Remove the EnvironmentProviderSnapshot wrapper. Providers now expose environments and the selected default id directly, while EnvironmentManager validates that the default id exists in the returned environment map.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Make environment providers return the environment map and default id together. This keeps provider-owned startup state in one boundary and removes the separate default callback over a map.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Have providers return a concrete default environment id after constructing their environment map, using None to disable the default. This removes the DefaultEnvironmentSelection tri-state while preserving legacy derived defaults through the trait's default implementation.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Let environment providers return an explicit default selection and let remote environments track the underlying transport instead of treating only websocket URLs as remote. This prepares the environment layer for stdio-backed remotes without introducing config-file loading.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Keep the retained transport ownership needed for stdio child cleanup, but drop the broader AtomicBool closed-state behavior and its targeted tests from this PR.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Drop the separate JsonRpcConnectionRuntime wrapper so JsonRpcConnection directly owns the channels, disconnect watch, transport tasks, and transport guard. This keeps the lifetime model explicit without helper extraction methods.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Remove the runtime extraction helpers and make JsonRpcConnection ownership explicit at the destructuring sites. Let the stdio transport clean up through Drop so ExecServerClient no longer needs to call an explicit shutdown hook.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Keep the server-side connection processor on the original by-value parts API, and move the compatibility needed for that shape into JsonRpcConnection. The client still borrows the connection mutably so it can keep transport ownership with ExecServerClient.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Remove the Option wrapper used only to force connection drop order and call transport shutdown explicitly instead. Also drop dead-code allowances that are no longer needed.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
The stdio transport no longer adds a processor-side disconnect side channel, so drop the test that asserted that removed behavior. Client cleanup is covered at the RPC/client transport boundary instead.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Keep transport shutdown responsible for stdio child cleanup, and remove the separate disconnect watch channel from the JSON-RPC connection/runtime. The RPC client now keeps a single closed flag for rejecting calls after the ordered reader exits.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Spawn stdio exec-server commands directly from structured argv/env/cwd instead of wrapping a shell string, redact the connection label, and tie the stdio child guard to transport disconnect.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Keep environment transport connection policy on ExecServerClient instead of the transport enum, and replace the JSON-RPC connection tuple alias with named connection parts.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Use the existing process-group cleanup pattern for stdio command transports so wrapper shell children are terminated with the client lifetime. Add a regression test that drops the client after spawning a background shell child through the command-backed transport.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Allow exec-server clients to connect through a shell command over stdio. The connection can now retain a drop resource so the spawned child is terminated when the JSON-RPC client is dropped.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
## Summary
This PR adds the first `codex-rs` milestone for remote-exec e2e: a local
`codex exec-server` can now register itself with
`codex-cloud-environments` and attach to the returned rendezvous
websocket.
At a high level, `codex exec-server --cloud ...` now:
- loads ChatGPT auth from normal Codex config
- registers an executor with `codex-cloud-environments`
- receives a signed rendezvous websocket URL
- serves the existing exec-server JSON-RPC protocol over that websocket
## What Changed
- Added `--cloud`, `--cloud-base-url`, `--cloud-environment-id`, and
`--cloud-name` to `codex exec-server`
- Added a new `exec-server/src/cloud.rs` module that handles:
- registration requests
- auth/header setup
- bounded auth retry on `401/403`
- reconnect/backoff after websocket disconnects
- Reused the existing `ConnectionProcessor` / `ExecServerHandler` path
so cloud mode serves the same exec/filesystem RPC surface as local
websocket mode
- Added cloud-specific error variants and minimal docs for the new mode
## Testing
Manual e2e test that fully goes through exec server flow with our codex
cloud agent as orchestrator
## Why
We want the agent graph store to be passed down the stack as a real
dependency, the same way we already treat the thread store.
This will let us inject the agent graph store as a real dependency and
support implementations other than the local SQLite-backed one. Right
now most code instantiates a state DB and an agent graph store
just-in-time. Ideally, we would not depend on the state DB directly but
only read through the higher-level interfaces.
This change makes the dependency boundaries explicit and moves state DB
initialization to process bootstrap instead of hiding it inside local
store implementations.
## What changed
- `ThreadManager` now requires a `StateDbHandle` and an
`AgentGraphStore` at construction time instead of treating them as
optional internals.
- The local store constructors no longer lazily initialize SQLite.
Callers now initialize the state DB once per process and use that shared
handle to build:
- `LocalThreadStore`
- `LocalAgentGraphStore`
- App bootstraps (`app-server`, `mcp-server`, `prompt_debug`, and the
thread-manager sample) now initialize the state DB up front and inject
the resulting handle down the stack.
- `app-server` now consistently uses its process-scoped state DB handle
instead of reopening SQLite or trying to recover it from loaded threads.
- Device-key storage now reuses the shared state DB handle instead of
maintaining its own lazy opener.
- The thread archive / descendant traversal paths now use the injected
`AgentGraphStore` instead of reaching through local
thread-store-specific state.
## Verification
- `cargo check -p codex-core -p codex-thread-store -p codex-app-server
-p codex-mcp-server -p codex-thread-manager-sample --tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-thread-store`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
thread_manager_accepts_separate_agent_graph_store_and_thread_store --
--nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server
thread_archive_archives_spawned_descendants -- --nocapture`
## Summary
This is the first PR in the V8 in-process sandboxing rollout.
It adds the build-system and Rust feature plumbing needed to support
sandboxed V8 builds, then enables sandboxing by default for the
source-built Bazel V8 path that we control directly. It deliberately
keeps the published `rusty_v8` artifact workflows on their current
non-sandboxed contract so this PR can land and ship independently before
we change any released artifacts.
## Rollout plan
- [x] **PR 1: land sandbox plumbing and default source-built Bazel V8 to
sandboxed mode**
- [ ] **PR 2: publish sandbox-enabled release artifacts and add
compatibility validation**
- Produce sandboxed artifact pairs for every released Cargo target that
does not already use the source-built Bazel path.
- Add CI coverage that consumes those sandboxed artifacts and verifies:
- `codex-v8-poc` reports sandbox enabled
- `codex-code-mode` builds/tests against the sandboxed path
- [ ] **PR 3: switch release consumers to sandboxed artifacts by
default**
- Update released artifact selectors/checksums.
- Enable the Rust `v8_enable_sandbox` feature in the default release
path.
- Make the sandboxed artifact family the normal path for published
builds.
- [ ] **PR 4: remove rollout-only compatibility paths**
- Remove the temporary non-sandbox release compatibility config once the
new default has shipped and baked.
- Keep the invariant tests permanently.
## Summary
Adds the required `items_view` field to the three session picker `Turn`
test fixtures that populate full turn item lists.
## Root Cause
`#21063` added `Turn.items_view` to the app-server protocol type. The
later session picker merge added three test-only
`codex_app_server_protocol::Turn` literals without the new field, which
broke Bazel compilation on `main` with `E0063: missing field
items_view`.
## Validation
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui resume_picker --no-fail-fast`
- `just argument-comment-lint`
I also ran `cargo test -p codex-tui`; it compiled and ran the suite, but
this local machine failed two pre-existing status permission-profile
tests because `/etc/codex/requirements.toml` disallows
`DangerFullAccess`.
## Summary
Xcode 26.4 was built against app-server behavior from before MCP
elicitation requests became client-visible in CLI 0.120.0 via #17043.
That client line does not expect the new events/messages, so this PR
restores the old behavior for exactly that client/version combination.
The compatibility handling stays in the app-server layer: when the
initialized client is `Xcode` and its version starts with `26.4`, the
app server marks the live Codex thread so MCP elicitations are
auto-denied. The flag is applied on thread start/resume/fork/turn
attachment, carried through `Codex`/`CodexThread`, and stored on
`McpConnectionManager` so refreshed MCP managers preserve the behavior.
## Notes
This is intentionally narrow and includes a TODO to remove the
compatibility path once Xcode 26.4 ages out.
## Why
Tool registration used to bind a tool name to a handler externally,
which left ownership split between the registry plan and the handler
implementation. Some built-in handlers also multiplexed multiple in-core
tools by switching on the invoked tool name internally.
This moves the registry identity onto the handler itself and makes
built-in multi-tool areas use separate concrete handlers, so each
registered handler instance owns exactly one tool name and one dispatch
path.
## What Changed
- Added `ToolHandler::tool_name()` and changed
`ToolRegistryBuilder::register_handler` to derive the registry key from
the handler.
- Split built-in multiplexed handlers into concrete per-tool handlers
for unified exec, shell/local shell/container exec, MCP resources, goal
tools, and agent job tools.
- Kept name-carrying handler instances only where the runtime target is
inherently external or dynamic, such as MCP tools, dynamic tools, and
unavailable placeholders.
- Updated `ToolHandlerKind` and registry-plan construction so plan
entries map directly to concrete handler registrations.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-tools tool_registry_plan`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib tools::registry_tests`
- `just fix -p codex-tools`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
## Summary
- make the Linux sandbox synthetic mount registry path unique per
effective UID
- keep same-user coordination intact while avoiding collisions between
users sharing `/tmp`
- add a regression test for the registry path contract
## Why
Issue #21192 reports that the Linux sandbox currently uses one global
temp path at `/tmp/codex-bwrap-synthetic-mount-targets`. If another user
creates that directory first, later users can fail to open the shared
lock file with `Permission denied`.
## Validation
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-linux-sandbox`
- `cargo clippy -p codex-linux-sandbox --all-targets`
Fixes#21192
## Summary
- Propagate Linux bubblewrap argument-construction failures instead of
panicking in the helper
- Keep mutable-symlink carveouts fail-closed while reporting them as
ordinary sandbox build failures
- Add regression coverage for a protected `.codex` symlink inside a
writable workspace root
## Root cause
Linux bubblewrap intentionally rejects read-only carveouts that cross a
symlink the sandboxed process can still rewrite. That is the correct
security behavior for protected metadata paths such as `.codex`.
The bug was one layer higher: `linux_run_main` treated the expected
build failure as impossible and panicked while constructing the
bubblewrap argv. For issue #20716, that turned a normal fail-closed
sandbox outcome into a noisy panic in the transcript.
## User impact
Users with a project-local `.codex` symlink inside a writable workspace
still get the conservative sandbox decision, but they no longer see a
Rust panic for that condition. The helper now exits with the concise
sandbox-build error so the normal denial / escalation path can handle
it.
Fixes#20716
## Why
The resume/fork picker is becoming the main way users recover previous
work, but the old fixed table made sessions hard to scan once thread
names, branches, working directories, and timestamps all mattered. This
redesign makes the picker denser by default, easier to search, and safer
to inspect before resuming or forking.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
<img width="1660" height="1103" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-03 at 12 34 10"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/313ede1d-1da4-4863-acd2-56b3e27e9703"
/>
</td>
<td>
<img width="1662" height="1100" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-03 at 12 34 15"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cfde7d5c-bab0-4994-a807-254e53f344ea"
/>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<img width="1664" height="1107" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-03 at 12 39 22"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/e1ee58ca-4dc5-4a35-ae0f-47562da3974c"
/>
</td>
<td>
<img width="1662" height="1100" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-03 at 12 35 09"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9c888072-eedf-4f45-985c-0c14df28bcc7"
/>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
## What Changed
- Replaces the old session table with responsive session rows that
prioritize the session name or preview, then show timestamp, cwd, and
branch metadata.
- Makes dense view the default while keeping comfortable view available
through `Ctrl+O`.
- Persists the picker view preference in `[tui].session_picker_view`,
including active profile-scoped config.
- Adds sort/filter controls for updated time, created time, cwd, and all
sessions.
- Expands search matching across session name, preview, thread id,
branch, and cwd.
- Makes `Esc` safer in search mode: it clears an active query before
starting a new session.
- Adds lazy transcript inspection:
- `Space` expands recent transcript context inline.
- `Ctrl+T` opens a transcript overlay.
- raw reasoning visibility follows `show_raw_agent_reasoning`.
- Keeps remote cwd filtering server-side for remote app-server sessions
so local path normalization does not incorrectly hide remote results.
- Updates snapshots and config schema for the new picker states and
config option.
## How to Test
1. Start Codex in a repo with several saved sessions.
2. Press `Ctrl+R` / resume picker entry point.
3. Confirm the picker opens in dense mode and shows session name or
preview, timestamp, cwd, and branch metadata.
4. Press `Ctrl+O` and confirm it switches between dense and comfortable
views.
5. Restart Codex and confirm the selected view persists.
6. Type a query that matches a branch, cwd, thread id, or session name;
confirm matching sessions appear.
7. Press `Esc` while the query is non-empty and confirm it clears search
instead of starting a new session.
8. Select a session and press `Space`; confirm recent transcript context
expands inline.
9. Press `Ctrl+T`; confirm the transcript overlay opens and respects
raw-reasoning visibility settings.
Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui resume_picker --no-fail-fast`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
runtime_config_resolves_session_picker_view_default_and_override`
- `cargo test -p codex-core profile_tui_rejects_unsupported_settings`
- `cargo check -p codex-thread-manager-sample`
- `cargo insta pending-snapshots`
Stacked on #20892.
## Why
#20892 adds the TUI workspace command abstraction so branch status
metadata can run through app-server instead of assuming the CLI process
has the active workspace locally. `/diff` still used direct local
process execution, which means remote app-server sessions could compute
the diff against the wrong machine or fail to see the active workspace
at all.
This PR moves `/diff` onto that same app-server-backed command path so
Git runs wherever the active workspace lives.
## What Changed
- Route `/diff` through the TUI `WorkspaceCommandExecutor` using the
active chat cwd.
- Replace direct `tokio::process::Command` usage in `get_git_diff` with
argv-based workspace command requests.
- Preserve the existing `/diff` behavior: tracked diff output, untracked
file diffs, treating Git diff exit code `1` as success, and showing the
existing non-git-repository message.
- Extend `WorkspaceCommand` with caller-set timeouts and an explicit
uncapped-output opt-out. Metadata probes remain capped by default;
`/diff` opts out because its full output is the user-visible payload.
## How to Test
Manual reviewer path:
1. Start the Codex TUI from a Git worktree with one tracked file change
and one untracked file.
2. Run `/diff`.
3. Confirm the rendered diff includes both the tracked diff and the
untracked file diff.
4. Start the TUI outside a Git worktree, or switch to a non-git cwd,
then run `/diff`.
5. Confirm it shows the existing `/diff` not-inside-a-git-repository
message.
Targeted tests run:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui get_git_diff -- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui branch_summary -- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui`
## Why
`Turn.items` currently overloads an empty array to mean either that no
items exist or that the server intentionally did not load them for this
response. That ambiguity blocks future lazy-loading work where clients
need to distinguish unloaded, summary, and fully hydrated turn payloads.
## What changed
- add a new `TurnItemsView` enum with `notLoaded`, `summary`, and `full`
variants
- add required `itemsView` metadata to app-server `Turn` payloads
- mark reconstructed persisted history as `full` and live shell-style
turn payloads as `notLoaded`
- keep current `thread/turns/list` behavior unchanged and document that
it still returns `full` turns today
- regenerate the JSON and TypeScript protocol fixtures
## Verification
- `just write-app-server-schema`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server thread_read_can_include_turns`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server
thread_turns_list_can_page_backward_and_forward`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server
thread_resume_rejects_history_when_thread_is_running`
- `just fix -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `just fix -p codex-app-server`
- `just fmt`
## Why
App-server had repeated hand-built JSON-RPC error objects for standard
error shapes. Using the shared helpers keeps the common
`invalid_request`, `invalid_params`, and `internal_error` construction
in one place and reduces the chance of new call sites drifting from the
common error payload shape.
## What changed
- Replaced manual standard JSON-RPC error object creation with
`internal_error(...)`, `invalid_request(...)`, and `invalid_params(...)`
across app-server request processors and runtime paths.
- Removed local duplicate helper definitions from search and review
request handling.
- Preserved existing structured `data` payloads by creating the shared
helper error first and then attaching the existing metadata.
- Left custom non-standard errors and raw error-code assertions intact.
## Validation
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server`
# Why
We want shared hook trust that both the app and the TUI can build on,
but the metadata is only useful if runtime behavior agrees with it. This
PR adds a single backend trust model for hooks so unmanaged hooks cannot
run until the current definition has been reviewed, while managed hooks
remain runnable and non-configurable.
# What
- persist `trusted_hash` alongside hook state in `config.toml`
- expose `currentHash` and derived `trustStatus` through `hooks/list`
- derive trust from normalized hook definitions so equivalent hooks from
`config.toml` and `hooks.json` share the same trust identity
- gate unmanaged hooks on trust before they enter the runnable handler
set
# Reviewer Notes
- key file to review is `codex-rs/hooks/src/engine/discovery.rs`
- the only **core** change is schema related
## Why
When a turn exposes multiple selected environments, shell-style tools
need a model-facing way to identify the intended target environment and
handlers need to resolve that target before parsing cwd-relative
permission fields or launching processes.
This PR scopes that rollout to process tools. Filesystem-oriented tools
such as `apply_patch`, `view_image`, and `list_dir` are intentionally
left for follow-up slices.
## What Changed
- Adds an `include_environment_id` option to shell-style tool schema
builders.
- Exposes optional `environment_id` on `shell`, `shell_command`, and
`exec_command` only when `ToolEnvironmentMode::Multiple` is active.
- Adds a shared handler helper that parses `environment_id` and
`workdir` from JSON function-call arguments and returns the selected
`Environment` plus effective absolute cwd.
- Uses that helper in `shell`, `shell_command`, and `exec_command`
handling so process execution uses the selected environment filesystem
and cwd.
- Changes `ExecCommandRequest` to carry a required resolved `cwd`,
removing the process-manager fallback to the primary turn cwd for new
exec commands.
- Leaves `write_stdin` unchanged because it targets an existing process
id, not a new environment.
## Testing
- Added unit coverage for process-tool schema exposure, selected
environment resolution, primary fallback, no-environment handling,
unknown environment ids, and resolving cwd-relative permission paths
against the selected environment cwd.
- Added a remote-suite e2e coverage case for `exec_command` routing
across explicit zero environments, one local environment, and
local+remote environments.
- Ran `just fmt` and `git diff --check`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
## Why
Tool analytics need stable, typed payloads before the later lifecycle
reducer starts emitting them. Keeping the event schema definitions
isolated in their own PR makes the emitted surface reviewable separately
from the reducer logic that produces those events.
## What changed
- Adds the common tool-item analytics event base plus event payload
types for command execution, file changes, MCP calls, dynamic tools,
collaboration tools, web search, and image generation.
- Extends `TrackEventRequest` with the corresponding tool-item variants.
- Adds serialization coverage for the command-execution event shape.
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-analytics`
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/17089).
* #18748
* #18747
* #17090
* __->__ #17089
* #20514
## Why
Taking a step to removing the `persistExtendedHistory` field. It's not
scalable to be persisting so much data in the rollout file and returning
it in the thread history.
When a client explicitly sends `true`, the server now tells that client
the parameter is deprecated and ignored so the caller has a clear
migration signal via the `deprecationNotice` notification.
## What changed
- Keep the `persist_extended_history` / `persistExtendedHistory` field
in the v2 protocol for compatibility, but document it as deprecated and
ignored.
- Ignore the parameter in app-server `thread/start`, `thread/resume`,
and `thread/fork`; those paths always use limited history persistence
now.
- Stop treating `persistExtendedHistory` as a running-thread resume
override mismatch.
- Emit a connection-scoped `deprecationNotice` when a request explicitly
sets `persist_extended_history: true`.
## Verification
- Added `thread_start_deprecates_persist_extended_history_true` to cover
the deprecation notice.
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
## Why
Granular copy is particularly difficult with the current output. Part of
it was solved with the introduction of the `/copy` command but when you
only need to copy parts of a response, you still encounter some issues:
- When you copy a paragraph, the result is a sequence of separate lines
instead of one correctly joined paragraph.
- When a word wraps, part of it stays on the original line and the rest
appears at the start of the next line.
- When you copy a long command, extra line breaks are often inserted,
and command arguments can be split across multiple lines.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0ef85c84-9363-4aad-b43a-15fce062a443
## Solution
Now that we own the scrollback and we re-create it when we resize, we
have the opportunity of toggling between the raw text and the rich text
we see today.
- Add TUI raw scrollback mode with `tui.raw_output_mode`, `/raw
[on|off]`, and the configurable `tui.keymap.global.toggle_raw_output`
action.
- Render transcript cells through rich/raw-aware paths so raw mode
preserves source text and lets the terminal soft-wrap selection-friendly
output.
- Bind raw-mode toggle to `alt-r` by default, with the keybinding path
toggling silently while `/raw` continues to emit confirmation messages.
## Related Issues
Likely addressed by raw mode:
- #12200: clean copy for multiline and soft-wrapped output. Raw mode
removes Codex-inserted wrapping/indentation and lets the terminal
soft-wrap logical lines.
- #9252: command suggestions gain unwanted leading spaces when copied.
Raw mode renders transcript text without the rich-mode left
padding/gutter.
- #8258: prompt output is hard to copy because of leading indentation.
Raw mode renders user/source-backed transcript text without that
decorative indentation.
Partially or conditionally addressed:
- #2880: copy/export message as Markdown. Raw mode exposes raw Markdown
for terminal selection, but this PR does not add a dedicated
export/copy-message command.
- #19820: mouse drag selection + copy in the TUI. Raw mode improves
terminal-native selection of output/history text, but this PR does not
implement in-TUI mouse selection, highlighting, auto-copy, or composer
selection.
- #18979: copied content is divided into two parts. This should improve
cases caused by Codex-inserted wraps/padding in rendered output; if the
report is about pasting into the composer/input path, that remains
outside this PR.
## Validation
- `just write-config-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui`
- `just fix -p codex-tui`
- `just argument-comment-lint`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
raw_output_mode_can_change_without_inserting_notice -- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
raw_slash_command_toggles_and_accepts_on_off_args -- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui raw_output_toggle -- --nocapture`
- `git diff --check`
- `cargo insta pending-snapshots`
## Why
Recent Auto Review reports show Git traffic hanging through the local
proxy on both SSH and HTTPS paths. Today the support bundle does not
make it obvious whether a request is stuck before upstream dialing,
during the proxy hop, or after the upstream response begins, which slows
down root-cause triage.
This adds a small amount of runtime visibility at the existing proxy
boundaries without changing routing or policy behavior.
## What changed
- log whether HTTP and CONNECT traffic take the direct or upstream-proxy
route
- log start / success / failure timings for CONNECT, HTTP, and SOCKS5
upstream dials
- log CONNECT forwarding lifecycle events
- describe HTTP success at the response-header boundary that is actually
observed, rather than implying the full body finished
## Verification
- `cargo test -p codex-network-proxy`
- `cargo clippy -p codex-network-proxy --all-targets -- -D warnings`
## Why
Linux startup runs an advisory system `bwrap` warning probe on each
launch. On hosts with NFS or autofs mounts, its `--ro-bind / /` probe
can take tens of seconds before Codex prints anything, matching #19828.
Because this probe only decides whether to surface a warning, it should
not be allowed to stall startup.
Relevant pre-change path:
[`codex-rs/sandboxing/src/bwrap.rs`](de2ccf9473/codex-rs/sandboxing/src/bwrap.rs (L64-L80))
## What changed
- Bound the advisory system `bwrap` probe to 500 ms.
- Preserve the existing warning behavior when `bwrap` promptly reports a
known user-namespace failure.
- Kill and reap the probe child on timeout, then suppress the advisory
warning instead of blocking startup.
- Read probe stderr with a bounded nonblocking drain so descendants that
inherit the pipe cannot extend startup after the probe child exits.
- Add regression coverage for both a deliberately slow fake `bwrap`
process and a fake probe whose descendant keeps stderr open.
## Security
This only bounds the advisory startup probe. It does not change the
command execution path or add a fail-open sandbox fallback. The related
command-side hang in #20017 remains separate from this PR.
## Verification
- Added `system_bwrap_probe_times_out_without_reporting_a_warning`.
- Added
`system_bwrap_probe_does_not_wait_for_descendants_holding_stderr_open`.
- `cargo test -p codex-sandboxing`
- `cargo clippy -p codex-sandboxing --all-targets -- -D warnings`
Fixes#19828
Related: #20017
## Why
We found this while reviewing #21091, but confirmed it is not introduced
by that PR: the order-sensitive `current_text_with_pending()`
replacement loop already existed, and `main` already allowed active
same-size large pastes to use prefix-overlapping labels such as `[Pasted
Content N chars]` and `[Pasted Content N chars] #2`.
#21091 fixes placeholder numbering after a draft is cleared, so a fresh
same-size paste can reuse the base label. This PR fixes a different
path: when a draft already contains multiple active same-size large
pastes, the placeholders can overlap by prefix, for example `[Pasted
Content N chars]` and `[Pasted Content N chars] #2`.
That overlap breaks `current_text_with_pending()` when the composer
materializes the draft text for the external editor. Replacing the base
placeholder first can partially rewrite the `#2` placeholder, leaving
the external editor seeded with corrupted text instead of both paste
payloads.
| Before | After |
|---|---|
| <img width="1230" height="1008" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-05 at 10 18 09"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/88a2936c-cf00-4adc-8567-8fd8f398b4a8"
/> | <img width="1230" height="1008" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-05 at 10 20
31"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/119cff52-43c8-432a-9367-418d82f4ed82"
/> |
| <img width="1230" height="1008" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-05 at 10 18 57"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/026031bb-839b-4252-a0fd-9ba9616435fe"
/> | <img width="1230" height="1008" alt="CleanShot 2026-05-05 at 10 21
31"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8cb6f2c8-3a5d-411b-8623-dca666ee3c08"
/> |
## What Changed
- Changed `current_text_with_pending()` to expand pending pastes through
the existing element-range based `expand_pending_pastes()` helper
instead of global string replacement.
- Added a regression test with two different same-length large pastes to
ensure both overlapping placeholders expand to their original payloads.
## How to Test
1. Start Codex TUI.
2. Paste a large string, for example 1004 `A` characters.
```shell
perl -e 'print "A" x 1004' | pbcopy
```
3. Paste a second large string with the same length, for example 1004
`B` characters.
```shell
perl -e 'print "B" x 1004' | pbcopy
```
4. Open the external editor from the composer.
5. Confirm the editor is seeded with the full `A...` payload followed by
the full `B...` payload, with no literal `#2` left behind.
Targeted tests:
- `cargo test -p codex-tui
current_text_with_pending_expands_overlapping_placeholders`
- `just argument-comment-lint-from-source -p codex-tui`
I also ran `cargo test -p codex-tui`; it reached the full crate suite
but failed two unrelated local status tests because this machine's
`/etc/codex/requirements.toml` rejects `DangerFullAccess`.
# Why
Revert #20524 for now because the computer use plugin has not migrated
off legacy `notify` yet. Keeping the deprecation in place today would
show users a warning before the plugin path is ready to move, so this
rolls the change back until that migration is complete.
# What
- revert the legacy `notify` deprecation change from #20524
- restore the prior `notify` behavior and remove the temporary
deprecation metrics/docs from that change
Once the computer use plugin has migrated, we can land the same
deprecation again.
Fixes#20945.
This keeps `codex fork --last` aligned with the neighboring
latest-session lookup flows. The local fork path now uses the same
cwd-scope helper as `resume --last`, which is also a small code cleanup
around how this selection logic is shared.
Credit to @chanwooyang1 for the report and for pointing out the narrow
fix direction.
What changed:
- Route `fork --last` through the shared latest-session cwd filter.
- Preserve `--all` as the explicit opt-in for global latest-session
selection.
- Keep remote cwd override behavior unchanged.
- Add focused coverage for local default, `--all`, and remote override
filter semantics.
Validation:
- Ran `just fmt`.
- Ran `git diff --check`.
- Reviewed the `fork --last`, `resume --last`, and fork picker selection
paths against the issue report.
Fixes#19940.
Large-paste placeholder numbering was backed by a per-size counter, so
clearing a draft with `Ctrl+C` left numbering state behind even though
the active pending paste state was gone. This updates the composer to
derive the next placeholder suffix from active pending pastes instead,
which keeps simultaneous same-size pastes distinct while letting fresh
drafts reuse the base label. This is also a small code cleanup: pending
paste state is now the source of truth instead of maintaining a separate
counter.
Credit to @Sungyoun-Kim for the issue report, root-cause notes, and fork
with the proposed fix, and to @charley-oai for the earlier related
#10032 proposal.
Changes:
- Remove the monotonic large-paste counter from the composer.
- Compute suffixes from currently active pending paste placeholders.
- Document large-paste placeholder behavior in the composer module docs.
- Add regression coverage for `Ctrl+C` clearing and deletion/reset
behavior.
Testing:
- `just fmt`
- `git diff --check`