Commit Graph

26 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Fan
7636437244 codex: make create-api-key app-server backed
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-05 18:07:48 -04:00
rhan-oai
4fd5c35c4f [codex-analytics] subagent analytics (#15915)
- creates custom event that emits subagent thread analytics from core
- wires client metadata (`product_client_id, client_name,
client_version`), through from app-server
- creates `created_at `timestamp in core
- subagent analytics are behind `FeatureFlag::GeneralAnalytics`

PR stack
- [[telemetry] thread events
#15690](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15690)
- --> [[telemetry] subagent events
#15915](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15915)
- [[telemetry] turn events
#15591](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15591)
- [[telemetry] steer events
#15697](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15697)
- [[telemetry] queued prompt data
#15804](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15804)

Notes:
- core does not spawn a subagent thread for compact, but represented in
mapping for consistency

`INFO | 2026-04-01 13:08:12 | codex_backend.routers.analytics_events |
analytics_events.track_analytics_events:399 | Tracked
codex_thread_initialized event params={'thread_id':
'019d4aa9-233b-70f2-a958-c3dbae1e30fa', 'product_surface': 'codex',
'app_server_client': {'product_client_id': 'CODEX_CLI', 'client_name':
'codex-tui', 'client_version': '0.0.0', 'rpc_transport': 'in_process',
'experimental_api_enabled': None}, 'runtime': {'codex_rs_version':
'0.0.0', 'runtime_os': 'macos', 'runtime_os_version': '26.4.0',
'runtime_arch': 'aarch64'}, 'model': 'gpt-5.3-codex', 'ephemeral':
False, 'initialization_mode': 'new', 'created_at': 1775074091,
'thread_source': 'subagent', 'subagent_source': 'thread_spawn',
'parent_thread_id': '019d4aa8-51ec-77e3-bafb-2c1b8e29e385'} | `

`INFO | 2026-04-01 13:08:41 | codex_backend.routers.analytics_events |
analytics_events.track_analytics_events:399 | Tracked
codex_thread_initialized event params={'thread_id':
'019d4aa9-94e3-75f1-8864-ff8ad0e55e1e', 'product_surface': 'codex',
'app_server_client': {'product_client_id': 'CODEX_CLI', 'client_name':
'codex-tui', 'client_version': '0.0.0', 'rpc_transport': 'in_process',
'experimental_api_enabled': None}, 'runtime': {'codex_rs_version':
'0.0.0', 'runtime_os': 'macos', 'runtime_os_version': '26.4.0',
'runtime_arch': 'aarch64'}, 'model': 'gpt-5.3-codex', 'ephemeral':
False, 'initialization_mode': 'new', 'created_at': 1775074120,
'thread_source': 'subagent', 'subagent_source': 'review',
'parent_thread_id': None} | `

---------

Co-authored-by: jif-oai <jif@openai.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Bolin <mbolin@openai.com>
2026-04-04 11:06:43 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
af8a9d2d2b remove temporary ownership re-exports (#16626)
Stacked on #16508.

This removes the temporary `codex-core` / `codex-login` re-export shims
from the ownership split and rewrites callsites to import directly from
`codex-model-provider-info`, `codex-models-manager`, `codex-api`,
`codex-protocol`, `codex-feedback`, and `codex-response-debug-context`.

No behavior change intended; this is the mechanical import cleanup layer
split out from the ownership move.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-03 00:33:34 -07:00
Michael Bolin
aa2403e2eb core: remove cross-crate re-exports from lib.rs (#16512)
## Why

`codex-core` was re-exporting APIs owned by sibling `codex-*` crates,
which made downstream crates depend on `codex-core` as a proxy module
instead of the actual owner crate.

Removing those forwards makes crate boundaries explicit and lets leaf
crates drop unnecessary `codex-core` dependencies. In this PR, this
reduces the dependency on `codex-core` to `codex-login` in the following
files:

```
codex-rs/backend-client/Cargo.toml
codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/common/Cargo.toml
```

## What

- Remove `codex-rs/core/src/lib.rs` re-exports for symbols owned by
`codex-login`, `codex-mcp`, `codex-rollout`, `codex-analytics`,
`codex-protocol`, `codex-shell-command`, `codex-sandboxing`,
`codex-tools`, and `codex-utils-path`.
- Delete the `default_client` forwarding shim in `codex-rs/core`.
- Update in-crate and downstream callsites to import directly from the
owning `codex-*` crate.
- Add direct Cargo dependencies where callsites now target the owner
crate, and remove `codex-core` from `codex-rs/backend-client`.
2026-04-01 23:06:24 -07:00
jif-oai
25fbd7e40e fix: ma2 (#16238) 2026-03-31 11:22:38 +02:00
jif-oai
213756c9ab feat: add mailbox concept for wait (#16010)
Add a mailbox we can use for inter-agent communication
`wait` is now based on it and don't take target anymore
2026-03-30 11:47:20 +02:00
rreichel3-oai
86764af684 Protect first-time project .codex creation across Linux and macOS sandboxes (#15067)
## Problem

Codex already treated an existing top-level project `./.codex` directory
as protected, but there was a gap on first creation.

If `./.codex` did not exist yet, a turn could create files under it,
such as `./.codex/config.toml`, without going through the same approval
path as later modifications. That meant the initial write could bypass
the intended protection for project-local Codex state.

## What this changes

This PR closes that first-creation gap in the Unix enforcement layers:

- `codex-protocol`
- treat the top-level project `./.codex` path as a protected carveout
even when it does not exist yet
- avoid injecting the default carveout when the user already has an
explicit rule for that exact path
- macOS Seatbelt
- deny writes to both the exact protected path and anything beneath it,
so creating `./.codex` itself is blocked in addition to writes inside it
- Linux bubblewrap
- preserve the same protected-path behavior for first-time creation
under `./.codex`
- tests
- add protocol regressions for missing `./.codex` and explicit-rule
collisions
- add Unix sandbox coverage for blocking first-time `./.codex` creation
  - tighten Seatbelt policy assertions around excluded subpaths

## Scope

This change is intentionally scoped to protecting the top-level project
`.codex` subtree from agent writes.

It does not make `.codex` unreadable, and it does not change the product
behavior around loading project skills from `.codex` when project config
is untrusted.

## Why this shape

The fix is pointed rather than broad:
- it preserves the current model of “project `.codex` is protected from
writes”
- it closes the security-relevant first-write hole
- it avoids folding a larger permissions-model redesign into this PR

## Validation

- `cargo test -p codex-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-sandboxing seatbelt`
- `cargo test -p codex-exec --test all
sandbox_blocks_first_time_dot_codex_creation -- --nocapture`

---------

Co-authored-by: Michael Bolin <mbolin@openai.com>
2026-03-26 16:06:53 -04:00
jif-oai
18f1a08bc9 feat: new op type for sub-agents communication (#15556)
Add `InterAgentCommunication` for v2 agent communication
2026-03-23 21:09:00 +00:00
jif-oai
37ac0c093c feat: structured multi-agent output (#15515)
Send input now sends messages as assistant message and with this format:

```
author: /root/worker_a
recipient: /root/worker_a/tester
other_recipients: []
Content: bla bla bla. Actual content. Only text for now
```
2026-03-23 18:53:54 +00:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
2e22885e79 Split features into codex-features crate (#15253)
- Split the feature system into a new `codex-features` crate.
- Cut `codex-core` and workspace consumers over to the new config and
warning APIs.

Co-authored-by: Ahmed Ibrahim <219906144+aibrahim-oai@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-19 20:12:07 -07:00
Michael Bolin
b77fe8fefe Apply argument comment lint across codex-rs (#14652)
## Why

Once the repo-local lint exists, `codex-rs` needs to follow the
checked-in convention and CI needs to keep it from drifting. This commit
applies the fallback `/*param*/` style consistently across existing
positional literal call sites without changing those APIs.

The longer-term preference is still to avoid APIs that require comments
by choosing clearer parameter types and call shapes. This PR is
intentionally the mechanical follow-through for the places where the
existing signatures stay in place.

After rebasing onto newer `main`, the rollout also had to cover newly
introduced `tui_app_server` call sites. That made it clear the first cut
of the CI job was too expensive for the common path: it was spending
almost as much time installing `cargo-dylint` and re-testing the lint
crate as a representative test job spends running product tests. The CI
update keeps the full workspace enforcement but trims that extra
overhead from ordinary `codex-rs` PRs.

## What changed

- keep a dedicated `argument_comment_lint` job in `rust-ci`
- mechanically annotate remaining opaque positional literals across
`codex-rs` with exact `/*param*/` comments, including the rebased
`tui_app_server` call sites that now fall under the lint
- keep the checked-in style aligned with the lint policy by using
`/*param*/` and leaving string and char literals uncommented
- cache `cargo-dylint`, `dylint-link`, and the relevant Cargo
registry/git metadata in the lint job
- split changed-path detection so the lint crate's own `cargo test` step
runs only when `tools/argument-comment-lint/*` or `rust-ci.yml` changes
- continue to run the repo wrapper over the `codex-rs` workspace, so
product-code enforcement is unchanged

Most of the code changes in this commit are intentionally mechanical
comment rewrites or insertions driven by the lint itself.

## Verification

- `./tools/argument-comment-lint/run.sh --workspace`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui-app-server -p codex-tui`
- parsed `.github/workflows/rust-ci.yml` locally with PyYAML

---

* -> #14652
* #14651
2026-03-16 16:48:15 -07:00
Charley Cunningham
bc24017d64 Add Smart Approvals guardian review across core, app-server, and TUI (#13860)
## Summary
- add `approvals_reviewer = "user" | "guardian_subagent"` as the runtime
control for who reviews approval requests
- route Smart Approvals guardian review through core for command
execution, file changes, managed-network approvals, MCP approvals, and
delegated/subagent approval flows
- expose guardian review in app-server with temporary unstable
`item/autoApprovalReview/{started,completed}` notifications carrying
`targetItemId`, `review`, and `action`
- update the TUI so Smart Approvals can be enabled from `/experimental`,
aligned with the matching `/approvals` mode, and surfaced clearly while
reviews are pending or resolved

## Runtime model
This PR does not introduce a new `approval_policy`.

Instead:
- `approval_policy` still controls when approval is needed
- `approvals_reviewer` controls who reviewable approval requests are
routed to:
  - `user`
  - `guardian_subagent`

`guardian_subagent` is a carefully prompted reviewer subagent that
gathers relevant context and applies a risk-based decision framework
before approving or denying the request.

The `smart_approvals` feature flag is a rollout/UI gate. Core runtime
behavior keys off `approvals_reviewer`.

When Smart Approvals is enabled from the TUI, it also switches the
current `/approvals` settings to the matching Smart Approvals mode so
users immediately see guardian review in the active thread:
- `approval_policy = on-request`
- `approvals_reviewer = guardian_subagent`
- `sandbox_mode = workspace-write`

Users can still change `/approvals` afterward.

Config-load behavior stays intentionally narrow:
- plain `smart_approvals = true` in `config.toml` remains just the
rollout/UI gate and does not auto-set `approvals_reviewer`
- the deprecated `guardian_approval = true` alias migration does
backfill `approvals_reviewer = "guardian_subagent"` in the same scope
when that reviewer is not already configured there, so old configs
preserve their original guardian-enabled behavior

ARC remains a separate safety check. For MCP tool approvals, ARC
escalations now flow into the configured reviewer instead of always
bypassing guardian and forcing manual review.

## Config stability
The runtime reviewer override is stable, but the config-backed
app-server protocol shape is still settling.

- `thread/start`, `thread/resume`, and `turn/start` keep stable
`approvalsReviewer` overrides
- the config-backed `approvals_reviewer` exposure returned via
`config/read` (including profile-level config) is now marked
`[UNSTABLE]` / experimental in the app-server protocol until we are more
confident in that config surface

## App-server surface
This PR intentionally keeps the guardian app-server shape narrow and
temporary.

It adds generic unstable lifecycle notifications:
- `item/autoApprovalReview/started`
- `item/autoApprovalReview/completed`

with payloads of the form:
- `{ threadId, turnId, targetItemId, review, action? }`

`review` is currently:
- `{ status, riskScore?, riskLevel?, rationale? }`
- where `status` is one of `inProgress`, `approved`, `denied`, or
`aborted`

`action` carries the guardian action summary payload from core when
available. This lets clients render temporary standalone pending-review
UI, including parallel reviews, even when the underlying tool item has
not been emitted yet.

These notifications are explicitly documented as `[UNSTABLE]` and
expected to change soon.

This PR does **not** persist guardian review state onto `thread/read`
tool items. The intended follow-up is to attach guardian review state to
the reviewed tool item lifecycle instead, which would improve
consistency with manual approvals and allow thread history / reconnect
flows to replay guardian review state directly.

## TUI behavior
- `/experimental` exposes the rollout gate as `Smart Approvals`
- enabling it in the TUI enables the feature and switches the current
session to the matching Smart Approvals `/approvals` mode
- disabling it in the TUI clears the persisted `approvals_reviewer`
override when appropriate and returns the session to default manual
review when the effective reviewer changes
- `/approvals` still exposes the reviewer choice directly
- the TUI renders:
- pending guardian review state in the live status footer, including
parallel review aggregation
  - resolved approval/denial state in history

## Scope notes
This PR includes the supporting core/runtime work needed to make Smart
Approvals usable end-to-end:
- shell / unified-exec / apply_patch / managed-network / MCP guardian
review
- delegated/subagent approval routing into guardian review
- guardian review risk metadata and action summaries for app-server/TUI
- config/profile/TUI handling for `smart_approvals`, `guardian_approval`
alias migration, and `approvals_reviewer`
- a small internal cleanup of delegated approval forwarding to dedupe
fallback paths and simplify guardian-vs-parent approval waiting (no
intended behavior change)

Out of scope for this PR:
- redesigning the existing manual approval protocol shapes
- persisting guardian review state onto app-server `ThreadItem`s
- delegated MCP elicitation auto-review (the current delegated MCP
guardian shim only covers the legacy `RequestUserInput` path)

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-13 15:27:00 -07:00
Owen Lin
5bc82c5b93 feat(app-server): propagate traces across tasks and core ops (#14387)
## Summary

This PR keeps app-server RPC request trace context alive for the full
lifetime of the work that request kicks off (e.g. for `thread/start`,
this is `app-server rpc handler -> tokio background task -> core op
submissions`). Previously we lose trace lineage once the request handler
returns or hands work off to background tasks.

This approach is especially relevant for `thread/start` and other RPC
handlers that run in a non-blocking way. In the near future we'll most
likely want to make all app-server handlers run in a non-blocking way by
default, and only queue operations that must operate in order (e.g.
thread RPCs per thread?), so we want to make sure tracing in app-server
just generally works.

Depends on https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/14300

**Before**
<img width="155" height="207" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c9487459-36f1-436c-beb7-fafeb40737af"
/>


**After**
<img width="299" height="337" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/727392b2-d072-4427-9dc4-0502d8652dea"
/>

## What changed

- Keep request-scoped trace context around until we send the final
response or error, or the connection closes.
- Thread that trace context through detached `thread/start` work so
background startup stays attached to the originating request.
- Pass request trace context through to downstream core operations,
including:
  - thread creation
  - resume/fork flows
  - turn submission
  - review
  - interrupt
  - realtime conversation operations
- Add tracing tests that verify:
  - remote W3C trace context is preserved for `thread/start`
  - remote W3C trace context is preserved for `turn/start`
  - downstream core spans stay under the originating request span
  - request-scoped tracing state is cleaned up correctly
- Clean up shutdown behavior so detached background tasks and spawned
threads are drained before process exit.
2026-03-11 20:18:31 -07:00
Channing Conger
c6343e0649 Implemented thread-level atomic elicitation counter for stopwatch pausing (#12296)
### Purpose
While trying to build out CLI-Tools for the agent to use under skills we
have found that those tools sometimes need to invoke a user elicitation.
These elicitations are handled out of band of the codex app-server but
need to indicate to the exec manager that the command running is not
going to progress on the usual timeout horizon.

### Example
Model calls universal exec:
`$ download-credit-card-history --start-date 2026-01-19 --end-date
2026-02-19 > credit_history.jsonl`

download-cred-card-history might hit a hosted/preauthenticated service
to fetch data. That service might decide that the request requires an
end user approval the access to the personal data. It should be able to
signal to the running thread that the command in question is blocked on
user elicitation. In that case we want the exec to continue, but the
timeout to not expire on the tool call, essentially freezing time until
the user approves or rejects the command at which point the tool would
signal the app-server to decrement the outstanding elicitation count.
Now timeouts would proceed as normal.

### What's Added

- New v2 RPC methods:
    - thread/increment_elicitation
    - thread/decrement_elicitation
- Protocol updates in:
    - codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/protocol/common.rs
    - codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/protocol/v2.rs
- App-server handlers wired in:
    - codex-rs/app-server/src/codex_message_processor.rs

### Behavior

- Counter starts at 0 per thread.
- increment atomically increases the counter.
- decrement atomically decreases the counter; decrement at 0 returns
invalid request.
- Transition rules:
- 0 -> 1: broadcast pause state, pausing all active stopwatches
immediately.
    - \>0 -> >0: remain paused.
    - 1 -> 0: broadcast unpause state, resuming stopwatches.
- Core thread/session logic:
    - codex-rs/core/src/codex_thread.rs
    - codex-rs/core/src/codex.rs
    - codex-rs/core/src/mcp_connection_manager.rs

### Exec-server stopwatch integration

- Added centralized stopwatch tracking/controller:
    - codex-rs/exec-server/src/posix/stopwatch_controller.rs
- Hooked pause/unpause broadcast handling + stopwatch registration:
    - codex-rs/exec-server/src/posix/mcp.rs
    - codex-rs/exec-server/src/posix/stopwatch.rs
    - codex-rs/exec-server/src/posix.rs
2026-03-09 22:29:26 -07:00
pash-openai
07e532dcb9 app-server service tier plumbing (plus some cleanup) (#13334)
followup to https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/13212 to expose fast
tier controls to app server
(majority of this PR is generated schema jsons - actual code is +69 /
-35 and +24 tests )

- add service tier fields to the app-server protocol surfaces used by
thread lifecycle, turn start, config, and session configured events
- thread service tier through the app-server message processor and core
thread config snapshots
- allow runtime config overrides to carry service tier for app-server
callers

cleanup:
- Removing useless "legacy" code supporting "standard" - we moved to
None | "fast", so "standard" is not needed.
2026-03-03 02:35:09 -08:00
Ruslan Nigmatullin
8c1e3f3e64 app-server: Add ephemeral field to Thread object (#13084)
Currently there is no alternative way to know that thread is ephemeral,
only client which did create it has the knowledge.
2026-02-27 17:42:25 -08:00
Michael Bolin
e6cd75a684 notify: include client in legacy hook payload (#12968)
## Why

The `notify` hook payload did not identify which Codex client started
the turn. That meant downstream notification hooks could not distinguish
between completions coming from the TUI and completions coming from
app-server clients such as VS Code or Xcode. Now that the Codex App
provides its own desktop notifications, it would be nice to be able to
filter those out.

This change adds that context without changing the existing payload
shape for callers that do not know the client name, and keeps the new
end-to-end test cross-platform.

## What changed

- added an optional top-level `client` field to the legacy `notify` JSON
payload
- threaded that value through `core` and `hooks`; the internal session
and turn state now carries it as `app_server_client_name`
- set the field to `codex-tui` for TUI turns
- captured `initialize.clientInfo.name` in the app server and applied it
to subsequent turns before dispatching hooks
- replaced the notify integration test hook with a `python3` script so
the test does not rely on Unix shell permissions or `bash`
- documented the new field in `docs/config.md`

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-hooks`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server
suite::v2::initialize::turn_start_notify_payload_includes_initialize_client_name
-- --exact --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core` (`src/lib.rs` passed; `core/tests/all.rs`
still has unrelated existing failures in this environment)

## Docs

The public config reference on `developers.openai.com/codex` should
mention that the legacy `notify` payload may include a top-level
`client` field. The TUI reports `codex-tui`, and the app server reports
`initialize.clientInfo.name` when it is available.
2026-02-26 22:27:34 -08:00
jif-oai
2daa3fd44f feat: sub-agent injection (#12152)
This PR adds parent-thread sub-agent completion notifications and change
the prompt of the model to prevent if from being confused
2026-02-19 11:32:10 +00:00
jif-oai
f675bf9334 fix: file watcher (#12105)
The issue was that the file_watcher never unsubscribe a file watch. All
of them leave in the owning of the ThreadManager. As a result, for each
newly created thread we create a new file watcher but this one never get
deleted even if we close the thread. On Unix system, a file watcher uses
an `inotify` and after some time we end up having consumed all of them.

This PR adds a mechanism to unsubscribe a file watcher when a thread is
dropped
2026-02-18 18:28:34 +00:00
jif-oai
2293ab0e21 feat: phase 2 usage (#12121) 2026-02-18 11:33:55 +00:00
Matthew Zeng
005e040f97 [apps] Add thread_id param to optionally load thread config for apps feature check. (#11279)
- [x] Add thread_id param to optionally load thread config for apps
feature check
2026-02-09 23:10:26 -08:00
Owen Lin
0d8b2b74c4 feat(app-server): turn/steer API (#10821)
This PR adds a dedicated `turn/steer` API for appending user input to an
in-flight turn.

## Motivation
Currently, steering in the app is implemented by just calling
`turn/start` while a turn is running. This has some really weird quirks:
- Client gets back a new `turn.id`, even though streamed
events/approvals remained tied to the original active turn ID.
- All the various turn-level override params on `turn/start` do not
apply to the "steer", and would only apply to the next real turn.
- There can also be a race condition where the client thinks the turn is
active but the server has already completed it, so there might be bugs
if the client has baked in some client-specific behavior thinking it's a
steer when in fact the server kicked off a new turn. This is
particularly possible when running a client against a remote app-server.

Having a dedicated `turn/steer` API eliminates all those quirks.

`turn/steer` behavior:
- Requires an active turn on threadId. Returns a JSON-RPC error if there
is no active turn.
- If expectedTurnId is provided, it must match the active turn (more
useful when connecting to a remote app-server).
- Does not emit `turn/started`.
- Does not accept turn overrides (`cwd`, `model`, `sandbox`, etc.) or
`outputSchema` to accurately reflect that these are not applied when
steering.
2026-02-06 00:35:04 +00:00
jif-oai
3878c3dc7c feat: sqlite 1 (#10004)
Add a `.sqlite` database to be used to store rollout metatdata (and
later logs)
This PR is phase 1:
* Add the database and the required infrastructure
* Add a backfill of the database
* Persist the newly created rollout both in files and in the DB
* When we need to get metadata or a rollout, consider the `JSONL` as the
source of truth but compare the results with the DB and show any errors
2026-01-28 15:29:14 +01:00
jif-oai
83775f4df1 feat: ephemeral threads (#9765)
Add ephemeral threads capabilities. Only exposed through the
`app-server` v2

The idea is to disable the rollout recorder for those threads.
2026-01-24 14:57:40 +00:00
jif-oai
623707ab58 feat: add wait tool implementation for collab (#9088)
Add implementation for the `wait` tool.

For this we consider all status different from `PendingInit` and
`Running` as terminal. The `wait` tool call will return either after a
given timeout or when the tool reaches a non-terminal status.

A few points to note:
* The usage of a channel is preferred to prevent some races (just
looping on `get_status()` could "miss" a terminal status)
* The order of operations is very important, we need to first subscribe
and then check the last known status to prevent race conditions
* If the channel gets dropped, we return an error on purpose
2026-01-12 12:16:24 +00:00
jif-oai
116059c3a0 chore: unify conversation with thread name (#8830)
Done and verified by Codex + refactor feature of RustRover
2026-01-07 17:04:53 +00:00