recv())
send({"type": "request", "command": "setBreakpoints",
"arguments": {"source": {"path": sys.argv[1]},
"breakpoints": [{"line": int(sys.argv[2])}]}})
print(recv())
send({"type": "request", "command": "configurationDone"})
# ... loop reading events and sending continue/stepIn/etc.
```
This is fine for one-off automation but painful as an interactive UX.
**Option 2: Attach from VS Code / Cursor / Zed** — if the user has one open, they can add a `launch.json`:
```json
{
"name": "Attach to Hermes",
"type": "debugpy",
"request": "attach",
"connect": { "host": "127.0.0.1", "port": 5678 },
"justMyCode": false,
"pathMappings": [
{ "localRoot": "${workspaceFolder}", "remoteRoot": "/home/bb/hermes-agent" }
]
}
```
**Option 3: Ditch DAP, use `remote-pdb`** — usually what you actually want from a terminal agent:
```bash
pip install remote-pdb
```
In your code:
```python
from remote_pdb import set_trace
set_trace(host="127.0.0.1", port=4444) # blocks until connection
```
Then from the terminal:
```bash
nc 127.0.0.1 4444
# You get a (Pdb) prompt exactly as if debugging locally.
```
`remote-pdb` is the cleanest agent-friendly choice when `debugpy`'s DAP protocol is overkill. Use `debugpy` only when you actually need IDE integration.
## Debugging Hermes-specific Processes
### Tests
See Recipe 3. Always add `-p no:xdist` or run single tests without xdist.
### `run_agent.py` / CLI — one-shot
Easiest: add `breakpoint()` near the suspect line, then run `hermes` normally. Control returns to your terminal at the pause point.
### `tui_gateway` subprocess (spawned by `hermes --tui`)
The gateway runs as a child of the Node TUI. Options:
**A. Source-edit the gateway:**
```python
# tui_gateway/server.py near the top of serve()
import debugpy
debugpy.listen(("127.0.0.1", 5678))
debugpy.wait_for_client()
```
Start `hermes --tui`. The TUI will appear frozen (its backend is waiting). Attach a client; execution resumes when you `continue`.
**B. Use `remote-pdb` at a specific handler:**
```python
from remote_pdb import set_trace
set_trace(host="127.0.0.1", port=4444) # in the RPC handler you want to trap
```
Trigger the matching slash command from the TUI, then `nc 127.0.0.1 4444` in another terminal.
### `_SlashWorker` subprocess
Same pattern — `remote-pdb` with `set_trace()` inside the worker's `exec` path. The worker is persistent across slash commands, so the first trigger blocks until you connect; subsequent slash commands pass through normally unless you re-arm.
### Gateway (`gateway/run.py`)
Long-lived. Use `remote-pdb` at a handler, or `debugpy` with `--wait-for-client` if you're restarting the gateway anyway.
## Common Pitfalls
1. **pdb under pytest-xdist silently does nothing.** You won't see the prompt, the test just hangs. Always use `-p no:xdist` or `-n 0`.
2. **`breakpoint()` in CI / non-TTY contexts hangs the process.** Safe locally; never commit it. Add a pre-commit grep as a safety net.
3. **`PYTHONBREAKPOINT=0`** disables all `breakpoint()` calls. Check the env if your breakpoint isn't hitting:
```bash
echo $PYTHONBREAKPOINT
```
4. **`debugpy.listen` blocks only if you also call `wait_for_client()`.** Without it, execution continues and your first breakpoint may fire before the client is attached.
5. **Attach to PID fails on hardened kernels.** `ptrace_scope=1` (Ubuntu default) allows only same-user ptrace of child processes. Workaround: `echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope` (needs root) or launch under `debugpy` from the start.
6. **Threads.** `pdb` only debugs the current thread. For multithreaded code, use `debugpy` (thread-aware DAP) or set `threading.settrace()` per thread.
7. **asyncio.** `pdb` works in coroutines but `await` inside pdb requires Python 3.13+ or `await` from `interact` mode on older versions. For 3.11/3.12, use `asyncio.run_coroutine_threadsafe` tricks or `!stmt`-based awaits via `asyncio.ensure_future`.
8. **`scripts/run_tests.sh` strips credentials and sets `HOME=<tmpdir>`.** If your bug depends on user config or real API keys, it won't reproduce under the wrapper. Debug with raw `pytest` first to repro, then re-confirm under the wrapper.
9. **Forking / multiprocessing.** pdb does not follow forks. Each child needs its own `breakpoint()` or `set_trace()`. For Hermes subagents, debug one process at a time.
## Verification Checklist
- [ ] After `pip install debugpy`, confirm: `python -c "import debugpy; print(debugpy.__version__)"`
- [ ] For remote debug, confirm the port is actually listening: `ss -tlnp | grep 5678`
- [ ] First breakpoint actually hits (if it doesn't, you likely have `PYTHONBREAKPOINT=0`, you're under xdist, or execution finished before attach)
- [ ] `where` / `w` shows the expected call stack
- [ ] Post-debug cleanup: no stray `breakpoint()` / `set_trace()` in committed code
```bash
rg -n 'breakpoint\(\)|set_trace\(|debugpy\.listen' --type py
```
## One-Shot Recipes
**"Why is this dict missing a key?"**
```python
# add above the KeyError site
breakpoint()
# then in pdb:
(Pdb) pp d
(Pdb) pp list(d.keys())
(Pdb) w # how did we get here
```
**"This test passes in isolation but fails in the suite."**
```bash
scripts/run_tests.sh tests/the_test.py --pdb -p no:xdist
# But if it only fails WITH other tests:
source .venv/bin/activate
python -m pytest tests/ -x --pdb -p no:xdist
# Now it pdb-traps at the exact failing test after state accumulated.
```
**"My async handler deadlocks."**
```python
# Add at handler entry
import remote_pdb; remote_pdb.set_trace(host="127.0.0.1", port=4444)
```
Trigger the handler. `nc 127.0.0.1 4444`, then `w` to see the suspended frame, `!import asyncio; asyncio.all_tasks()` to see what else is pending.
**"Post-mortem on a crash in an Ink child process / subprocess."**
```bash
PYTHONFAULTHANDLER=1 python -m pdb -c continue path/to/entrypoint.py
# On crash, pdb lands at the frame of the exception with full locals
```