| --- |
| title: Vision & Image Paste |
| description: Paste images from your clipboard into the Hermes CLI for multimodal vision analysis. |
| sidebar_label: Vision & Image Paste |
| sidebar_position: 7 |
| --- |
| |
| # Vision & Image Paste |
|
|
| Hermes Agent supports **multimodal vision** β you can paste images from your clipboard directly into the CLI and ask the agent to analyze, describe, or work with them. Images are sent to the model as base64-encoded content blocks, so any vision-capable model can process them. |
|
|
| ## How It Works |
|
|
| 1. Copy an image to your clipboard (screenshot, browser image, etc.) |
| 2. Attach it using one of the methods below |
| 3. Type your question and press Enter |
| 4. The image appears as a `[π Image #1]` badge above the input |
| 5. On submit, the image is sent to the model as a vision content block |
|
|
| You can attach multiple images before sending β each gets its own badge. Press `Ctrl+C` to clear all attached images. |
|
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| Images are saved to `~/.hermes/images/` as PNG files with timestamped filenames. |
|
|
| ## Paste Methods |
|
|
| How you attach an image depends on your terminal environment. Not all methods work everywhere β here's the full breakdown: |
|
|
| ### `/paste` Command |
|
|
| **The most reliable explicit image-attach fallback.** |
|
|
| ``` |
| /paste |
| ``` |
|
|
| Type `/paste` and press Enter. Hermes checks your clipboard for an image and attaches it. This is the safest option when your terminal rewrites `Cmd+V`/`Ctrl+V`, or when you copied only an image and there is no bracketed-paste text payload to inspect. |
|
|
| ### Ctrl+V / Cmd+V |
|
|
| Hermes now treats paste as a layered flow: |
| - normal text paste first |
| - native clipboard / OSC52 text fallback if the terminal did not deliver text cleanly |
| - image attach when the clipboard or pasted payload resolves to an image or image path |
|
|
| This means pasted macOS screenshot temp paths and `file://...` image URIs can attach immediately instead of sitting in the composer as raw text. |
|
|
| :::warning |
| If your clipboard has **only an image** (no text), terminals still cannot send binary image bytes directly. Use `/paste` as the explicit image-attach fallback. |
| ::: |
|
|
| ### `/terminal-setup` for VS Code / Cursor / Windsurf |
|
|
| If you run the TUI inside a local VS Code-family integrated terminal on macOS, Hermes can install the recommended `workbench.action.terminal.sendSequence` bindings for better multiline and undo/redo parity: |
|
|
| ```text |
| /terminal-setup |
| ``` |
|
|
| This is especially useful when `Cmd+Enter`, `Cmd+Z`, or `Shift+Cmd+Z` are being intercepted by the IDE. Run it on the local machine only β not inside an SSH session. |
|
|
| ## Platform Compatibility |
|
|
| | Environment | `/paste` | Cmd/Ctrl+V | `/terminal-setup` | Notes | |
| |---|:---:|:---:|:---:|---| |
| | **macOS Terminal / iTerm2** | β
| β
| n/a | Best experience β native clipboard + screenshot-path recovery | |
| | **Apple Terminal** | β
| β
| n/a | If Cmd+β/β/β« gets rewritten, use Ctrl+A / Ctrl+E / Ctrl+U fallbacks | |
| | **Linux X11 desktop** | β
| β
| n/a | Requires `xclip` (`apt install xclip`) | |
| | **Linux Wayland desktop** | β
| β
| n/a | Requires `wl-paste` (`apt install wl-clipboard`) | |
| | **WSL2 (Windows Terminal)** | β
| β
| n/a | Uses `powershell.exe` β no extra install needed | |
| | **VS Code / Cursor / Windsurf (local)** | β
| β
| β
| Recommended for better Cmd+Enter / undo / redo parity | |
| | **VS Code / Cursor / Windsurf (SSH)** | βΒ² | βΒ² | βΒ³ | Run `/terminal-setup` on the local machine instead | |
| | **SSH terminal (any)** | βΒ² | βΒ² | n/a | Remote clipboard not accessible | |
|
|
| Β² See [SSH & Remote Sessions](#ssh--remote-sessions) below |
| Β³ The command writes local IDE keybindings and should not be run from the remote host |
|
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| ## Platform-Specific Setup |
|
|
| ### macOS |
|
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| **No setup required.** Hermes uses `osascript` (built into macOS) to read the clipboard. For faster performance, optionally install `pngpaste`: |
|
|
| ```bash |
| brew install pngpaste |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### Linux (X11) |
|
|
| Install `xclip`: |
|
|
| ```bash |
| # Ubuntu/Debian |
| sudo apt install xclip |
| |
| # Fedora |
| sudo dnf install xclip |
| |
| # Arch |
| sudo pacman -S xclip |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### Linux (Wayland) |
|
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| Modern Linux desktops (Ubuntu 22.04+, Fedora 34+) often use Wayland by default. Install `wl-clipboard`: |
|
|
| ```bash |
| # Ubuntu/Debian |
| sudo apt install wl-clipboard |
| |
| # Fedora |
| sudo dnf install wl-clipboard |
| |
| # Arch |
| sudo pacman -S wl-clipboard |
| ``` |
|
|
| :::tip How to check if you're on Wayland |
| ```bash |
| echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE |
| # "wayland" = Wayland, "x11" = X11, "tty" = no display server |
| ``` |
| ::: |
|
|
| ### WSL2 |
|
|
| **No extra setup required.** Hermes detects WSL2 automatically (via `/proc/version`) and uses `powershell.exe` to access the Windows clipboard through .NET's `System.Windows.Forms.Clipboard`. This is built into WSL2's Windows interop β `powershell.exe` is available by default. |
|
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| The clipboard data is transferred as base64-encoded PNG over stdout, so no file path conversion or temp files are needed. |
|
|
| :::info WSLg Note |
| If you're running WSLg (WSL2 with GUI support), Hermes tries the PowerShell path first, then falls back to `wl-paste`. WSLg's clipboard bridge only supports BMP format for images β Hermes auto-converts BMP to PNG using Pillow (if installed) or ImageMagick's `convert` command. |
| ::: |
|
|
| #### Verify WSL2 clipboard access |
|
|
| ```bash |
| # 1. Check WSL detection |
| grep -i microsoft /proc/version |
| |
| # 2. Check PowerShell is accessible |
| which powershell.exe |
| |
| # 3. Copy an image, then check |
| powershell.exe -NoProfile -Command "Add-Type -AssemblyName System.Windows.Forms; [System.Windows.Forms.Clipboard]::ContainsImage()" |
| # Should print "True" |
| ``` |
|
|
| ## SSH & Remote Sessions |
|
|
| **Clipboard image paste does not fully work over SSH.** When you SSH into a remote machine, the Hermes CLI runs on the remote host. Clipboard tools (`xclip`, `wl-paste`, `powershell.exe`, `osascript`) read the clipboard of the machine they run on β which is the remote server, not your local machine. Your local clipboard image is therefore inaccessible from the remote side. |
|
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| Text can sometimes still bridge through terminal paste or OSC52, but image clipboard access and local screenshot temp paths remain tied to the machine running Hermes. |
|
|
| ### Workarounds for SSH |
|
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| 1. **Upload the image file** β Save the image locally, upload it to the remote server via `scp`, VSCode's file explorer (drag-and-drop), or any file transfer method. Then reference it by path. *(A `/attach <filepath>` command is planned for a future release.)* |
|
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| 2. **Use a URL** β If the image is accessible online, just paste the URL in your message. The agent can use `vision_analyze` to look at any image URL directly. |
|
|
| 3. **X11 forwarding** β Connect with `ssh -X` to forward X11. This lets `xclip` on the remote machine access your local X11 clipboard. Requires an X server running locally (XQuartz on macOS, built-in on Linux X11 desktops). Slow for large images. |
|
|
| 4. **Use a messaging platform** β Send images to Hermes via Telegram, Discord, Slack, or WhatsApp. These platforms handle image upload natively and are not affected by clipboard/terminal limitations. |
|
|
| ## Why Terminals Can't Paste Images |
|
|
| This is a common source of confusion, so here's the technical explanation: |
|
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| Terminals are **text-based** interfaces. When you press Ctrl+V (or Cmd+V), the terminal emulator: |
|
|
| 1. Reads the clipboard for **text content** |
| 2. Wraps it in [bracketed paste](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bracketed-paste) escape sequences |
| 3. Sends it to the application through the terminal's text stream |
|
|
| If the clipboard contains only an image (no text), the terminal has nothing to send. There is no standard terminal escape sequence for binary image data. The terminal simply does nothing. |
|
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| This is why Hermes uses a separate clipboard check β instead of receiving image data through the terminal paste event, it calls OS-level tools (`osascript`, `powershell.exe`, `xclip`, `wl-paste`) directly via subprocess to read the clipboard independently. |
|
|
| ## Supported Models |
|
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| Image paste works with any vision-capable model. The image is sent as a base64-encoded data URL in the OpenAI vision content format: |
|
|
| ```json |
| { |
| "type": "image_url", |
| "image_url": { |
| "url": "data:image/png;base64,..." |
| } |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| Most modern models support this format, including GPT-4 Vision, Claude (with vision), Gemini, and open-source multimodal models served through OpenRouter. |
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