Commit Graph

1820 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Traut
1ae811ddb2 Refactor chatwidget settings surfaces into modules (phase 4) (#22518)
## Why

`chatwidget.rs` is still carrying too many unrelated responsibilities in
one file. #22269 started a five-phase cleanup to move coherent behavior
domains into focused modules while keeping `chatwidget.rs` as the
composition layer. #22407 completed phase 2 by extracting input and
submission flow, and #22433 completed phase 3 by extracting protocol,
replay, streaming, and tool lifecycle handling.

This PR is phase 4. It keeps moving high-churn UI coordination out of
the central widget by extracting settings, popups, and status surfaces
without changing the visible behavior those flows already provide. This
is once again a mechanical movement of existing functions. No functional
changes.

## What Changed

- Added focused modules for runtime settings/model coordination,
model/reasoning/collaboration popups,
settings/personality/theme/audio/experimental popups, permission
prompts, status setup/output controls, and Windows sandbox prompt flows.
- Moved the remaining rate-limit nudge/status helpers and connectors
popup/loading/update helpers into their existing focused modules.
- Preserved the existing picker flows, approval behavior, status/title
setup previews, rate-limit notices, and connectors/app list behavior
while shrinking `chatwidget.rs` back toward orchestration.
- Left `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget.rs` as the registration and
composition surface for these extracted behaviors.

## Cleanup Phases

The five-phase cleanup plan from #22269 is:

1. Phase 1: mechanical helper and state moves. Completed in #22269.
2. Phase 2: extract input and submission flow, including queued user
messages, shell prompt submission, pending steer restoration, and thread
input snapshot/restore behavior. Completed in #22407.
3. Phase 3: extract protocol, replay, streaming, and tool lifecycle
handling, while preserving active-cell grouping, transcript
invalidation, interrupt deferral, and final-message separator behavior.
Completed in #22433.
4. Phase 4: extract settings, popups, and status surfaces, including
model/reasoning/collaboration/personality popups, permission prompts,
rate-limit UI, and connectors helpers. This PR.
5. Phase 5: clean up the remaining constructor and orchestration code
once the larger behavior domains have moved out, leaving `chatwidget.rs`
as the composition layer.

## Verification

- `cargo check -p codex-tui`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui chatwidget::tests::permissions`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui chatwidget::tests::status_surface_previews`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui chatwidget::tests::popups_and_settings`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui chatwidget::tests::status_and_layout`

`cargo test -p codex-tui` also compiles and begins running, but aborts
in the unchanged app-side test
`app::tests::discard_side_thread_keeps_local_state_when_server_close_fails`
with a reproducible stack overflow.
2026-05-13 11:26:37 -07:00
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
Eric Traut
8fe0ecb045 Refactor chatwidget protocol flows into modules (phase 3) (#22433)
## Why

`chatwidget.rs` is still carrying too many unrelated responsibilities in
one file. #22269 started a five-phase cleanup to move coherent behavior
domains into focused modules while keeping `chatwidget.rs` as the
composition layer. #22407 completed phase 2 by extracting input and
submission flow.

This PR is phase 3. It keeps moving high-churn event handling out of the
central widget by extracting protocol, replay, streaming, and tool
lifecycle handling without changing the visible behavior those flows
already provide. This is once again just a mechanical movement of
existing functions. No functional changes.

## What Changed

- Added focused modules for protocol request dispatch, replay rendering,
assistant/plan/reasoning streaming, turn runtime bookkeeping, hook
lifecycle handling, command lifecycle handling, tool lifecycle
rendering, and interactive tool request prompts.
- Kept active-cell grouping, transcript invalidation, interrupt
deferral, and final-message separator behavior in the same flows, just
moved into smaller files.
- Added module header comments to the new files so the ownership
boundaries are explicit.
- Left `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget.rs` as the registration and
orchestration surface for these extracted behaviors.

## Cleanup Phases

The five-phase cleanup plan from #22269 is:

1. Phase 1: mechanical helper and state moves. Completed in #22269.
2. Phase 2: extract input and submission flow, including queued user
messages, shell prompt submission, pending steer restoration, and thread
input snapshot/restore behavior. Completed in #22407.
3. Phase 3: extract protocol, replay, streaming, and tool lifecycle
handling, while preserving active-cell grouping, transcript
invalidation, interrupt deferral, and final-message separator behavior.
This PR.
4. Phase 4: extract settings, popups, and status surfaces, including
model/reasoning/collaboration/personality popups, permission prompts,
rate-limit UI, and connectors helpers.
5. Phase 5: clean up the remaining constructor and orchestration code
once the larger behavior domains have moved out, leaving `chatwidget.rs`
as the composition layer.
2026-05-13 08:52:56 -07:00
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
392e94e9ea add --dangerously-bypass-hook-trust CLI flag (#21768)
# Why

Hook trust happens through the TUI in `/hooks` so it can block
non-interactive use cases. This flag will allow users that are using
codex headlessly to bypass hooks when they want to.

# What

This adds one invocation-scoped escape hatch.

- the CLI flag sets a runtime-only `bypass_hook_trust` override; there
is no durable `config.toml` setting
- hook discovery still respects normal enablement, so explicitly
disabled hooks remain disabled
- we show a `--dangerously-bypass-hook-trust is enabled. Enabled hooks
may run without review for this invocation.` message on startup so
accidental use is visible in both interactive and exec flows

This keeps “enabled” and “trusted” as separate concepts in the normal
path, while giving CI/E2E callers a stable way to opt into the
exceptional path when they already control the hook set.
2026-05-13 07:13:57 +00:00
Eric Traut
2630a6ca35 Refactor chatwidget input flow into modules (#22407)
## Why

`chatwidget.rs` is still carrying too many unrelated responsibilities in
one file. #22269 started a five-phase effort to move coherent behavior
domains into focused modules while keeping `chatwidget.rs` as the
composition layer.

This PR is phase 2 of that plan. It extracts the input and submission
flow as a mechanical move before the later protocol, popup/status, and
constructor/orchestration phases.

## What Changed

- Added `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/input_flow.rs` for composer input
results, queued user-message draining, pending-input previews, and
mode-specific submission entry points.
- Added `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/input_submission.rs` for
user-message construction/submission, shell prompt submission,
structured mention resolution, and blocked image draft restoration.
- Added `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/input_restore.rs` for
initial-message submission, pending steer restoration after interrupts,
and thread input snapshot/restore behavior.
- Registered the new modules and removed the moved `ChatWidget` impl
methods from `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget.rs`.

## Follow-On Refactor Phases

The five-phase plan from #22269 is:

- Phase 1: mechanical helper and state moves. Completed in #22269.
- Phase 2: extract input and submission flow, including queued user
messages, shell prompt submission, pending steer restoration, and thread
input snapshot/restore behavior. This PR.
- Phase 3: extract protocol, replay, streaming, and tool lifecycle
handling, while preserving active-cell grouping, transcript
invalidation, interrupt deferral, and final-message separator behavior.
- Phase 4: extract settings, popups, and status surfaces, including
model/reasoning/collaboration/personality popups, permission prompts,
rate-limit UI, and connectors helpers.
- Phase 5: clean up the remaining constructor and orchestration code
once the larger behavior domains have moved out, leaving `chatwidget.rs`
as the composition layer.
2026-05-12 21:17:35 -07:00
Eric Traut
ad572709ab Add support for UDS in codex --remote (#22414)
## Why

Added support for UDS connections in `codex --remote`.

TUI also now connects to local app-server using UDS by default if it is
running and set to listen to UDS connection.

## What Changed

- Introduced `RemoteAppServerEndpoint` with `WebSocket` and `UnixSocket`
variants.
- Reused the existing JSON-RPC-over-WebSocket protocol over either a TCP
WebSocket stream or a UDS stream.
- Updated `codex --remote` to accept `ws://host:port`,
`wss://host:port`, `unix://`, and `unix://PATH`.
- Kept `--remote-auth-token-env` restricted to `wss://` and loopback
`ws://` remotes.
- Added a fast TUI startup probe for the default daemon socket, falling
back to the embedded app server when the daemon is absent or
unresponsive.

## Verification

- Manually verified that the updated remote flow works.
- Added coverage for UDS remote round trips, WebSocket auth headers,
auth-token transport policy, remote address parsing, and missing-daemon
fallback.
- Ran focused remote test coverage locally.
2026-05-12 21:17:20 -07:00
pakrym-oai
96833c5b15 Remove CODEX_RS_SSE_FIXTURE test hook (#22413)
## Why

`CODEX_RS_SSE_FIXTURE` let integration-style CLI, exec, and TUI tests
bypass the normal Responses transport by reading SSE from local files.
That kept test-only behavior wired through production client code. The
affected tests can stay hermetic by using the existing
`core_test_support::responses` mock server and passing `openai_base_url`
instead.

## What Changed

- Removed the `CODEX_RS_SSE_FIXTURE` flag,
`codex_api::stream_from_fixture`, the `env-flags` dependency, and the
checked-in SSE fixture files.
- Repointed the affected core, exec, and TUI tests at `MockServer` with
the existing SSE event constructors.
- Removed the Bazel test data plumbing for the deleted fixtures and
refreshed cargo/Bazel lock state.

## Verification

- `cargo build -p codex-cli`
- `cargo test -p codex-api`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all responses_api_stream_cli`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
integration_creates_and_checks_session_file`
- `cargo test -p codex-exec --test all ephemeral`
- `cargo test -p codex-exec --test all resume`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui --test all
resume_startup_does_not_consume_model_availability_nux_count`
- `just bazel-lock-update`
- `just bazel-lock-check`
- `just fix -p codex-api -p codex-core -p codex-exec -p codex-tui`
- `git diff --check`
2026-05-13 03:08:01 +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
xl-openai
d1430fd61e feat: Expose plugin versions and gate plugin sharing (#22397)
- Adds localVersion to plugin summaries and remoteVersion to share
context, including generated API schemas.
- Hydrates local and remote plugin versions from manifests and remote
release metadata.
- Adds default-on plugin_sharing gate for shared-with-me listing and
plugin/share/save, with disabled-path errors
    and focused coverage.
2026-05-12 17:56:30 -07:00
Eric Traut
92930a8d40 Refactor chatwidget state into modules (#22269)
## Why

`chatwidget.rs` is still carrying too many unrelated responsibilities in
one file. After #21866 consolidated some of the state it tracks, this
starts the next phase by moving coherent state/helper clusters out of
the main module without changing behavior.

This PR is intentionally mechanical: it only moves existing functions,
structs, and helpers into focused modules so the boundaries are easier
to review before the less mechanical refactors that should follow.

## What Changed

- Moved user-message, composer, queue, pending steer, and merge/remap
helpers into `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/user_messages.rs`.
- Added `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/exec_state.rs` for unified exec
bookkeeping helpers.
- Added `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/rate_limits.rs` for rate-limit
warning, prompt, and error classification state.
- Moved plugin list fetch and install auth-flow state into
`codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/plugins.rs`.
- Made a couple of test-only `VecDeque` imports explicit now that those
tests no longer inherit the parent module import.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-tui` was run

## Follow-On Refactor Phases

This PR is phase 1: mechanical helper and state moves. Planned follow-up
PRs:

- Phase 2: extract input and submission flow, including queued user
messages, shell prompt submission, pending steer restoration, and thread
input snapshot/restore behavior.
- Phase 3: extract protocol, replay, streaming, and tool lifecycle
handling, while preserving active-cell grouping, transcript
invalidation, interrupt deferral, and final-message separator behavior.
- Phase 4: extract settings, popups, and status surfaces, including
model/reasoning/collaboration/personality popups, permission prompts,
rate-limit UI, and connectors helpers.
- Phase 5: clean up the remaining constructor and orchestration code
once the larger behavior domains have moved out, leaving `chatwidget.rs`
as the composition layer.
2026-05-12 17:33:33 -07:00
richardopenai
b6e718591b [codex] Remove workspace owner usage nudge gate (#20509)
## Summary
- make workspace owner nudge handling unconditional in the TUI now that
it is fully rolled out
- keep `workspace_owner_usage_nudge` as a removed no-op compatibility
flag so old configs/app overrides remain accepted during rollout
- remove flag-disabled test setup

## Companion PR
- https://github.com/openai/openai/pull/876351 removes the Codex Apps
Statsig rollout gate override after this change is available to the
app/runtime path

## Validation
- `just write-config-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-features`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui status_and_layout`
2026-05-12 17:07:33 -07:00
Felipe Coury
6dc3b3d7c8 test(tui): relax configured pet load timeout (#22392)
## Why

Windows CI has been timing out in
`configured_pet_load_is_deferred_until_after_construction` while waiting
for the deferred configured-pet load event.

The test still needs to prove construction returns before the pet image
is available, but the background load slices the built-in pet
spritesheet into frame cache files. That work can exceed the old 2
second deadline on slower or more contended CI machines.

## What Changed

- Increased the test wait for `ConfiguredPetLoaded` from 2 seconds to 30
seconds.
- Kept the post-construction assertion intact so the test still verifies
that the pet is not loaded synchronously during `ChatWidget`
construction.

## How to Test

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
configured_pet_load_is_deferred_until_after_construction`
- `just argument-comment-lint`

Additional check:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui` was run, but the broader crate suite did not
complete successfully due to unrelated existing failures:
-
`status::tests::status_permissions_full_disk_managed_without_network_is_external_sandbox`
-
`status::tests::status_permissions_full_disk_managed_with_network_is_danger_full_access`
- later abort in
`tests::fork_last_filters_latest_session_by_cwd_unless_show_all` from
stack overflow
2026-05-12 16:50:35 -07:00
pakrym-oai
960d42ddae code-mode: carry nested tool kind through runtime (#22377)
## Why

Code mode only used nested spec lookup at execution time to rediscover
whether a nested tool should be invoked as a function tool or a freeform
tool.

That information is already present in the enabled tool metadata that
code mode builds to expose `tools.*` and `ALL_TOOLS`, so re-looking it
up from the router was redundant and kept execution coupled to a
separate spec lookup path.

## What Changed

- thread `CodeModeToolKind` through the code-mode runtime `ToolCall`
event and `CodeModeNestedToolCall`
- emit the nested tool kind directly from the V8 callback using the
already-enabled tool metadata
- build nested tool payloads from the propagated kind instead of calling
`find_spec`
- remove the now-unused `find_spec` plumbing from the router and
parallel runtime helpers
- add unit coverage for function vs freeform payload shaping and update
affected router tests

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-code-mode`
- `cargo test -p codex-core code_mode::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
extension_tool_bundles_are_model_visible_and_dispatchable`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
model_visible_specs_filter_deferred_dynamic_tools`
2026-05-12 23:34:37 +00:00
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
xl-openai
5b1a4c2fa7 feat: Normalize remote plugin summary identities. (#22265)
Makes plugin summaries use config-style plugin@marketplace IDs while
exposing backend remote IDs separately as remotePluginId.

Also fix the consistency issue of REMOTE_SHARED_WITH_ME_MARKETPLACE_NAME
2026-05-12 00:58:37 -07:00
Felipe Coury
e16b4e46d4 fix(tui): handle hidden app git directives (#21946) 2026-05-11 21:08:40 -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
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
canvrno-oai
eaf05c9002 Unified mentions in TUI (#19068)
This PR replaces the TUI’s file-only `@mention` popup with a unified
mentions experience. Typing `@...` now searches across filesystem
matches, installed plugins, and skills in one popup, with result types
clearly labeled and selectable from the same flow.

- Adds a unified `@mentions` popup that returns:
  - plugins
  - skills
  - files
  - directories

- Adds search modes so users can narrow the popup without changing their
query:
  - All Results _(default/same as Codex App)_
  - Filesystem Only
  - Plugins _(...and skills)_

- Preserves existing insertion behavior:
  - selected file paths are inserted into the prompt
  - paths with spaces are quoted
  - image file selections still attach as images when possible
  - selecting a plugin or skill inserts the corresponding `$name`
- the composer records the canonical mention binding, such as
`plugin://...` or the skill path

- Expanded `@mentions` rendering:
  - type tags for Plugin, Skill, File, and Dir
  - distinct plugin/filesystem colors
  - stable fixed-height layout (8 rows)
  - truncation behavior for narrow terminals

Note:
- The unified mentions popup does not display app connectors under
`@mention` results for Codex App parity. Connector mentions remain
available through the existing `$mention` path.


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f93781ed-57d3-4cb5-9972-675bc5f3ef3f
2026-05-11 11:34:52 -07:00
jif-oai
b401666ca5 Add process-scoped SQLite telemetry (#22154)
## Summary
- add SQLite init, backfill-gate, and fallback telemetry without
introducing a cross-cutting state-db access wrapper
- install one process-scoped telemetry sink after OTEL startup and let
low-level state/rollout paths emit through it directly
- add process-start metrics for the process owners that initialize
SQLite

---------

Co-authored-by: Owen Lin <owen@openai.com>
2026-05-11 11:32:40 -07:00
Eric Traut
1e65b3e0af Fix goal update and add /goal edit command in TUI (#21954)
## Why

Users have requested the ability to edit a goal's objective after a goal
has been created. This PR exposes a new `/goal edit` command in the TUI
to address this request.

In the process of implementing this, I also noticed an existing bug in
the goal runtime. When a goal's objective is updated through the
`thread/goal/set` app server API, the goal runtime didn't emit a new
steering prompt to tell the agent about the new objective. This PR also
fixes this hole.

## What Changed

- Adds `/goal edit` in the TUI, opening an edit box prefilled with the
current goal objective.
- Keeps active and paused goals in their current state, resets completed
goals to active, keeps budget-limited goals budget-limited, and
preserves the existing token budget.
- Changes the existing `thread/goal/set` behavior so editing an
objective preserves goal accounting instead of resetting it. The older
reset-on-new-objective behavior was left over from before
`thread/goal/clear`; clients that need to reset accounting can now clear
the existing goal and create a new one.
- Reuses the existing goal set API path; this does not add or change
app-server protocol surface area.
- Adds a dedicated goal runtime steering prompt when an externally
persisted goal mutation changes the objective, so active turns receive
the updated objective.

## Validation

- Make sure `/goal edit` returns an error if no goal currently exists
- Make sure `/goal edit` displays an edit box that can be optionally
canceled with no side effects
- Make sure that an edited goal results in a steer so the agent starts
pursuing the new objective
- Make sure the new objective is reflected in the goal if you use
`/goal` to display the goal summary
- Make sure that `/goal edit` doesn't reset the token budget, time/token
accounting on the updated goal
2026-05-11 10:49:19 -07:00
Eric Traut
c03eb20d8d Fix side conversation config inheritance (#22106)
Addresses #22101

## Why

Side conversations are ephemeral forks of the active thread, but `/side`
was building its fork config from the app-level config after refreshing
it from disk. If the parent thread had runtime settings that differed
from the current persisted defaults, such as a changed model, reasoning
effort, permissions, reviewer, or fast-mode selection, the side
conversation could start with different behavior than its parent.

## What changed

- Build side fork config from the active parent `ChatWidget` config,
then overlay the parent thread's effective model, reasoning effort,
service tier, and fast-mode opt-out state.
- Forward model reasoning summary, verbosity, personality, web search
mode, and service-tier overrides through TUI app-server
start/resume/fork lifecycle params.
- Add focused tests for parent runtime inheritance, side developer
guardrail preservation, and lifecycle param forwarding.
2026-05-11 09:47:51 -07:00
Eric Traut
2229c8daf2 Persist /goal commands in history (#21860)
## Summary

A user reported that `/goal` was not saved to the TUI command history,
which made it unavailable for later recall even though other accepted
input paths persist history entries.

This updates the TUI goal slash-command dispatch so successful `/goal`
invocations append the command text to message history. The change
covers the bare `/goal` menu command, goal control commands such as
`/goal pause`, and objective-setting commands such as `/goal improve
benchmark coverage`.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-tui goal_slash_command -- --nocapture`
2026-05-11 08:43:55 -07:00
Felipe Coury
5248e3da2b feat(tui): render responsive Markdown tables in TUI (#22052)
## Why

The TUI currently treats Markdown tables as ordinary wrapped text, which
makes table-heavy responses hard to read and brittle across narrow panes
and terminal resizes.

This change teaches the TUI to render Markdown tables responsively while
preserving the raw Markdown source needed to re-render streamed and
finalized transcript content after width changes. The goal is to keep
tables legible during streaming, after resize, and once a turn has
finished, without corrupting scrollback ordering.

## What Changed

- add table detection and responsive table rendering in the Markdown
renderer
- render standard tables with Unicode box-drawing borders when the pane
is wide enough
- add a vertical readability fallback for constrained or dense tables so
narrow panes still show each row clearly
- keep links and `<br>` content inside table cells instead of leaking
text outside the table
- avoid table normalization inside fenced or indented code blocks
- preserve raw streamed Markdown source and keep the active table as a
mutable tail until finalization
- consolidate finalized streamed content into source-backed transcript
cells so post-resize re-rendering stays correct
- add snapshot and targeted streaming/resize regression coverage for the
new table behavior

## How to Test

1. Start Codex TUI from this branch.
2. Paste this exact prompt:
`This is a session to test codex, no need to do any thinking, just end
different markdown tables, with columns exploring different markdown
contents, like links, bold italic, code, etc. Make them different sizes,
some 30+ rows, some not and intertwine them with some paragraphs with
complex formatting as well.`
3. Confirm the response includes several Markdown tables mixed with
richly formatted paragraphs.
4. Confirm wide-enough tables render with box-drawing borders instead of
plain wrapped pipe text.
5. Resize the terminal narrower while the answer is still streaming and
confirm the in-progress table stays coherent instead of duplicating
headers or leaving broken scrollback behind.
6. Resize again after the turn finishes and confirm the finalized
transcript re-renders cleanly at the new width.
7. In a narrow pane, verify dense tables fall back to the vertical
per-row layout instead of producing unreadable wrapped columns.
8. Also verify pipe-heavy fenced code blocks still render as code, not
as tables.

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui table_readability_fallback --no-fail-fast`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui markdown_render --no-fail-fast`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui streaming::controller --no-fail-fast`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui table_resize_lifecycle --no-fail-fast`

## Docs

No developer docs update appears necessary.
2026-05-10 20:42:11 +00:00
Felipe Coury
cac5354455 fix(tui): preserve Shift+Enter in tmux csi-u panes (#21943)
## Why

Inside tmux, `Shift+Enter` can still reach Codex as a plain `Enter` even
when tmux has extended keys enabled. In `csi-u` tmux panes, Codex needs
to request `modifyOtherKeys` mode 2 so tmux moves the pane from `VT10x`
into extended-key mode and preserves the Shift modifier. Without that
extra request, composer `Shift+Enter` submits the draft instead of
inserting a newline.

Fixes #21699.

## What Changed

- Detect tmux sessions and read the active `extended-keys-format`,
preferring the pane-local value before falling back to the global
option.
- Request `modifyOtherKeys` mode 2 for tmux panes using `csi-u` extended
keys, and reset it when restoring keyboard reporting.
- Add unit coverage for tmux detection, the format gate, and the emitted
`modifyOtherKeys` escape sequence.

## How to Test

1. In tmux, configure:
   ```tmux
   set-option -g extended-keys on
   set-option -g extended-keys-format csi-u
   ```
2. Start Codex in a fresh tmux pane from this branch.
3. From another pane, confirm the Codex pane reports `mode=Ext 2`:
   ```bash
tmux list-panes -a -F '#{session_name}:#{window_index}.#{pane_index}
mode=#{pane_key_mode} cmd=#{pane_current_command}'
   ```
4. Type a draft in the composer and press `Shift+Enter`; confirm it
inserts a newline instead of submitting.
5. Also confirm plain `Enter` still submits as before.

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui`

## Notes

- Manual verification used both real `Shift+Enter` in iTerm2/tmux and
`tmux send-keys ... S-Enter` to confirm the tmux pane changes from
`VT10x` to `Ext 2` and preserves newline behavior.
- On this checkout, the broader `codex-tui` test run currently reaches
unrelated existing failures in `status::tests::*` plus a later stack
overflow in
`tests::fork_last_filters_latest_session_by_cwd_unless_show_all`.
2026-05-10 11:45:49 -03:00
Eric Traut
789b7e39dc Split ChatWidget state into focused modules (#21866)
## Summary

`ChatWidget` has been carrying several independent domains in one large
state bag: transcript bookkeeping, turn lifecycle, queued input, status
surfaces, connectors, review mode, and protocol dispatch. That makes
otherwise-local changes hard to reason about because unrelated fields
and side effects live beside each other in `chatwidget.rs`.

This is the first cleanup PR in a larger decomposition effort. It does
not try to make `chatwidget.rs` small in one sweep; instead, it
establishes focused state boundaries that later handler, popup,
rendering, and effect-synchronization extractions can build on.

This PR keeps `ChatWidget` as the composition layer while moving focused
state into smaller `codex-tui` modules. The widget still owns effects
that touch the bottom pane, app events, command submission, redraw
scheduling, and terminal-title updates.

## Changes

- Add focused state modules under `codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget/` for
input queues, turn lifecycle, transcript bookkeeping, status state,
connectors, review mode, and app-server protocol dispatch.
- Update `ChatWidget` to hold grouped state structs and route
input/lifecycle/status operations through those focused helpers.
- Move app-server notification dispatch into `chatwidget/protocol.rs`
while leaving feature handlers and side effects on `ChatWidget`.
- Replace the large manual `ChatWidget` test literal with the normal
constructor plus narrow test overrides, so future state moves do not
require every field to be restated in test setup.
- Update existing tests to access the new grouped state or narrower
helpers without changing snapshot behavior.

## Longer-term direction

Follow-up PRs can continue shrinking `chatwidget.rs` by moving behavior,
not just state, into focused modules:

- Extract input/submission flow, turn/stream handling, and tool-cell
lifecycles into domain modules that call the new state reducers.
- Move popup/settings builders and rendering helpers out of the main
widget file so `ChatWidget` stays focused on composition.
- Reduce direct `BottomPane` mutation by applying domain-specific sync
outputs at clearer boundaries.
2026-05-09 15:16:01 -07:00
Eric Traut
90c0bec50c Avoid blocking TUI on agent metadata hydration (#21870)
## Why

Fixes #16688.

The TUI currently hydrates collab receiver metadata by awaiting
`thread/read` before each active-thread notification is rendered. During
large subagent fan-outs, the embedded app-server can be busy starting
agents and processing spawn work, so those synchronous metadata reads
queue behind the fan-out and block the TUI event loop. That makes the UI
appear frozen even though the underlying agent work can continue.

## What Changed

- Replaced eager `thread/read` metadata hydration on the active
notification path with local receiver-thread caching.
- Kept `ThreadStarted` and picker refreshes as the places that fill in
agent nickname/role metadata when it is available.
- Skipped caching receiver threads that are explicitly reported as
`NotFound`, avoiding live-looking ghost entries for failed stale-agent
calls.
- Added TUI tests covering both local receiver caching and `NotFound`
suppression.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-tui collab_receiver_notification`
- `just fix -p codex-tui`

I also ran the full `cargo test -p codex-tui`; the new test passed, but
the full process later aborted with an unrelated stack overflow in
`tests::fork_last_filters_latest_session_by_cwd_unless_show_all`.
2026-05-09 15:15:40 -07:00
Abhinav
6d747db7d8 Improve hooks trust flow in TUI (#21755)
# Why
Hooks that need trust review were easy to miss, and the existing TUI
flow made users discover `/hooks` manually before they could decide
whether to inspect or trust them.

# What
- add a startup review prompt for new or changed hooks before normal
composer use
- add a top-level `t` shortcut in `/hooks` to trust every review-needed
hook at once
- make pending-review rows and helper copy use warning styling

## TUI

### Startup review interstitial

```text
Hooks need review
2 hooks are new or changed.
Hooks can run outside the sandbox after you trust them.

› 1. Review hooks
  2. Trust all and continue
  3. Continue without trusting (hooks won't run)
```

### Top-level `/hooks` page when review is needed

```text
Hooks
Lifecycle hooks from config and enabled plugins.

⚠ 1 hook needs review before it can run.

Event                 Installed   Active   Review   Description
PreToolUse            1           0        1        Before a tool executes
...

Press t to trust all; enter to review hooks; esc to close
```
2026-05-09 21:17:30 +00:00
Felipe Coury
53468b97f6 fix(tui): improve light-mode selection contrast (#21950)
## Why

On light terminal backgrounds, selected rows in several TUI pickers were
rendered with the same bright cyan accent used on dark themes. Against
the light menu surface, that made the current selection hard to
distinguish at a glance.

<table><tr>
<td>
<p align="center">Before</p>
<img width="1109" height="864" alt="SCR-20260509-nmtz"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b31ce0d0-19c2-4bdd-a220-7acc77bd8e8e"
/>
</td>
<td>
<p align="center">After</p>
<img width="1164" height="844" alt="SCR-20260509-nmox"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7b3fede0-4739-4a9f-a979-cdbb7451841f"
/>
</td>
</tr></table>

## What changed

- Added a shared background-aware accent style for active/selected TUI
controls.
- Use a darker cyan-family accent on light backgrounds while preserving
the existing bright cyan accent on dark or unknown backgrounds.
- Reused that accent across shared picker rows and the custom
selection-like surfaces that had drifted separately: picker tabs, hooks
browsing, external-agent migration choices, and /keymap affordances.
- Added focused tests for the light/dark accent rule and rendered
selected-row styling.

## How to Test

1. Start Codex in a terminal using a light background theme.
2. Type `/` to open the slash-command picker and move the selection
through a few rows.
3. Confirm that the selected row is visibly colored with strong contrast
instead of blending into the popup surface.
4. Open `/keymap` and confirm the active tab, selected rows, and picker
hint accents use the same light-theme accent treatment.
5. In a dark terminal theme, repeat the slash-picker check and confirm
the existing bright cyan selection styling is preserved.

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui accent_style_uses_`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui selected_rows_use_the_shared_accent_style`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
selected_event_rows_use_the_shared_accent_style`

Notes:
- A full `cargo test -p codex-tui` run reached the end of the suite but
hit an unrelated existing stack overflow in
`tests::fork_last_filters_latest_session_by_cwd_unless_show_all`.
2026-05-09 16:10:56 -03:00
Felipe Coury
f27cf9db09 fix(tui): preserve wrapped prose beside URLs (#21760)
## Why

Mixed prose lines that contained URLs started taking the URL-preserving
wrapping path, but that path could split ordinary words mid-token. A
follow-up issue remained in scrollback insertion: when already-rendered
indented rows were wrapped again, continuation rows could lose their
margin and fall back to terminal hard wrapping. Together those bugs made
normal Markdown output look broken around links, lists, blockquotes, and
indented content.

Separately, the local argument-comment lint wrappers failed under
environments that set `PYTHONSAFEPATH=1`, because Python no longer adds
the script directory to `sys.path` automatically. That prevented the
lint from reaching Rust callsites at all.

<img width="1778" height="1558" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-09 at 11 51 38"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9274d150-1757-4f1a-89ac-5bdc9997d8cb"
/>

## What Changed

- Preserve URL tokens without turning every neighboring prose word into
a character-level split point.
- Add a mixed URL/prose wrapper that keeps ordinary words whole,
preserves leading whitespace, and re-splits long non-URL tokens against
the actual width available on continuation rows.
- Reuse a rendered history row's leading whitespace as the continuation
indent when scrollback insertion has to pre-wrap it again.
- Add regression coverage for markdown wrapping, history-cell rendering,
scrollback continuation margins, leading-indent width accounting, and
continuation-row re-splitting.
- Make both argument-comment lint entrypoints explicitly add their own
directory to `sys.path`, so sibling imports still work when
`PYTHONSAFEPATH=1`.

## How to Test

1. Start Codex and render a long Markdown response that mixes prose with
inline links, blockquotes, lists, and indented code-like text.
2. Confirm that ordinary words next to links stay whole instead of
breaking mid-word.
3. Resize or replay the transcript and confirm wrapped continuation rows
keep their expected left margin for blockquotes, lists, and indented
content.
4. Run the source argument-comment lint from a shell with
`PYTHONSAFEPATH=1` and confirm it starts normally instead of failing to
import `wrapper_common`.

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui mixed_line --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui preserves_prefix_on_wrapped_rows --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
agent_markdown_cell_does_not_split_words_after_inline_markdown --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
mixed_url_markdown_wraps_prose_without_splitting_words_snapshot --lib`
- `python3 tools/argument-comment-lint/test_wrapper_common.py`
- `just argument-comment-lint-from-source -p codex-tui -- --lib`

Notes:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui` currently reaches the new tests
successfully, then still aborts in the pre-existing
`tests::fork_last_filters_latest_session_by_cwd_unless_show_all`
stack-overflow failure.
2026-05-09 13:58:10 -03:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
fca81eeb5b [codex] Lowercase TUI service tier commands (#21906)
## Why

Service-tier slash commands are built from model-catalog metadata. If
the catalog returns a name like `Fast`, the TUI currently exposes
`/Fast` and exact dispatch expects that casing, which is inconsistent
with the lowercase command style used elsewhere.

## What

- Lowercase service-tier command names when converting catalog tiers
into `ServiceTierCommand` values.
- Add regression coverage that seeds a catalog tier named `Fast` and
expects the generated command to be `fast`.

## Testing

Not run locally per repo instruction; PR CI should run the new
`service_tier_commands_lowercase_catalog_names` coverage.
2026-05-09 14:29:12 +03:00
Jiaming Zhang
5f4d0ec343 [codex] request desktop attestation from app (#20619)
## Summary

TL;DR: teaches `codex-rs` / app-server to request a desktop-provided
attestation token and attach it as `x-oai-attestation` on the scoped
ChatGPT Codex request paths.

![DeviceCheck attestation
interface](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openai/codex/dev/jm/devicecheck-diagram-assets/pr-assets/devicecheck-attestation-interface.png)

## Details

This PR teaches the Codex app-server runtime how to request and attach
an attestation token. It does not generate DeviceCheck tokens directly;
instead, it relies on the connected desktop app to advertise that it can
generate attestation and then asks that app for a fresh header value
when needed.

The flow is:

1. The Codex desktop app connects to app-server.
2. During `initialize`, the app can advertise that it supports
`requestAttestation`.
3. Before app-server calls selected ChatGPT Codex endpoints, it sends
the internal server request `attestation/generate` to the app.
4. app-server receives a pre-encoded header value back.
5. app-server forwards that value as `x-oai-attestation` on the scoped
outbound requests.

The code in this repo is mostly protocol and runtime plumbing: it adds
the app-server request/response shape, introduces an attestation
provider in core, wires that provider into Responses / compaction /
realtime setup paths, and covers the intended scoping with tests. The
signed macOS DeviceCheck generation remains owned by the desktop app PR.

## Related PR

- Codex desktop app implementation:
https://github.com/openai/openai/pull/878649

## Validation

<details>
<summary>Tests run</summary>

```sh
cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol
cargo test -p codex-core attestation --lib
cargo test -p codex-app-server --lib attestation
```

Also ran:

```sh
just fix -p codex-core
just fix -p codex-app-server
just fix -p codex-app-server-protocol
just fmt
just write-app-server-schema
```

</details>

<details>
<summary>E2E DeviceCheck validation</summary>

First validated the signed desktop app boundary directly: launched a
packaged signed `Codex.app`, sent `attestation/generate`, decoded the
returned `v1.` attestation header, and validated the extracted
DeviceCheck token with `personal/jm/verify_devicecheck_token.py` using
bundle ID `com.openai.codex`. Apple returned `status_code: 200` and
`is_ok: true`.

Then ran the fuller app + app-server flow. The packaged `Codex.app`
launched a current-branch app-server via `CODEX_CLI_PATH`, and a local
MITM proxy intercepted outbound `chatgpt.com` traffic. The app-server
requested `attestation/generate` from the real Electron app process, and
the intercepted `/backend-api/codex/responses` traffic included
`x-oai-attestation` on both routes:

```text
GET  /backend-api/codex/responses  Upgrade: websocket  x-oai-attestation: present
POST /backend-api/codex/responses  Upgrade: none       x-oai-attestation: present
```

The captured header decoded to a DeviceCheck token that also validated
with Apple for `com.openai.codex` (`status_code: 200`, `is_ok: true`,
team `2DC432GLL2`).

</details>

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-08 12:36:02 -07:00
starr-openai
5f2543b74e Load configured environments from CODEX_HOME (#20667)
## Why

The earlier PRs add stdio transport support and the config-backed
environment provider, but the feature remains inert until normal Codex
entrypoints construct `EnvironmentManager` with enough context to
discover `CODEX_HOME/environments.toml`. This final stack PR activates
the provider while preserving the legacy `CODEX_EXEC_SERVER_URL`
fallback when no environments file exists.

**Stack position:** this is PR 5 of 5. It is the product wiring PR that
activates the configured environment provider added in PR 4.

## What Changed

- Thread `codex_home` into `EnvironmentManagerArgs`.
- Change `EnvironmentManager::new(...)` to load the provider from
`CODEX_HOME`.
- Preserve legacy behavior by falling back to
`DefaultEnvironmentProvider::from_env()` when `environments.toml` is
absent.
- Make `environments.toml`-backed managers start new threads with all
configured environments, default first, while keeping the legacy env-var
path single-default.
- Update the app-server, TUI, exec, MCP server, connector, prompt-debug,
and thread-manager-sample callsites to pass `codex_home` and handle
provider-loading errors.

## Self-Review Notes

- The multi-environment startup path is intentionally tied to the
`environments.toml` provider. Using `>1` configured environment as the
only signal would also expand the legacy `CODEX_EXEC_SERVER_URL`
provider because it keeps `local` addressable alongside `remote`.
- The startup environment list is still derived inside
`EnvironmentManager`; the provider only says whether its snapshot should
start new threads with all configured environments.
- The thread-manager sample was updated to pass the current
`ThreadManager::new(...)` installation id argument so the stack compiles
under Bazel.

## Stack

- 1. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20663 - Add stdio exec-server
listener
- 2. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20664 - Add stdio exec-server
client transport
- 3. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20665 - Make environment
providers own default selection
- 4. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20666 - Add CODEX_HOME
environments TOML provider
- **5. This PR:** https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20667 - Load
configured environments from CODEX_HOME

Split from original draft: https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20508

## Validation

- `just fmt`
- `git diff --check`
- `bazel build --config=remote --strategy=remote
--remote_download_toplevel
//codex-rs/thread-manager-sample:codex-thread-manager-sample`
- `bazel test --config=remote --strategy=remote
--remote_download_toplevel
//codex-rs/exec-server:exec-server-unit-tests`
- `bazel test --config=remote --strategy=remote
--remote_download_toplevel --test_sharding_strategy=disabled
--test_arg=default_thread_environment_selections_use_manager_default_id
//codex-rs/core:core-unit-tests`
- `bazel test --config=remote --strategy=remote
--remote_download_toplevel --test_sharding_strategy=disabled
--test_arg=start_thread_uses_all_default_environments_from_codex_home
//codex-rs/core:core-unit-tests`

## Documentation

This activates `CODEX_HOME/environments.toml`; user-facing documentation
should be added before this stack is treated as a documented public
workflow.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-08 11:17:56 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
7c0e54bf59 [codex] Generalize service tier slash commands (#21745)
## Why

`/fast` was wired as a one-off slash command even though model metadata
now exposes service tiers as catalog data. That meant adding another
tier, such as a slower/cheaper tier, would require more hardcoded TUI
plumbing instead of letting the model catalog drive the available
commands.

This change makes service-tier commands data-driven: each advertised
`service_tiers` entry becomes a `/name` command using the catalog
description, while the request path sends the tier `id` only when the
selected model supports it.

## What Changed

- Removed the hardcoded `/fast` slash-command variant and introduced
dynamic service-tier command items in the composer and command popup.
- Added toggle behavior for service-tier commands: invoking `/name`
selects that tier, and invoking it again clears the selection.
- Preserved the existing Fast-mode keybinding/status affordances by
resolving the current model tier whose name is `fast`, while still
sending the tier request value such as `priority`.
- Persisted service-tier selections as raw request strings so non-fast
tiers can round-trip through config.
- Updated the Bedrock catalog entry to advertise fast support through
`service_tiers` with `id: "priority"` and `name: "fast"`.
- Added defensive filtering in core so unsupported selected service
tiers are omitted from `/responses` requests.

## Validation

- Added/updated coverage for dynamic service-tier slash command lookup,
popup descriptions, composer dispatch, TUI fast toggling, and
unsupported-tier omission in core request construction.
- Local tests were not run per request.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-08 20:09:51 +03:00
jif-oai
5b87bd2845 chore: thread tui (#21767) 2026-05-08 17:53:23 +02:00
jif-oai
bd8fc9adb9 api: send hyphenated session and thread headers (#21757)
## Why
Some consumers expect conventional hyphenated HTTP headers. Codex
already sends the session and thread IDs on outbound Responses requests,
but it only uses the underscore spellings today, which makes those IDs
harder to consume in systems that normalize or reject underscore header
names.

Full context here:
https://openai.slack.com/archives/C08KCGLSPSQ/p1778248578422369

## What changed
- `build_session_headers` now emits both `session_id` and `session-id`
when a session ID is present.
- It does the same for `thread_id` and `thread-id`.
- Added regression coverage in `codex-api/tests/clients.rs` and
`core/tests/suite/client.rs` so both the lower-level client tests and
the end-to-end request tests assert the two header spellings are
present.

## Test plan
- Added header assertions in `codex-api/tests/clients.rs`.
- Added request-header assertions in `core/tests/suite/client.rs` for
both the `/v1/responses` and `/api/codex/responses` request paths.
2026-05-08 17:11:19 +02:00
Eric Traut
e6312d44f0 Show permissions and approval mode in the TUI status line (#21677)
Fixes #21665.

## Why

The TUI status line is the right place for compact, glanceable session
state. The original request was motivated by the need to see the active
permission posture without opening `/permissions` or `/status`,
especially when switching between safer and more permissive modes during
a session.

This PR intentionally separates `permissions` from `approval-mode`
instead of combining them into one status-line item. They answer related
but different questions: `permissions` describes the active
sandbox/profile shape, while `approval-mode` describes how command
approvals are handled. Keeping them separate makes each item
independently configurable and avoids long combined labels in an already
space-constrained status line.

The tradeoff is that users who want the full permission posture in the
status line need to opt into both items. In exchange, users can show
only the sandbox/profile label, only the approval behavior, or both, and
named user-defined profiles remain concise. Non-standard permission
shapes are rendered as `Custom permissions` rather than trying to
squeeze detailed profile contents into the status line; `/status`
remains the fuller explanatory surface.

## What changed

- Added a configurable `permissions` status-line item.
- Added a separate `approval-mode` status-line item, with `approval` as
an alias.
- Render standard permission states compactly as `Read Only`,
`Workspace`, or `Full Access`.
- Preserve user-defined permission profile names directly in the status
line.
- Render unnamed non-standard permission shapes as `Custom permissions`.
- Refresh status surfaces when `/permissions` updates the permission
profile, approval policy, or approval reviewer.
- Updated status-line preview snapshot coverage for the new items.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-tui
status_permissions_non_default_workspace_write_uses_workspace_label`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
permissions_selection_emits_history_cell_when_selection_changes`
- `cargo insta pending-snapshots --manifest-path tui/Cargo.toml`
2026-05-08 08:03:11 -07:00
Eric Traut
f86d95a242 Display blended token count in status line (#21669)
## Why

The configurable `/statusline` and terminal title can display session
token usage. That display was using the raw total token count, which
includes cached input tokens, so it significantly overstated the token
usage compared with the blended token count shown elsewhere (in
`/status` and tracked in goals). This inconsistency resulted in user
confusion. We don't want to report cached tokens because we don't charge
for them and they are somewhat of an implementation detail that users
shouldn't care about.

## What changed

- Use `TokenUsage::blended_total()` for the `used-tokens` status surface
item so cached input is excluded.
- Add a brief comment to `tokens_in_context_window()` clarifying that it
returns raw `total_tokens`, whose meaning depends on whether the caller
has last-turn or accumulated usage.
2026-05-08 07:56:13 -07:00
github-actions[bot]
aadcae9f3c Update models.json (#19896)
Automated update of models.json.

---------

Co-authored-by: aibrahim-oai <219906144+aibrahim-oai@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ahmed Ibrahim <aibrahim@openai.com>
2026-05-08 17:41:55 +03:00
xli-oai
314229fd72 Remove skills list extra roots (#21485)
## Summary
- Remove `perCwdExtraUserRoots` / `SkillsListExtraRootsForCwd` from the
`skills/list` app-server API.
- Drop Rust app-server and `codex-core-skills` extra-root plumbing so
skill scans are keyed by the normal cwd/user/plugin roots only.
- Regenerate app-server schemas and update docs/tests that only existed
for the removed extra-roots behavior.

## Validation
- `just write-app-server-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-core-skills`
- `just fix -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `just fix -p codex-core-skills`
- `just fix -p codex-app-server`
- `just fix -p codex-tui`

## Notes
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all skills_list` ran the edited
skills-list cases, but the full filtered run ended on existing
`skills_changed_notification_is_emitted_after_skill_change` timeout
after a websocket `401`.
- `cargo test -p codex-tui --lib` compiled the changed TUI callers, then
failed two unrelated status permission tests because local
`/etc/codex/requirements.toml` forbids `DangerFullAccess`.
- Source-truth check found the OpenAI monorepo still has
generated/app-server-kit mirror references to the removed field; those
should be cleaned up when generated app-server types are synced or in a
companion OpenAI cleanup.
2026-05-07 20:56:42 -07:00
rhan-oai
99016ec732 [codex-analytics] plumb protocol-native review timing (#21434)
## Why

We want terminal tool review analytics, but the reducer should not stamp
review timing from its own wall clock.

This PR plumbs review timing through the real protocol and app-server
seams so downstream analytics can consume the emitter's timestamps
directly. Guardian reviews keep their enriched `started_at` /
`completed_at` analytics fields by deriving those legacy second-based
values from the same protocol-native millisecond lifecycle timestamps,
rather than sampling a separate analytics clock.

## What changed

- add `started_at_ms` to user approval request payloads
- add `started_at_ms` / `completed_at_ms` to guardian review
notifications
- preserve Guardian review `started_at` / `completed_at` enrichment from
the protocol-native timing source
- stamp typed `ServerResponse` analytics facts with app-server-observed
`completed_at_ms`
- thread the new timing fields through core, protocol, app-server, TUI,
and analytics fixtures

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-app-server outgoing_message --manifest-path
codex-rs/Cargo.toml`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol guardian --manifest-path
codex-rs/Cargo.toml`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui guardian --manifest-path codex-rs/Cargo.toml`
- `cargo test -p codex-analytics analytics_client_tests --manifest-path
codex-rs/Cargo.toml`

---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/21434).
* #18748
* __->__ #21434
* #18747
* #17090
* #17089
* #20514
2026-05-07 20:31:41 -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
Abhinav
40e282849c Show plugin hooks in plugin details (#21447)
Supersedes the abandoned #19859, rebuilt on latest `main`.

# Why

PR #19705 adds discovery for hooks bundled with plugins, but `/plugins`
still only shows skills, apps, and MCP servers. This follow-up makes
bundled hooks visible in the same plugin detail view so users can
inspect the full plugin surface in one place.

We also need `PluginHookSummary` to populate Plugin Hooks in the app;
`hooks/list` is not enough there because plugin detail needs to show
hooks for disabled plugins too.

# What

- extend `plugin/read` with `PluginHookSummary` entries for bundled
hooks
- summarize plugin hooks while loading plugin details
- render a `Hooks` row in the `/plugins` detail popup

<img width="3456" height="848" alt="CleanShot 2026-04-27 at 11 45 34@2x"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/fe3a38d6-a260-4351-8513-fb04c93d725b"
/>
2026-05-07 00:21:14 -07:00
pakrym-oai
a8488fec5e Revert state DB injection and agent graph store (#21481)
## Why

Reverts #20689 to restore the previous optional state DB plumbing. The
conflict resolution keeps the newer installation ID and session/thread
identity changes that landed after #20689, while removing the mandatory
state DB and agent graph store dependency from ThreadManager
construction.

## What changed

- Restored `Option<StateDbHandle>` through app-server, MCP server,
prompt debug, and test entry points.
- Removed the `codex-core` dependency on `codex-agent-graph-store` and
reverted descendant lookup back to the existing state DB path when
available.
- Kept newer `installation_id` forwarding by passing it beside the
optional DB handle.
- Kept local thread-name updates working when the optional state DB
handle is absent.

## Validation

- `git diff --check`
- `cargo test -p codex-thread-store`
- `cargo test -p codex-state -p codex-rollout -p
codex-app-server-protocol`
- Attempted `env CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo test -p codex-core -p
codex-app-server -p codex-app-server-client -p codex-mcp-server -p
codex-thread-manager-sample -p codex-tui`; blocked locally by a rustc
ICE while compiling `v8 v146.4.0` with `rustc 1.93.0 (254b59607
2026-01-19)` on `aarch64-apple-darwin`.
2026-05-06 22:48:29 -07:00
Felipe Coury
5a4b2702f2 fix(tui): clear first inline viewport render (#21450)
## Why

The alpha TUI can render the initial trust-directory prompt with stale
terminal text showing through spaces when startup begins below existing
shell output. The first inline viewport transition can happen while the
previous viewport is still empty, so the old clear path no-ops before
Ratatui draws the prompt. Ratatui then skips blank cells because its
previous buffer also thinks those cells are blank, leaving old terminal
contents visible inside the prompt.

## What Changed

- Clear from the new inline viewport top when the previous viewport is
empty during a viewport transition.
- Keep the existing clear-from-old-viewport behavior for normal viewport
updates.
- Add a VT100-backed regression test that pre-fills terminal contents,
performs the first viewport clear, and verifies stale text inside the
new viewport is removed while shell content above the viewport remains.

## How to Test

1. Start Codex alpha in a terminal that already has visible shell output
above the cursor.
2. Use a fresh untrusted project directory so the trust-directory prompt
appears.
3. Confirm the prompt text renders cleanly, with spaces staying blank
instead of showing fragments of previous shell output.
4. As a regression check, confirm content above the inline viewport is
still preserved in terminal scrollback.

Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
first_viewport_change_clears_from_new_viewport_when_old_viewport_is_empty
-- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui`
2026-05-07 02:48:49 +00:00
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
xl-openai
11106016ff feat: Add marketplace source filtering and plugin share context (#21419)
Adds marketplaceKinds to plugin/list for local, workspace-directory, and
shared-with-me; omitted params keep default local plus gated global
behavior, while explicit kinds are exact.

Exposes shareContext on plugin summaries from local share mappings and
remote workspace/shared responses, including remotePluginId and nullable
creator metadata.

Adds shared-with-me listing through /ps/plugins/workspace/shared,
renames the workspace remote namespace to workspace-directory, and keeps
direct remote read/share/install/update/delete paths gated by plugins
rather than remote_plugin.
2026-05-06 16:12:23 -07:00
rhan-oai
21295f47e2 [codex-tui] pass thread source for tui threads (#21401)
## Summary
- mark TUI-created thread starts and forks with explicit `thread_source
= user`
- add focused coverage for embedded and remote lifecycle request
builders

## Why
Thread analytics now consume an explicit thread-level source
classification instead of inferring it from `session_source`. The TUI
still omitted that field, so TUI-created interactive threads would
continue to land as `null` even after the new analytics plumbing
shipped.

## Validation
- `cargo test -p codex-tui app_server_session --lib`
2026-05-06 13:18:41 -07:00