Hooks
[!NOTE] This document was designed for both humans and agents.
Hooks are user-defined shell scripts that run when various events happen during the agent lifecycle, allowing you to both build on top of Crush, customize its behavior, and exert deterministic control over an agent's wily behavior.
Hooks are just shell commands, and were designed to be both simple and future forward.
Hot Hook Facts
- Hooks just shell commands
- Hooks can be written in any language because theyβre just executables: Bash, Python, Node, Rust, Haskell, whatever
- Hooks are Claude Code-compatible
- Crush ships with a builtin
crush-hookskill write, edit, and configure hooks; just tell Crush how to configure Crush - Crush currently supports just one hook,
PreToolUse, with plans to support the full gamut; please let us know which hooks you'd like to see next - Hooks run in parallel for speed, but their results compose in config order for determinism
Some things you can do with hooks:
- Block "dangerous" commands: no more
git push -forcabal init - Rewrite tool input: turn
nodecalls infodeno, scrub secrets from commands, rewrite all mentions of "Haskell" into "Haskell, The Best Language", and so on - Inject context: add notes to the model's context whenever certain tools are called. For example: "remember to run gofumpt after editing Go files"
- Auto-approve tools: skip the permission prompt for bash commands that you know are safe
- Log certain tool calls
β¦And lots more. Show us what you're building!
Baby's First Hook
Let's just dive into it and make a simple hook. This particular hook will disallow the use of Haskell (but we love you, Simon Peyton Jones).
Config
The first thing we need to do is hook up our hook. Let's add the following to
our local crush.json. You can, of course, do this globally, too.
{
// As expected, hooks go in a "hooks" object.
"hooks": {
// PreToolUse is an event that fires before a tool is used.
"PreToolUse": [
{
// What tool do we want to hook into? In this case, Bash, because it
// runs the stuff we wanna block.
"matcher": "^bash$",
// The path to our actual hook script.
"command": "./no-haskell.sh",
},
],
},
}
Now, let's make our no-haskell.sh hook script.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Disallow ghc, cabal, and stack. Pipe the bash command output
# ($CRUSH_TOOL_INPUT_COMMAND) to grep and match on a regexp.
if echo "$CRUSH_TOOL_INPUT_COMMAND" | grep -qE '(^| )((ghc|cabal|stack)(\.exe)?)( |$)'; then
# Someone is trying to use Haskell. Let's send a message back to the model
# and user explaining why we're blocking this. Note that we send all feedback
# like this to stderr.
echo "No Haskell allowed, kiddo." >&2
# Now, block the tool call by exiting with code 2.
exit 2
fi
That's basically it. For the full guide on how hooks work, however, read on.
Configuration
Hooks can be added to your crush.json (or .crush.json) at both the global
and project-level, with project level hooks taking precedence.
{
"hooks": {
"PreToolUse": [
{
"matcher": "bash", // regex tested against the tool name
"command": "./hooks/my-hot-hook.sh", // the path to the hook
"timeout": 10, // in seconds; default 30
},
],
},
}
Remember, hooks will run in parallel but resolve in config order. Last hook wins when rewriting input, but first deny wins when blocking.
Events
Here are the events you can hook into (spoiler: there's currently just one):
PreToolUse
This hook fires before every tool call. Use it to block dangerous commands, enforce policies, rewrite tool input, inject context the model should see, log stuff, and so on.
Matched against: the tool name (e.g. bash, edit, write,
mcp_github_create_pull_request).
[!NOTE] Event names are case insensitive and snake-caseable, so
PreToolUse,pretooluse,PRETOOLUSE,pre_tool_use, andPRE_TOOL_USEall work.
Scope: PreToolUse only fires on the top-level agent's tool calls.
Sub-agents (the agent task tool, agentic_fetch, etc.) run without hook
interception so a single delegated turn doesn't trigger your hook N times. The
outer sub-agent tool call itself is hooked, so policy like "never let the
agent spawn sub-agents" still works.
Hooks are keyed by event name. Only command is required, and you can omit
matcher to match all tools.
Building Hooks
When a hook fires, Crush:
- Filters hooks whose
matcherregex matches the tool name (no matcher = match all). - Deduplicates by
command(identical commands run once). - Runs all matching hooks in parallel as subprocesses.
- Waits for all to finish (or time out), then aggregates results in config
order: deny wins over allow, allow wins over none;
updated_inputpatches shallow-merge in order. - Applies the result before permission checks. If the aggregated decision
is
deny, the tool call is blocked and you never see a permission prompt for it. If it'sallow, Crush treats that as affirmative pre-approval and also skips the prompt. Silence (no decision) falls through to the normal permission flow.
Note that you can omit matcher and match in your shell script instead, however
you'll incur some additional overhead as Crush will exec each script.
Input
Each hook receives data two ways: environment variables and stdin (as JSON). Environment variables are typically easier to work with, with JSON being available when input is more complex.
Environment Variables
The available environment variables are:
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
CRUSH_EVENT |
The hook event name (e.g. PreToolUse). |
CRUSH_TOOL_NAME |
The tool being called (e.g. bash). |
CRUSH_SESSION_ID |
Current session ID. |
CRUSH_CWD |
Working directory. |
CRUSH_PROJECT_DIR |
Project root directory. |
CRUSH_TOOL_INPUT_COMMAND |
For bash calls: the shell command being run. |
CRUSH_TOOL_INPUT_FILE_PATH |
For file tools: the target file path. |
JSON
Standard input provides the full context as JSON:
{
"event": "PreToolUse", // Hook event name
"session_id": "313909e", // Current session ID
"cwd": "/home/user/project", // Working directory
"tool_name": "bash", // The tool being called
"tool_input": { "command": "rm -rf /" }, // The tool's input
}
Note that tool_input field contains the raw JSON the model sent to the tool.
To parse the stdin JSON in your hook script, read from stdin and use a tool like
jq:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
read -r input
tool_name=$(echo "$input" | jq -r '.tool_name')
command=$(echo "$input" | jq -r '.tool_input.command // empty')
You can also use tools like Python:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import json, sys
data = json.load(sys.stdin)
tool_name = data.get("tool_name", "")
command = data.get("tool_input", {}).get("command", "")
Output
Hooks communicate back to Crush via exit code and stdout/stderr. The
simplest way to do this is to return an error code and print additional context
to stderr. For example:
# Here, error code 2 blocks the tool, using stderr as the reason:
if some_bad_condition; then
echo "Blocked: reason here" >&2
exit 2
fi
| Exit Code | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 0 | Success. Stdout is parsed as JSON (see fields below). |
| 2 | Block the tool. Stderr is used as the deny reason (no JSON). |
| 49 | Halt the turn. Stderr is used as the halt reason (no JSON). |
| Other | Non-blocking error. Logged and ignored β the tool call proceeds. |
The difference between exit 2 and exit 49:
- Exit 2 blocks the current tool call. The agent sees the error and can try something else.
- Exit 49 halts the whole turn. The agent doesn't get to respond further;
the user takes over. Use this when something is wrong enough that the agent
shouldn't keep trying. 49 sits in an empty slice of the exit-code space β
between the generic-error range (1-30), the BSD
sysexits.hrange (64-78), and the killed-by-signal range (128+) β so it can't be hit by accident.
That said, if you need more control, or if you need to rewrite input, you can use JSON on stdout. Exit 0 and print a JSON object to provide context, update the input, or still deny/halt with a reason:
{
"version": 1, // Output envelope version. Optional; defaults to 1.
"decision": "allow", // "allow", "deny", or null. Omit for no opinion.
"halt": false, // If true, halts the turn entirely.
"reason": "LGTM", // Shown when denying or halting.
"context": "Scrubbed secrets", // String or array of strings. Appended to what the model sees.
"updated_input": { "command": "β¦" }, // Shallow-merged into the tool's input before execution.
}
version is an optional integer at the top of the envelope. It defaults to 1
if omitted. Unknown higher versions are still parsed; the field exists so the
envelope can evolve without a compatibility shim.
decision: "allow" is affirmative: it pre-approves the tool call and
bypasses the permission prompt entirely. Silence (no decision, or
decision: null) means "no opinion" β the tool still goes through the
normal permission flow. Use "allow" when you want to auto-approve; omit it
when you only want to inject context or rewrite input without also vouching
for the call.
updated_input is a shallow-merge patch. Keys you include overwrite matching
keys in tool_input; keys you don't include are preserved. If the model called
bash with {"command": "npm test", "timeout": 60000} and your hook returns
{"updated_input": {"command": "bun test"}}, the tool runs with
{"command": "bun test", "timeout": 60000} β the timeout isn't dropped. The
merge is shallow: nested objects are replaced wholesale, not deep-merged.
halt: true stops the turn entirely. The agent doesn't get to respond further;
the user takes over. The exit-code shorthand is exit 49 with stderr as the
reason.
context accepts either a string or an array of strings. Use the string form
for a single observation; use the array form when a hook produces multiple
distinct notes and you'd rather not concatenate them by hand. Empty strings and
empty array entries are dropped.
Here's a full shell script that produces this JSON:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Example: rewrite a bash command using RTK
read -r input
original_cmd=$(echo "$input" | jq -r '.tool_input.command')
rewritten=$(secret-scrubber rewrite "$original_cmd")
cat <<EOF
{
"decision": "allow",
"context": "Scrubbed secrets",
"updated_input": {"command": "$rewritten"}
}
EOF
Multiple Hooks
Hooks run in parallel, but their results compose in config order. Whichever hook
finishes first doesn't get to "win" by virtue of timing; composition is
deterministic based on the order hooks appear in crush.json.
When multiple hooks match the same tool call:
- If any hook denies, the tool call is blocked.
reasonvalues are concatenated in config order (newline-separated). - If any hook halts, the turn ends after the tool call is blocked.
- If no hook denies or halts but at least one allows, the tool call proceeds and the permission prompt is skipped.
contextvalues are concatenated in config order. Strings and arrays compose uniformly β each string becomes one entry, and array entries are flattened in.updated_inputpatches shallow-merge in config order against the original tool input. Later hooks override earlier ones on colliding keys. If denied or halted,updated_inputpatches are ignored.
Timeouts
If a hook exceeds its timeout, the process is killed and treated as a non-blocking error and the tool call proceeds. The default timeout is 30 seconds.
Examples
Block destructive commands
Prevent the agent from running rm -rf in bash:
{
"hooks": {
"PreToolUse": [
{
"matcher": "^bash$",
"command": "./hooks/no-rm-rf.sh"
}
]
}
}
hooks/no-rm-rf.sh:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Block rm -rf commands in the bash tool. Otherwise stay silent so the
# normal permission flow runs.
if echo "$CRUSH_TOOL_INPUT_COMMAND" | grep -qE 'rm\s+-(rf|fr)\s+/'; then
echo "Refusing to run rm -rf against root" >&2
exit 2
fi
exit 0
Auto-approve read-only tools
Skip the permission prompt for tools that can't change anything. The hook
returns decision: "allow", which tells Crush to pre-approve the call:
{
"hooks": {
"PreToolUse": [
{
"matcher": "^(view|ls|grep|glob)$",
"command": "echo '{\"decision\":\"allow\"}'",
},
],
},
}
No script file needed β the command is inline. Every view/ls/grep/glob
call now runs without prompting. Add the bash tool to this list at your own
risk; consider a more targeted allowlist instead:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# hooks/safe-bash.sh β auto-approve read-only bash commands.
case "$CRUSH_TOOL_INPUT_COMMAND" in
ls*|cat*|grep*|rg*|echo*|pwd*)
echo '{"decision":"allow"}'
;;
*)
# Silent β fall through to the normal permission prompt.
exit 0
;;
esac
Inject context into file writes
Add a reminder to the model whenever it writes a Go file:
{
"hooks": {
"PreToolUse": [
{
"matcher": "^(edit|write|multiedit)$",
"command": "./hooks/go-context.sh"
}
]
}
}
hooks/go-context.sh:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Remind the model about Go formatting when editing .go files.
# Emit context only; stay silent on `decision` so the normal permission
# prompt still runs for edits/writes.
if [[ "$CRUSH_TOOL_INPUT_FILE_PATH" == *.go ]]; then
echo '{"context": "Remember: run gofumpt after editing Go files."}'
else
echo '{}'
fi
Block all MCP tools
The command can be inline. This one-liner matches all MCP tools and blocks
them:
{ "matcher": "^mcp_", "command": "echo 'MCP tools are disabled' >&2; exit 2" }
Log every tool call
With no matcher this fires for every tool. It exits 0 with no stdout so the
tool call always proceeds.
{ "command": "echo \"$(date -Iseconds) $CRUSH_TOOL_NAME\" >> ./tools.log" }
A real-world Example:
For a more practical example, see rtk-rewrite.sh,
which demonstrates how to rewrite tool input using
RTK to save tokens.
Using other languages
Hooks aren't limited to shell scripts: any executable works. Here's the same "block rm -rf" example in some other languages.
Lua
{"matcher": "^bash$", "command": "lua ./hooks/no-rm-rf.lua"}
local input = io.read("*a")
local tool_input = input:match('"command":"(.-)"') or ""
if tool_input:match("rm%s+%-[rf][rf]%s+/") then
io.stderr:write("Refusing to run rm -rf against root\n")
os.exit(2)
end
JavaScript
{"matcher": "^bash$", "command": "node ./hooks/no-rm-rf.js"}
let input = "";
process.stdin.on("data", (chunk) => (input += chunk));
process.stdin.on("end", () => {
const { tool_input: toolInput } = JSON.parse(input);
if (/rm\s+-[rf]{2}\s+\//.test(toolInput.command)) {
process.stderr.write("Refusing to run rm -rf against root\n");
process.exit(2);
}
});
Claude Code compatibility
Crush hooks are broadly compatible with Claude Code hooks: the config shape, stdin payload, output envelope, and exit codes line up so most Claude Code hooks run under Crush unchanged. This document covers the Crush-specific API only β anything not documented here isn't guaranteed to work.
One intentional divergence: Crush treats updated_input as a shallow-merge
patch against the original tool_input rather than a full replacement. Keys
you omit are preserved. See Output for details.
Reference
This is the official reference of the narrative above. If prose and this section disagree, the prose should be presumed canonical for intent, while this section is canonical for shape.
Both the stdin payload and the output envelope have common fields that apply to every event and per-event fields that only some events recognize. When an event doesn't understand a field, it's ignored.
Hook config
Each entry under a hooks.<EventName> array:
{
// string. Optional. Regex tested against the tool name. Omit to match all.
"matcher": "^bash$",
// string. Required. Shell command to run.
"command": "./hooks/my-hook.sh",
// number. Optional. Seconds before the hook is killed. Defaults to 30.
"timeout": 10,
}
Stdin payload (common)
Present in every hook event:
{
// string. Hook event name.
"event": "PreToolUse",
// string. Current session ID.
"session_id": "313909e",
// string. Working directory when invoked.
"cwd": "/home/user/project",
}
Stdin payload β PreToolUse
Extends the common payload:
{
// ...common fields...
// string. The tool being called.
"tool_name": "bash",
// object. Raw JSON input the model sent to the tool. Shape is per-tool.
"tool_input": {
"command": "npm test",
},
}
Output envelope (common)
Fields a hook may print to stdout on exit 0. All are optional and apply to every event:
{
// number. Defaults to 1. Unknown higher values still parse; exists for
// forward-compat.
"version": 1,
// boolean. If true, ends the turn entirely. User takes over.
"halt": false,
// string. Shown when denying (to the model) or halting (to the model and
// user).
"reason": "not allowed",
// string | string[]. Appended to what the model sees. Empty entries are
// dropped.
"context": "Rewrote with RTK",
}
Output envelope β PreToolUse
Extends the common envelope:
{
// ...common fields...
// "allow" | "deny" | null. null/omitted = no opinion, the tool still goes
// through the normal permission prompt. "allow" is affirmative: pre-approves
// the tool call and bypasses the prompt. "deny" blocks the call; the model
// sees the error and may try something else.
"decision": "allow",
// object. Shallow-merge patch against tool_input. Nested objects are
// replaced wholesale, not deep-merged.
"updated_input": {
"command": "bun test",
},
}
Exit codes
| Code | Meaning |
|---|---|
0 |
Success. Stdout is parsed as the output envelope. |
2 |
Block this tool call. Stderr becomes the deny reason. Stdout is ignored. |
49 |
Halt the whole turn. Stderr becomes the halt reason. Stdout is ignored. |
| other | Non-blocking error. Logged and ignored; the tool call proceeds. |
Exit 2 only applies to events that can block something. On events where
there's nothing to block, it's treated as a non-blocking error.
Aggregation
When multiple hooks match the same event, results compose in config order.
Universal rules:
haltis sticky: if any hook halts, the turn ends.reasonvalues concatenate with\nin config order. Halt-only hooks without a deny still contribute their reason.contextvalues concatenate with\nin config order. String entries and array entries flatten uniformly.
PreToolUse-specific rules:
decisionprecedence:deny>allow>null. First deny determines the outcome; subsequent allows don't override. If the final aggregated decision isallow, Crush pre-approves the tool call and skips the permission prompt. If it'snull(no hook allowed), the tool goes through the normal permission flow.updated_inputpatches shallow-merge sequentially against the originaltool_input. Later patches override earlier ones on colliding keys. Patches are ignored if the final decision is deny or halt.
Environment variables
See Environment Variables above for the full list.
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