## Why
This PR prepares the stack to enable Clippy await-holding lints that
were left disabled in #18178. The mechanical lock-scope cleanup is
handled separately; this PR is the documentation/configuration layer for
the remaining await-across-guard sites.
Without explicit annotations, reviewers and future maintainers cannot
tell whether an await-holding warning is a real concurrency smell or an
intentional serialization boundary.
## What changed
- Configures `clippy.toml` so `await_holding_invalid_type` also covers
`tokio::sync::{MutexGuard,RwLockReadGuard,RwLockWriteGuard}`.
- Adds targeted `#[expect(clippy::await_holding_invalid_type, reason =
...)]` annotations for intentional async guard lifetimes.
- Documents the main categories of intentional cases: active-turn state
transitions that must remain atomic, session-owned MCP manager accesses,
remote-control websocket serialization, JS REPL kernel/process
serialization, OAuth persistence, external bearer token refresh
serialization, and tests that intentionally serialize shared global or
session-owned state.
- For external bearer token refresh, documents the existing
serialization boundary: holding `cached_token` across the provider
command prevents concurrent cache misses from starting duplicate refresh
commands, and the current behavior is small enough that an explicit
expectation is easier to maintain than adding another synchronization
primitive.
## Verification
- `cargo clippy -p codex-login --all-targets`
- `cargo clippy -p codex-connectors --all-targets`
- `cargo clippy -p codex-core --all-targets`
- The follow-up PR #18698 enables `await_holding_invalid_type` and
`await_holding_lock` as workspace `deny` lints, so any undocumented
remaining offender will fail Clippy.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/18423).
* #18698
* __->__ #18423
This change ensures that we store the absolute time instead of relative
offsets of when the primary and secondary rate limits will reset.
Previously these got recalculated relative to current time, which leads
to the displayed reset times to change over time, including after doing
a codex resume.
For previously changed sessions, this will cause the reset times to not
show due to this being a breaking change:
<img width="524" height="55" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-17 at 5 14 18 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/53ebd43e-da25-4fef-9c47-94a529d40265"
/>
Fixes https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/4761
New style guide:
# Headers, primary, and secondary text
- **Headers:** Use `bold`. For markdown with various header levels,
leave in the `#` signs.
- **Primary text:** Default.
- **Secondary text:** Use `dim`.
# Foreground colors
- **Default:** Most of the time, just use the default foreground color.
`reset` can help get it back.
- **Selection:** Use ANSI `blue`. (Ed & AE want to make this cyan too,
but we'll do that in a followup since it's riskier in different themes.)
- **User input tips and status indicators:** Use ANSI `cyan`.
- **Success and additions:** Use ANSI `green`.
- **Errors, failures and deletions:** Use ANSI `red`.
- **Codex:** Use ANSI `magenta`.
# Avoid
- Avoid custom colors because there's no guarantee that they'll contrast
well or look good on various terminal color themes.
- Avoid ANSI `black`, `white`, `yellow` as foreground colors because the
terminal theme will do a better job. (Use `reset` if you need to in
order to get those.) The exception is if you need contrast rendering
over a manually colored background.
(There are some rules to try to catch this in `clippy.toml`.)
# Testing
Tested in a variety of light and dark color themes in Terminal, iTerm2, and Ghostty.
This PR:
* Added the clippy.toml to configure allowable expect / unwrap usage in
tests
* Removed as many expect/allow lines as possible from tests
* moved a bunch of allows to expects where possible
Note: in integration tests, non `#[test]` helper functions are not
covered by this so we had to leave a few lingering `expect(expect_used`
checks around