Commit Graph

150 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jif-oai
ef6528c6c7 feat: gate dedicated memories tools in config (#24600)
## Why

The memories extension already has dedicated `list`, `read`, `search`,
and `add_ad_hoc_note` tools, but app-server registration was still
disabled. The memories app collaborator needs an explicit config switch
so those native extension tools can be exposed intentionally, without
making ordinary memory prompt usage automatically register the dedicated
tool surface.

## What changed

- Added `[memories].dedicated_tools`, defaulting to `false`, to
`MemoriesToml` / `MemoriesConfig`.
- Regenerated `core/config.schema.json` for the new setting.
- Registered the memories extension as a `ToolContributor`, while
keeping tool contribution gated on both memories being enabled and
`dedicated_tools = true`.
- Added tests for the disabled default, the enabled dedicated-tools
path, and installer registration.

## Verification

- `just test -p codex-config -p codex-memories-extension`
2026-05-26 18:18:58 +02:00
jif-oai
4f7d6b4ef7 chore: stop consuming legacy config profiles (#24076)
## Why

The old config-profile mechanism should no longer influence runtime
behavior now that profile selection has moved to file-based `--profile`
config files. Core already rejects a selected legacy `profile = "..."`
with a migration error in
[`core/src/config/mod.rs`](d6451fcb79/codex-rs/core/src/config/mod.rs (L2521-L2529)),
but a few residual consumers still read legacy `[profiles.*]` data while
performing managed-feature checks and personality migration.

That kept dead legacy profile state relevant after selection had been
removed, and could make personality migration depend on a stale or
missing old profile.

## What changed

- Stop scanning legacy `[profiles.*]` feature settings when validating
managed feature requirements.
- Make personality migration consider only top-level `personality` and
`model_provider` settings.
- Remove the now-unused `ConfigToml::get_config_profile` helper.
- Update personality migration coverage to verify that legacy profile
personality fields and missing legacy profile names no longer affect
that migration path.

This keeps the legacy `profile` / `profiles` config shape available for
the remaining compatibility and migration diagnostics; it only removes
these behavior consumers.

## Verification

- Updated `core/tests/suite/personality_migration.rs` for the new
legacy-profile behavior.
- Focused test command: `cargo test -p codex-core
personality_migration`.
2026-05-26 10:34:43 +02:00
Michael Bolin
c7bcb90f9b package: include zsh fork in Codex package (#23756)
## Why

The package layout gives Codex a stable place for runtime helpers that
should travel with the entrypoint. `shell_zsh_fork` still required users
to configure `zsh_path` manually, even though we already publish
prebuilt zsh fork artifacts.

This PR builds on #24129 and uses the shared DotSlash artifact fetcher
to include the zsh fork in Codex packages when a matching target
artifact exists. Packaged Codex builds can then discover the bundled
fork automatically; the user/profile `zsh_path` override is removed so
the feature uses the package-managed artifact instead of a legacy path
knob.

## What Changed

- Added `scripts/codex_package/codex-zsh`, a checked-in DotSlash
manifest for the current macOS arm64 and Linux zsh fork artifacts.
- Taught `scripts/build_codex_package.py` to fetch the matching zsh fork
artifact and install it at `codex-resources/zsh/bin/zsh` when available
for the selected target.
- Added package layout validation for the optional bundled zsh resource.
- Added `InstallContext::bundled_zsh_path()` and
`InstallContext::bundled_zsh_bin_dir()` for package-layout resource
discovery.
- Threaded the packaged zsh path through config loading as the runtime
`zsh_path` for packaged installs, and removed the config/profile/CLI
override path.
- Kept the packaged default zsh override typed as `AbsolutePathBuf`
until the existing runtime `Config::zsh_path` boundary.
- Updated app-server zsh-fork integration tests to spawn
`codex-app-server` from a temporary package layout with
`codex-resources/zsh/bin/zsh`, matching the new packaged discovery path
instead of setting `zsh_path` in config.
- Switched package executable copying from metadata-preserving `copy2()`
to `copyfile()` plus explicit executable bits, which avoids macOS
file-flag failures when local smoke tests use system binaries as inputs.

## Testing

To verify that the `zsh` executable from the Codex package is picked up
correctly, first I ran:

```shell
./scripts/build_codex_package.py
```

which created:

```
/private/var/folders/vw/x2knqmks50sfhfpy27nftl900000gp/T/codex-package-pms94kdp/
```

so then I ran:

```
/private/var/folders/vw/x2knqmks50sfhfpy27nftl900000gp/T/codex-package-pms94kdp/bin/codex exec --enable shell_zsh_fork 'run `echo $0`'
```

which reported the following, as expected:

```
/private/var/folders/vw/x2knqmks50sfhfpy27nftl900000gp/T/codex-package-pms94kdp/codex-resources/zsh/bin/zsh
```



---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/23756).
* #23768
* __->__ #23756
2026-05-22 17:54:07 -07:00
adams-oai
865ca936db Add new enterprise requirement gate (#23736)
Add new enterprise requirement gate.

Validation:
- `cargo test -p codex-config --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui --lib debug_config`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --lib` *(fails: stack overflow in
`in_process::tests::in_process_start_initializes_and_handles_typed_v2_request`;
reproduces when run alone)*
2026-05-22 11:33:44 -07:00
jif-oai
162a6e746b app-server: drop legacy profile config surface (#24067)
## Why

Legacy `[profiles.<name>]` config tables and the legacy `profile`
selector are being retired in favor of profile files selected with
`--profile <name>`. After #23886 removed the CLI-side legacy profile
plumbing, the app-server config surface still exposed those fields and
still carried conversion code for the old protocol shape.

## What changed

- Remove `profile`, `profiles`, and `ProfileV2` from the app-server
config protocol/schema output so `config/read` no longer returns legacy
profile config.
- Drop the old v1 `UserSavedConfig` profile conversion path from
`config`.
- Reject new app-server config writes under `profiles.*` with the same
migration direction used for `profile`, while still allowing callers to
clear existing legacy profile tables.
- Refresh app-server config coverage and the experimental API README
example around the remaining `Config` nesting path.

## Verification

- Added config-manager coverage that `config/read` omits legacy profile
config, `profiles.*` writes are rejected, and existing legacy profile
tables can still be cleared.
- Updated the v2 config RPC test to cover the rejected `profiles.*`
batch-write path.
2026-05-22 19:41:39 +02:00
jif-oai
f55f864b9f tui: make codex-tui.log opt-in (#24081)
## Why

The TUI currently creates a shared plaintext `codex-tui.log` under the
default log directory. That append-only file can keep growing across
runs even though the TUI already records diagnostics in bounded local
stores.

Make the plaintext file log an explicit troubleshooting choice instead
of a default side effect.

This is possible because logs are also stored in the DB with proper
rotation

## What changed

- Only install the TUI file logging layer when `log_dir` is explicitly
set.
- Remove the prior `codex-tui.log` at startup before an opt-in file
layer is created.
- Clarify the `log_dir` config/schema text and `docs/install.md` example
so users opt in with `codex -c log_dir=...` when they need a plaintext
log.
2026-05-22 17:19:51 +00:00
jif-oai
932f72c225 fix: reject legacy profile selectors (#24059)
## Why

`--profile` now selects `<name>.config.toml`, so the legacy `profile`
selector should not be reintroduced through config write or MCP tool
paths. A matching legacy selector in base user config also needs the
same migration guard as a matching legacy `[profiles.<name>]` table so
profile loading fails with one clear migration error instead of mixing
the old and new profile models.

## What

- reject non-null app-server config writes to the top-level legacy
`profile` selector
- make `--profile <name>` reject base user config that still selects the
same legacy `profile = "<name>"` value, alongside the existing matching
legacy profile-table guard
- reject removed MCP `codex` tool fields such as `profile` by denying
unknown tool-call parameters and exposing that restriction in the
generated schema
- add regression coverage for the app-server write paths, config loader
guard, and MCP tool input/schema behavior

## Verification

- targeted regression tests cover the new app-server, config loader, and
MCP rejection paths
2026-05-22 13:19:47 +02:00
starr-openai
298e5cfce1 Route MCP servers through explicit environments (#23583)
## Summary
- route each configured MCP server through an explicit per-server
`environment_id` instead of a manager-wide remote toggle
- default omitted `environment_id` to `local`, resolve named ids through
`EnvironmentManager`, and fail only the affected MCP server when an
explicit id is unknown
- keep local stdio on the existing local launcher path for now, while
named-environment stdio uses the selected environment backend and
requires an absolute `cwd`
- allow local HTTP MCP servers to keep using the ambient HTTP client
when no local `Environment` is configured; named-environment HTTP MCPs
use that environment's HTTP client

## Validation
- devbox Bazel build: `bazel build --bes_backend= --bes_results_url=
//codex-rs/cli:codex //codex-rs/rmcp-client:test_stdio_server
//codex-rs/rmcp-client:test_streamable_http_server`
- devbox app-server config matrix with real `config.toml` /
`environments.toml` files covering omitted local, explicit local,
omitted local under remote default, explicit remote stdio, local HTTP
without local env, explicit remote HTTP, local stdio without local env,
unknown explicit env, and remote stdio without `cwd`
2026-05-21 17:19:54 +02:00
jif-oai
c1d7f4c8f8 chore: link doc in profile error messages (#23879)
Just updating the error message with a link to the doc
2026-05-21 16:32:12 +02:00
viyatb-oai
713a5b1b00 feat: support managed permission profiles in requirements.toml (#23433)
## Why

Cloud-managed `requirements.toml` should be able to define the managed
permission profiles a client may select and constrain that selectable
set without requiring local user config to recreate the profile catalog.

This keeps requirements focused on restrictions. The selected default
remains a config or session choice, while requirements contribute the
managed profile bodies and `allowed_permissions` allowlist that the
config-loading boundary validates before a resolved runtime
`PermissionProfile` is installed.

## What changed

- Add `requirements.toml` support for a managed permission-profile
catalog plus its allowlist:

```toml
allowed_permissions = ["review", "build"]

[permissions.review]
extends = ":read-only"

[permissions.build]
extends = ":workspace"
```

- Merge requirements-defined profile bodies into the effective
permission catalog and reject profile ids that collide with
config-defined profiles.
- Validate that every `allowed_permissions` entry resolves to a built-in
or catalog profile before selection uses it.
- Preserve allowed configured named-profile selections. When a
configured named profile is disallowed, fall back to the first allowed
requirements profile with a startup warning.
- Keep built-in selections and the stock trust-based `:read-only` /
`:workspace` fallback path intact when no permission profile is
explicitly selected.
- Centralize the managed catalog and allowlist selection path in
`EffectivePermissionSelection` so the requirements boundary is visible
in config loading.
- Surface `allowedPermissions` through `configRequirements/read`, and
update the generated app-server schema fixtures plus the app-server
README.

## Validation

- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core system_requirements_`
- `cargo test -p codex-core system_allowed_permissions_`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `just write-app-server-schema`

## Related work

- Uses merged permission-profile inheritance support from #22270 and
#23705.
- Kept separate from the in-flight permission profile listing API in
#23412.
2026-05-20 17:33:01 -07:00
evawong-oai
3cae84009a Use named MITM permissions config (#18240)
## Stack
1. Parent PR: #18868 adds MITM hook config and model only.
2. Parent PR: #20659 wires hook enforcement into the proxy request path.
3. This PR changes the user facing PermissionProfile TOML shape.

## Why
1. The broader goal is to make MITM clamping usable from the same
permission profile that already controls network behavior.
2. This PR is the config UX layer for the stack. It moves MITM policy
into `[permissions.<profile>.network.mitm]` instead of exposing the flat
runtime shape to users.
3. The named hook and action tables belong here because users need
reusable policy blocks that are easy to review, while the proxy runtime
only needs a flat hook list.
4. This PR validates action refs during config parsing so mistakes in
the user facing policy fail before a proxy session starts.
5. Keeping the lowering here lets the proxy keep its simpler runtime
model and lets PermissionProfile remain the single source of network
permission policy.

## Summary
1. Keep MITM policy inside `[permissions.<profile>.network.mitm]` so the
selected PermissionProfile owns network proxy policy.
2. Use named MITM hooks under
`[permissions.<profile>.network.mitm.hooks.<name>]`.
3. Put host, methods, path prefixes, query, headers, body, and action
refs on the hook table.
4. Define reusable action blocks under
`[permissions.<profile>.network.mitm.actions.<name>]`.
5. Represent action blocks with `NetworkMitmActionToml`, then lower them
into the proxy runtime action config.
6. Reject unknown refs, empty refs, and empty action blocks during
config parsing.
7. Keep the runtime hook model unchanged by lowering config into the
existing proxy hook list.
8. Preserve the #20659 activation fix for nested MITM policy.

## Example
```toml
[permissions.workspace.network.mitm]
enabled = true

[permissions.workspace.network.mitm.hooks.github_write]
host = "api.github.com"
methods = ["POST", "PUT"]
path_prefixes = ["/repos/openai/"]
action = ["strip_auth"]

[permissions.workspace.network.mitm.actions.strip_auth]
strip_request_headers = ["authorization"]
```

## Validation
1. Regenerated the config schema.
2. Ran the core MITM config parsing and validation tests.
3. Ran the core PermissionProfile MITM proxy activation tests.
4. Ran the core config schema fixture test.
5. Ran the network proxy MITM policy tests.
6. Ran the scoped Clippy fixer for the network proxy crate.
7. Ran the scoped Clippy fixer for the core crate.

---------

Co-authored-by: Winston Howes <winston@openai.com>
2026-05-20 17:10:37 -07:00
Shijie Rao
370b13afc9 Honor client-resolved service tier defaults (#23537)
## Why

Model catalog responses can now advertise a nullable
`default_service_tier` for each model. Codex needs to preserve three
distinct states all the way from config/app-server inputs to inference:

- no explicit service tier, so the client may apply the current model
catalog default when FastMode is enabled
- explicit `default`, meaning the user intentionally wants standard
routing
- explicit catalog tier ids such as `priority`, `flex`, or future tiers

Keeping those states distinct prevents the UI from showing one tier
while core sends another, especially after model switches or app-server
`thread/start` / `turn/start` updates.

## What Changed

- Plumbed `default_service_tier` through model catalog protocol types,
app-server model responses, generated schemas, model cache fixtures, and
provider/model-manager conversions.
- Added the request-only `default` service tier sentinel and normalized
legacy config spelling so `fast` in `config.toml` still materializes as
the runtime/request id `priority`.
- Moved catalog default resolution to the TUI/client side, including
recomputing the effective service tier when model/FastMode-dependent
surfaces change.
- Updated app-server thread lifecycle config construction so
`serviceTier: null` preserves explicit standard-routing intent by
mapping to `default` instead of internal `None`.
- Kept core responsible for validating explicit tiers against the
current model and stripping `default` before `/v1/responses`, without
applying catalog defaults itself.

## Validation

- `CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo build -p codex-cli`
- `CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo test -p codex-app-server model_list`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui service_tier`
- `cargo test -p codex-protocol service_tier_for_request`
- `cargo test -p codex-core get_service_tier`
- `RUST_MIN_STACK=8388608 CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo test -p codex-core
service_tier`
2026-05-20 15:57:50 -07:00
Abhinav
eee3e60db3 Add SubagentStop hook (#22873)
# What

<img width="1792" height="1024" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8f81d232-5813-4994-a61d-e42a05a93a3e"
/>

`SubagentStop` runs when a thread-spawned subagent turn is about to
finish. Thread-spawned subagents use `SubagentStop` instead of the
normal root-agent `Stop` hook.

Configured handlers match on `agent_type`. Hook input includes the
normal stop fields plus:

- `agent_id`: the child thread id.
- `agent_type`: the resolved subagent type.
- `agent_transcript_path`: the child subagent transcript path.
- `transcript_path`: the parent thread transcript path.
- `last_assistant_message`: the final assistant message from the child
turn, when available.
- `stop_hook_active`: `true` when the child is already continuing
because an earlier stop-like hook blocked completion.

`SubagentStop` shares the same completion-control semantics as `Stop`,
scoped to the child turn:

- No decision allows the child turn to finish.
- `decision: "block"` with a non-empty `reason` records that reason as
hook feedback and continues the child with that prompt.
- `continue: false` stops the child turn. If `stopReason` is present,
Codex surfaces it as the stop reason.

# Lifecycle Scope

Only thread-spawned subagents run `SubagentStop`.

Internal/system subagents such as Review, Compact, MemoryConsolidation,
and Other do not run normal `Stop` hooks and do not run `SubagentStop`.
This avoids exposing synthetic matcher labels for internal
implementation paths.

# Stack

1. #22782: add `SubagentStart`.
2. This PR: add `SubagentStop`.
3. #22882: add subagent identity to normal hook inputs.
2026-05-20 14:59:41 -07:00
viyatb-oai
fe7c069fe6 feat(permissions): resolve permission profile inheritance (#22270)
## Stack

This is the foundation PR for the permission-profile inheritance stack.

- This PR adds config-level `extends` resolution and merge semantics.
- Follow-up: #23705 applies resolved profiles at runtime and updates the
active-profile protocol surfaces.

## Why

Permission profiles are starting to carry enough policy that
copy-pasting near-identical definitions becomes hard to review and easy
to drift. Before the runtime can consume inherited profiles, the config
layer needs one explicit resolver that can merge parent chains and
reject unsafe or invalid inheritance shapes.

## What changed

- Add `extends` to permission-profile TOML and resolve parent chains in
inheritance order.
- Merge inherited profile TOML with the existing config merge behavior
while preserving the permission-specific normalization needed for
network domain keys.
- Keep parent descriptions out of resolved child profiles and record
inherited profile names separately for downstream consumers.
- Reject undefined parents, unsupported built-in parents, and
inheritance cycles with targeted errors.
- Cover resolver behavior with TOML fixture tests and refresh the
generated config schema.

## Validation

- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core permissions_profiles_`
2026-05-20 20:12:07 +00:00
viyatb-oai
c3faea0b09 feat: add permission profile list api (#23412)
## Why

Clients need a typed permission-profile catalog instead of
reconstructing that state from config internals.

## What changed

- Added `permissionProfile/list` to the app-server v2 protocol with
cursor pagination and optional `cwd`.
- The list response includes built-in permission profiles plus
config-defined `[permissions.<id>]` profiles from the effective config
for the request context.
- Permission profiles keep optional `description` metadata for display
purposes.
- App-server docs and schema fixtures are updated for the new RPC.
2026-05-20 02:42:56 +00:00
adams-oai
d86352d520 Add CUA requirements subsection for locked computer use (#23555)
Adds a new top-level section for "CUA" requirements that can allow for
disablement of specific features as needed for enterprises.
2026-05-19 15:41:44 -07:00
Abhinav
d661ab70ed Add SubagentStart hook (#22782)
# What

`SubagentStart` runs once when Codex creates a thread-spawned subagent,
before that child sends its first model request. Thread-spawned
subagents use `SubagentStart` instead of the normal root-agent
`SessionStart` hook.

Configured handlers match on the subagent `agent_type`, using the same
value passed to `spawn_agent`. When no agent type is specified, Codex
uses the default agent type.

Hook input includes the normal session-start fields plus:

- `agent_id`: the child thread id.
- `agent_type`: the resolved subagent type.

`SubagentStart` may return `hookSpecificOutput.additionalContext`. That
context is added to the child conversation before the first model
request.

# Lifecycle Scope

Only thread-spawned subagents run `SubagentStart`.

Internal/system subagents such as Review, Compact, MemoryConsolidation,
and Other do not run normal `SessionStart` hooks and do not run
`SubagentStart`. This avoids exposing synthetic matcher labels for
internal implementation paths.

Also the `SessionStart` hook no longer fires for subagents, this matches
behavior with other coding agents' implementation

# Stack

1. This PR: add `SubagentStart`.
2. #22873: add `SubagentStop`.
3. #22882: add subagent identity to normal hook inputs.
2026-05-19 12:45:08 -07:00
jif-oai
80fdd4688f Add body_after_prefix auto-compact token limit scope (#22870)
## Why

`model_auto_compact_token_limit` has only been able to budget the full
active context. That makes it hard to set a small "growth since
compaction" budget for sessions that preserve a large carried window
prefix: the preserved prefix can consume the whole budget and force
immediate repeated compaction.

This PR adds an opt-in `body_after_prefix` scope so callers can apply
`model_auto_compact_token_limit` to sampled output and later growth
after the current carried prefix, while still forcing compaction before
the full model context window is exhausted.

## What changed

- Adds `AutoCompactTokenLimitScope` with the existing `total` behavior
as the default and a new `body_after_prefix` mode:
[`config_types.rs`](973806b1cb/codex-rs/protocol/src/config_types.rs (L24-L37)).
- Threads `model_auto_compact_token_limit_scope` through config loading,
`Config`, `core-api`, and app-server v2 schema/TypeScript generation.
- Records the first observed input-token count for a `body_after_prefix`
compaction window and uses it as the baseline when deciding whether the
scoped auto-compaction budget is exhausted:
[`turn.rs`](973806b1cb/codex-rs/core/src/session/turn.rs (L743-L781)).
- Keeps a hard context-window cap in `body_after_prefix`, so scoped
budgeting cannot let the active context overrun the usable window.

## Verification

Added compact-suite coverage for the two key behaviors:
`body_after_prefix` does not re-compact just because the carried prefix
is larger than the scoped budget, and it still compacts when the total
active context reaches the configured context window:
[`compact.rs`](973806b1cb/codex-rs/core/tests/suite/compact.rs (L3003-L3128)).
2026-05-19 10:19:46 +00:00
Michael Bolin
d91bc15618 test: construct permission profiles directly (#23030)
## Why

`SandboxPolicy` is now a legacy compatibility shape, but several tests
still built a `SandboxPolicy` only to immediately convert it into
`PermissionProfile` for APIs that already accept canonical runtime
permissions. Those detours make it harder to audit where legacy sandbox
policy is still required, because boundary-only usages are mixed
together with ordinary test setup.

## What Changed

- Updated tests in `codex-core`, `codex-exec`, `codex-analytics`, and
`codex-config` to construct `PermissionProfile` values directly when the
code under test takes a permission profile.
- Changed exec-policy, request-permissions, session, and sandbox test
helpers to pass `PermissionProfile` through instead of converting from
`SandboxPolicy` internally.
- Left `SandboxPolicy` in place where tests are explicitly exercising
legacy compatibility or request/response boundaries.

## Test Plan

- `cargo test -p codex-analytics -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib safety::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib exec_policy::tests::`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib exec::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib guardian_review_session_config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib tools::network_approval::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib
tools::runtimes::shell::unix_escalation::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib managed_network`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all request_permissions::`
- `cargo test -p codex-exec sandbox`


---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/23030).
* #23036
* __->__ #23030
2026-05-16 12:12:37 -07:00
Boyang Niu
c15613f2b6 Forward apps MCP product SKU from Codex config (#22872)
This adds `apps_mcp_product_sku` as a toplevel config.toml key. We pass
the given value as a header when listing MCPs for the client, allowing
connectors to be filtered per product entry point.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-15 11:52:14 -07:00
jif-oai
a5e5faf216 Reject legacy [profiles] when using profile-v2 (#22647)
## Why

`profile-v2` layers the selected profile file on top of the base user
`config.toml`, but the legacy `[profiles]` table also stores named
profile overrides in that same base file. Allowing both paths during one
load makes it too easy to get a mixed profile where stale legacy
settings still influence a profile-v2 run.

## What Changed

- Detect a legacy `[profiles]` table in the base user config whenever
`--profile-v2` selects a profile file.
- Fail config loading with an `InvalidData` error that tells the user to
move those settings into the selected profile-v2 file or remove
`[profiles]`.
- Add a loader regression covering `--profile-v2` with legacy
`[profiles]` in `config.toml`.

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-config
profile_v2_rejects_legacy_profiles_in_base_user_config`
2026-05-15 11:35:42 +02:00
guinness-oai
4f2918dd7f [codex] Add opaque desktop config namespace (#22584)
## Summary
- reserve an explicit opaque `desktop` namespace in `ConfigToml`
- expose `desktop` directly in the app-server v2 `config/read` response
- keep `config/value/write` and `config/batchWrite` as the only mutation
seam for paths like `desktop.someKey`
- regenerate the config/app-server schema outputs and document the new
contract

## Why
The desktop settings work wants one durable, user-editable home for
app-owned preferences in `~/.codex/config.toml`, without forcing Rust to
model every individual desktop setting key.

This PR is only the enabling Rust/app-server layer. It gives the
Electron app a first-class config namespace it can read and write
through the existing config APIs, while leaving the actual desktop
migration to the app PR.

## Behavior and design notes
- **Opaque but explicit:** `desktop` is first-class at the typed config
root, while its children remain app-owned and open-ended.
- **Strict validation still works:** arbitrary nested `desktop.*` keys
are accepted instead of being rejected as unknown config.
- **Existing config APIs stay the seam:** `config/read` returns the bag,
and dotted writes such as `desktop.someKey` continue to flow through
`config/value/write` / `config/batchWrite` rather than a bespoke RPC.
- **No new consumer behavior:** Core/TUI do not start depending on
desktop preferences. This only preserves and exposes the namespace for
callers that intentionally use it.
- **Same persistence machinery:** hand-edited `config.toml` keeps using
the existing TOML edit/write path; this PR does not introduce a second
serializer or side channel.
- **TOML-friendly values:** the namespace is intended for ordinary
JSON-shaped setting values that map cleanly into TOML: strings, numbers,
booleans, arrays, and nested object/table values. This PR does not add
special handling for TOML-only edge cases such as datetimes.

## Layering semantics
Reads keep using the ordinary effective config pipeline, so `desktop`
participates in the same layered `config/read` behavior as the rest of
`ConfigToml`. Writes still target user config through the existing
config service.

## Why this is the shape
The alternative would be teaching Rust about each desktop setting as it
is added. That would make ordinary app preferences into a cross-repo
change, which is exactly the coupling we want to avoid.

This keeps the contract small:
1. Rust owns one opaque `desktop` namespace in `config.toml`.
2. The desktop app owns the schema and meaning of individual keys inside
it.
3. The existing config APIs remain the transport and mutation surface.

That is the piece the desktop settings PR needs in order to move forward
cleanly.

## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-config strict_config_accepts_opaque_desktop_keys`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
desktop_toml_round_trips_opaque_nested_values`
- `cargo test -p codex-core config_schema_matches_fixture`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all desktop_settings`
2026-05-15 02:34:21 +00:00
Michael Bolin
c25d905f61 permissions: support workspace roots in profiles (#22610)
## Why

This is the configuration/model half of the alternative permissions
migration we discussed as a comparison point for
[#22401](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22401) and
[#22402](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22402).

The old `workspace-write` model mixes three concerns that we want to
keep separate:
- reusable profile rules that should stay immutable once selected
- user/runtime workspace roots from `cwd`, `--add-dir`, and legacy
workspace-write config
- internal Codex writable roots such as memories, which should not be
shown as user workspace roots

This PR gives permission profiles first-class `workspace_roots` so users
can opt multiple repositories into the same `:workspace_roots` rules
without using broad absolute-path write grants. It also starts
separating the raw selected profile from the effective runtime profile
by making `Permissions` expose explicit accessors instead of public
mutable fields.

A representative `config.toml` looks like this:

```toml
default_permissions = "dev"

[permissions.dev.workspace_roots]
"~/code/openai" = true
"~/code/developers-website" = true

[permissions.dev.filesystem.":workspace_roots"]
"." = "write"
".codex" = "read"
".git" = "read"
".vscode" = "read"
```

If Codex starts in `~/code/codex` with that profile selected, the
effective workspace-root set becomes:
- `~/code/codex` from the runtime `cwd`
- `~/code/openai` from the profile
- `~/code/developers-website` from the profile

The `:workspace_roots` rules are materialized across each root, so
`.git`, `.codex`, and `.vscode` stay scoped the same way everywhere.
Runtime additions such as `--add-dir` can still layer on later stack
entries without mutating the selected profile.

## Stack Shape

This PR intentionally stops before the profile-identity cleanup in
[#22683](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22683) so the base review
stays focused on config loading, workspace-root materialization, and
compatibility with legacy `workspace-write`.

The representation in this PR is therefore transitional: `Permissions`
carries enough state to distinguish the raw constrained profile from the
effective runtime profile, and there are still call sites that must keep
the active profile identity and constrained profile value in sync. The
follow-up PR replaces that with a single resolved profile state
(`ResolvedPermissionProfile` / `PermissionProfileState`) that keeps the
profile id, immutable `PermissionProfile`, and profile-declared
workspace roots together. That follow-up removes APIs such as
`set_constrained_permission_profile_with_active_profile()` where
separate arguments could drift out of sync.

Downstream PRs then build on this base to switch app-server turn updates
to profile ids plus runtime workspace roots and to finish the
user-visible summary behavior. Reviewers should judge this PR as the
workspace-roots foundation, not as the final in-memory shape of selected
permission profiles.

## Review Guide

Suggested review order:

1. Start with `codex-rs/core/src/config/mod.rs`.
This is the main shape change in the base slice. `Permissions` now
stores a private raw `Constrained<PermissionProfile>` plus runtime
`workspace_roots`. Callers use `permission_profile()` when they need the
raw constrained value and `effective_permission_profile()` when they
need a materialized runtime profile. As noted above,
[#22683](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22683) replaces this
transitional shape with a resolved profile state that keeps identity and
profile data together.

2. Review `codex-rs/config/src/permissions_toml.rs` and
`codex-rs/core/src/config/permissions.rs`.
These add `[permissions.<id>.workspace_roots]`, resolve enabled entries
relative to the policy cwd, and keep `:workspace_roots` deny-read glob
patterns symbolic until the actual roots are known.

3. Review `codex-rs/protocol/src/permissions.rs` and
`codex-rs/protocol/src/models.rs`.
These add the policy/profile materialization helpers that expand exact
`:workspace_roots` entries and scoped deny-read globs over every
workspace root. This is also where `ActivePermissionProfileModification`
is removed from the core model.

4. Review the legacy bridge in
`Config::load_from_base_config_with_overrides` and
`Config::set_legacy_sandbox_policy`.
This is where legacy `workspace-write` roots become runtime workspace
roots, while Codex internal writable roots stay internal and do not
appear as user-facing workspace roots.

5. Then skim downstream call sites.
The interesting pattern is raw-vs-effective access: state/proxy/bwrap
paths keep the raw constrained profile, while execution, summaries, and
user-visible status use the effective profile and workspace-root list.

## What Changed

- added `[permissions.<id>.workspace_roots]` to the config model and
schema
- added runtime `workspace_roots` state to `Config`/`Permissions` and
`ConfigOverrides`
- made `Permissions` profile fields private and replaced direct mutation
with accessors/setters
- added `PermissionProfile` and `FileSystemSandboxPolicy` helpers for
materializing `:workspace_roots` exact paths and deny-read globs across
all roots
- moved legacy additional writable roots into runtime workspace-root
state instead of active profile modifications
- removed `ActivePermissionProfileModification` and its app-server
protocol/schema export
- updated sandbox/status summary paths so internal writable roots are
not reported as user workspace roots

## Verification Strategy

The targeted tests cover the behavior at the layers where regressions
are most likely:
- `codex-rs/core/src/config/config_tests.rs` verifies config loading,
legacy workspace-root seeding, effective profile materialization, and
memory-root handling.
- `codex-rs/core/src/config/permissions_tests.rs` verifies profile
`workspace_roots` parsing and `:workspace_roots` scoped/glob
compilation.
- `codex-rs/protocol/src/permissions.rs` unit tests verify exact and
glob materialization over multiple workspace roots.
- `codex-rs/tui/src/status/tests.rs` and
`codex-rs/utils/sandbox-summary/src/sandbox_summary.rs` verify the
user-facing summaries show effective workspace roots and hide internal
writes.

I also ran `cargo check --tests` locally after the latest stack refresh
to catch cross-crate API breakage from the private-field/accessor
changes.







---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/22610).
* #22612
* #22611
* #22683
* __->__ #22610
2026-05-14 18:25:23 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
7dbe1c9498 [codex] Remove experimental instructions file config (#22724)
## Summary

Remove the deprecated `experimental_instructions_file` config setting
from the typed config surface and the remaining deprecation-notice
plumbing. `model_instructions_file` remains the supported setting and
its loading path is unchanged.

The setting was deprecated when it was renamed to
`model_instructions_file` on January 20, 2026 in
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/9555.

## Changes

- Remove `experimental_instructions_file` from `ConfigToml` and
`ConfigProfile`.
- Delete the custom config-layer scan and session deprecation notice for
the removed setting.
- Stop clearing the removed field from generated session config locks.
- Remove the obsolete deprecation-notice test case while keeping
`model_instructions_file` coverage intact.

## Validation

- `just write-config-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core model_instructions_file`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `git diff --check`

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-14 18:04:26 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
85915a2a21 chore(config) rm windows_wsl_setup_acknowledged (#22717)
## Summary
Remove dead code from a notice that no longer exists.

## Testing
- [x] Unit tests pass.
2026-05-14 23:25:15 +00:00
rreichel3-oai
02a7205250 [codex] Support multiple forced ChatGPT workspaces (#18161)
## Summary

This change lets `forced_chatgpt_workspace_id` accept multiple workspace
IDs instead of a single value.

It keeps the existing config key name, adds backward-compatible parsing
for a single string in `config.toml`, and normalizes the setting into an
allowed workspace list across login enforcement, app-server config
surfaces, and local ChatGPT auth helpers.

## Why

Workspace-restricted deployments may need to allow more than one ChatGPT
workspace without dropping the guardrail entirely.

## Server-side impact

Codex's local server and app-server protocol needed changes because they
previously assumed a single workspace ID. The local login flow now
matches the auth backend interface by sending the allowed workspace list
as a single comma-separated `allowed_workspace_id` query parameter.

## Validation

This was tested with:

- A single workspace config
- With multi-workspace configs
- With multiple workspaces in the config
- The user only being a part of a subset of them

All were successful.

Automated coverage:

- `cargo test -p codex-login`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui local_chatgpt_auth`
- `cargo test --locked -p codex-app-server
login_account_chatgpt_includes_forced_workspace_allowlist_query_param`
2026-05-14 17:11:36 -04:00
Matthew Zeng
d8ddeb6869 Support explicit MCP OAuth client IDs (#22575)
## Why
Some MCP OAuth providers require a pre-registered public client ID and
cannot rely on dynamic client registration. Codex already supports MCP
OAuth, but it had no way to supply that client ID from config into the
PKCE flow.

## What changed
- add `oauth.client_id` under `[mcp_servers.<server>]` config, including
config editing and schema generation
- thread the configured client ID through CLI, app-server, plugin login,
and MCP skill dependency OAuth entrypoints
- configure RMCP authorization with the explicit client when present,
while preserving the existing dynamic-registration path when it is
absent
- add focused coverage for config parsing/serialization and OAuth URL
generation

## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-config -p codex-rmcp-client -p codex-mcp -p
codex-core-plugins`
- `cargo test -p codex-core blocking_replace_mcp_servers_round_trips
--lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
replace_mcp_servers_streamable_http_serializes_oauth_resource --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-core config_schema_matches_fixture --lib`

## Notes
Broader local package runs still hit unrelated pre-existing stack
overflows in:
- `codex-app-server::in_process_start_clamps_zero_channel_capacity`
-
`codex-core::resume_agent_from_rollout_uses_edge_data_when_descendant_metadata_source_is_stale`
2026-05-14 11:52:43 -07:00
jif-oai
deedf3b2c4 feat: add layered --profile-v2 config files (#17141)
## Why

`--profile-v2 <name>` gives launchers and runtime entry points a named
profile config without making each profile duplicate the base user
config. The base `$CODEX_HOME/config.toml` still loads first, then
`$CODEX_HOME/<name>.config.toml` layers above it and becomes the active
writable user config for that session.

That keeps shared defaults, plugin/MCP setup, and managed/user
constraints in one place while letting a named profile override only the
pieces that need to differ.

## What Changed

- Added the shared `--profile-v2 <name>` runtime option with validated
plain names, now represented by `ProfileV2Name`.
- Extended config layer state so the base user config and selected
profile config are both `User` layers; APIs expose the active user layer
and merged effective user config.
- Threaded profile selection through runtime entry points: `codex`,
`codex exec`, `codex review`, `codex resume`, `codex fork`, and `codex
debug prompt-input`.
- Made user-facing config writes go to the selected profile file when
active, including TUI/settings persistence, app-server config writes,
and MCP/app tool approval persistence.
- Made plugin, marketplace, MCP, hooks, and config reload paths read
from the merged user config so base and profile layers both participate.
- Updated app-server config layer schemas to mark profile-backed user
layers.

## Limits

`--profile-v2` is still rejected for config-management subcommands such
as feature, MCP, and marketplace edits. Those paths remain tied to the
base `config.toml` until they have explicit profile-selection semantics.

Some adjacent background writes may still update base or global state
rather than the selected profile:

- marketplace auto-upgrade metadata
- automatic MCP dependency installs from skills
- remote plugin sync or uninstall config edits
- personality migration marker/default writes

## Verification

Added targeted coverage for profile name validation, layer
ordering/merging, selected-profile writes, app-server config writes,
session hot reload, plugin config merging, hooks/config fixture updates,
and MCP/app approval persistence.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-14 15:16:15 +02:00
Dylan Hurd
e33cf9ae28 chore(config) rm experimental_use_freeform_apply_patch (#22565)
## Summary
Get rid of the `experimental_use_freeform_apply_patch` config option,
since it is now encoded in model config. No deprecation message since it
has been experimental this entire time.

## Testing
- [x] Updated unit tests

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-13 17:52:15 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
9c691b74d6 chore(config) rm tools.view_image (#22501)
## Summary
It appears this config flag has been broken/a noop for quite some time:
since https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/8850. Let's simplify and get
rid of this.

## Testing
- [x] Updated unit tests
2026-05-13 12:35:37 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
d18a7c982e chore(config) rm Feature::CodexGitCommit (#22412)
## Summary
Removes the unused Feature::CodexGitCommit

## Testing
- [x] tests pass
2026-05-13 12:33:36 -07:00
pakrym-oai
83decfa300 [codex] Remove unused legacy shell tools (#22246)
## Why

Recent session history showed no active use of the raw `shell`,
`local_shell`, or `container.exec` execution surfaces. Keeping those
handlers/specs wired into core leaves duplicate shell execution paths
alongside the supported `shell_command` and unified exec tools.

## What changed

- Removed the raw `shell` handler/spec and its `ShellToolCallParams`
protocol helper.
- Removed the legacy `local_shell` and `container.exec` handler/spec
plumbing while preserving persisted-history compatibility for old
response items.
- Normalized model/config `default` and `local` shell selections to
`shell_command`.
- Pruned tests that exercised removed raw-shell/local-shell/apply-patch
variants and kept coverage on `shell_command`, unified exec, and
freeform `apply_patch`.

## Verification

- `git diff --check`
- `cargo test -p codex-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::handlers::shell`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::spec`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::router`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
active_call_preserves_triggering_command_context`
- `cargo test -p codex-core guardian_tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all shell_serialization`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all apply_patch_cli`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all shell_command_`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all local_shell`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all otel::`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all hooks::`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
2026-05-13 16:43:25 +00:00
Michael Bolin
889ee018e7 config: add strict config parsing (#20559)
## Why

Codex intentionally ignores unknown `config.toml` fields by default so
older and newer config files keep working across versions. That leniency
also makes typo detection hard because misspelled or misplaced keys
disappear silently.

This change adds an opt-in strict config mode so users and tooling can
fail fast on unrecognized config fields without changing the default
permissive behavior.

This feature is possible because `serde_ignored` exposes the exact
signal Codex needs: it lets Codex run ordinary Serde deserialization
while recording fields Serde would otherwise ignore. That avoids
requiring `#[serde(deny_unknown_fields)]` across every config type and
keeps strict validation opt-in around the existing config model.

## What Changed

### Added strict config validation

- Added `serde_ignored`-based validation for `ConfigToml` in
`codex-rs/config/src/strict_config.rs`.
- Combined `serde_ignored` with `serde_path_to_error` so strict mode
preserves typed config error paths while also collecting fields Serde
would otherwise ignore.
- Added strict-mode validation for unknown `[features]` keys, including
keys that would otherwise be accepted by `FeaturesToml`'s flattened
boolean map.
- Kept typed config errors ahead of ignored-field reporting, so
malformed known fields are reported before unknown-field diagnostics.
- Added source-range diagnostics for top-level and nested unknown config
fields, including non-file managed preference source names.

### Kept parsing single-pass per source

- Reworked file and managed-config loading so strict validation reuses
the already parsed `TomlValue` for that source.
- For actual config files and managed config strings, the loader now
reads once, parses once, and validates that same parsed value instead of
deserializing multiple times.
- Validated `-c` / `--config` override layers with the same
base-directory context used for normal relative-path resolution, so
unknown override keys are still reported when another override contains
a relative path.

### Scoped `--strict-config` to config-heavy entry points

- Added support for `--strict-config` on the main config-loading entry
points where it is most useful:
  - `codex`
  - `codex resume`
  - `codex fork`
  - `codex exec`
  - `codex review`
  - `codex mcp-server`
  - `codex app-server` when running the server itself
  - the standalone `codex-app-server` binary
  - the standalone `codex-exec` binary
- Commands outside that set now reject `--strict-config` early with
targeted errors instead of accepting it everywhere through shared CLI
plumbing.
- `codex app-server` subcommands such as `proxy`, `daemon`, and
`generate-*` are intentionally excluded from the first rollout.
- When app-server strict mode sees invalid config, app-server exits with
the config error instead of logging a warning and continuing with
defaults.
- Introduced a dedicated `ReviewCommand` wrapper in `codex-rs/cli`
instead of extending shared `ReviewArgs`, so `--strict-config` stays on
the outer config-loading command surface and does not become part of the
reusable review payload used by `codex exec review`.

### Coverage

- Added tests for top-level and nested unknown config fields, unknown
`[features]` keys, typed-error precedence, source-location reporting,
and non-file managed preference source names.
- Added CLI coverage showing invalid `--enable`, invalid `--disable`,
and unknown `-c` overrides still error when `--strict-config` is
present, including compound-looking feature names such as
`multi_agent_v2.subagent_usage_hint_text`.
- Added integration coverage showing both `codex app-server
--strict-config` and standalone `codex-app-server --strict-config` exit
with an error for unknown config fields instead of starting with
fallback defaults.
- Added coverage showing unsupported command surfaces reject
`--strict-config` with explicit errors.

## Example Usage

Run Codex with strict config validation enabled:

```shell
codex --strict-config
```

Strict config mode is also available on the supported config-heavy
subcommands:

```shell
codex --strict-config exec "explain this repository"
codex review --strict-config --uncommitted
codex mcp-server --strict-config
codex app-server --strict-config --listen off
codex-app-server --strict-config --listen off
```

For example, if `~/.codex/config.toml` contains a typo in a key name:

```toml
model = "gpt-5"
approval_polic = "on-request"
```

then `codex --strict-config` reports the misspelled key instead of
silently ignoring it. The path is shortened to `~` here for readability:

```text
$ codex --strict-config
Error loading config.toml:
~/.codex/config.toml:2:1: unknown configuration field `approval_polic`
  |
2 | approval_polic = "on-request"
  | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```

Without `--strict-config`, Codex keeps the existing permissive behavior
and ignores the unknown key.

Strict config mode also validates ad-hoc `-c` / `--config` overrides:

```text
$ codex --strict-config -c foo=bar
Error: unknown configuration field `foo` in -c/--config override

$ codex --strict-config -c features.foo=true
Error: unknown configuration field `features.foo` in -c/--config override
```

Invalid feature toggles are rejected too, including values that look
like nested config paths:

```text
$ codex --strict-config --enable does_not_exist
Error: Unknown feature flag: does_not_exist

$ codex --strict-config --disable does_not_exist
Error: Unknown feature flag: does_not_exist

$ codex --strict-config --enable multi_agent_v2.subagent_usage_hint_text
Error: Unknown feature flag: multi_agent_v2.subagent_usage_hint_text
```

Unsupported commands reject the flag explicitly:

```text
$ codex --strict-config cloud list
Error: `--strict-config` is not supported for `codex cloud`
```

## Verification

The `codex-cli` `strict_config` tests cover invalid `--enable`, invalid
`--disable`, the compound `multi_agent_v2.subagent_usage_hint_text`
case, unknown `-c` overrides, app-server strict startup failure through
`codex app-server`, and rejection for unsupported commands such as
`codex cloud`, `codex mcp`, `codex remote-control`, and `codex
app-server proxy`.

The config and config-loader tests cover unknown top-level fields,
unknown nested fields, unknown `[features]` keys, source-location
reporting, non-file managed config sources, and `-c` validation for keys
such as `features.foo`.

The app-server test suite covers standalone `codex-app-server
--strict-config` startup failure for an unknown config field.

## Documentation

The Codex CLI docs on developers.openai.com/codex should mention
`--strict-config` as an opt-in validation mode for supported
config-heavy entry points once this ships.
2026-05-13 16:08:05 +00:00
Felipe Coury
3d517fbd00 feat(tui): standardize picker navigation keys (#22347)
## Why

Picker-style UI in the TUI has accumulated a mix of hardcoded navigation
keys. Some lists supported page movement, some did not; some accepted
Vim-like keys, while others only accepted arrows; and tabbed or
horizontally adjustable pickers had no shared keymap action for
left/right movement.

This PR makes picker/list navigation consistent and configurable so
users can rely on the same defaults across the TUI.

## What Changed

- Adds shared list keymap actions for:
  - vertical movement: `move_up`, `move_down`
  - horizontal movement: `move_left`, `move_right`
  - paging and jumps: `page_up`, `page_down`, `jump_top`, `jump_bottom`
- Adds defaults:
- Up/down: arrows, `Ctrl+P/N`, `Ctrl+K/J`, and plain `k/j` where text
input is not active
  - Page up/down: `PageUp/PageDown` and `Ctrl+B/F`
  - First/last: `Home/End`
  - Left/right: `Left/Right` and `Ctrl+H/L`
- Wires the shared list keymap through picker and list surfaces
including session resume, multi-select, tabbed selection lists,
settings-style lists, app-link selection, MCP elicitation,
request-user-input, and the OSS selection wizard.
- Keeps search behavior intact by reserving printable characters for
query text in searchable pickers.
- Updates keymap setup actions, config schema, snapshots, and focused
coverage for the new list actions.

## How to Test

1. Start Codex from this branch and open the session picker, for example
with an existing session history.
2. In the session list, verify that `Ctrl+J/K` moves the selection
down/up.
3. Verify that `Ctrl+F/B` pages down/up and `Home/End` jumps to the
first/last visible session.
4. Type printable search text such as `j` or `k` and confirm it updates
the query instead of navigating.
5. Focus a picker control that changes values horizontally, such as a
session picker toolbar control, and verify `Ctrl+H/L` changes the
focused value like left/right arrows.

Targeted tests run:

- `cargo test -p codex-tui keymap::tests::`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui keymap_setup::tests::`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui horizontal_list_keys`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui page_and_jump_navigation_use_list_keymap`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui ctrl_h_l_move_provider_selection`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui scroll_state::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
switching_tabs_changes_visible_items_and_clears_search`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui toggle_sort_key_reloads_with_new_sort`

Also ran `just write-config-schema`, `just fmt`, `just fix -p
codex-tui`, `just argument-comment-lint`, and `git diff --check`.

Note: `cargo test -p codex-tui` was attempted and still aborts in the
pre-existing
`tests::fork_last_filters_latest_session_by_cwd_unless_show_all` stack
overflow, which is unrelated to this branch.
2026-05-13 15:33:27 +00:00
Felipe Coury
6f77b70ff3 feat(tui): remove Zellij TUI workarounds (#22214)
## Why

We added Zellij-specific TUI workarounds because older Zellij behavior
did not work with Codex's normal terminal model:

- #8555 made `tui.alternate_screen = "auto"` disable alternate screen in
Zellij so transcript history stayed available.
- #16578 avoided scroll-region operations in Zellij by emitting raw
newlines and using a separate composer styling path.

This PR removes both workarounds because the latest Zellij release
tested locally (`zellij 0.44.1`) works correctly with Codex's standard
TUI behavior: normal alternate-screen handling, redraw, and history
insertion.

## What Changed

- Removed the `InsertHistoryMode::Zellij` path and the Zellij-only
newline scrollback insertion behavior.
- Removed cached `is_zellij` state from the TUI and composer.
- Removed Zellij-specific composer styling, the helper snapshot, and the
`TerminalInfo::is_zellij()` convenience method that only served this
workaround.
- Changed `tui.alternate_screen = "auto"` to use alternate screen for
Zellij too; `--no-alt-screen` and `tui.alternate_screen = "never"` still
preserve the inline mode escape hatch.
- Updated the generated config schema description for
`tui.alternate_screen`.

## How to Test

Manual smoke path used with `zellij 0.44.1`:

1. Build and run this branch inside a Zellij `0.44.1` session with
default config.
2. Start Codex normally and produce enough assistant/tool output to
create scrollback.
3. Confirm the transcript remains readable, the composer renders
normally, and scrolling through terminal history works.
4. Resize the Zellij pane while output exists and confirm the TUI
redraws without duplicated, missing, or stale rows.
5. Compare with `--no-alt-screen` or `-c tui.alternate_screen=never` if
you want to verify the inline fallback still works.

Targeted tests:
- `just write-config-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `just fix -p codex-tui`
- `cargo test -p codex-terminal-detection`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui alternate_screen_auto_uses_alt_screen`

Attempted but did not complete locally:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui` built and ran the new test successfully,
then failed later on unrelated local failures in
`status_permissions_full_disk_managed_*` and a stack overflow in
`tests::fork_last_filters_latest_session_by_cwd_unless_show_all`.

## Documentation

No developers.openai.com Codex documentation update is needed for this
revert.
2026-05-13 12:11:15 -03:00
Abhinav
934a40c7d9 Use root repo hooks in linked worktrees (#21969)
# Why

Linked worktrees currently load their own project hook declarations, so
the same repo can present different hook definitions depending on which
checkout is active. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/21762 tried to
share trust by giving matching worktree hooks a shared synthetic key,
but review pointed out that divergent worktree hook definitions would
then fight over one `trusted_hash`.

Instead of introducing a second trust model, this makes linked worktrees
use the root checkout as the single source of truth for project hook
declarations. Worktree-local project config can still diverge for
unrelated settings, but project hooks now keep one real source path and
one trust state per repo.

# What

- Teach project config loading to remember the matching root-checkout
`.codex/` folder for actual linked-worktree project layers.
- Keep ordinary project config sourced from the worktree, but replace
project hook declarations with the root checkout's matching layer before
hook discovery runs, including linked-worktree layers with `.codex/` but
no local `config.toml`.
- Make hook discovery use that authoritative hook folder for both
`hooks.json` and TOML hook source paths, so linked worktrees produce the
same hook key and trust state as the root checkout.
- Cover the linked-worktree path plus regressions for missing worktree
`config.toml` and nested non-worktree project roots.
2026-05-13 06:58:58 +00:00
Andrei Eternal
913aad4d3c Add allow_managed_hooks_only hook requirement (#20319)
## Why

Enterprise-managed hook policy needs a narrow way to require Codex to
ignore user-controlled lifecycle hooks without adopting the broader
trust-precedence model from earlier hook work. This keeps the policy
anchored in `requirements.toml`, so admins can opt into managed hooks
only while normal `config.toml` files cannot enable the restriction
themselves.

## What changed

- Added `allow_managed_hooks_only` to the requirements data flow and
preserved explicit `false` values.
- Also adds it to /debug-config
- Marked MDM, system, and legacy managed config layers as managed for
hook discovery.
- Updated hook discovery so `allow_managed_hooks_only = true`:
  - keeps managed requirements hooks and managed config-layer hooks,
- skips user/project/session `hooks.json` and `[hooks]` entries with
concise startup warnings,
  - skips current unmanaged plugin hooks,
- ignores any `allow_managed_hooks_only` key placed in ordinary
`config.toml` layers.
2026-05-12 19:05:25 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
8123bddb16 chore(config) include_collaboration_mode_instructions (#22383)
## Summary
Adds include_collaboration_mode_instructions, which is a config
equivalent to include_permissions_instructions for collaboration modes.
Desired for situations where we want to disable this instruction from
entering the context

## Testing
- [x] Added unit test
2026-05-12 15:50:10 -07:00
Felipe Coury
95b332c820 feat(tui): add ambient terminal pets (#21206)
## Why

The Codex App has animated pets, but the TUI had no equivalent ambient
companion surface. This brings that experience into terminal Codex while
keeping the main chat flow usable: the pet should feel present, but it
cannot cover transcript text, composer input, approvals, or picker
content.

The feature also needs to be terminal-aware. Different terminals support
different image protocols, tmux can interfere with image rendering, and
some users will want pets disabled entirely or anchored differently
depending on their layout.

<table>
<tr><td>
<img width="4110" height="2584" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-05 at 12 41
45@2x"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/68a1fcbc-2104-48d6-b834-69c6aaa95cdf"
/>
<p align="center">macOS - Ghostty, iTerm2 and WezTerm with Custom
Pet</p>
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
![Uploading CleanShot 2026-05-10 at 20.28.30.png…]()
<p align="center">Windows Terminal</p>
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<img width="3902" height="2752" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-05 at 12 39
02@2x"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/300e2931-6b00-467e-91cb-ab8e28470500"
/>
<p align="center">Linux - WezTerm and Ghostty</p>
</td></tr>
</table>

## What Changed

- Add a TUI ambient pet renderer in `codex-rs/tui/src/pets/`.
- Port the app-style pet animation states so the sprite changes with
task status, waiting-for-input states, review/ready states, and
failures.
- Add `/pets` selection UI with a preview pane, loading state, built-in
pet choices, and a first-row `Disable terminal pets` option.
- Download built-in pet spritesheets on demand from the same public CDN
path already used by Android, under
`https://persistent.oaistatic.com/codex/pets/v1/...`, and cache them
locally under `~/.codex/cache/tui-pets/`.
- Keep custom pets local.
- Add config support for pet selection, disabling pets, and choosing
whether the pet follows the composer bottom or anchors to the terminal
bottom.
- Reserve layout space around the pet so transcript wrapping, live
responses, and composer input do not render underneath the sprite.
- Gate image rendering by terminal capability, disable image pets under
tmux, and support both Kitty Graphics and SIXEL terminals.
- Add redraw cleanup for terminal image artifacts, including sixel cell
clearing.

## Current Scope

- This is an initial TUI version of ambient pets, not full App parity.
- It focuses on ambient sprite rendering, `/pets` selection, custom
pets, terminal capability gating, and on-demand CDN-backed built-in
assets.
- The ambient text overlay is currently disabled, so the TUI renders the
pet sprite without extra status text beside it.

## How to Test

1. Start Codex TUI in a terminal with image support.
2. Run `/pets`.
3. Confirm the picker shows built-in pets plus custom pets, and the
first item is `Disable terminal pets`.
4. On a fresh `~/.codex/cache/tui-pets/`, move onto a built-in pet and
confirm the first preview downloads the spritesheet from the shared
Codex pets CDN and renders successfully.
5. Move through the pet list and confirm subsequent built-in previews
use the local cache.
6. Select a pet, then send and receive messages. Confirm transcript and
composer text wrap before the pet instead of rendering underneath the
sprite.
7. Change the pet anchor setting and confirm the pet can either follow
the composer bottom or sit at the terminal bottom.
8. Return to `/pets`, choose `Disable terminal pets`, and confirm the
sprite disappears cleanly.

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui ambient_pet_`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
resize_reflow_wraps_transcript_early_when_pet_is_enabled`
- `cargo insta pending-snapshots`
2026-05-12 10:43:17 -03:00
Abhinav
9ab7f4e6ac Add Windows hook command overrides (#22159)
# Why

Managed hook configs need a shared cross-platform shape without making
the existing `command` field polymorphic. The common case is still one
command string, with Windows needing a different entrypoint only when
the runtime is actually Windows.

Keeping `command` as the portable/default path and adding an optional
Windows override keeps the config easier to read, preserves the existing
scalar shape for non-Windows users, and avoids forcing every caller into
a `{ unix, windows }` object when only one platform needs special
handling.

# What

- Add optional `command_windows` / `commandWindows` alongside the
existing hook `command` field.
- Resolve `command_windows` only on Windows during hook discovery; other
platforms continue to use `command` unchanged.
- Keep trust hashing aligned to the effective command selected for the
current runtime.

# Docs

The Codex hooks/config reference should document `command_windows` as
the Windows-only override for command hooks.
2026-05-11 22:22:29 +00:00
viyatb-oai
c7b55cdc46 feat: add network proxy feature flag (#20147)
## Why

The permissions migration is making
`permissions.<profile>.network.enabled` the canonical sandbox network
bit, while proxy startup is a separate concern. Enabling network access
should not implicitly start the proxy, and users who are still on legacy
sandbox modes need a separate place to opt into proxy startup and
provide proxy-specific settings.

This follow-up to #19900 gives the network proxy its own feature surface
instead of overloading permission-profile network semantics.

## What changed

- Add an experimental `network_proxy` feature with a configurable
`[features.network_proxy]` table.
- Overlay `features.network_proxy` settings onto the configured proxy
state after permission-profile selection, so the proxy only starts when
the active `NetworkSandboxPolicy` already allows network access.
- Preserve `[experimental_network]` startup behavior independently of
the new feature flag.

## Behavior and examples

There are now three related knobs:

- `permissions.<profile>.network.enabled` controls whether the active
permission profile has network access at all.
- `features.network_proxy` enables proxy restrictions for an
already-network-enabled profile.
- Legacy `sandbox_mode` plus `[sandbox_workspace_write].network_access`
still control whether legacy `workspace-write` has network access at
all.

The rule is:

- network off + proxy flag on -> network stays off, proxy is a no-op
- network on + proxy flag off -> unrestricted direct network
- network on + proxy flag on -> network stays on, with proxy
restrictions applied

For permission profiles, the feature toggle adds proxy restrictions only
when network access is already enabled:

```toml
default_permissions = "workspace"

[permissions.workspace.filesystem]
":minimal" = "read"

[permissions.workspace.network]
enabled = true

[features]
network_proxy = true
```

If `network.enabled = false`, the same feature flag is a no-op: network
remains off and the proxy does not start.

For legacy sandbox config, `network_access` remains the master switch:

```toml
sandbox_mode = "workspace-write"

[sandbox_workspace_write]
network_access = true

[features]
network_proxy = true
```

That keeps legacy `workspace-write` network access on, but routes it
through the proxy policy. If `network_access = false`, the proxy feature
is a no-op and legacy `workspace-write` remains offline.

The same proxy opt-in can be supplied from the CLI:

```bash
codex -c 'features.network_proxy=true'
```

Additional proxy settings can be supplied when a table is needed:

```bash
codex \
  -c 'features.network_proxy.enabled=true' \
  -c 'features.network_proxy.enable_socks5=false'
```

The intended behavior matrix is:

| Config surface | Network setting | `features.network_proxy` | Direct
sandbox network | Proxy |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Permission profile | `network.enabled = false` | off | restricted |
off |
| Permission profile | `network.enabled = false` | on | restricted | off
|
| Permission profile | `network.enabled = true` | off | enabled | off |
| Permission profile | `network.enabled = true` | on | enabled | on |
| Legacy `workspace-write` | `network_access = false` | off | restricted
| off |
| Legacy `workspace-write` | `network_access = false` | on | restricted
| off |
| Legacy `workspace-write` | `network_access = true` | off | enabled |
off |
| Legacy `workspace-write` | `network_access = true` | on | enabled | on
|

`[experimental_network]` requirements remain separate from the user
feature toggle and still start the proxy on their own.

Relevant code:
-
[`features/src/feature_configs.rs`](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/43785aff47/codex-rs/features/src/feature_configs.rs#L58-L117)
defines the feature-specific proxy config.
-
[`core/src/config/mod.rs`](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/43785aff47/codex-rs/core/src/config/mod.rs#L1959-L1964)
reads the feature table, and [later applies it only when network access
is already
enabled](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/43785aff47/codex-rs/core/src/config/mod.rs#L2448-L2458).

## Verification

Added focused coverage for:
- keeping the proxy off when `features.network_proxy` is enabled but
sandbox network access is disabled
- the full permission-profile and legacy `workspace-write` matrix above
- preserving `[experimental_network]` startup without the feature
- reusing profile-supplied proxy settings when the feature is enabled

Ran:
- `cargo test -p codex-features`
- `cargo test -p codex-core network_proxy_feature`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
experimental_network_requirements_enable_proxy_without_feature`
2026-05-11 14:12:00 -07:00
Felipe Coury
99b98aece6 config: accept minus in TUI keymap config (#22192)
## Summary

Fixes #22128.

The `/keymap` flow already persists the `-` key as `minus`, and the
runtime keymap parser already accepts that spelling. `codex-config` was
the missing leg: it rejected `minus` during config deserialization, so a
binding saved by Codex could fail on the next startup or config reload.

## What Changed

- Accept `minus` as a valid canonical key name in `tui.keymap` config
normalization.
- Update the config validation message so its supported-key list
includes `minus`.
- Add regression coverage that deserializes both `minus` and `alt-minus`
under `[tui.keymap.global]` and verifies the normalized config shape.

## How to Test

1. Start Codex TUI.
2. Run `/keymap`.
3. Assign the `-` key to an action and save the change.
4. Restart Codex or reload the config.
5. Confirm the config loads normally and the saved binding remains
usable instead of failing on `minus`.
6. As a focused regression check, repeat with a modifier form such as
`alt--` captured through `/keymap`, which persists as `alt-minus` and
should also reload successfully.

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-config`
2026-05-11 16:34:33 -03:00
viyatb-oai
d0fa2d81d8 feat(connectors): support managed app tool approval requirements (#21061)
## Why

Managed requirements can already centrally disable apps, but they could
not express the per-tool app approval rules that normal config already
supports. That left admins without a way to enforce connector tool
approvals through `/etc/codex/requirements.toml` or cloud requirements.

## What changed

- Extend app requirements with per-tool `approval_mode` entries.
- Merge managed app tool requirements across managed sources while
preserving higher-precedence exact tool settings.
- Apply managed tool approvals separately from user app config so
managed policy is matched only on raw MCP `tool.name`, while user config
keeps the existing raw-name-then-title convenience fallback.
- Add coverage for local requirements, cloud requirements parsing,
managed-over-user precedence, and a title-collision case that must not
widen managed auto-approval.

## Configuration shape

Local `/etc/codex/requirements.toml` and cloud requirements use the same
TOML shape:

```toml
[apps.connector_123123.tools."calendar/list_events"]
approval_mode = "approve"
```

This is a per-tool approval rule keyed by app ID and raw MCP tool name,
not an app-level boolean such as `apps.connector_123123.approve = true`.
2026-05-11 19:08:26 +00:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
317213fd33 Allow string service tiers in config TOML (#21697)
## Why

`service_tier` in `config.toml` and profile config was still modeled as
an enum, which blocked newer or experimental service tier IDs even
though the runtime paths already carry string IDs.

This change makes the TOML-facing config accept string service tier IDs
directly while keeping the legacy `fast` alias behavior by normalizing
it to the request value `priority`.

## What Changed

- change the TOML-facing `service_tier` fields in global and profile
config to `Option<String>`
- keep config-load normalization so legacy `fast` still resolves to
`priority`
- persist resolved service tier strings directly in config locks so
arbitrary IDs round-trip cleanly
- regenerate the config schema and add config coverage for arbitrary
string IDs plus legacy `fast` normalization

## Verification

- added config tests for arbitrary string service tiers and legacy
`fast` normalization
- ran `just write-config-schema`
- CI

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-08 15:15:00 +03:00
Tom
79ad209ce6 [codex] Remove remote thread store implementation (#21596)
Remove the remote thread-store backend and checked-in protobuf
artifacts. We've moved these into another crate that link against this
one.

Also remove the config settings for thread store backend selection,
since we'll instead pass an instantiated thread store into the core-api
crate's main entrypoint.
2026-05-08 00:02:46 +00:00
bbrown-oai
31b233c7c6 codex-otel: add configurable trace metadata (#21556)
Add Codex config for static trace span attributes and structured W3C
tracestate field upserts. The config flows through OtelSettings so
callers can attach trace metadata without touching every span call site.

Apply span attributes with an SDK span processor so every exported
trace span carries the configured metadata. Model tracestate as nested
member fields so configured keys can be upserted while unrelated
propagated state in the same member is preserved.

Validate configured tracestate before installing provider-global state,
including header-unsafe values the SDK does not reject by itself. This
keeps Codex from propagating malformed trace context from config.

Update the config schema, public docs, and OTLP loopback coverage for
config parsing, span export, propagation, and invalid-header rejection.
2026-05-07 16:06:57 -07:00
Charlie Marsh
54ef99a365 Disable empty Cargo test targets (#21584)
## Summary

`cargo test` has entails both running standard Rust tests and doctests.
It turns out that the doctest discovery is fairly slow, and it's a cost
you pay even for crates that don't include any doctests.

This PR disables doctests with `doctest = false` for crates that lack
any doctests.

For the collection of crates below, this speeds up test execution by
>4x.

E.g., before this PR:

```
Benchmark 1: cargo test     -p codex-utils-absolute-path     -p codex-utils-cache     -p codex-utils-cli     -p codex-utils-home-dir     -p codex-utils-output-truncation     -p codex-utils-path     -p codex-utils-string     -p codex-utils-template     -p codex-utils-elapsed     -p codex-utils-json-to-toml
  Time (mean ± σ):      1.849 s ±  4.455 s    [User: 0.752 s, System: 1.367 s]
  Range (min … max):    0.418 s … 14.529 s    10 runs
```

And after:

```
Benchmark 1: cargo test     -p codex-utils-absolute-path     -p codex-utils-cache     -p codex-utils-cli     -p codex-utils-home-dir     -p codex-utils-output-truncation     -p codex-utils-path     -p codex-utils-string     -p codex-utils-template     -p codex-utils-elapsed     -p codex-utils-json-to-toml
  Time (mean ± σ):     428.6 ms ±   6.9 ms    [User: 187.7 ms, System: 219.7 ms]
  Range (min … max):   418.0 ms … 436.8 ms    10 runs
```

For a single crate, with >2x speedup, before:

```
Benchmark 1: cargo test -p codex-utils-string
  Time (mean ± σ):     491.1 ms ±   9.0 ms    [User: 229.8 ms, System: 234.9 ms]
  Range (min … max):   480.9 ms … 512.0 ms    10 runs
```

And after:

```
Benchmark 1: cargo test -p codex-utils-string
  Time (mean ± σ):     213.9 ms ±   4.3 ms    [User: 112.8 ms, System: 84.0 ms]
  Range (min … max):   206.8 ms … 221.0 ms    13 runs
```

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-07 15:44:17 -07:00
jif-oai
eb0462f2af app-server: refresh live threads from latest config snapshot (#21187)
## Why

App-server config writes were leaving existing threads partially stale.
After a config mutation, the app-server told each live thread to run
`Op::ReloadUserConfig`, but that path only re-read the user
`config.toml` layer. Settings that came from the app-server's
materialized config snapshot did not propagate to existing threads until
restart.

This change prevent a FS access from `core` for CCA.

## What changed

- add `CodexThread::refresh_runtime_config()` and
`Session::refresh_runtime_config()` so the app-server can push a freshly
rebuilt config snapshot into a live thread
- rebuild the latest config with each thread's `cwd` after config
mutations, then refresh the thread from that snapshot instead of asking
it to reload only `config.toml`
- keep session-static settings unchanged during refresh, while updating
runtime-refreshable state such as the config layer stack,
`tool_suggest`, and derived hook/plugin/skill state
- keep `reload_user_config_layer()` as the file-backed fallback for
legacy local reload flows, but route the shared refresh logic through
the new runtime refresh path

## Testing

- add a session test that verifies `refresh_runtime_config()` rebuilds
hooks from refreshed config
- add a session test that verifies runtime-refreshable fields update
while session-static settings like `model` and `notify` stay unchanged

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-07 19:22:04 +02:00
Andrei Eternal
527d52df03 Add compact lifecycle hooks (started by vincentkoc - external contrib) (#19905)
Based on work from Vincent K -
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/19060

<img width="1836" height="642" alt="CleanShot 2026-04-29 at 20 47 40@2x"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b647bb89-65fe-40c8-80b0-7a6b7c984634"
/>

## Why

Compaction rewrites the conversation context that future model turns
receive, but hooks currently have no deterministic lifecycle point
around that rewrite. This adds compact lifecycle hooks so users can
audit manual and automatic compaction, surface hook messages in the UI,
and run post-compaction follow-up without overloading tool or prompt
hooks.

## What Changed

- Added `PreCompact` and `PostCompact` hook events across hook config,
discovery, dispatch, generated schemas, app-server notifications,
analytics, and TUI hook rendering.
- Added trigger matching for compact hooks with the documented `manual`
and `auto` matcher values.
- Wired `PreCompact` before both local and remote compaction, and
`PostCompact` after successful local or remote compaction.
- Kept compact hook command input to lifecycle metadata: session id,
Codex turn id, transcript path, cwd, hook event name, model, and
trigger.
- Made compact stdout handling consistent with other hooks: plain stdout
is ignored as debug output, while malformed JSON-looking stdout is
reported as failed hook output.
- Added integration coverage for compact hook dispatch, trigger
matching, post-compact execution, and the audited behavior that
`decision:"block"` does not block compaction.

## Out of Scope

- Hook-specific compaction blocking is not implemented;
`decision:"block"` and exit-code-2 blocking semantics are intentionally
unsupported for `PreCompact`.
- Custom compaction instructions are not exposed to compact hooks in
this PR.
- Compact summaries, summary character counts, and summary previews are
not exposed to compact hooks in this PR.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-hooks`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
manual_pre_compact_block_decision_does_not_block_compaction`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server hooks_list`
- `cargo test -p codex-core config_schema_matches_fixture`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui hooks_browser`

## Docs

The developer documentation for Codex hooks should be updated alongside
this feature to document `PreCompact` and `PostCompact`, the
`manual`/`auto` matcher values, and the compact hook payload fields.

---------

Co-authored-by: Vincent Koc <vincentkoc@ieee.org>
2026-05-06 18:08:31 -07:00
Brian Henzelmann
8f5d68f9d2 Document Codex git commit attribution config (#21379)
## Summary
- document that commit attribution for generated git commit messages is
gated by the `codex_git_commit` feature flag
- add an example `config.toml` snippet showing `commit_attribution` with
`[features].codex_git_commit = true`
- update the config schema description so the reference docs explain
that `commit_attribution` only takes effect when the feature is enabled

Fixes #19799.

## Validation
- `cargo run -p codex-core --bin codex-write-config-schema`
- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-features`
- `cargo fmt --check`
- `git diff --check`

## Notes
- `cargo test -p codex-core config_schema_matches_fixture` currently
fails before reaching the schema test because `core_test_support`
imports `similar` without a linked crate in this checkout. The narrower
package checks above avoid that unrelated test-support build failure.
2026-05-06 16:14:50 -05:00