## Why
`multi_agent_v2` already allowed configuring the minimum `wait_agent`
timeout, but the default timeout and upper bound were still hard-coded.
That made it hard to tune waits for subagent mailbox activity in
sessions that need either faster wakeups or longer waits, and it meant
the model-visible `wait_agent` schema could not fully reflect the
resolved runtime limits.
## What Changed
- Added `features.multi_agent_v2.max_wait_timeout_ms` and
`features.multi_agent_v2.default_wait_timeout_ms` alongside the existing
`min_wait_timeout_ms` setting.
- Validated all three timeouts in config as `0..=3_600_000`, with
`min_wait_timeout_ms <= default_wait_timeout_ms <= max_wait_timeout_ms`.
- Thread and review session tool config now passes the resolved
min/default/max values into the `wait_agent` tool schema.
- `wait_agent` now uses the configured default when `timeout_ms` is
omitted and rejects explicit values outside the configured min/max range
instead of silently clamping them.
- Updated the generated config schema and config-lock test coverage for
the new fields.
## Why
`code_mode_only` filters code-mode nested tools out of the top-level
tool list. For multi-agent v2, we need a rollout shape where the
collaboration tools remain callable as normal model tools without also
being embedded into the code-mode `exec` tool declaration.
Related to this:
https://openai-corpws.slack.com/archives/C0AQLHB4U75/p1778660267922549
## What Changed
- Adds `features.multi_agent_v2.non_code_mode_only`, including config
resolution, profile override handling, and generated schema coverage.
- Introduces `ToolExposure::DirectModelOnly` so a tool can be included
in the initial model-visible list while staying out of the nested
code-mode tool surface.
- Applies that exposure to the multi-agent v2 tools when the new flag is
set: `spawn_agent`, `send_message`, `followup_task`, `wait_agent`,
`close_agent`, and `list_agents`.
- Updates code-mode-only filtering so direct-model-only tools remain
visible while ordinary nested code-mode tools are still hidden.
## Verification
- Added config parsing/profile tests for `non_code_mode_only`.
- Added tool spec coverage for the code-mode-only multi-agent v2
exposure behavior.
## Why
Recent session history showed no active use of the raw `shell`,
`local_shell`, or `container.exec` execution surfaces. Keeping those
handlers/specs wired into core leaves duplicate shell execution paths
alongside the supported `shell_command` and unified exec tools.
## What changed
- Removed the raw `shell` handler/spec and its `ShellToolCallParams`
protocol helper.
- Removed the legacy `local_shell` and `container.exec` handler/spec
plumbing while preserving persisted-history compatibility for old
response items.
- Normalized model/config `default` and `local` shell selections to
`shell_command`.
- Pruned tests that exercised removed raw-shell/local-shell/apply-patch
variants and kept coverage on `shell_command`, unified exec, and
freeform `apply_patch`.
## Verification
- `git diff --check`
- `cargo test -p codex-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::handlers::shell`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::spec`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::router`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
active_call_preserves_triggering_command_context`
- `cargo test -p codex-core guardian_tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all shell_serialization`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all apply_patch_cli`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all shell_command_`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all local_shell`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all otel::`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all hooks::`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
## Why
Deferred tools were tracked with separate side-channel filtering after
tool specs had already been assembled. That made the registry
responsible for executing tools while the router/spec planner separately
decided whether those same tools should be exposed to the model up
front.
This PR makes exposure part of the tool handler contract so direct
versus deferred availability travels with the executable tool
registration.
Next step will be to simplify registration
## What Changed
- Adds `ToolExposure` to `codex-tools` and exposes it through
`ToolExecutor`, defaulting tools to `Direct`.
- Teaches dynamic tools and MCP handlers to mark deferred tools as
`Deferred` at construction time.
- Renames the registry object-safe wrapper from `AnyToolHandler` to
`RegisteredTool` and uses `ToolExposure` when deciding whether to
include a handler's spec in the initial model-visible tool list.
- Refactors tool spec planning to derive direct specs and deferred
search entries from registered handlers, removing the router's
special-case deferred dynamic tool filtering.
## Verification
- Not run.
## Why
Extension tools were split across two public runtime contracts:
`codex-tool-api` exposed `ToolBundle` plus its own call/spec/error
types, while core native tools used `codex_tools::ToolExecutor`. That
made contributed tool specs and execution behavior easy to drift apart
and added another crate boundary for what should be one executable-tool
seam.
This PR makes `ToolExecutor` the single runtime contract and keeps
extension-specific pinning in `codex-extension-api`.
## Remaining todo
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22369/changes#diff-b935ea8245c3ce568a30cff660175fa6390b66b872ae409e1e2e965738250741R5
Either generic `Invocation` or sub-extract the `ToolCall` and clean
`ToolInvocation`
## What changed
- Removed the `codex-tool-api` workspace crate and its dependencies from
core and `codex-extension-api`.
- Made `codex_tools::ToolExecutor` object-safe with `async_trait` so
extension contributors can return a dyn executor.
- Added the extension-facing aliases under
`ext/extension-api/src/contributors/tools.rs`, including
`ExtensionToolExecutor = dyn ToolExecutor<ToolCall, Output =
ExtensionToolOutput>`.
- Changed `ToolContributor::tools` to return extension executors
directly instead of `ToolBundle`s.
- Updated core’s extension tool handler/registry/router path to adapt
those extension executors into the existing native `ToolInvocation`
runtime path.
- Added focused coverage for extension tools being registered,
model-visible, dispatchable, and not replacing built-in tools.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-extension-api`
## Why
Codex still models model-visible tools and executable behavior largely
inside `codex-core`, which makes it harder to evolve the tool system
toward a single reusable abstraction for built-ins, MCP-backed tools,
dynamic tools, and later tools injected from outside core.
This PR takes the next incremental step in that direction by moving the
common execution-facing pieces out of core and separating them from
core-only orchestration. The intent is to let shared tool abstractions
improve in one place, while `codex-core` keeps the parts that are still
inherently host-specific today, such as `ToolInvocation`, dispatch
wiring, and hook integration.
This PR is mostly moving things around. The only interesting piece is
this abstraction:
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22359/changes#diff-81af519002548ba51ed102bdaaf77e081d40a1e73a6e5f9b104bbbc96a6f1b3dR13
## What changed
- Added `codex_tools::ToolExecutor<Invocation>` as the shared execution
trait for model-visible tools.
- Moved the reusable execution support types from `codex-core` into
`codex-tools`:
- `FunctionCallError`
- `ToolPayload`
- `ToolOutput`
- Refactored core tool implementations so that execution behavior lives
on `ToolExecutor<ToolInvocation>`, while `ToolHandler` remains the
core-local extension point for hook payloads, telemetry tags, diff
consumers, and other orchestration concerns.
- Kept the registry and dispatch flow behaviorally unchanged while
making the shared/extracted boundary explicit across built-in, MCP,
dynamic, extension-backed, shell, and multi-agent tool handlers.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `cargo test -p codex-core` progressed through the updated tool
surfaces and then hit the existing unrelated multi-agent stack overflow
in
`tools::handlers::multi_agents::tests::tool_handlers_cascade_close_and_resume_and_keep_explicitly_closed_subtrees_closed`.
## Why
This builds on the handler-owned spec refactor by moving deferred
tool-search metadata to the same handlers that already own tool specs.
The registry builder no longer needs a separate prebuilt
`tool_search_entries` path; it can collect searchable entries from
deferred handlers directly.
## What changed
- Added `search_info()` to tool handlers and implemented it for MCP and
dynamic handlers.
- Reused handler `spec()` output when constructing tool-search entries,
adapting it into the deferred `LoadableToolSpec` shape expected by
`tool_search`.
- Simplified `build_tool_registry_builder(...)` so `tool_search`
registration is based on deferred handlers with search info.
- Removed the old standalone search-entry builders and now-unused
`codex-tools` discovery helper exports.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::handlers::tool_search::tests:: --
--nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::spec_plan::tests::search_tool --
--nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::spec::tests:: -- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::spec_plan::tests:: -- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
## Why
`ToolRouter::tool_supports_parallel()` was still consulting configured
specs when a handler lookup missed, even though parallel schedulability
is really a property of the executable handler. Keeping that metadata on
`ConfiguredToolSpec` duplicated state between the model-visible spec
layer and the runtime handler layer.
This change makes handlers the sole source of truth for parallel tool
support and removes the extra spec wrapper that only existed to carry
duplicated metadata.
## What changed
- removed `ConfiguredToolSpec` and store plain `ToolSpec` values in the
registry/router builder path
- changed `ToolRouter::tool_supports_parallel()` to consult only the
handler registry and fall back to `false`
- simplified spec collection and test helpers to operate directly on
`ToolSpec`
- updated router/spec tests to cover handler-owned parallel behavior and
the no-handler fallback
## Validation
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-core mcp_parallel_support_uses_handler_data`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
deferred_responses_api_tool_serializes_with_defer_loading`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
tools_without_handlers_do_not_support_parallel`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
request_plugin_install_can_be_registered_without_search_tool`
## Docs
No documentation updates needed.
## Why
`apply_patch` is now a freeform/custom tool. Keeping the old
JSON/function-style registration and parsing path left another way for
models and tests to invoke `apply_patch`, which made the tool surface
harder to reason about.
## What changed
- Removed the `ApplyPatchToolType::Function` variant, JSON `apply_patch`
spec, and handler support for function payloads.
- Kept `apply_patch_tool_type = freeform` as the supported model
metadata path, including Bedrock catalog metadata.
- Migrated `apply_patch` tests and SSE fixtures to custom/freeform tool
calls.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-tools -p codex-protocol -p codex-model-provider`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::handlers::apply_patch --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
apply_patch_tool_executes_and_emits_patch_events`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
apply_patch_reports_parse_diagnostics`
- `cargo test -p codex-exec test_apply_patch_tool`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `just fix -p codex-tools -p codex-protocol -p codex-model-provider -p
codex-exec`
## Summary
- enable `apply_patch_freeform` by default in the feature registry
## Why
- make the freeform `apply_patch` tool available by default when model
metadata does not explicitly opt into another mode
## Validation
- `just fmt`
- did not run tests
---------
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
## Why
This is the first mechanical slice of moving tool spec ownership toward
the handlers. `codex-tools` should keep shared primitives and conversion
helpers, while builtin tool specs and registration planning live in
`codex-core` with the handlers that own those tools.
Keeping this PR to relocation and import updates isolates the copy/move
review from the later logic change that wires specs through registered
handlers.
## What changed
- Moved builtin tool spec constructors from `codex-rs/tools/src` into
`codex-rs/core/src/tools/handlers/*_spec.rs` or nearby core tool
modules.
- Moved the registry planning code into
`codex-rs/core/src/tools/spec_plan.rs` and its associated types/tests
into core.
- Kept shared primitives in `codex-tools`, including `ToolSpec`,
schema/types, discovery/config primitives, dynamic/MCP conversion
helpers, and code-mode collection helpers.
- Updated handlers that referenced moved argument types or tool-name
constants to use the core spec modules.
- Moved spec tests next to the moved spec modules.
## Verification
- `cargo check -p codex-tools`
- `cargo check -p codex-core`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-core _spec::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::spec_plan::tests`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
Note: I also tried the broader `cargo test -p codex-core tools::`; it
reached the moved spec-plan/spec tests successfully, then aborted with a
stack overflow in
`tools::handlers::multi_agents::tests::tool_handlers_cascade_close_and_resume_and_keep_explicitly_closed_subtrees_closed`,
which is outside this spec relocation.
## Why
Tool registration used to bind a tool name to a handler externally,
which left ownership split between the registry plan and the handler
implementation. Some built-in handlers also multiplexed multiple in-core
tools by switching on the invoked tool name internally.
This moves the registry identity onto the handler itself and makes
built-in multi-tool areas use separate concrete handlers, so each
registered handler instance owns exactly one tool name and one dispatch
path.
## What Changed
- Added `ToolHandler::tool_name()` and changed
`ToolRegistryBuilder::register_handler` to derive the registry key from
the handler.
- Split built-in multiplexed handlers into concrete per-tool handlers
for unified exec, shell/local shell/container exec, MCP resources, goal
tools, and agent job tools.
- Kept name-carrying handler instances only where the runtime target is
inherently external or dynamic, such as MCP tools, dynamic tools, and
unavailable placeholders.
- Updated `ToolHandlerKind` and registry-plan construction so plan
entries map directly to concrete handler registrations.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-tools tool_registry_plan`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib tools::registry_tests`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
## Why
When a turn exposes multiple selected environments, shell-style tools
need a model-facing way to identify the intended target environment and
handlers need to resolve that target before parsing cwd-relative
permission fields or launching processes.
This PR scopes that rollout to process tools. Filesystem-oriented tools
such as `apply_patch`, `view_image`, and `list_dir` are intentionally
left for follow-up slices.
## What Changed
- Adds an `include_environment_id` option to shell-style tool schema
builders.
- Exposes optional `environment_id` on `shell`, `shell_command`, and
`exec_command` only when `ToolEnvironmentMode::Multiple` is active.
- Adds a shared handler helper that parses `environment_id` and
`workdir` from JSON function-call arguments and returns the selected
`Environment` plus effective absolute cwd.
- Uses that helper in `shell`, `shell_command`, and `exec_command`
handling so process execution uses the selected environment filesystem
and cwd.
- Changes `ExecCommandRequest` to carry a required resolved `cwd`,
removing the process-manager fallback to the primary turn cwd for new
exec commands.
- Leaves `write_stdin` unchanged because it targets an existing process
id, not a new environment.
## Testing
- Added unit coverage for process-tool schema exposure, selected
environment resolution, primary fallback, no-environment handling,
unknown environment ids, and resolving cwd-relative permission paths
against the selected environment cwd.
- Added a remote-suite e2e coverage case for `exec_command` routing
across explicit zero environments, one local environment, and
local+remote environments.
- Ran `just fmt` and `git diff --check`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
## Why
`list_dir` still carries a full spec/handler/test path, but nothing in
the current model catalog advertises it via
`experimental_supported_tools`. That leaves us maintaining an
environment-backed tool surface that is effectively unused.
## What changed
- delete the `list_dir` handler and its tests from `codex-core`
- remove the `list_dir` spec builder, handler kind, and registry wiring
from `codex-tools`
- clean up the remaining internal README and registry tests so they no
longer mention the removed tool
## Why
The model list needs to carry display-ready service tier metadata so
clients can render tier choices with stable IDs, names, and
descriptions. A raw speed-tier string list is not enough for richer UI
copy or future tier labels.
## What changed
- Added `ModelServiceTier` to shared model metadata with string `id`,
`name`, and `description` fields.
- Added `service_tiers` to `ModelInfo` and `ModelPreset`, preserving
empty defaults for older cached model payloads.
- Exposed `serviceTiers` on app-server v2 `Model` responses and threaded
it through TUI app-server model conversion.
- Marked legacy `additional_speed_tiers` / `additionalSpeedTiers`
metadata as deprecated in source and generated schema output.
- Regenerated app-server protocol JSON schema and TypeScript fixtures,
including `ModelServiceTier.ts`.
## Verification
- Ran `just write-app-server-schema`.
- Did not run local tests per repo instruction; relying on PR CI.
---------
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
## Why
MCP servers can provide `instructions` that explain what their tools are
for. Directly exposed MCP namespaces already use those instructions when
a connector description is not available, but deferred `tool_search`
results did not preserve that fallback. The direct path falls back from
connector metadata to server instructions, while the deferred path only
carried `connector_description` and otherwise fell back to generic
namespace text.
That meant a plain MCP server could provide useful model-facing guidance
and still appear as `Tools in the X namespace.` whenever it was
discovered lazily through `tool_search`.
## What changed
- Store one model-facing `namespace_description` on `ToolInfo`, using
connector descriptions for connector-backed tools and server
instructions for plain MCP servers.
- Thread that namespace description through the `tool_search` source
list, search indexing, and returned namespace metadata.
- Add an end-to-end regression test for deferred non-app MCP search
results exposing server instructions as the namespace description.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-tools
search_tool_description_lists_each_mcp_source_once --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
tool_search_uses_non_app_mcp_server_instructions_as_namespace_description`
## Why
This is a prep PR in the multi-environment process-tool stack. It
separates ownership/config cleanup from the behavior change that teaches
process tools to route by selected environment, so the follow-up PR can
focus on model-facing `environment_id` behavior.
## Stack
1. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20646 - `EnvironmentContext`
rendering for selected environments
2. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20669 - selected-environment
ownership and tool config prep (this PR)
3. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20647 - process-tool
`environment_id` routing
## What Changed
- keep the resolved turn environment list wrapped in
`ResolvedTurnEnvironments` through `TurnContext` instead of unwrapping
it back to a raw `Vec`
- add `TurnContext::resolve_path_against` so cwd-relative path
resolution has one shared helper
- replace the old tool config boolean with `ToolEnvironmentMode::{None,
Single, Multiple}`
## Testing
- Tests not run locally; this prep refactor is covered by GitHub CI for
the stack.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Tool suggest still misfires when model needs tool_search, updating the
prompts to further disambiguate it:
- [x] rename it from `tool_suggest` to `request_plugin_install`
- [x] rephrase "suggestion" to "install" in the tool descriptions.
- [x] disambiguate "the tool" vs "the plugin/connector".
Tested with the Codex App and verified it still works.
## Why
`multi_agents_v2` is meant to be independently gated from the older
`collab` feature. The tool registry still treated the
collaboration-style agent tools as `collab`-only, so enabling
`multi_agents_v2` without `collab` omitted the v2 agent tools. Review
and guardian sub-sessions also need to keep agent spawning disabled even
when the outer session has `multi_agents_v2` enabled.
## What changed
- Include the collab-backed agent tools when either `multi_agents_v2` or
`collab` is enabled.
- Explicitly disable `multi_agents_v2` for review and guardian review
sub-sessions, matching the existing `spawn_csv` and `collab`
restrictions.
- Add a registry test that enables `multi_agents_v2`, disables `collab`,
and verifies the v2 agent tools are present while legacy `send_input`
and `resume_agent` remain hidden.
## Testing
- Added
`test_build_specs_multi_agent_v2_does_not_require_collab_feature`.
## Summary
- remove the Windows-specific unified-exec environment block from tool
selection
- keep `unified_exec` default-off on Windows unless the feature is
explicitly enabled
- normalize model-provided `shell_type = unified_exec` to
`shell_command` when the feature is disabled
- drop obsolete tests tied to the removed environment gate and keep the
feature-flag regression coverage
## Why
Now that the session/long-lived process backend is implemented for the
Windows sandbox, we don't need to hard disable it anymore. We will be
rolling out slowly using a feature gate.
## Impact
This allows manual Windows opt-in in CLI and app-backed flows while
preserving the existing default-off behavior for Windows users.
---------
Co-authored-by: canvrno-oai <kbond@openai.com>
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
## Summary
- Tighten `tool_suggest` guidance so it prefers explicit plugin install
requests, while still allowing a connector install when the relevant
plugin is already installed and a needed connector from that plugin is
missing.
- Tell the model not to call `tool_suggest` in parallel with other
tools.
## Testing
- `cargo test -p codex-tools tool_suggest`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tool_suggest`
Messages sent with `followup_task` already arrive at their target
recipient promptly (at message boundaries while sampling, or after the
pending tool call completes) -- having `interrupt` is not worth the
added complexity.
## Why
Unsupported features must fail closed and Codex must not expose
OpenAI-hosted fallback paths when the active provider cannot support
them. In practice, Bedrock should not surface app connectors, MCP
servers, tool search/suggestions, image generation, web search, or JS
REPL until those paths are explicitly supported for that provider.
This PR moves that decision into provider-owned capability metadata
instead of scattering Bedrock-specific checks across callers.
## What changed
- Adds `ProviderCapabilities` to `codex-model-provider`, with default
support for existing providers and a Bedrock override that disables
unsupported launch surfaces.
- Adds `ToolCapabilityBounds` to `codex-tools` so provider capability
limits can clamp otherwise-enabled tool config.
- Applies capability bounds when building session and review-thread tool
config.
- Routes MCP/app connector configuration through
`McpManager::mcp_config`, which filters configured MCP servers and app
connectors based on the active provider.
- Updates app-server MCP list/read paths to use the filtered MCP config.
- Adds coverage for default provider capabilities, Bedrock disabled
capabilities, and optional tool-surface clamping.
## Testing
built locally and verified that bedrock responses api now return without
errors calling unsupported tools.
## Summary
- Add `disable_tool_suggest` to app and plugin config, schema, and
TypeScript output
- Exclude disabled connectors and plugins from tool suggestion discovery
- Persist "never show again" tool-suggestion choices back into
`config.toml`
- Update config docs and add coverage for connector and plugin
suppression
## Testing
- Added and updated unit tests for config persistence and tool-suggest
filtering
- Not run (not requested)
## Why
MultiAgentV2 `wait_agent` currently clamps short waits to a fixed 10
second minimum. That default is still useful for preventing tight
polling loops, but it is too rigid for environments that need faster
mailbox wake-up checks or a larger minimum to discourage frequent
polling.
This PR makes the minimum wait timeout configurable from the existing
MultiAgentV2 feature config section, so operators can tune the behavior
without changing the legacy multi-agent tool surface.
## What Changed
- Added `features.multi_agent_v2.min_wait_timeout_ms`.
- Defaulted the new setting to the existing 10 second floor.
- Validated the configured value as `1..=3600000`, matching the existing
one hour maximum wait bound.
- Applied the configured minimum to MultiAgentV2 `wait_agent` runtime
clamping.
- Plumbed the configured minimum into the `wait_agent` tool schema,
including the effective default when the minimum is above the normal 30
second default.
- Regenerated `core/config.schema.json`.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-features`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib multi_agent_v2`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
## Why
This supersedes #19391. During stack repair, GitHub marked #19391 as
merged into a temporary stack branch rather than into `main`, so the
runtime-config change needed a fresh PR.
`PermissionProfile` is now the canonical permissions shape after #19231
because it can distinguish `Managed`, `Disabled`, and `External`
enforcement while also carrying filesystem rules that legacy
`SandboxPolicy` cannot represent cleanly. Core config and session state
still needed to accept profile-backed permissions without forcing every
profile through the strict legacy bridge, which rejected valid runtime
profiles such as direct write roots.
The unrelated CI/test hardening that previously rode along with this PR
has been split into #19683 so this PR stays focused on the permissions
model migration.
## What Changed
- Adds `Permissions.permission_profile` and
`SessionConfiguration.permission_profile` as constrained runtime state,
while keeping `sandbox_policy` as a legacy compatibility projection.
- Introduces profile setters that keep `PermissionProfile`, split
filesystem/network policies, and legacy `SandboxPolicy` projections
synchronized.
- Uses a compatibility projection for requirement checks and legacy
consumers instead of rejecting profiles that cannot round-trip through
`SandboxPolicy` exactly.
- Updates config loading, config overrides, session updates, turn
context plumbing, prompt permission text, sandbox tags, and exec request
construction to carry profile-backed runtime permissions.
- Preserves configured deny-read entries and `glob_scan_max_depth` when
command/session profiles are narrowed.
- Adds `PermissionProfile::read_only()` and
`PermissionProfile::workspace_write()` presets that match legacy
defaults.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-core direct_write_roots`
- `cargo test -p codex-core runtime_roots_to_legacy_projection`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server
requested_permissions_trust_project_uses_permission_profile_intent`
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/19606).
* #19395
* #19394
* #19393
* #19392
* __->__ #19606
Adds the model-facing goal tools on top of the app-server API from PR 2.
## Why
Once goals are persisted and exposed to clients, the model needs a
small, constrained tool surface for goal workflows. The tool contract
should let the model inspect goals, create them only when explicitly
requested, and mark them complete without giving it broad control over
user/runtime-owned state.
## What changed
- Added `get_goal`, `create_goal`, and `update_goal` tool specs behind
the `goals` feature flag.
- Added core goal tool handlers that validate objectives and token
budgets before mutating persisted state.
- Constrained `create_goal` to create only when no goal exists, with
optional `token_budget` only when a budget is explicitly provided.
- Tightened the `create_goal` instructions so the model does not infer
goals from ordinary task requests.
- Constrained `update_goal` to expose only goal completion; pause,
resume, clear, and budget-limited transitions remain user- or
runtime-controlled.
- Registered the goal tools in the tool registry and kept them out of
review contexts where they should not appear.
## Verification
- Added tool-registry coverage for feature gating and tool availability.
- Added core session tests for create/get/update behavior, duplicate
goal rejection, budget validation, and completion-only updates.
## Summary
- Thread `agent_max_threads` into `ToolsConfig` and
`SpawnAgentToolOptions`.
- Render the configured `max_concurrent_threads_per_session` value in
the MultiAgentV2 `spawn_agent` description.
- Cover the description text in `codex-tools` unit tests and
`codex-core` tool spec tests.
## Validation
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-core spawn_agent_description`
- `git diff --check`
## Notes
- `cargo test -p codex-core` was also attempted, but unrelated
environment-sensitive tests failed with the active local environment.
Examples: approvals reviewer defaults observed `AutoReview` instead of
`User`, request-permissions event tests did not emit events, and
proxy-env tests saw `http://127.0.0.1:50604` from the active proxy
environment.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Sometimes codex runs `Start-Process` to start up a service or something
similar, which launches a user-visible powershell window that probably
doesn't get cleaned up. This instruction change encourages it to do so
using a hidden window.
This was reported in
https://openai.slack.com/archives/C09K6H5DZC4/p1776741272870519
One caveat is that this change won't do anything to cleanup these
processes, but it will stop them from polluting the user's visible
workspace
---------
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Deferred dynamic tools need to round-trip a namespace so a tool returned
by `tool_search` can be called through the same registry key that core
uses for dispatch.
This change adds namespace support for dynamic tool specs/calls,
persists it through app-server thread state, and routes dynamic tool
calls by full `ToolName` while still sending the app the leaf tool name.
Deferred dynamic tools must provide a namespace; non-deferred dynamic
tools may remain top-level.
It also introduces `LoadableToolSpec` as the shared
function-or-namespace Responses shape used by both `tool_search` output
and dynamic tool registration, so dynamic tools use the same wrapping
logic in both paths.
Validation:
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tool_search`
---------
Co-authored-by: Sayan Sisodiya <sayan@openai.com>
This updates the spawn-agent tool contract so subagents are presented as
inheriting the parent model by default. The visible model list is now
framed as optional overrides, the model parameter tells callers to leave
it unset and the delegation guidance no longer nudges models toward
picking a smaller/mini override.
Fixes reports that 5.4 would occasionally pick 5.2 or lower as
sub-agents.
## Summary
- Normalize deferred MCP and dynamic tools into `ToolSearchEntry` values
before constructing `ToolSearchHandler`.
- Move the tool-search entry adapter out of `tools/handlers` and into
`tools/tool_search_entry.rs` so the handlers directory stays focused on
handlers.
- Keep `ToolSearchHandler` operating over one generic entry list for
BM25 search, namespace grouping, and per-bucket default limits.
## Why
Follow-up cleanup for #17849. The dynamic tool-search support made the
handler juggle source-specific MCP and dynamic tool lists, index
arithmetic, output conversion, and namespace emission. This keeps source
adaptation outside the handler so the search loop itself is smaller and
source-agnostic.
## Validation
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-core tools::handlers::tool_search::tests`
- `git diff --check`
- `cargo test -p codex-core` currently fails in unrelated
`plugins::manager::tests::list_marketplaces_ignores_installed_roots_missing_from_config`;
rerunning that single test fails the same way at
`core/src/plugins/manager_tests.rs:1692`.
---------
Co-authored-by: pash <pash@openai.com>
## Summary
- Promote `image_generation` from under-development to stable
- Enable image generation by default in the feature registry
- Update feature coverage for the new launch-state expectation
- Add the missing image-generation auth fixture field in a tool registry
test
## Testing
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-features`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools` currently fails:
`test_full_toolset_specs_for_gpt5_codex_unified_exec_web_search` needs
its expected default tool list updated for `image_generation`
## Summary
- hide deferred MCP/app nested tool descriptions from the `exec` prompt
in code mode
- add short guidance that omitted nested tools are still available
through `ALL_TOOLS`
- cover the code_mode_only path with an integration test that discovers
and calls a deferred app tool
## Motivation
`code_mode_only` exposes only top-level `exec`/`wait`, but the `exec`
description could still include a large nested-tool reference. This
keeps deferred nested tools callable while avoiding that prompt bloat.
## Tests
- `just fmt`
- `just fix -p codex-code-mode`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
- `cargo test -p codex-code-mode
exec_description_mentions_deferred_nested_tools_when_available`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools
create_code_mode_tool_matches_expected_spec`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
code_mode_only_guides_all_tools_search_and_calls_deferred_app_tools`
## Summary
- Promote `Feature::ToolSearch` to `Stable` and enable it in the default
feature set
- Update feature tests and tool registry coverage to match the new
default
- Adjust the search-tool integration test to assert the default-on path
and explicit disable fallback
## Testing
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-features`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test all search_tool`
- `cargo test -p codex-tools`
## Summary
- honor `_meta["codex/imageDetail"] == "original"` on MCP image content
and map it to `detail: "original"` where supported
- strip that detail back out when the active model does not support
original-detail image inputs
- update code-mode `image(...)` to accept individual MCP image blocks
- teach `js_repl` / `codex.emitImage(...)` to preserve the same hint
from raw MCP image outputs
- document the new `_meta` contract and add generic RMCP-backed coverage
across protocol, core, code-mode, and js_repl paths
## Summary
- Ensure direct namespaced MCP tool groups are emitted with a non-empty
namespace description even when namespace metadata is missing or blank.
- Add regression coverage for missing MCP namespace descriptions.
## Cause
Latest `main` can serialize a direct namespaced MCP tool group with an
empty top-level `description`. The namespace description path used
`unwrap_or_default()` when `tool_namespaces` did not include metadata
for that namespace, so the outbound Responses API payload could contain
a tool like `{"type":"namespace","description":""}`. The Responses API
rejects that because namespace tool descriptions must be a non-empty
string.
## Fix
- Add a fallback namespace description: `Tools in the <namespace>
namespace.`
- Preserve provided namespace descriptions after trimming, but treat
blank descriptions as missing.
### Issue I am seeing
This is what I am seeing on the local build.
<img width="1593" height="488" alt="Screenshot 2026-04-15 at 10 55 55
AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/bab668ba-bf17-4c71-be4e-b102202fce57"
/>
---------
Co-authored-by: Sayan Sisodiya <sayan@openai.com>
stacked on #17402.
MCP tools returned by `tool_search` (deferred tools) get registered in
our `ToolRegistry` with a different format than directly available
tools. this leads to two different ways of accessing MCP tools from our
tool catalog, only one of which works for each. fix this by registering
all MCP tools with the namespace format, since this info is already
available.
also, direct MCP tools are registered to responsesapi without a
namespace, while deferred MCP tools have a namespace. this means we can
receive MCP `FunctionCall`s in both formats from namespaces. fix this by
always registering MCP tools with namespace, regardless of deferral
status.
make code mode track `ToolName` provenance of tools so it can map the
literal JS function name string to the correct `ToolName` for
invocation, rather than supporting both in core.
this lets us unify to a single canonical `ToolName` representation for
each MCP tool and force everywhere to use that one, without supporting
fallbacks.
## Summary
This PR removes `image_detail_original` as a runtime experiment and
makes original image detail available whenever the selected model
supports it.
Concretely, this change:
- drops the `image_detail_original` feature flag from the feature
registry and generated config schema
- makes tool-emitted image detail depend only on
`ModelInfo.supports_image_detail_original`
- updates `view_image` and `code_mode`/`js_repl` image emission to use
that capability check directly
- removes now-redundant experiment-specific tests and instruction
coverage
- keeps backward compatibility for existing configs by silently ignoring
a stale `features.image_detail_original` entry
The net effect is that `detail: "original"` is always available on
supported models, without requiring an experiment toggle.
we used to alpha-sort tool search results because we were using
`BTreeMap`, which threw away the actual search result ordering.
Now we use a vec to preserve it.
### Tests
Updated tests
- [x] Expand tool search to custom MCPs.
- [x] Rename several variables/fields to be more generic.
Updated tool & server name lifecycles:
**Raw Identity**
ToolInfo.server_name is raw MCP server name.
ToolInfo.tool.name is raw MCP tool name.
MCP calls route back to raw via parse_tool_name() returning
(tool.server_name, tool.tool.name).
mcpServerStatus/list now groups by raw server and keys tools by
Tool.name: mod.rs:599
App-server just forwards that grouped raw snapshot:
codex_message_processor.rs:5245
**Callable Names**
On list-tools, we create provisional callable_namespace / callable_name:
mcp_connection_manager.rs:1556
For non-app MCP, provisional callable name starts as raw tool name.
For codex-apps, provisional callable name is sanitized and strips
connector name/id prefix; namespace includes connector name.
Then qualify_tools() sanitizes callable namespace + name to ASCII alnum
/ _ only: mcp_tool_names.rs:128
Note: this is stricter than Responses API. Hyphen is currently replaced
with _ for code-mode compatibility.
**Collision Handling**
We do initially collapse example-server and example_server to the same
base.
Then qualify_tools() detects distinct raw namespace identities behind
the same sanitized namespace and appends a hash to the callable
namespace: mcp_tool_names.rs:137
Same idea for tool-name collisions: hash suffix goes on callable tool
name.
Final list_all_tools() map key is callable_namespace + callable_name:
mcp_connection_manager.rs:769
**Direct Model Tools**
Direct MCP tool declarations use the full qualified sanitized key as the
Responses function name.
The raw rmcp Tool is converted but renamed for model exposure.
**Tool Search / Deferred**
Tool search result namespace = final ToolInfo.callable_namespace:
tool_search.rs:85
Tool search result nested name = final ToolInfo.callable_name:
tool_search.rs:86
Deferred tool handler is registered as "{namespace}:{name}":
tool_registry_plan.rs:248
When a function call comes back, core recombines namespace + name, looks
up the full qualified key, and gets the raw server/tool for MCP
execution: codex.rs:4353
**Separate Legacy Snapshot**
collect_mcp_snapshot_from_manager_with_detail() still returns a map
keyed by qualified callable name.
mcpServerStatus/list no longer uses that; it uses
McpServerStatusSnapshot, which is raw-inventory shaped.
**Disabling Image-Gen for Non-SIWC Codex Users**
We are only enabling image-gen feature for SIWC Codex users until there
comes a fix in ResponsesAPI to omit output from responses.completed, to
prevent the following issues:
1. websocket blows up due to heavier load (images) than before (text)
2. http parser streams through n^2 of n-base64 bytes (sum of base64s of
all images generated in turn) that causes long delays in
turn_completion.
Allow multi_agent_v2 features to have its own temporary configuration
under `[features.multi_agent_v2]`
```
[features.multi_agent_v2]
enabled = true
usage_hint_enabled = false
usage_hint_text = "Custom delegation guidance."
hide_spawn_agent_metadata = true
```
Absent `usage_hint_text` means use the default hint.
```
[features]
multi_agent_v2 = true
```
still works as the boolean shorthand.