Commit Graph

652 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Owen Lin
139365a4bb feat(app-server): add optional thread_id to experimentalFeature/list (#23335)
## Why

`experimentalFeature/list` reports effective feature enablement, but
currently does not resolve it against a working directory where
project-local config.toml files can exist and toggle on/off features
when merged into the effective config after resolving the various config
layers. That means we effectively (and incorrectly) ignore features set
in project-local config.

To address that, this PR exposes an optional `thread_id` param which
allows us to load the thread's `cwd.

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server experimental_feature_list`
2026-05-18 12:12:14 -07:00
Eric Traut
0d344aca9b goal: pause continuation loops on usage limits and blockers (#23094)
Addresses #22833, #22245, #23067

## Why
`/goal` can keep synthesizing turns even when the next turn cannot make
meaningful progress. Hard usage exhaustion can replay failing turns, and
repeated permission or external-resource blockers can keep burning
tokens while waiting for user or system intervention.

## What changed
- Add resumable `blocked` and `usageLimited` goal states. As with
`paused`, goal continuation stops with these states.
- Move to `usageLimited` after usage-limit failures.
- Allow the built-in `update_goal` tool to set `blocked` only under
explicit repeated-impasse guidance. Updated goal continuation prompt to
specify that agent should use `blocked` only when it has made at least
three attempts to get past an impasse.

Most of the files touched by this PR are because of the small app server
protocol update.

## Validation

I manually reproduced a number of situations where an agent can run into
a true impasse and verified that it properly enters `blocked` state. I
then resumed and verified that it once again entered `blocked` state
several turns later if the impasse still exists.

I also manually reproduced the usage-limit condition by creating a
simulated responses API endpoint that returns 429 errors with the
appropriate error message. Verified that the goal runtime properly moves
the goal into `usageLimited` state and TUI UI updates appropriately.
Verified that `/goal resume` resumes (and immediately goes back into
`ussageLImited` state if appropriate).


## Follow-up PRs

Small changes will be needed to the GUI clients to properly handle the
two new states.
2026-05-18 11:28:53 -07:00
jif-oai
7ee7fe239f chore: isolate thread goal storage behind GoalStore (#23295)
## Why

Thread goal persistence is being prepared for a dedicated storage
boundary. Before that split, goal-specific reads, writes, accounting,
and cleanup were exposed directly on `StateRuntime`, so core and
app-server callsites stayed coupled to the full runtime instead of a
goal-specific store.

This PR introduces that boundary without changing the goal wire API or
current persistence behavior. Callers now go through
`StateRuntime::thread_goals()` and the new `GoalStore`, while
`GoalStore` still uses the existing state DB pool underneath.

## What changed

- Added `GoalStore` in `state/src/runtime/goals.rs` and exposed it from
`StateRuntime` via `thread_goals()`.
- Moved thread-goal reads, writes, status updates, pause, delete, and
usage accounting onto `GoalStore`.
- Updated core session goal handling, app-server goal RPCs, resume
snapshots, and goal tests to use the store boundary.
- Kept thread deletion responsible for cascading goal cleanup by
deleting the goal through the store only after a thread row is removed.

## Testing

- Existing goal persistence, resume, and accounting tests were updated
to exercise the new `GoalStore` access path.
2026-05-18 14:47:05 +02:00
xli-oai
da14dd2add [codex] Add installed-plugin mention API (#22448)
## Summary
- add app-server `plugin/installed` for mention-oriented plugin loading
- return installed plugins plus explicitly requested install-suggestion
rows
- keep remote handling on installed-state data instead of the broad
catalog listing path

## Why
The `@` mention surface only needs plugins that are usable now, plus a
small product-approved set of install suggestions. It does not need the
full catalog-shaped `plugin/list` payload that the Plugins page uses.

## Validation
- `just write-app-server-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-core-plugins`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all plugin_installed_`

## Notes
- The package-wide `cargo test -p codex-app-server` run still hits an
existing unrelated stack overflow in
`in_process::tests::in_process_start_clamps_zero_channel_capacity`.
- Companion webview PR: https://github.com/openai/openai/pull/915672
2026-05-18 03:11:54 -07:00
Eric Traut
0445b290fe [1 of 4] tui: route primary settings writes through app server (#22913)
## Why
The TUI can run against a remote app server, but several high-traffic
settings still persisted by editing the local config file. That sends
remote sessions' preference writes to the wrong machine and lets local
disk state drift from the app-server-owned config.

This is **[1 of 4]** in a stacked series that moves TUI-owned config
mutations onto app-server APIs.

## What changed
- Added a small TUI helper for typed app-server config writes.
- Routed primary interactive preference writes through
`config/batchWrite`.
- Preserved existing profile scoping for settings that already support
`profiles.<profile>.*` overrides.

## Config keys affected
- `model`
- `model_reasoning_effort`
- `personality`
- `service_tier`
- `plan_mode_reasoning_effort`
- `approvals_reviewer`
- `notice.fast_default_opt_out`
- Profile-scoped equivalents under `profiles.<profile>.*`

## Suggested manual validation
- Connect the TUI to a remote app server, change `model` and
`model_reasoning_effort`, reconnect, and confirm the remote config
retained both values while the local `config.toml` did not change.
- Change `personality`, `plan_mode_reasoning_effort`, and the explicit
auto-review selection, then reconnect and confirm those choices persist
through the app server.
- Clear the service tier back to default and confirm `service_tier` is
cleared while `notice.fast_default_opt_out = true` is persisted
remotely.
- Repeat one setting change with an active profile and confirm the write
lands under `profiles.<profile>.*`.

## Stack
1. [#22913](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22913) `[1 of 4]`
primary settings writes
2. [#22914](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22914) `[2 of 4]` app
and skill enablement
3. [#22915](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22915) `[3 of 4]`
feature and memory toggles
4. [#22916](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22916) `[4 of 4]`
startup and onboarding bookkeeping
2026-05-16 14:27:02 -07:00
Michael Bolin
9025550709 app-server-protocol: remove PermissionProfile from API (#22924)
## Why

The app server API should expose permission profile identity, not the
lower-level runtime permission model. `PermissionProfile` is the
compiled sandbox/network representation that the server uses internally;
exposing it through app-server-protocol forces clients to understand
details that should remain implementation-level.

The API boundary should prefer `ActivePermissionProfile`: a stable
profile id, plus future parent-profile metadata, that clients can pass
back when they want to select the same active permissions. This also
avoids schema generation collisions between the app-server v2 API type
space and the core protocol model.

Incidentally, while PR makes a number of changes to `command/exec`, note
that we are hoping to deprecate this API in favor of `process/spawn`, so
we don't need to be too finicky about these changes.

## What Changed

- Removed `PermissionProfile` from the app-server-protocol API surface,
including generated schema and TypeScript exports.
- Changed `CommandExecParams.permissionProfile` to
`ActivePermissionProfile`.
- Resolve command exec profile ids through `ConfigManager` for the
command cwd, matching turn override selection semantics.
- Updated downstream TUI tests/helpers to use core permission types
directly instead of app-server-protocol `PermissionProfile` shims.
2026-05-15 17:10:15 -07:00
Curtis 'Fjord' Hawthorne
8543e39885 Preserve image detail in app-server inputs (#20693)
## Summary

- Add optional image detail to user image inputs across core, app-server
v2, thread history/event mapping, and the generated app-server
schemas/types.
- Preserve requested detail when serializing Responses image inputs:
omitted detail stays on the existing `high` default, while explicit
`original` keeps local images on the original-resolution path.
- Support `high`/`original` consistently for tool image outputs,
including MCP `codex/imageDetail`, code-mode image helpers, and
`view_image`.
2026-05-15 15:04:04 -07:00
Owen Lin
6a331a66eb feat(app-server): update remote control APIs for better UX (#22877)
## Why
To help improve `codex remote-control` CLI UX which I plan to do in a
followup, this PR adds `server-name` to the various remote control APIs:
- `remoteControl/enable`
- `remoteControl/disable`
- `remoteControl/status/changed`

Also, add a `remoteControl/status/read` API. This will be helpful in the
Codex App.
2026-05-15 14:33:24 -07:00
Michael Bolin
8a5306ff88 app-server: use permission ids and runtime workspace roots (#22611)
## Why

This PR builds on [#22610](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22610)
and is the app-server side of the migration from mutable per-turn
`SandboxPolicy` replacement toward selecting immutable permission
profiles by id plus mutable runtime workspace roots.

Once permission profiles can carry their own immutable
`workspace_roots`, app-server no longer needs to mutate the selected
`PermissionProfile` just to represent thread-specific filesystem
context. The mutable part now lives on the thread as explicit
`runtimeWorkspaceRoots`, while `:workspace_roots` remains symbolic until
the sandbox is realized for a turn.

## What Changed

- Replaced the v2 permission-selection wrapper surface with plain
profile ids for `thread/start`, `thread/resume`, `thread/fork`, and
`turn/start`.
- Removed the API surface for profile modifications
(`PermissionProfileSelectionParams`,
`PermissionProfileModificationParams`,
`ActivePermissionProfileModification`).
- Added experimental `runtimeWorkspaceRoots` fields to the thread
lifecycle and turn-start APIs.
- Threaded runtime workspace roots through core session/thread
snapshots, turn overrides, app-server request handling, and command
execution permission resolution.
- Kept session permission state symbolic so later runtime root updates
and cwd-only implicit-root retargeting rebind `:workspace_roots`
correctly.
- Updated the embedded clients just enough to send and restore the new
thread state.
- Refreshed the generated schema/TypeScript artifacts and the app-server
README to match the new contract.

## Verification

Targeted coverage for this layer lives in:

- `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/protocol/v2/tests.rs`
- `codex-rs/app-server/tests/suite/v2/thread_start.rs`
- `codex-rs/app-server/tests/suite/v2/thread_resume.rs`
- `codex-rs/app-server/tests/suite/v2/turn_start.rs`
- `codex-rs/core/src/session/tests.rs`

The key regression checks exercise that:

- `runtimeWorkspaceRoots` resolve against the effective cwd on thread
start.
- Profile-declared workspace roots are excluded from the runtime
workspace roots returned by app-server.
- A turn-level runtime workspace-root update persists onto the thread
and is returned by `thread/resume`.
- A named permission profile selected on one turn remains symbolic so a
later runtime-root-only turn update changes the actual sandbox writes.
- A cwd-only turn update retargets the implicit runtime cwd root while
preserving additional runtime roots.
- The protocol fixtures and generated client artifacts stay in sync with
the string-based permission selection contract.











---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/22611).
* #22612
* __->__ #22611
2026-05-14 23:00:05 -07:00
guinness-oai
4f2918dd7f [codex] Add opaque desktop config namespace (#22584)
## Summary
- reserve an explicit opaque `desktop` namespace in `ConfigToml`
- expose `desktop` directly in the app-server v2 `config/read` response
- keep `config/value/write` and `config/batchWrite` as the only mutation
seam for paths like `desktop.someKey`
- regenerate the config/app-server schema outputs and document the new
contract

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-config strict_config_accepts_opaque_desktop_keys`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
desktop_toml_round_trips_opaque_nested_values`
- `cargo test -p codex-core config_schema_matches_fixture`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all desktop_settings`
2026-05-15 02:34:21 +00:00
Dylan Hurd
51b0e94105 chore(features) rm Feature::ApplyPatchFreeform (#22711)
## Summary
Removes the feature since this is effectively on by default in all cases
where we should use it, or can be configured via models.json.

## Testing
- [x] unit tests pass
2026-05-14 16:15:56 -07:00
rreichel3-oai
02a7205250 [codex] Support multiple forced ChatGPT workspaces (#18161)
## Summary

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

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

## Why

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

## Server-side impact

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

## Validation

This was tested with:

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

All were successful.

Automated coverage:

- `cargo test -p codex-login`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui local_chatgpt_auth`
- `cargo test --locked -p codex-app-server
login_account_chatgpt_includes_forced_workspace_allowlist_query_param`
2026-05-14 17:11:36 -04:00
Rajeev Nayak
f13e21ef43 Prefer the model list fetched from the backend for SIWC users (#22547)
## Summary
- For SIWC users, update the model list merging logic to prefer the
model list fetched from the backend over the bundled model list (this is
needed for special cases where users have a more limited set of models
they're allowed to use)
- Add or update tests covering the revised cache behavior

## Testing
- Added/updated unit tests in
`codex-rs/models-manager/src/manager_tests.rs`
- Not run (not requested)
2026-05-14 13:45:49 -04:00
starr-openai
8736e32657 tests: avoid ambient temp sandbox roots (#22576)
## Why
Some sandboxed integration tests enabled both ambient temp roots
(`TMPDIR` and literal `/tmp`) even though they were not testing
temp-root behavior. On Linux bwrap, making `/tmp` writable causes
protected metadata mount targets such as `/tmp/.git`, `/tmp/.agents`,
and `/tmp/.codex` to be synthesized. If a run is interrupted, those
top-level markers can be left behind and contaminate later tests.

## What changed
For the incidental integration tests that do not need ambient temp-root
access, set `exclude_tmpdir_env_var` and `exclude_slash_tmp` to `true`.
Dedicated protected-metadata coverage remains in the lower-level sandbox
tests that use isolated temp roots.

## Verification
Focused remote devbox repros passed with a watcher polling `/tmp/.git`,
`/tmp/.agents`, and `/tmp/.codex`; no leaked markers were observed.
2026-05-14 10:04:24 -07:00
Michael Bolin
01d93fd9fc permissions: canonicalize workspace_roots and danger-full-access names (#22624)
## Why

This is a small precursor to the larger permissions-migration work. Both
the comparison stack in
[#22401](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22401) /
[#22402](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22402) and the alternate
stack in [#22610](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22610) /
[#22611](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22611) /
[#22612](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22612) are easier to
review if the terminology is already settled underneath them.

Because `:project_roots` and `:danger-no-sandbox` have not shipped as
stable user-facing surface area, carrying them forward as aliases would
just add more migration logic to the later stacks. This PR removes that
ambiguity now so the follow-on work can rely on one spelling for each
built-in concept.

## What Changed

- renamed the config-facing special filesystem key from `:project_roots`
to `:workspace_roots`
- dropped unpublished `:project_roots` parsing support in
`core/src/config/permissions.rs`, so new config only recognizes
`:workspace_roots`
- renamed the built-in full-access permission profile id from
`:danger-no-sandbox` to `:danger-full-access`
- dropped unpublished `:danger-no-sandbox` support entirely, including
the old active-profile canonicalization path, and added explicit
rejection coverage for the legacy id
- introduced shared built-in permission-profile id constants in
`codex-rs/protocol/src/models.rs`
- updated `core`, `app-server`, and `tui` call sites that special-case
built-in profiles to use the shared constants and canonical ids
- updated tests and the Linux sandbox README to use `:workspace_roots` /
`:danger-full-access`

## Verification

I focused verification on the three places this rename can regress:
config parsing, active-profile identity surfaced back out of `core`, and
user/server call sites that special-case built-in profiles.

Targeted checks:

-
`config::tests::default_permissions_can_select_builtin_profile_without_permissions_table`
-
`config::tests::default_permissions_read_only_applies_additional_writable_roots_as_modifications`
-
`config::tests::default_permissions_can_select_builtin_full_access_profile`
- `config::tests::legacy_danger_no_sandbox_is_rejected`
- `workspace_root` filtered `codex-core` tests
-
`request_processors::thread_processor::thread_processor_tests::thread_processor_behavior_tests::requested_permissions_trust_project_uses_permission_profile_intent`
-
`suite::v2::turn_start::turn_start_rejects_invalid_permission_selection_before_starting_turn`
- `status::tests::status_snapshot_shows_auto_review_permissions`
-
`status::tests::status_permissions_full_disk_managed_with_network_is_danger_full_access`
-
`app_server_session::tests::embedded_turn_permissions_use_active_profile_selection`
2026-05-14 08:45:54 -07:00
jif-oai
deedf3b2c4 feat: add layered --profile-v2 config files (#17141)
## Why

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

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

## What Changed

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

## Limits

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

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

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

## Verification

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

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-14 15:16:15 +02:00
xli-oai
9797296564 Relax remote plugin sync gate (#22594)
## Summary
- Allow remote installed-plugin cache refresh to start whenever plugins
are enabled.
- Allow remote installed-plugin bundle sync to start whenever plugins
are enabled.
- Remove the extra local `remote_plugin_enabled` guard from those
background sync paths.

## Context
Server-side installed plugin state and optional bundle URL behavior are
owned by plugin-service `/public/plugins/installed`, so these local sync
paths only need the overall plugin enablement gate.

## Test plan
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-core-plugins`
2026-05-14 03:38:30 +00:00
Owen Lin
4e368aa2e9 enable/disable remote control at runtime, not via features (#22578)
## Why
reapplies https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22386 which was
previously reverted

Also, introduce `remoteControl/enable` and `remoteControl/disable`
app-server APIs to toggle on/off remote control at runtime for a given
running app-server instance.

## What Changed

- Adds experimental v2 RPCs:
  - `remoteControl/enable`
  - `remoteControl/disable`
- Adds `RemoteControlRequestProcessor` and routes the new RPCs through
it instead of `ConfigRequestProcessor`.
- Adds named `RemoteControlHandle::enable`, `disable`, and `status`
methods.
- Makes `remoteControl/enable` return an error when sqlite state DB is
unavailable, while keeping enrollment/websocket failures as async status
updates.
- Adds `AppServerRuntimeOptions.remote_control_enabled` and hidden
`--remote-control` flags for `codex app-server` and `codex-app-server`.
- Updates managed daemon startup to use `codex app-server
--remote-control --listen unix://`.
- Marks `Feature::RemoteControl` as removed and ignores
`[features].remote_control`.
- Updates app-server README entries for the new remote-control methods.
2026-05-14 01:07:46 +00:00
xl-openai
e3bf0cfc63 [codex] Canonicalize shared workspace plugin IDs (#22564)
## Summary
- Canonicalize private and unlisted workspace shared plugin IDs to
`workspace-shared-with-me`.
- Keep `plugin/list` private/unlisted shared-with-me buckets as UI
grouping only.
- Update share read/list/checkout and cache cleanup coverage for the
canonical namespace.

## Tests
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all
plugin_list_fetches_shared_with_me_kind`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all
plugin_read_returns_share_context_for_shared_remote_plugin`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all suite::v2::plugin_share`
- `cargo test -p codex-core-plugins
list_remote_plugin_shares_fetches_created_workspace_plugins`
- `cargo test -p codex-core-plugins
stale_remote_plugin_cleanup_removes_old_shared_with_me_cache_and_keeps_canonical_cache`
- `git diff --check`
2026-05-13 16:29:47 -07:00
Owen Lin
fb7cfc813a fix: prevent codex-backend from stealing originator (#22533)
## Why

Remote control starts by letting `codex-backend` initialize against the
app-server as an infrastructure health/proxy client before the real
remote client connects. App-server initialization also sets the
process-wide `originator` from `client_info.name`, so `codex-backend`
could become the sticky originator for later model/API requests even
after the real client initialized.

## What changed

- Treat `codex-backend` as a non-originating initialize client,
alongside the existing `codex_app_server_daemon` probe client.
- Preserve normal per-connection initialize behavior, including session
metadata and initialize analytics.
- Add regression coverage that verifies `codex-backend` initialize does
not replace the default originator.

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all
initialize_codex_backend_does_not_override_originator`
2026-05-13 12:38:34 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
9c691b74d6 chore(config) rm tools.view_image (#22501)
## Summary
It appears this config flag has been broken/a noop for quite some time:
since https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/8850. Let's simplify and get
rid of this.

## Testing
- [x] Updated unit tests
2026-05-13 12:35:37 -07:00
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
xl-openai
2a67c46de4 feat: Add plugin share checkout (#22435)
Adds plugin/share/checkout to turn a shared remote plugin into a local
working copy under ~/plugins/<name>.

Registers the copy in the managed personal marketplace and records the
remote-to-local mapping for later share/save flows.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-13 00:50:29 -07:00
Abhinav
934a40c7d9 Use root repo hooks in linked worktrees (#21969)
# Why

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

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

# What

- Teach project config loading to remember the matching root-checkout
`.codex/` folder for actual linked-worktree project layers.
- Keep ordinary project config sourced from the worktree, but replace
project hook declarations with the root checkout's matching layer before
hook discovery runs, including linked-worktree layers with `.codex/` but
no local `config.toml`.
- Make hook discovery use that authoritative hook folder for both
`hooks.json` and TOML hook source paths, so linked worktrees produce the
same hook key and trust state as the root checkout.
- Cover the linked-worktree path plus regressions for missing worktree
`config.toml` and nested non-worktree project roots.
2026-05-13 06:58:58 +00:00
xl-openai
7bf95b39aa feat: Split shared workspace plugins by discoverability (#22425)
- Keep shared-with-me as the plugin/list request kind, but return
private plugins under workspace-shared-with-me-private.
- Add workspace-shared-with-me-unlisted for installed workspace plugins
with UNLISTED discoverability,
2026-05-12 21:11:19 -07:00
Eric Traut
51bfb5f3b1 Restore app-server websocket listener with auth guard (#22404)
## Why
PR #21843 removed the TCP websocket app-server listener, but that also
removed functionality that still needs to exist. Restoring it as-is
would reopen the old remote exposure problem, so this keeps the restored
listener while making remote and non-loopback usage require explicit
auth.

## What Changed
- Mostly reverts #21843 and reapplies the small merge-conflict
resolutions needed on top of current main.
- Restores ws://IP:PORT parsing, the app-server TCP websocket acceptor,
websocket auth CLI flags, and the associated tests.
- The only intentional behavior change from the restored code is that
non-loopback websocket listeners now fail startup unless --ws-auth
capability-token or --ws-auth signed-bearer-token is configured.
Loopback listeners remain available for local and SSH-forwarding
workflows.

## Reviewer Focus
Please focus review on the small auth-enforcement delta layered on top
of the revert:

- codex-rs/app-server-transport/src/transport/websocket.rs:
start_websocket_acceptor now rejects unauthenticated non-loopback
websocket binds before accepting connections.
- codex-rs/app-server-transport/src/transport/auth.rs: helper logic
classifies unauthenticated non-loopback listeners.
- codex-rs/app-server/tests/suite/v2/connection_handling_websocket.rs:
tests cover unauthenticated ws://0.0.0.0 startup rejection and
authenticated non-loopback capability-token startup.

Everything else is intended to be revert/merge-conflict restoration
rather than new product behavior.

## Verification

- Manually verified that TUI remoting is restored and that auth is
enforced for non-localhost urls.
2026-05-12 18:40:53 -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
Tom
c51c65ad09 Unify thread metadata updates above store (#22236)
- make ThreadStore::update_thread_metadata accept a broad range of
metadata patches
- keep ThreadStore::append_items as raw canonical history append (no
metadata side effects)
- in the local store, write these metadata updates to a combination of
sqlite and rollout jsonl files for backwards-compat. It special cases
which fields need to go into jsonl vs sqlite vs whatever, confining the
awkwardness to just this implementation
- in remote stores we can simply persist the metadata directly to a
database, no special casing required.
- move the "implicit metadata updates triggered by appending rollout
items" from the RolloutRecorder (which is local-threadstore-specific) to
the LiveThread layer above the ThreadStore, inside of a private helper
utility called ThreadMetadataSync. LiveThread calls ThreadStore
append_items and update_metadata separately.
- Add a generic update metadata method to ThreadManager that works on
both live threads and "cold" threads
- Call that ThreadManager method from app server code, so app server
doesn't need to worry about whether the thread is live or not
2026-05-13 00:28:15 +00:00
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
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
Owen Lin
7bddb3083d fix(app-server): thread history redaction for remote clients (#22178)
## Summary

Remote clients can still receive large `thread/resume` histories when
prior turns include MCP tool call payloads or image-generation results.
This adds a temporary response-only redaction path for the known remote
client names.

Longer term we will move towards fully paginated APIs backed by SQLite.

## Changes

- Redact MCP tool call payload-bearing fields in `thread/resume`
responses for `codex_chatgpt_android_remote` and
`codex_chatgpt_ios_remote`.
- Drop `imageGeneration` items from those `thread/resume` responses.
- Keep redaction out of persisted rollout files, `thread/read`,
`thread/turns/list`, live notifications, and token usage replay.
- Cover the behavior with app-server helper tests and a v2 resume
integration test that checks both remote clients plus a non-target
control client.

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-app-server thread_resume_redaction`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server
thread_resume_redacts_payloads_for_chatgpt_remote_clients`
2026-05-11 11:45:25 -07:00
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
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
Ruslan Nigmatullin
a124ddb854 app-server: remove TCP websocket listener (#21843)
## Why

The app-server no longer needs to expose a TCP websocket listener.
Keeping that transport also kept around a separate listener/auth surface
that is unnecessary now that local clients can use stdio or the
Unix-domain control socket, while remote connectivity is handled by
`remote_control`.

## What Changed

- Removed `ws://IP:PORT` parsing and the `AppServerTransport::WebSocket`
startup path.
- Deleted the app-server websocket listener auth module and removed
related CLI flags/dependencies.
- Kept websocket framing only where it is still needed: over the
Unix-domain control socket and in the outbound `remote_control`
connection.
- Updated app-server CLI/help text and `app-server/README.md` to
document only `stdio://`, `unix://`, `unix://PATH`, and `off` for local
transports.
- Converted affected app-server integration coverage from TCP websocket
listeners to UDS-backed websocket connections, and added a parse test
that rejects `ws://` listen URLs.
- Removed the now-unused workspace `constant_time_eq` dependency and
refreshed `Cargo.lock` after `cargo shear` caught the drift.
- Moved test app-server UDS socket paths to short Unix temp paths so
macOS Bazel test sandboxes do not exceed Unix socket path limits.

## Verification

- Added/updated tests around UDS websocket transport behavior and
`ws://` listen URL rejection.
- `cargo shear`
- `cargo metadata --no-deps --format-version 1`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server unix_socket_transport`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server unix_socket_disconnect`
- `just fix -p codex-app-server`
- `git diff --check`

Local full Rust test execution was blocked before compilation by an
external fetch failure for the pinned `nornagon/crossterm` git
dependency. `just bazel-lock-update` and `just bazel-lock-check` were
retried after the manifest cleanup but remain blocked by external
BuildBuddy/V8 fetch timeouts.
2026-05-11 10:17:26 -07:00
xli-oai
2abdeb34d5 Read cached metadata for installed Git plugins (#20825)
## Summary
- Populate `plugin/list` interface metadata for installed Git-sourced
marketplace plugins from the active cached plugin bundle.
- Preserve marketplace category precedence so list behavior matches
`plugin/read`.
- Keep existing fallback behavior when the cache or manifest is missing
or invalid.

## Test Plan
- `cd codex-rs && just fmt`
- `cd codex-rs && cargo test -p codex-core-plugins
list_marketplaces_installed_git_source_reads_metadata_from_cache_without_cloning`
- `cd codex-rs && cargo test -p codex-app-server
plugin_list_returns_installed_git_source_interface_from_cache`
- `cd codex-rs && just fix -p codex-core-plugins`
- `cd codex-rs && just fix -p codex-app-server`
- `git diff --check`

Server-truth check: OpenAI monorepo app-server generated types already
expose `PluginSummary.interface`, and the webview consumes it for plugin
cards. This PR keeps the protocol/schema unchanged and fills the
existing field from the cached installed bundle for Git-backed
cross-repo plugins.
2026-05-10 16:59:57 -07:00
xl-openai
479491ed89 feat: Add role-aware plugin share context APIs (#21867)
Expose discoverability and full share principals in share context, carry
roles through save/updateTargets, hydrate local shared plugin reads, and
keep share URLs only under plugin.shareContext.
2026-05-08 20:46:39 -07:00
pakrym-oai
408e6218ab Reapply "Move skills watcher to app-server" (#21652)
## Why

PR #21460 reverted the earlier move of skills change watching from
`codex-core` into app-server. This reapplies that boundary change so
app-server owns client-facing `skills/changed` notifications and core no
longer carries the watcher.

## What

- Restore the app-server `SkillsWatcher` and register it from thread
listener setup.
- Remove the core-owned skills watcher and its core live-reload
integration surface.
- Restore app-server coverage for `skills/changed` notifications after a
watched skill file changes.

## Validation

- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all
suite::v2::skills_list::skills_changed_notification_is_emitted_after_skill_change
-- --exact --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib --no-run`
2026-05-08 17:41:15 -07:00
Ruslan Nigmatullin
1b86906fa1 app-server: support daemon-safe restart handling (#21831)
## Why

The app-server daemon work needs two app-server behaviors to be safe
when lifecycle management is driven by a helper process:

- a readiness probe must not become the process-wide client identity
just because it connects first
- a graceful reload signal needs to keep draining active turns even if
it is delivered more than once

## What changed

- Treat `codex_app_server_daemon` initialization as a probe-only client
for process-global originator and user-agent suffix state.
- Distinguish forceable shutdown signals from graceful-only ones, and
treat Unix `SIGHUP` as graceful-only while leaving `SIGTERM` and Ctrl-C
forceable.
- Add regression coverage for daemon probe initialization and repeated
`SIGHUP` delivery while a turn is still running.

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-app-server`
  - The new daemon-probe and repeated-`SIGHUP` coverage passed.
- The run still failed in the existing
`suite::conversation_summary::get_conversation_summary_by_relative_rollout_path_resolves_from_codex_home`
and
`suite::conversation_summary::get_conversation_summary_by_thread_id_reads_rollout`
tests because their initialize handshake timed out.
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all
suite::conversation_summary::`
- Reproduced the same two existing initialize-timeout failures in
isolation.
2026-05-08 15:47:51 -07:00
starr-openai
dac108f2f1 Make environment provider snapshots path-free (#21794)
## Summary
- make EnvironmentProvider::snapshot path-free and keep providers
focused on provider-owned remote environments
- let provider snapshots request local inclusion via include_local, with
environments.toml including local and CODEX_EXEC_SERVER_URL excluding
local
- move reserved local environment construction into EnvironmentManager
using ExecServerRuntimePaths

Follow-up to https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20667

## Testing
- just fmt
- git diff --check
- devbox: bazel build --bes_backend= --bes_results_url=
//codex-rs/exec-server:exec-server
- devbox: bazel test --bes_backend= --bes_results_url=
//codex-rs/exec-server:exec-server-unit-tests

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-05-08 15:30:00 -07:00
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
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
xl-openai
ae15343243 feat: Update plugin share settings with discoverability (#21637)
Requires discoverability on plugin/share/updateTargets so the server can
manage workspace link access consistently, including auto-adding the
workspace principal for UNLISTED.

Also rejects LISTED on share creation and blocks client-supplied
workspace principals while preserving response parsing for LISTED.
2026-05-07 21:28:18 -07:00
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
Tom
79ad209ce6 [codex] Remove remote thread store implementation (#21596)
Remove the remote thread-store backend and checked-in protobuf
artifacts. We've moved these into another crate that link against this
one.

Also remove the config settings for thread store backend selection,
since we'll instead pass an instantiated thread store into the core-api
crate's main entrypoint.
2026-05-08 00:02:46 +00:00
Owen Lin
0d0835dd53 feat(app-server, threadstore): Thread pagination APIs and ThreadStore contract (#21566)
## Why
The goal of this PR is to align on app-server and `ThreadStore` API
updates for paginating through large threads.


#### app-server
##### `thread/turns/list`
- Updates `thread/turns/list` to support `itemsView?: "notLoaded" |
"summary" | "full" | null`, defaulting to `summary`.
- Implements the current `thread/turns/list` behavior over the existing
persisted rollout-history fallback:
  - `notLoaded` returns turn envelopes with empty `items`.
- `summary` returns the first user message and final assistant message
when available.
  - `full` preserves the existing full item behavior.

Note that this method still uses the naive approach of loading the
entire rollout file, and returns just the filtered slice of the data.
Real pagination will come later by leveraging SQLite.

##### `thread/turns/items/list`
- Adds the experimental `thread/turns/items/list` protocol, schema,
dispatcher, and processor stub. The app-server currently returns
JSON-RPC `-32601` with `thread/turns/items/list is not supported yet`.

#### ThreadStore
- Adds the experimental `thread/turns/items/list` protocol, schema,
dispatcher, and processor stub. The app-server currently returns
JSON-RPC `-32601` with `thread/turns/items/list is not supported yet`.
- Adds `ThreadStore` contract types and stubbed methods for listing
thread turns and listing items within a turn.
- Adds a typed `StoredTurnStatus` and `StoredTurnError` to avoid baking
app-server API enums or lossy string status values into the store-facing
turn contract.
- Adds a typed `StoredTurnStatus` and `StoredTurnError` to avoid baking
app-server API enums or lossy string status values into the store-facing
turn contract.

This also sketches the storage abstraction we expect to need once turns
are indexed/stored. In particular, `notLoaded` is useful only if
ThreadStore can eventually list turn metadata without loading every
persisted item for each turn.

## Validation

- Added/updated protocol serialization coverage for the new request and
response shapes.
- Added app-server integration coverage for `thread/turns/list` default
summary behavior and all three `itemsView` modes.
- Added app-server integration coverage that `thread/turns/items/list`
returns the expected unsupported JSON-RPC error when experimental APIs
are enabled.
- Added thread-store coverage that the default trait methods return
`ThreadStoreError::Unsupported`.

No developers.openai.com documentation update is needed for this
internal experimental app-server API surface.
2026-05-07 15:44:43 -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
Tom
0274398901 [codex] Fix pathless thread summaries (#21266)
## Summary

Fix `getConversationSummary` so thread-id summaries work for stored
threads that do not have a local rollout path, such as remote thread
stores.

The root cause was that `summary_from_stored_thread` returned `None`
when `StoredThread.rollout_path` was absent, and
`get_thread_summary_response_inner` treated that as an internal error.
This made conversation-id lookups depend on a local-only field even
though the thread store can address the thread by id.
2026-05-07 11:18:16 -07:00
xl-openai
114bac1409 feat: Expose plugin share metadata in shareContext (#21495)
Extends PluginSummary.shareContext with shareUrl and reader shareTargets
2026-05-07 10:07:03 -07:00
Ruslan Nigmatullin
e64a8979b0 device-key: clean up unused crate (#21487) 2026-05-07 09:01:44 -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