Commit Graph

73 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Abhinav
c3e60849e5 inline hostname resolution for remote sandbox config (#19739)
# Why

Requirements support host-specific
`remote_sandbox_config.hostname_patterns`, but config loading previously
resolved and passed the system hostname through every config-loading
path even when no requirements layer used `remote_sandbox_config`. On
machines where hostname lookup is slow, startup and app-server config
reads paid for a feature that was not active.

We only need the hostname when a requirements layer actually declares
`remote_sandbox_config`, so this moves hostname resolution to the single
requirements merge point and keeps all other config callers unaware of
hostname matching.

# What

- Removed the eager `host_name` plumbing from
`load_config_layers_state`, `load_requirements_toml`, `ConfigBuilder`,
app-server `ConfigManager`, network proxy loading, and related call
sites.
- Resolve the hostname inside
`merge_requirements_with_remote_sandbox_config` only when the incoming
requirements contain `remote_sandbox_config`.
2026-04-27 03:18:57 +00:00
pakrym-oai
9c3abcd46c [codex] Move config loading into codex-config (#19487)
## Why

Config loading had become split across crates: `codex-config` owned the
config types and merge logic, while `codex-core` still owned the loader
that assembled the layer stack. This change consolidates that
responsibility in `codex-config`, so the crate that defines config
behavior also owns how configs are discovered and loaded.

To make that move possible without reintroducing the old dependency
cycle, the shell-environment policy types and helpers that
`codex-exec-server` needs now live in `codex-protocol` instead of
flowing through `codex-config`.

This also makes the migrated loader tests more deterministic on machines
that already have managed or system Codex config installed by letting
tests override the system config and requirements paths instead of
reading the host's `/etc/codex`.

## What Changed

- moved the config loader implementation from `codex-core` into
`codex-config::loader` and deleted the old `core::config_loader` module
instead of leaving a compatibility shim
- moved shell-environment policy types and helpers into
`codex-protocol`, then updated `codex-exec-server` and other downstream
crates to import them from their new home
- updated downstream callers to use loader/config APIs from
`codex-config`
- added test-only loader overrides for system config and requirements
paths so loader-focused tests do not depend on host-managed config state
- cleaned up now-unused dependency entries and platform-specific cfgs
that were surfaced by post-push CI

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core config_loader_tests::`
- `cargo test -p codex-protocol -p codex-exec-server -p
codex-cloud-requirements -p codex-rmcp-client --lib`
- `cargo test --lib -p codex-app-server-client -p codex-exec`
- `cargo test --no-run --lib -p codex-app-server`
- `cargo test -p codex-linux-sandbox --lib`
- `cargo shear`
- `just bazel-lock-check`

## Notes

- I did not chase unrelated full-suite failures outside the migrated
loader surface.
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib` still hits unrelated proxy-sensitive
failures on this machine, and Windows CI still shows unrelated
long-running/timeouting test noise outside the loader migration itself.
2026-04-26 15:10:53 -07:00
Felipe Coury
5591912f0b fix(tui): reflow scrollback on terminal resize (#18575)
Fixes multiple scrollback and terminal resize issues: #5538, #5576,
#8352, #12223, #16165, and #15380.

## Why

Codex writes finalized transcript output into terminal scrollback after
wrapping it for the current viewport width. A later terminal resize
could leave that scrollback shaped for the old width, so wider windows
kept narrow output and narrower windows could show stale wrapping
artifacts until enough new output replaced the visible area.

This is also the foundation PR for responsive markdown tables. Table
rendering needs finalized transcript content to be width-sensitive after
insertion, not only while content is first streaming. Markdown table
rendering itself stays in #18576.

## Stack

- PR1: resize backlog reflow and interrupt cleanup
- #18576: markdown table support

## What Changed

- Rebuild source-backed transcript history when the terminal width
changes. `terminal_resize_reflow` is introduced through the experimental
feature system, but is enabled by default for this rollout so we can
validate behavior across real terminals.
- Preserve assistant and plan stream source so finalized streaming
output can participate in resize reflow after consolidation.
- Debounce resize work, but force a final source-backed reflow when a
resize happened during active or unconsolidated streaming output.
- Clear stale pending history lines on resize so old-width wrapped
output is not emitted just before rebuilt scrollback.
- Bound replay work with `[tui.terminal_resize_reflow].max_rows`:
omitted uses terminal-specific defaults, `0` keeps all rendered rows,
and a positive value sets an explicit cap. The cap applies both while
initially replaying a resumed transcript into scrollback and when
rebuilding scrollback after terminal resize.
- Consolidate interrupted assistant streams before cleanup, then clear
pending stream output and active-tail state consistently.
- Move resize reflow and thread event buffering helpers out of `app.rs`
into dedicated TUI modules.
- Add focused coverage for resize reflow, feature-gated behavior,
streaming source preservation, interrupted output cleanup,
unicode-neutral text, terminal-specific row caps, and composer/layout
stability.

## Runtime Bounds

Resize reflow keeps only the most recent rendered rows when a row cap is
active. The default is `auto`, which maps to the detected terminal's
default scrollback size where Codex can identify it: VS Code `1000`,
Windows Terminal `9001`, WezTerm `3500`, and Alacritty `10000`.
Terminals without a dedicated mapping use the conservative fallback of
`1000` rows. Users can override this with `[tui.terminal_resize_reflow]
max_rows = N`, or set `max_rows = 0` to disable row limiting.

## Validation

- `just fmt`
- `git diff --check`
- `cargo test --manifest-path codex-rs/Cargo.toml -p codex-tui reflow`
- `cargo test --manifest-path codex-rs/Cargo.toml -p codex-tui
transcript_reflow`
- `just fix -p codex-tui`
- PR CI in progress on the squashed branch
2026-04-25 22:00:32 -03:00
Curtis 'Fjord' Hawthorne
8a559e7938 Remove js_repl feature (#19410) 2026-04-24 17:49:29 -07:00
Michael Bolin
789f387982 permissions: remove legacy read-only access modes (#19449)
## Why

`ReadOnlyAccess` was a transitional legacy shape on `SandboxPolicy`:
`FullAccess` meant the historical read-only/workspace-write modes could
read the full filesystem, while `Restricted` tried to carry partial
readable roots. The partial-read model now belongs in
`FileSystemSandboxPolicy` and `PermissionProfile`, so keeping it on
`SandboxPolicy` makes every legacy projection reintroduce lossy
read-root bookkeeping and creates unnecessary noise in the rest of the
permissions migration.

This PR makes the legacy policy model narrower and explicit:
`SandboxPolicy::ReadOnly` and `SandboxPolicy::WorkspaceWrite` represent
the old full-read sandbox modes only. Split readable roots, deny-read
globs, and platform-default/minimal read behavior stay in the runtime
permissions model.

## What changed

- Removes `ReadOnlyAccess` from
`codex_protocol::protocol::SandboxPolicy`, including the generated
`access` and `readOnlyAccess` API fields.
- Updates legacy policy/profile conversions so restricted filesystem
reads are represented only by `FileSystemSandboxPolicy` /
`PermissionProfile` entries.
- Keeps app-server v2 compatible with legacy `fullAccess` read-access
payloads by accepting and ignoring that no-op shape, while rejecting
legacy `restricted` read-access payloads instead of silently widening
them to full-read legacy policies.
- Carries Windows sandbox platform-default read behavior with an
explicit override flag instead of depending on
`ReadOnlyAccess::Restricted`.
- Refreshes generated app-server schema/types and updates tests/docs for
the simplified legacy policy shape.

## Verification

- `cargo check -p codex-app-server-protocol --tests`
- `cargo check -p codex-windows-sandbox --tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol sandbox_policy_`


---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/19449).
* #19395
* #19394
* #19393
* #19392
* #19391
* __->__ #19449
2026-04-24 17:16:58 -07:00
Tom
588f7a9fc4 [codex] add non-local thread store regression harness (#19266)
- Add an integration test that guarantees nothing gets written to codex
home dir or sqlite when running a rollout with a non-local ThreadStore
- Add an in-memory "spy" ThreadStore for tests like this

Note I could not find a good way to also ensure there were no filesystem
_reads_ that didn't go through threadstore. I explored a more elaborate
sandboxed-subprocess approach but it isn't platform portable and felt
like it wasn't (yet) worth it.
2026-04-24 15:45:44 -07:00
jif-oai
28742866c7 Add agents.interrupt_message for interruption markers (#19351)
## Why

Agent interruptions currently always persist a model-visible
interrupted-turn marker before emitting `TurnAborted`. That marker is
useful by default because it gives the next model turn context about a
deliberately interrupted task, but some deployments need to suppress
that history injection entirely while still keeping the client-visible
interruption event.

## What changed

- Add `[agents] interrupt_message = false` to disable the model-visible
interrupted-turn marker.
- Resolve the setting into `Config::agent_interrupt_message_enabled`,
defaulting to `true` so existing behavior is unchanged.
- Apply the setting to both live interrupted turns and interrupted fork
snapshots.
- Keep emitting `TurnAborted` even when the history marker is disabled.
- Regenerate `core/config.schema.json` for the new
`agents.interrupt_message` field.

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-core load_config_resolves_agent_interrupt_message
-- --nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
disabled_interrupted_fork_snapshot_appends_only_interrupt_event --
--nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
multi_agent_v2_interrupted_marker_uses_developer_input_message --
--nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
multi_agent_v2_followup_task_can_disable_interrupted_marker --
--nocapture`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
multi_agent_v2_followup_task_interrupts_busy_child_without_losing_message
-- --nocapture`
- `cargo check -p codex-core`
2026-04-24 16:02:45 +02:00
jif-oai
9eadff9713 chore: alias max_concurrent_threads_per_session (#19354) 2026-04-24 14:33:03 +02:00
Eric Traut
6f87eb0479 Hide unsupported MCP bearer_token from config schema (#19294)
## Summary

Fixes #19275.

Codex runtime rejects inline MCP `bearer_token` config entries and asks
users to configure `bearer_token_env_var` instead, but the generated
config schema still advertised `mcp_servers.<name>.bearer_token` as a
supported field. That made editor/schema validation disagree with
runtime validation.

This keeps `bearer_token` in `RawMcpServerConfig` so Codex can continue
producing the targeted runtime error for recent or existing configs, but
skips the field during schemars generation. The checked-in
`core/config.schema.json` fixture now exposes `bearer_token_env_var`
without exposing unsupported inline `bearer_token`.

## Verification

- Added `config_schema_hides_unsupported_inline_mcp_bearer_token` to
assert the generated schema hides `bearer_token` while preserving
`bearer_token_env_var`.
- Ran `cargo test -p codex-config`.
- Ran `cargo test -p codex-core config_schema`.
2026-04-24 00:17:43 -07:00
Rasmus Rygaard
f11583b8f6 Add remote thread config endpoint (#18908)
## Why

App-server needs a way to fetch thread-scoped config from the remote
thread config service when the user config opts into that behavior. This
mirrors the existing experimental remote thread store endpoint while
keeping local/noop behavior as the default.

Startup paths also need to avoid silently dropping the remote config
endpoint after the first config load. The stdio app-server path
discovers the endpoint from the initial config and installs the real
thread config loader for later config builds, while in-process clients
used by TUI/exec now select the same remote loader directly from their
provided config.

## What changed

- Added `experimental_thread_config_endpoint` to `ConfigToml`, `Config`,
and `core/config.schema.json`.
- Added config parsing coverage for the new setting.
- Updated app-server startup to select `RemoteThreadConfigLoader` from
the initially loaded config, falling back to `NoopThreadConfigLoader`
when unset.
- Let `ConfigManager` replace its thread config loader after startup
discovery so later config loads use the selected loader.
- Updated in-process app-server client startup to pass
`RemoteThreadConfigLoader` when its config has
`experimental_thread_config_endpoint` set.

## Verification

- Added `experimental_thread_config_endpoint_loads_from_config_toml`.
- Added
`runtime_start_args_use_remote_thread_config_loader_when_configured`.
- Ran `cargo check -p codex-app-server --lib`.
- Ran `cargo test -p codex-app-server-client`.
2026-04-23 11:46:06 -07:00
Rasmus Rygaard
0b4f694347 Add remote thread config loader protos (#18892)
## Why

Thread-scoped config needs a stable boundary between the app/session
owner and the config stack. Instead of having call sites manually copy
thread config fields into individual overrides, this adds the proto and
Rust plumbing needed for a `ThreadConfigLoader` implementation to return
typed sources that can be translated into ordinary config layer entries.

Keeping the remote payload typed also makes precedence easier to reason
about: session-owned thread config maps back to the existing session
config source, while user-owned thread config is represented separately
without introducing a new config-layer source until it has TOML-backed
fields.

## What changed

- Added the `codex.thread_config.v1` protobuf service and generated Rust
module for loading thread config sources.
- Added `RemoteThreadConfigLoader`, which calls the gRPC service, parses
`SessionThreadConfig` / `UserThreadConfig`, and validates provider
fields such as `wire_api`, auth timeout, and absolute auth cwd.
- Added proto generation tooling under
`config/scripts/generate-proto.sh` and
`config/examples/generate-proto.rs`.
- Added `ThreadConfigLoader::load_config_layers`, plus static/no-op
loader helpers, so tests and callers can use the same typed loader
interface while config-layer translation stays centralized.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-config thread_config`
2026-04-23 10:06:05 -07:00
Shijie Rao
02170996e6 Default Fast service tier for eligible ChatGPT plans (#19053)
## Why

Enterprise and business-like ChatGPT plans should get Codex's Fast
service tier by default when the user or caller has not made an explicit
service-tier choice. At the same time, callers need a durable way to
choose standard routing without adding a new persisted `standard`
service tier value. This keeps existing config compatibility while
letting core own the managed default policy.

## What changed

- Resolve the effective service tier in core at session creation:
explicit `fast` or `flex` wins, explicit null/clear or
`[notice].fast_default_opt_out = true` resolves to standard routing, and
otherwise eligible ChatGPT plans resolve to Fast when FastMode is
enabled.
- Add `[notice].fast_default_opt_out` as the persisted opt-out marker
for managed Fast defaults.
- Treat app-server/TUI `service_tier: null` as an explicit
standard/clear choice by preserving that intent through config loading.
- Update TUI rendering to use core's effective service tier for startup
and status surfaces while still keeping `config.service_tier` as the
explicit configured choice.
- Update `/fast off` to clear `service_tier`, persist the opt-out
marker, and send explicit standard for subsequent turns.

## Verification

- Added unit coverage for config override/notice handling, service-tier
resolution, runtime null clearing, and `/fast off` turn propagation.
- `cargo build -p codex-cli`

Full test suite was not run locally per author request.
2026-04-22 21:54:44 -07:00
Andrei Eternal
2b2de3f38b codex: support hooks in config.toml and requirements.toml (#18893)
## Summary

Support the existing hooks schema in inline TOML so hooks can be
configured from both `config.toml` and enterprise-managed
`requirements.toml` without requiring a separate `hooks.json` payload.

This gives enterprise admins a way to ship managed hook policy through
the existing requirements channel while still leaving script delivery to
MDM or other device-management tooling, and it keeps `hooks.json`
working unchanged for existing users.

This also lays the groundwork for follow-on managed filtering work such
as #15937, while continuing to respect project trust gating from #14718.
It does **not** implement `allow_managed_hooks_only` itself.

NOTE: yes, it's a bit unfortunate that the toml isn't formatted as
closely as normal to our default styling. This is because we're trying
to stay compatible with the spec for plugins/hooks that we'll need to
support & the main usecase here is embedding into requirements.toml

## What changed

- moved the shared hook serde model out of `codex-rs/hooks` into
`codex-rs/config` so the same schema can power `hooks.json`, inline
`config.toml` hooks, and managed `requirements.toml` hooks
- added `hooks` support to both `ConfigToml` and
`ConfigRequirementsToml`, including requirements-side `managed_dir` /
`windows_managed_dir`
- treated requirements-managed hooks as one constrained value via
`Constrained`, so managed hook policy is merged atomically and cannot
drift across requirement sources
- updated hook discovery to load requirements-managed hooks first, then
per-layer `hooks.json`, then per-layer inline TOML hooks, with a warning
when a single layer defines both representations
- threaded managed hook metadata through discovered handlers and exposed
requirements hooks in app-server responses, generated schemas, and
`/debug-config`
- added hook/config coverage in `codex-rs/config`, `codex-rs/hooks`,
`codex-rs/core/src/config_loader/tests.rs`, and
`codex-rs/core/tests/suite/hooks.rs`

## Testing

- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-hooks`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server config_api`

## Documentation

Companion updates are needed in the developers website repo for:

- the hooks guide
- the config reference, sample, basic, and advanced pages
- the enterprise managed configuration guide

---------

Co-authored-by: Michael Bolin <mbolin@openai.com>
2026-04-22 21:20:09 -07:00
Won Park
83ec1eb5d6 Rename approvals reviewer variant to auto-review (#19056)
## Why

`approvals_reviewer` now uses `auto_review` as the canonical config/API
value after #18504, but the Rust enum variant and nearby helper/test
names still used `GuardianSubagent` / guardian approval wording. That
made follow-up code and reviews confusing even though the external value
had already moved to Auto-review.

## What changed

- Renamed `ApprovalsReviewer::GuardianSubagent` to
`ApprovalsReviewer::AutoReview`.
- Updated protocol, app-server, config, core, TUI, exec, and analytics
test callsites.
- Renamed nearby helper/test names from guardian approval wording to
Auto-review wording where they refer to the approvals reviewer mode.
- Preserved wire compatibility:
  - `auto_review` remains the canonical serialized value.
  - `guardian_subagent` remains accepted as a legacy alias.

This intentionally does not rename the `[features].guardian_approval`
key, `Feature::GuardianApproval`, `core/src/guardian`, analytics event
names, or app-server Guardian review event types.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-protocol
approvals_reviewer_serializes_auto_review_and_accepts_legacy_guardian_subagent`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol
approvals_reviewer_serializes_auto_review_and_accepts_legacy_guardian_subagent`
- `cargo test -p codex-config approvals_reviewer`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui update_feature_flags`
- `cargo test -p codex-core permissions_instructions`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui permissions_selection`
2026-04-22 17:22:35 -07:00
Won Park
46142c3cb0 Rebrand approvals reviewer config to auto-review (#18504)
### Why

Auto-review is the user-facing name for the approvals reviewer, but the
config/API value still exposed the old `guardian_subagent` name. That
made new configs and generated schemas point users at Guardian
terminology even though the intended product surface is Auto-review.

This PR updates the external `approvals_reviewer` value while preserving
compatibility for existing configs and clients.

### What changed

- Makes `auto_review` the canonical serialized value for
`approvals_reviewer`.
- Keeps `guardian_subagent` accepted as a legacy alias.
- Keeps `user` accepted and serialized as `user`.
- Updates generated config and app-server schemas so
`approvals_reviewer` includes:
  - `user`
  - `auto_review`
  - `guardian_subagent`
- Updates app-server README docs for the reviewer value.
- Updates analytics and config requirements tests for the canonical
auto_review value.


### Compatibility

Existing configs and API payloads using:

```toml
approvals_reviewer = "guardian_subagent"
```

continue to load and map to the Auto-review reviewer behavior. 

New serialization emits: 
```toml
approvals_reviewer = "auto_review" 
```

This PR intentionally does not rename the [features].guardian_approval
key or broad internal Guardian symbols. Those are split out for a
follow-up PR to keep this migration small and avoid touching large
TUI/internal surfaces.

**Verification**
cargo test -p codex-protocol
approvals_reviewer_serializes_auto_review_and_accepts_legacy_guardian_subagent
cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol
approvals_reviewer_serializes_auto_review_and_accepts_legacy_guardian_subagent
2026-04-22 15:45:35 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
78593d72ea feat(auto-review) policy config (#18959)
## Summary
Allow users to customize their own auto-review policy config.

## Testing
- [x] added config_tests
2026-04-22 10:33:02 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
0e39614d87 chore(tui) debug-config guardian_policy_config (#18923)
## Summary
List guardian_policy_config_source in `/debug-config` output

## Testing
 - [x] Ran locally
2026-04-21 21:00:23 -07:00
Abhinav
ab26554a3a Add remote_sandbox_config to our config requirements (#18763)
## Why

Customers need finer-grained control over allowed sandbox modes based on
the host Codex is running on. For example, they may want stricter
sandbox limits on devboxes while keeping a different default elsewhere.

Our current cloud requirements can target user/account groups, but they
cannot vary sandbox requirements by host. That makes remote development
environments awkward because the same top-level `allowed_sandbox_modes`
has to apply everywhere.

## What

Adds a new `remote_sandbox_config` section to `requirements.toml`:

```toml
allowed_sandbox_modes = ["read-only"]

[[remote_sandbox_config]]
hostname_patterns = ["*.org"]
allowed_sandbox_modes = ["read-only", "workspace-write"]

[[remote_sandbox_config]]
hostname_patterns = ["*.sh", "runner-*.ci"]
allowed_sandbox_modes = ["read-only", "danger-full-access"]
```

During requirements resolution, Codex resolves the local host name once,
preferring the machine FQDN when available and falling back to the
cleaned kernel hostname. This host classification is best effort rather
than authenticated device proof.

Each requirements source applies its first matching
`remote_sandbox_config` entry before it is merged with other sources.
The shared merge helper keeps that `apply_remote_sandbox_config` step
paired with requirements merging so new requirements sources do not have
to remember the extra call.

That preserves source precedence: a lower-precedence requirements file
with a matching `remote_sandbox_config` cannot override a
higher-precedence source that already set `allowed_sandbox_modes`.

This also wires the hostname-aware resolution through app-server,
CLI/TUI config loading, config API reads, and config layer metadata so
they all evaluate remote sandbox requirements consistently.

## Verification

- `cargo test -p codex-config remote_sandbox_config`
- `cargo test -p codex-config host_name`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
load_config_layers_applies_matching_remote_sandbox_config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
system_remote_sandbox_config_keeps_cloud_sandbox_modes`
- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- `cargo test -p codex-core` unit tests passed; `tests/all.rs`
integration matrix was intentionally stopped after the relevant focused
tests passed
- `just fix -p codex-config`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `cargo check -p codex-app-server`
2026-04-21 05:05:02 +00:00
Celia Chen
cefcfe43b9 feat: add a built-in Amazon Bedrock model provider (#18744)
## Why

Codex needs a first-class `amazon-bedrock` model provider so users can
select Bedrock without copying a full provider definition into
`config.toml`. The provider has Codex-owned defaults for the pieces that
should stay consistent across users: the display `name`, Bedrock
`base_url`, and `wire_api`.

At the same time, users still need a way to choose the AWS credential
profile used by their local environment. This change makes
`amazon-bedrock` a partially modifiable built-in provider: code owns the
provider identity and endpoint defaults, while user config can set
`model_providers.amazon-bedrock.aws.profile`.

For example:

```toml
model_provider = "amazon-bedrock"

[model_providers.amazon-bedrock.aws]
profile = "codex-bedrock"
```

## What Changed

- Added `amazon-bedrock` to the built-in model provider map with:
  - `name = "Amazon Bedrock"`
  - `base_url = "https://bedrock-mantle.us-east-1.api.aws/v1"`
  - `wire_api = "responses"`
- Added AWS provider auth config with a profile-only shape:
`model_providers.<id>.aws.profile`.
- Kept AWS auth config restricted to `amazon-bedrock`; custom providers
that set `aws` are rejected.
- Allowed `model_providers.amazon-bedrock` through reserved-provider
validation so it can act as a partial override.
- During config loading, only `aws.profile` is copied from the
user-provided `amazon-bedrock` entry onto the built-in provider. Other
Bedrock provider fields remain hard-coded by the built-in definition.
- Updated the generated config schema for the new provider AWS profile
config.
2026-04-21 00:54:05 +00:00
Rasmus Rygaard
7b994100b3 Add session config loader interface (#18208)
## Why

Cloud-hosted sessions need a way for the service that starts or manages
a thread to provide session-owned config without treating all config as
if it came from the same user/project/workspace TOML stack.

The important boundary is ownership: some values should be controlled by
the session/orchestrator, some by the authenticated user, and later some
may come from the executor. The earlier broad config-store shape made
that boundary too fuzzy and overlapped heavily with the existing
filesystem-backed config loader. This PR starts with the smaller piece
we need now: a typed session config loader that can feed the existing
config layer stack while preserving the normal precedence and merge
behavior.

## What Changed

- Added `ThreadConfigLoader` and related typed payloads in
`codex-config`.
- `SessionThreadConfig` currently supports `model_provider`,
`model_providers`, and feature flags.
- `UserThreadConfig` is present as an ownership boundary, but does not
yet add TOML-backed fields.
- `NoopThreadConfigLoader` preserves existing behavior when no external
loader is configured.
  - `StaticThreadConfigLoader` supports tests and simple callers.

- Taught thread config sources to produce ordinary `ConfigLayerEntry`
values so the existing `ConfigLayerStack` remains the place where
precedence and merging happen.

- Wired the loader through `ConfigBuilder`, the config loader, and
app-server startup paths so app-server can provide session-owned config
before deriving a thread config.

- Added coverage for:
  - translating typed thread config into config layers,
- inserting thread config layers into the stack at the right precedence,
- applying session-provided model provider and feature settings when
app-server derives config from thread params.

## Follow-Ups

This intentionally stops short of adding the remote/service transport.
The next pieces are expected to be:

1. Define the proto/API shape for this interface.
2. Add a client implementation that can source session config from the
service side.

## Verification

- Added unit coverage in `codex-config` for the loader and layer
conversion.
- Added `codex-core` config loader coverage for thread config layer
precedence.
- Added app-server coverage that verifies session thread config wins
over request-provided config for model provider and feature settings.
2026-04-20 23:05:49 +00:00
Tom
46e5814f77 Add experimental remote thread store config (#18714)
Add experimental config to use remote thread store rather than local
thread store implementation in app server
2026-04-20 22:20:39 +00:00
jif-oai
be4fe9f9b2 feat: add --ignore-user-config and --ignore-rules (#18646)
Add those 2 flags to be able to fully isolate a run of `codex exec` from
any rules or tools.
This will be used by Chronicle
2026-04-20 11:27:47 +01:00
Dylan Hurd
49403e3676 chore(multiagent) skills instructions toggle (#18596)
## Summary
Support toggling the skills message off.

## Test Plan
- [x] Updated unit tests
2026-04-19 21:11:52 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
996aa23e4c [5/6] Wire executor-backed MCP stdio (#18212)
## Summary
- Add the executor-backed RMCP stdio transport.
- Wire MCP stdio placement through the executor environment config.
- Cover local and executor-backed stdio paths with the existing MCP test
helpers.

## Stack
```text
o  #18027 [6/6] Fail exec client operations after disconnect
│
@  #18212 [5/6] Wire executor-backed MCP stdio
│
o  #18087 [4/6] Abstract MCP stdio server launching
│
o  #18020 [3/6] Add pushed exec process events
│
o  #18086 [2/6] Support piped stdin in exec process API
│
o  #18085 [1/6] Add MCP server environment config
│
o  main
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-18 21:47:43 -07:00
xli-oai
e9c70fff3f [codex] Add marketplace remove command and shared logic (#17752)
## Summary

Move the marketplace remove implementation into shared core logic so
both the CLI command and follow-up app-server RPC can reuse the same
behavior.

This change:
- adds a shared `codex_core::plugins::remove_marketplace(...)` flow
- moves validation, config removal, and installed-root deletion out of
the CLI
- keeps the CLI as a thin wrapper over the shared implementation
- adds focused core coverage for the shared remove path

## Validation

- `just fmt`
- focused local coverage for the shared remove path
- heavier follow-up validation deferred to stacked PR CI
2026-04-17 21:44:47 -07:00
alexsong-oai
93ff798e5b [TUI] add external config migration prompt when start TUI (#17891)
- add a TUI startup migration prompt for external agent config
- support migrating external configs including config, skills, AGENTS.md
and plugins
- gate the prompt behind features.external_migrate (default false)

<img width="1037" height="480" alt="Screenshot 2026-04-14 at 9 29 14 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6060849b-03cb-429a-9c13-c7bb46ad2e65"
/>
<img width="713" height="183" alt="Screenshot 2026-04-14 at 9 29 26 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d13f177e-d4c4-479c-8736-ef29636081e1"
/>

---------

Co-authored-by: Eric Traut <etraut@openai.com>
2026-04-17 17:58:32 -07:00
viyatb-oai
370bed4bf4 fix: trust-gate project hooks and exec policies (#14718)
## Summary
- trust-gate project `.codex` layers consistently, including repos that
have `.codex/hooks.json` or `.codex/execpolicy/*.rules` but no
`.codex/config.toml`
- keep disabled project layers in the config stack so nested trusted
project layers still resolve correctly, while preventing hooks and exec
policies from loading until the project is trusted
- update app-server/TUI onboarding copy to make the trust boundary
explicit and add regressions for loader, hooks, exec-policy, and
onboarding coverage

## Security
Before this change, an untrusted repo could auto-load project hooks or
exec policies from `.codex/` as long as `config.toml` was absent. This
makes trust the single gate for project-local config, hooks, and exec
policies.

## Stack
- Parent of #15936

## Test
- cargo test -p codex-core without_config_toml

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-17 17:56:58 -07:00
jif-oai
cfc23eee3d feat: config aliases (#18140)
Rename `no_memories_if_mcp_or_web_search` →
`disable_on_external_context` with backward compatibility

While doing so, we add a key alias system on our layer merging system.
What we try to avoid is a case where a company managed config use an old
name while the user has a new name in it's local config (which would
make the deserialization fail)
2026-04-17 18:26:09 +01:00
viyatb-oai
dae0608c06 feat(config): support managed deny-read requirements (#17740)
## Summary
- adds managed requirements support for deny-read filesystem entries
- constrains config layers so managed deny-read requirements cannot be
widened by user-controlled config
- surfaces managed deny-read requirements through debug/config plumbing

This PR lets managed requirements inject deny-read filesystem
constraints into the effective filesystem sandbox policy.
User-controlled config can still choose the surrounding permission
profile, but it cannot remove or weaken the managed deny-read entries.

## Managed deny-read shape
A managed requirements file can declare exact paths and glob patterns
under `[permissions.filesystem]`:

```toml
# /etc/codex/requirements.toml
[permissions.filesystem]
deny_read = [
  "/Users/alice/.gitconfig",
  "/Users/alice/.ssh",
  "./managed-private/**/*.env",
]
```

Those entries are compiled into the effective filesystem policy as
`access = none` rules, equivalent in shape to filesystem permission
entries like:

```toml
[permissions.workspace.filesystem]
"/Users/alice/.gitconfig" = "none"
"/Users/alice/.ssh" = "none"
"/absolute/path/to/managed-private/**/*.env" = "none"
```

The important difference is that the managed entries come from
requirements, so lower-precedence user config cannot remove them or make
those paths readable again.

Relative managed `deny_read` entries are resolved relative to the
directory containing the managed requirements file. Glob entries keep
their glob suffix after the non-glob prefix is normalized.

## Runtime behavior
- Managed `deny_read` entries are appended to the effective
`FileSystemSandboxPolicy` after the selected permission profile is
resolved.
- Exact paths become `FileSystemPath::Path { access: None }`; glob
patterns become `FileSystemPath::GlobPattern { access: None }`.
- When managed deny-read entries are present, `sandbox_mode` is
constrained to `read-only` or `workspace-write`; `danger-full-access`
and `external-sandbox` cannot silently bypass the managed read-deny
policy.
- On Windows, the managed deny-read policy is enforced for direct file
tools, but shell subprocess reads are not sandboxed yet, so startup
emits a warning for that platform.
- `/debug-config` shows the effective managed requirement as
`permissions.filesystem.deny_read` with its source.

## Stack
1. #15979 - glob deny-read policy/config/direct-tool support
2. #18096 - macOS and Linux sandbox enforcement
3. This PR - managed deny-read requirements

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-17 08:40:09 -07:00
pakrym-oai
9effa0509f Refactor config loading to use filesystem abstraction (#18209)
Initial pass propagating FileSystem through config loading.
2026-04-17 00:51:21 +00:00
viyatb-oai
0d0abe839a feat(sandbox): add glob deny-read platform enforcement (#18096)
## Summary
- adds macOS Seatbelt deny rules for unreadable glob patterns
- expands unreadable glob matches on Linux and masks them in bwrap,
including canonical symlink targets
- keeps Linux glob expansion robust when `rg` is unavailable in minimal
or Bazel test environments
- adds sandbox integration coverage that runs `shell` and `exec_command`
with a `**/*.env = none` policy and verifies the secret contents do not
reach the model

## Linux glob expansion

```text
Prefer:   rg --files --hidden --no-ignore --glob <pattern> -- <search-root>
Fallback: internal globset walker when rg is not installed
Failure:  any other rg failure aborts sandbox construction
```

```
[permissions.workspace.filesystem]
glob_scan_max_depth = 2

[permissions.workspace.filesystem.":project_roots"]
"**/*.env" = "none"
```


This keeps the common path fast without making sandbox construction
depend on an ambient `rg` binary. If `rg` is present but fails for
another reason, the sandbox setup fails closed instead of silently
omitting deny-read masks.

## Platform support
- macOS: subprocess sandbox enforcement is handled by Seatbelt regex
deny rules
- Linux: subprocess sandbox enforcement is handled by expanding existing
glob matches and masking them in bwrap
- Windows: policy/config/direct-tool glob support is already on `main`
from #15979; Windows subprocess sandbox paths continue to fail closed
when unreadable split filesystem carveouts require runtime enforcement,
rather than silently running unsandboxed

## Stack
1. #15979 - merged: cross-platform glob deny-read
policy/config/direct-tool support for macOS, Linux, and Windows
2. This PR - macOS/Linux subprocess sandbox enforcement plus Windows
fail-closed clarification
3. #17740 - managed deny-read requirements

## Verification
- Added integration coverage for `shell` and `exec_command` glob
deny-read enforcement
- `cargo check -p codex-sandboxing -p codex-linux-sandbox --tests`
- `cargo check -p codex-core --test all`
- `cargo clippy -p codex-linux-sandbox -p codex-sandboxing --tests`
- `just bazel-lock-check`

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-16 17:35:16 -07:00
Abhinav
8720b7bdce Add codex_hook_run analytics event (#17996)
# Why
Add product analytics for hook handler executions so we can understand
which hooks are running, where they came from, and whether they
completed, failed, stopped, or blocked work.

# What
- add the new `codex_hook_run` analytics event and payload plumbing in
`codex-rs/analytics`
- emit hook-run analytics from the shared hook completion path in
`codex-rs/core`
- classify hook source from the loaded hook path as `system`, `user`,
`project`, or `unknown`

```
{
  "event_type": "codex_hook_run",
  "event_params": {
    "thread_id": "string",
    "turn_id": "string",
    "model_slug": "string",
    "hook_name": "string, // any HookEventName
    "hook_source": "system | user | project | unknown",
    "status": "completed | failed | stopped | blocked"
  }
}
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-16 19:43:16 +00:00
Matthew Zeng
71174574ad Add server-level approval defaults for custom MCP servers (#17843)
## Summary
- Add `default_tools_approval_mode` support for custom MCP server
configs, matching the existing `codex_apps` behavior
- Apply approval precedence as per-tool override, then server default,
then `auto`
- Update config serialization, CLI display, schema generation, docs, and
tests

## Testing
- `cargo check -p codex-config`
- `cargo check -p codex-core`
- `just write-config-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-config`
- Targeted `codex-core` tests for config parsing, config writes, and MCP
approval precedence
- `just fix -p codex-config -p codex-core`
2026-04-16 18:18:07 +00:00
xli-oai
faf48489f3 Auto-upgrade configured marketplaces (#17425)
## Summary
- Add best-effort auto-upgrade for user-configured Git marketplaces
recorded in `config.toml`.
- Track the last activated Git revision with `last_revision` so
unchanged marketplace sources skip clone work.
- Trigger the upgrade from plugin startup and `plugin/list`, while
preserving existing fail-open plugin behavior with warning logs rather
than new user-visible errors.

## Details
- Remote configured marketplaces use `git ls-remote` to compare the
source/ref against the recorded revision.
- Upgrades clone into a staging directory, validate that
`.agents/plugins/marketplace.json` exists and that the manifest name
matches the configured marketplace key, then atomically activate the new
root.
- Local `.agents/plugins/marketplace.json` marketplaces remain live
filesystem state and are not auto-pulled.
- Existing non-curated plugin cache refresh is kicked after successful
marketplace root upgrades.

## Validation
- `just write-config-schema`
- `cargo test -p codex-core marketplace_upgrade`
- `cargo check -p codex-cli -p codex-app-server`
- `just fix -p codex-core`

Did not run the complete `cargo test` suite because the repo
instructions require asking before a full core workspace run.
2026-04-16 10:36:34 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
b4be3617f9 [1/8] Add MCP server environment config (#18085)
## Summary
- Add an MCP server environment setting with local as the default.
- Thread the default through config serialization, schema generation,
and existing config fixtures.

## Stack
```text
o  #18027 [8/8] Fail exec client operations after disconnect
│
o  #18025 [7/8] Cover MCP stdio tests with executor placement
│
o  #18089 [6/8] Wire remote MCP stdio through executor
│
o  #18088 [5/8] Add executor process transport for MCP stdio
│
o  #18087 [4/8] Abstract MCP stdio server launching
│
o  #18020 [3/8] Add pushed exec process events
│
o  #18086 [2/8] Support piped stdin in exec process API
│
@  #18085 [1/8] Add MCP server environment config
│
o  main
```

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-16 08:50:03 -07:00
jif-oai
9c326c4cb4 nit: add min values for memories (#18137)
Just add min values to some memories config fields
2026-04-16 14:37:43 +01:00
pakrym-oai
bd61737e8a Async config loading (#18022)
Parts of config will come from executor. Prepare for that by making
config loading methods async.
2026-04-15 19:18:38 -07:00
xli-oai
3cc689fb23 [codex] Support local marketplace sources (#17756)
## Summary

- Port marketplace source support into the shared core marketplace-add
flow
- Support local marketplace directory sources
- Support direct `marketplace.json` URL sources
- Persist the new source types in config/schema and cover them in CLI
and app-server tests

## Validation

- `cargo test -p codex-core marketplace_add`
- `cargo test -p codex-cli marketplace_add`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server marketplace_add`
- `just write-config-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `just fix -p codex-core`
- `just fix -p codex-cli`

## Context

Current `main` moved marketplace-add behavior into shared core code and
still assumed only git-backed sources. This change keeps that structure
but restores support for local directories and direct manifest URLs in
the shared path.
2026-04-14 15:58:14 -07:00
viyatb-oai
81c0bcc921 fix: Revert danger-full-access denylist-only mode (#17732)
## Summary

- Reverts openai/codex#16946 and removes the danger-full-access
denylist-only network mode.
- Removes the corresponding config requirements, app-server
protocol/schema, config API, TUI debug output, and network proxy
behavior.
- Drops stale tests that depended on the reverted mode while preserving
newer managed allowlist-only coverage.

## Verification

- `just write-app-server-schema`
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-config network_requirements`
- `cargo test -p codex-core network_proxy_spec`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
managed_network_proxy_decider_survives_full_access_start`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server map_requirements_toml_to_api`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui debug_config_output`
- `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol`
- `just fix -p codex-config -p codex-core -p codex-app-server-protocol
-p codex-app-server -p codex-tui`
- `git diff --cached --check`

Not run: full workspace `cargo test` (repo instructions ask for
confirmation before that broader run).
2026-04-14 09:50:14 -07:00
josiah-openai
937dd3812d Add supports_parallel_tool_calls flag to included mcps (#17667)
## Why

For more advanced MCP usage, we want the model to be able to emit
parallel MCP tool calls and have Codex execute eligible ones
concurrently, instead of forcing all MCP calls through the serial block.

The main design choice was where to thread the config. I made this
server-level because parallel safety depends on the MCP server
implementation. Codex reads the flag from `mcp_servers`, threads the
opted-in server names into `ToolRouter`, and checks the parsed
`ToolPayload::Mcp { server, .. }` at execution time. That avoids relying
on model-visible tool names, which can be incomplete in
deferred/search-tool paths or ambiguous for similarly named
servers/tools.

## What was added

Added `supports_parallel_tool_calls` for MCP servers.

Before:

```toml
[mcp_servers.docs]
command = "docs-server"
```

After:

```toml
[mcp_servers.docs]
command = "docs-server"
supports_parallel_tool_calls = true
```

MCP calls remain serial by default. Only tools from opted-in servers are
eligible to run in parallel. Docs also now warn to enable this only when
the server’s tools are safe to run concurrently, especially around
shared state or read/write races.

## Testing

Tested with a local stdio MCP server exposing real delay tools. The
model/Responses side was mocked only to deterministically emit two MCP
calls in the same turn.

Each test called `query_with_delay` and `query_with_delay_2` with `{
"seconds": 25 }`.

| Build/config | Observed | Wall time |
| --- | --- | --- |
| main with flag enabled | serial | `58.79s` |
| PR with flag enabled | parallel | `31.73s` |
| PR without flag | serial | `56.70s` |

PR with flag enabled showed both tools start before either completed;
main and PR-without-flag completed the first delay before starting the
second.

Also added an integration test.

Additional checks:

- `cargo test -p codex-tools` passed
- `cargo test -p codex-core
mcp_parallel_support_uses_exact_payload_server` passed
- `git diff --check` passed
2026-04-13 15:16:34 -07:00
jif-oai
bacb92b1d7 Build remote exec env from exec-server policy (#17216)
## Summary
- add an exec-server `envPolicy` field; when present, the server starts
from its own process env and applies the shell environment policy there
- keep `env` as the exact environment for local/embedded starts, but
make it an overlay for remote unified-exec starts
- move the shell-environment-policy builder into `codex-config` so Core
and exec-server share the inherit/filter/set/include behavior
- overlay only runtime/sandbox/network deltas from Core onto the
exec-server-derived env

## Why
Remote unified exec was materializing the shell env inside Core and
forwarding the whole map to exec-server, so remote processes could
inherit the orchestrator machine's `HOME`, `PATH`, etc. This keeps the
base env on the executor while preserving Core-owned runtime additions
like `CODEX_THREAD_ID`, unified-exec defaults, network proxy env, and
sandbox marker env.

## Validation
- `just fmt`
- `git diff --check`
- `cargo test -p codex-exec-server --lib`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib unified_exec::process_manager::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib exec_env::tests`
- `cargo test -p codex-core --lib exec_env_tests` (compile-only; filter
matched 0 tests)
- `cargo test -p codex-config --lib shell_environment` (compile-only;
filter matched 0 tests)
- `just bazel-lock-update`

## Known local validation issue
- `just bazel-lock-check` is not runnable in this checkout: it invokes
`./scripts/check-module-bazel-lock.sh`, which is missing.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Co-authored-by: pakrym-oai <pakrym@openai.com>
2026-04-13 09:59:08 +01:00
xli-oai
f9a8d1870f Add marketplace command (#17087)
Added a new top-level `codex marketplace add` command for installing
plugin marketplaces into Codex’s local marketplace cache.

This change adds source parsing for local directories, GitHub shorthand,
and git URLs, supports optional `--ref` and git-only `--sparse` checkout
paths, stages the source in a temp directory, validates the marketplace
manifest, and installs it under
`$CODEX_HOME/marketplaces/<marketplace-name>`

Included tests cover local install behavior in the CLI and marketplace
discovery from installed roots in core. Scoped formatting and fix passes
were run, and targeted CLI/core tests passed.
2026-04-10 19:18:37 -07:00
Eric Traut
598d6ff056 Render statusline context as a meter (#17170)
Problem: The statusline reported context as an “X% left” value, which
could be mistaken for quota, and context usage was included in the
default footer.

Solution: Render configured context status items as a filling context
meter, preserve `context-used` as a legacy alias while hiding it from
the setup menu, and remove context from the default statusline. It will
still be available as an opt-in option for users who want to see it.

<img width="317" height="39" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3aeb39bb-f80d-471f-88fe-d55e25b31491"
/>
2026-04-09 07:52:07 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
84a24fe333 make webrtc the default experience (#17188)
## Summary
- make realtime default to the v2 WebRTC path
- keep partial realtime config tables inheriting
`RealtimeConfig::default()`

## Validation
- CI found a stale config-test expectation; fixed in 974ba51bb3
- just fmt
- git diff --check

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-08 23:52:32 -07:00
Eric Traut
6dc5391c7c Add TUI notification condition config (#17175)
Problem: TUI desktop notifications are hard-gated on terminal focus, so
terminal/IDE hosts that want in-focus notifications cannot opt in.

Solution: Add a flat `[tui] notification_condition` setting (`unfocused`
by default, `always` opt-in), carry grouped TUI notification settings
through runtime config, apply method + condition together in the TUI,
and regenerate the config schema.
2026-04-08 21:50:02 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
2f9090be62 Add realtime voice selection (#17176)
- Add realtime voice selection for realtime/start.
- Expose the supported v1/v2 voice lists and cover explicit, configured,
default, and invalid voice paths.
2026-04-08 20:19:15 -07:00
maja-openai
dcbc91fd39 Update guardian output schema (#17061)
## Summary
- Update guardian output schema to separate risk, authorization,
outcome, and rationale.
- Feed guardian rationale into rejection messages.
- Split the guardian policy into template and tenant-config sections.

## Validation
- `cargo test -p codex-core mcp_tool_call`
- `env -u CODEX_SANDBOX_NETWORK_DISABLED INSTA_UPDATE=always cargo test
-p codex-core guardian::`

---------

Co-authored-by: Owen Lin <owen@openai.com>
2026-04-08 15:47:29 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
06d88b7e81 Add realtime transport config (#17097)
Adds realtime.transport config with websocket as the default and webrtc
wired through the effective config.

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-08 09:53:53 -07:00
pakrym-oai
4c07dd4d25 Configure multi_agent_v2 spawn agent hints (#17071)
Allow multi_agent_v2 features to have its own temporary configuration
under `[features.multi_agent_v2]`

```
[features.multi_agent_v2]
enabled = true
usage_hint_enabled = false
usage_hint_text = "Custom delegation guidance."
hide_spawn_agent_metadata = true
```

Absent `usage_hint_text` means use the default hint.

```
[features]
multi_agent_v2 = true
```

still works as the boolean shorthand.
2026-04-08 08:42:18 -07:00
jif-oai
2bbab7d8f9 feat: single app-server bootstrap in TUI (#16582)
Before this, the TUI was starting 2 app-server. One to check the login
status and one to actually start the session

This PR make only one app-server startup and defer the login check in
async, outside of the frame rendering path

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-04-08 13:49:06 +01:00