Remote access
June 1, 2026 ยท View on GitHub
How to reach a self-hosted Hermes WebUI from another machine or your phone.
Accessing from a remote machine
The server binds to 127.0.0.1 by default (loopback only). If you are running
Hermes on a VPS or remote server, use an SSH tunnel from your local machine:
ssh -N -L <local-port>:127.0.0.1:<remote-port> <user>@<server-host>
Example:
ssh -N -L 8787:127.0.0.1:8787 user@your.server.com
Then open http://localhost:8787 in your local browser.
start.sh will print this command for you automatically when it detects you
are running over SSH.
Accessing on your phone with Tailscale
Tailscale is a zero-config mesh VPN built on WireGuard. Install it on your server and your phone, and they join the same private network -- no port forwarding, no SSH tunnels, no public exposure.
The Hermes Web UI is fully responsive with a mobile-optimized layout (hamburger sidebar, sidebar top tabs in the drawer, touch-friendly controls), so it works well as a daily-driver agent interface from your phone.
Setup:
- Install Tailscale on your server and your iPhone/Android.
- Start the WebUI listening on all interfaces with password auth enabled:
HERMES_WEBUI_HOST=0.0.0.0 HERMES_WEBUI_PASSWORD=your-secret ./start.sh
- Open
http://<server-tailscale-ip>:8787in your phone's browser (find your server's Tailscale IP in the Tailscale app or withtailscale ip -4on the server).
That's it. Traffic is encrypted end-to-end by WireGuard, and password auth protects the UI at the application level. You can add it to your home screen for an app-like experience.
Community field report: ARM64 Android via AVF
A community report in #2364
documents Hermes Agent + WebUI running on a mid-range ARM64 Android phone inside
a Debian 12 VM via Android Virtualization Framework (AVF). The reported setup
used a Xiaomi Redmi Note 13 Pro 4G, 3.8 GiB RAM allocated to the VM, 8 visible
CPU cores, Chrome on Android at localhost:8787, and cloud-hosted inference.
This is not an official support baseline or provider/model benchmark, but it is a useful compatibility signal for mobile ARM64 experiments: the WebUI rendered smoothly in Chrome, ARM64 Debian worked for the agent stack, and the total local footprint was about 1.7 GB. Practical caveats from the report: first install can take longer when dependencies compile from source, Android browser tabs may reload when switching apps, and disabling battery optimization for the terminal or VM host may be needed for longer-running sessions.
Tip: If using Docker, set
HERMES_WEBUI_HOST=0.0.0.0in yourdocker-compose.ymlenvironment (already the default) and setHERMES_WEBUI_PASSWORD.