On the back of:
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/10138
Let's ensure that every folder with a `package.json` is listed in
`pnpm-workspace.yaml` (not sure why `docs` was in there...) and that we
are using `pnpm` over `npm` consistently (which is why this PR deletes
`codex-cli/package-lock.json`).
## What?
Upgrades @modelcontextprotocol/sdk from ^1.20.2 to ^1.24.0 in the
TypeScript SDK's devDependencies.
## Why?
Related to #7737 - keeping development dependencies up to date with the
latest MCP SDK version that includes the fix for CVE-2025-66414.
Note: This change does not address the CVE for Codex users, as the MCP
SDK is only in devDependencies here. The actual MCP integration that
would be affected by the CVE is in the Rust codebase.
## How?
• Updated dependency version in sdk/typescript/package.json
• Ran pnpm install to update lockfile
• Fixed formatting (added missing newline in package.json)
## Related Issue
Related to #7737
## Test Status
⚠️ After this upgrade, 2 additional tests timeout (1 test was already
failing on main):
• tests/run.test.ts: "sends previous items when run is called twice"
• tests/run.test.ts: "resumes thread by id"
• tests/runStreamed.test.ts: "sends previous items when runStreamed is
called twice"
Marking as draft to investigate test timeouts. Maintainer guidance would
be appreciated.
Co-authored-by: HalfonA <amit@miggo.io>
This adds a GitHub workflow for building a new npm module we are
experimenting with that contains an MCP server for running Bash
commands. The new workflow, `shell-tool-mcp`, is a dependency of the
general `release` workflow so that we continue to use one version number
for all artifacts across the project in one GitHub release.
`.github/workflows/shell-tool-mcp.yml` is the primary workflow
introduced by this PR, which does the following:
- builds the `codex-exec-mcp-server` and `codex-execve-wrapper`
executables for both arm64 and x64 versions of Mac and Linux (preferring
the MUSL version for Linux)
- builds Bash (dynamically linked) for a [comically] large number of
platforms (both x64 and arm64 for most) with a small patch specified by
`shell-tool-mcp/patches/bash-exec-wrapper.patch`:
- `debian-11`
- `debian-12`
- `ubuntu-20.04`
- `ubuntu-22.04`
- `ubuntu-24.04`
- `centos-9`
- `macos-13` (x64 only)
- `macos-14` (arm64 only)
- `macos-15` (arm64 only)
- builds the TypeScript for the [new] Node module declared in the
`shell-tool-mcp/` folder, which creates `bin/mcp-server.js`
- adds all of the native binaries to `shell-tool-mcp/vendor/` folder;
`bin/mcp-server.js` does a runtime check to determine which ones to
execute
- uses `npm pack` to create the `.tgz` for the module
- if `publish: true` is set, invokes the `npm publish` call with the
`.tgz`
The justification for building Bash for so many different operating
systems is because, since it is dynamically linked, we want to increase
our confidence that the version we build is compatible with the glibc
whatever OS we end up running on. (Note this is less of a concern with
`codex-exec-mcp-server` and `codex-execve-wrapper` on Linux, as they are
statically linked.)
This PR also introduces the code for the npm module in `shell-tool-mcp/`
(the proposed module name is `@openai/codex-shell-tool-mcp`). Initially,
I intended the module to be a single file of vanilla JavaScript (like
[`codex-cli/bin/codex.js`](ab5972d447/codex-cli/bin/codex.js)),
but some of the logic seemed a bit tricky, so I decided to port it to
TypeScript and add unit tests.
`shell-tool-mcp/src/index.ts` defines the `main()` function for the
module, which performs runtime checks to determine the clang triple to
find the path to the Rust executables within the `vendor/` folder
(`resolveTargetTriple()`). It uses a combination of `readOsRelease()`
and `resolveBashPath()` to determine the correct Bash executable to run
in the environment. Ultimately, it spawns a command like the following:
```
codex-exec-mcp-server \
--execve codex-execve-wrapper \
--bash custom-bash "$@"
```
Note `.github/workflows/shell-tool-mcp-ci.yml` defines a fairly standard
CI job for the module (`format`/`build`/`test`).
To test this PR, I pushed this branch to my personal fork of Codex and
ran the CI job there:
https://github.com/bolinfest/codex/actions/runs/19564311320
Admittedly, the graph looks a bit wild now:
<img width="5115" height="2969" alt="Screenshot 2025-11-20 at 11 44
58 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cc5ef306-efc1-4ed7-a137-5347e394f393"
/>
But when it finished, I was able to download `codex-shell-tool-mcp-npm`
from the **Artifacts** for the workflow in an empty temp directory,
unzip the `.zip` and then the `.tgz` inside it, followed by `xattr -rc
.` to remove the quarantine bits. Then I ran:
```shell
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector node /private/tmp/foobar4/package/bin/mcp-server.js
```
which launched the MCP Inspector and I was able to use it as expected!
This bodes well that this should work once the package is published to
npm:
```shell
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector npx @openai/codex-shell-tool-mcp
```
Also, to verify the package contains what I expect:
```shell
/tmp/foobar4/package$ tree
.
├── bin
│ └── mcp-server.js
├── package.json
├── README.md
└── vendor
├── aarch64-apple-darwin
│ ├── bash
│ │ ├── macos-14
│ │ │ └── bash
│ │ └── macos-15
│ │ └── bash
│ ├── codex-exec-mcp-server
│ └── codex-execve-wrapper
├── aarch64-unknown-linux-musl
│ ├── bash
│ │ ├── centos-9
│ │ │ └── bash
│ │ ├── debian-11
│ │ │ └── bash
│ │ ├── debian-12
│ │ │ └── bash
│ │ ├── ubuntu-20.04
│ │ │ └── bash
│ │ ├── ubuntu-22.04
│ │ │ └── bash
│ │ └── ubuntu-24.04
│ │ └── bash
│ ├── codex-exec-mcp-server
│ └── codex-execve-wrapper
├── x86_64-apple-darwin
│ ├── bash
│ │ └── macos-13
│ │ └── bash
│ ├── codex-exec-mcp-server
│ └── codex-execve-wrapper
└── x86_64-unknown-linux-musl
├── bash
│ ├── centos-9
│ │ └── bash
│ ├── debian-11
│ │ └── bash
│ ├── debian-12
│ │ └── bash
│ ├── ubuntu-20.04
│ │ └── bash
│ ├── ubuntu-22.04
│ │ └── bash
│ └── ubuntu-24.04
│ └── bash
├── codex-exec-mcp-server
└── codex-execve-wrapper
26 directories, 26 files
```
This deletes the bulk of the `codex-cli` folder and eliminates the logic
that builds the TypeScript code and bundles it into the release.
Since this PR modifies `.github/workflows/rust-release.yml`, to test
changes to the release process, I locally commented out all of the "is
this commit on upstream `main`" checks in
`scripts/create_github_release.sh` and ran:
```
./codex-rs/scripts/create_github_release.sh 0.20.0-alpha.4
```
Which kicked off:
https://github.com/openai/codex/actions/runs/16842085113
And the release artifacts appear legit!
https://github.com/openai/codex/releases/tag/rust-v0.20.0-alpha.4
This PR uses [`pnpm
patch`](https://www.petermekhaeil.com/til/pnpm-patch/) to pull in the
following proposed fixes for `marked-terminal`:
* https://github.com/mikaelbr/marked-terminal/pull/366
* https://github.com/mikaelbr/marked-terminal/pull/367
This adds a substantial test to `codex-cli/tests/markdown.test.tsx` to
verify the new behavior.
Note that one of the tests shows two citations being split across a line
even though the rendered version would fit comfortably on one line.
Changing this likely requires a subtle fix to `marked-terminal` to
account for "rendered length" when determining line breaks.
## Description
This PR addresses the following improvements:
**Unify Prettier Version**: Currently, the Prettier version used in
`/package.json` and `/codex-cli/package.json` are different. In this PR,
we're updating both to use Prettier v3.
- Prettier v3 introduces improved support for JavaScript and TypeScript.
(e.g. the formatting scenario shown in the image below. This is more
aligned with the TypeScript indentation standard).
<img width="1126" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6e237eb8-4553-4574-b336-ed9561c55370"
/>
**Add Prettier Auto-Formatting in lint-staged**: We've added a step to
automatically run prettier --write on JavaScript and TypeScript files as
part of the lint-staged process, before the ESLint checks.
- This will help ensure that all committed code is properly formatted
according to the project's Prettier configuration.
## Background
Addressing feedback from
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/333#discussion_r2050893224, this PR
adds support for Bun alongside npm, pnpm while keeping the code simple.
## Summary
The update‑check flow is refactored to use a direct registry lookup
(`fast-npm-meta` + `semver`) instead of shelling out to `npm outdated`,
and adds a lightweight installer‑detection mechanism that:
1. Checks if the invoked script lives under a known global‑bin directory
(npm, pnpm, or bun)
2. If not, falls back to local detection via `getUserAgent()` (the
`package‑manager‑detector` library)
## What’s Changed
- **Registry‑based version check**
- Replace `execFile("npm", ["outdated"])` with `getLatestVersion()` and
`semver.gt()`
- **Multi‑manager support**
- New `renderUpdateCommand` handles update commands for `npm`, `pnpm`,
and `bun`.
- Detect global installer first via `detectInstallerByPath()`
- Fallback to local detection via `getUserAgent()`
- **Module cleanup**
- Extract `detectInstallerByPath` into
`utils/package-manager-detector.ts`
- Remove legacy `checkOutdated`, `getNPMCommandPath`, and child‑process
JSON parsing
- **Flow improvements in `checkForUpdates`**
1. Short‑circuit by `UPDATE_CHECK_FREQUENCY`
3. Fetch & compare versions
4. Persist new timestamp immediately
5. Render & display styled box only when an update exists
- **Maintain simplicity**
- All multi‑manager logic lives in one small helper and a concise lookup
rather than a complex adapter hierarchy
- Core `checkForUpdates` remains a single, easy‑to‑follow async function
- **Dependencies added**
- `fast-npm-meta`, `semver`, `package-manager-detector`, `@types/semver`
## Considerations
If we decide to drop the interactive update‑message (`npm install -g
@openai/codex`) rendering altogether, we could remove most of the
installer‑detection code and dependencies, which would simplify the
codebase further but result in a less friendly UX.
## Preview
* npm

* bun

## Simple Flow Chart
```mermaid
flowchart TD
A(Start) --> B[Read state]
B --> C{Recent check?}
C -- Yes --> Z[End]
C -- No --> D[Fetch latest version]
D --> E[Save check time]
E --> F{Version data OK?}
F -- No --> Z
F -- Yes --> G{Update available?}
G -- No --> Z
G -- Yes --> H{Global install?}
H -- Yes --> I[Select global manager]
H -- No --> K{Local install?}
K -- No --> Z
K -- Yes --> L[Select local manager]
I & L --> M[Render update message]
M --> N[Format with boxen]
N --> O[Print update]
O --> Z
```
# Improve Developer Experience with Husky and lint-staged for pnpm
Monorepo
## Summary
This PR enhances the developer experience by configuring Husky and
lint-staged to work properly with our pnpm monorepo structure. It
centralizes Git hooks at the root level and ensures consistent code
quality across the project.
## Changes
- Centralized Husky and lint-staged configuration at the monorepo root
- Added pre-commit hook that runs lint-staged to enforce code quality
- Configured lint-staged to:
- Format JSON, MD, and YAML files with Prettier
- Lint and typecheck TypeScript files before commits
- Fixed release script in codex-cli package.json (changed "pmpm" to "npm
publish")
- Removed duplicate Husky and lint-staged configurations from codex-cli
package.json
## Benefits
- **Consistent Code Quality**: Ensures all committed code meets project
standards
- **Automated Formatting**: Automatically formats code during commits
- **Early Error Detection**: Catches type errors and lint issues before
they're committed
- **Centralized Configuration**: Easier to maintain and update in one
place
- **Improved Collaboration**: Ensures consistent code style across the
team
## Future Improvements
We could further enhance this setup by
**Commit Message Validation**: Add commitlint to enforce conventional
commit messages
---------
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>