Commit Graph

260 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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
Andrei Eternal
c4d9887f9a [hooks] add non-streaming (non-stdin style) shell-only PostToolUse support (#15531)
CHAINED PR - note that base is eternal/hooks-pretooluse-bash, not main
-- so the following PR should be first

Matching post-tool hook to the pre-tool functionality here:
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15211

So, PreToolUse calls for plain shell calls, allows blocking. This
PostToolUse call runs after the command executed

example run:

```
› as a test, run in parallel the following commands:
  - echo 'one'
  - echo '[block-pre-tool-use]'
  - echo '[block-post-tool-use]'


⚠ MCP startup incomplete (failed: notion, linear)

• Cruising through those three commands in parallel now, and I’ll share the exact outputs right after
  they land.

• Running PreToolUse hook: checking the observatory runes

• Running PreToolUse hook: checking the observatory runes

• Running PreToolUse hook: checking the observatory runes

PreToolUse hook (blocked)
  warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo blocked a Bash command on purpose.
  feedback: PreToolUse demo blocked the command. Remove [block-pre-tool-use] to continue.

PreToolUse hook (completed)
  warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo 'one'

PreToolUse hook (completed)
  warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo '[block-post-tool-use]'

• Ran echo '[block-post-tool-use]'
  └ [block-post-tool-use]

• Ran echo 'one'
  └ one

• Running PostToolUse hook: reading the observatory aftermath

• Running PostToolUse hook: reading the observatory aftermath

PostToolUse hook (blocked)
  warning: wizard-tower PostToolUse demo blocked the Bash follow-through on purpose.
  feedback: PostToolUse demo blocked the result after execution. Remove [block-post-tool-use] to
continue.

PostToolUse hook (completed)
  warning: wizard-tower PostToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo 'one'
  hook context: PostToolUse demo saw the Bash result. Response preview: one

──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

• Ran them in parallel. Little wave report:

  - echo 'one' completed and returned one.
  - echo '[block-pre-tool-use]' was blocked before execution by the PreToolUse hook.
  - echo '[block-post-tool-use]' ran, but its result was blocked afterward by the PostToolUse hook.

  The hook messages were:

  - PreToolUse demo blocked the command. Remove [block-pre-tool-use] to continue.
  - PostToolUse demo blocked the result after execution. Remove [block-post-tool-use] to continue.


› for the blocked messages (correctly blocked in this test) did the tool output land back into
  context?


• Yeah, from this run:

  - PreToolUse block: the command itself did not execute, so no command output landed in context. Only
    the block message did.
  - PostToolUse block: the command did execute, but the actual stdout did not come back into context.
    Only the post-tool block message did.

  So the blocked notifications landed in context, but the blocked command payloads themselves did not.
  Nice clean guardrail, aloha.
```
2026-03-25 19:18:03 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
062fa7a2bb Move string truncation helpers into codex-utils-string (#15572)
- move the shared byte-based middle truncation logic from `core` into
`codex-utils-string`
- keep token-specific truncation in `codex-core` so rollout can reuse
the shared helper in the next stacked PR

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-24 15:45:40 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
0f957a93cd Move git utilities into a dedicated crate (#15564)
- create `codex-git-utils` and move the shared git helpers into it with
file moves preserved for diff readability
- move the `GitInfo` helpers out of `core` so stacked rollout work can
depend on the shared crate without carrying its own git info module

---------

Co-authored-by: Ahmed Ibrahim <219906144+aibrahim-oai@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-24 13:26:23 -07:00
jif-oai
773fbf56a4 feat: communication pattern v2 (#15647)
See internal communication
2026-03-24 18:45:49 +00:00
jif-oai
b51d5f18c7 feat: disable notifier v2 and start turn on agent interaction (#15624)
Make the inter-agent communication start a turn

As part of this, we disable the v2 notifier to prevent some odd
behaviour where the agent restart working while you're talking to it for
example
2026-03-24 17:01:24 +00:00
Dylan Hurd
67c1c7c054 chore(core) Add approvals reviewer to UserTurn (#15426)
## Summary
Adds support for approvals_reviewer to `Op::UserTurn` so we can migrate
`[CodexMessageProcessor::turn_start]` to use Op::UserTurn

## Testing
- [x] Adds quick test for the new field

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-23 15:19:01 -07:00
jif-oai
191fd9fd16 feat: use serde to differenciate inter agent communication (#15560)
Use `serde` to encode the inter agent communication to an assistant
message and use the decode to see if this is such a message

Note: this assume serde on small pattern is fast enough
2026-03-23 22:09:55 +00:00
Andrei Eternal
73bbb07ba8 [hooks] add non-streaming (non-stdin style) shell-only PreToolUse support (#15211)
- add `PreToolUse` hook for bash-like tool execution only at first
- block shell execution before dispatch with deny-only hook behavior
- introduces common.rs matcher framework for matching when hooks are run

example run:

```
› run three parallel echo commands, and the second one should echo "[block-pre-tool-use]" as a test


• Running the three echo commands in parallel now and I’ll report the output directly.

• Running PreToolUse hook: name for demo pre tool use hook

• Running PreToolUse hook: name for demo pre tool use hook

• Running PreToolUse hook: name for demo pre tool use hook

PreToolUse hook (completed)
  warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo "first parallel echo"
  
PreToolUse hook (blocked)
  warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo blocked a Bash command on purpose.
  feedback: PreToolUse demo blocked the command. Remove [block-pre-tool-use] to continue.

PreToolUse hook (completed)
  warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo "third parallel echo"

• Ran echo "first parallel echo"
  └ first parallel echo

• Ran echo "third parallel echo"
  └ third parallel echo

• Three little waves went out in parallel.

  1. printed first parallel echo
  2. was blocked before execution because it contained the exact test string [block-pre-tool-use]
  3. printed third parallel echo

  There was also an unrelated macOS defaults warning around the successful commands, but the echoes
  themselves worked fine. If you want, I can rerun the second one with a slightly modified string so
  it passes cleanly.
```
2026-03-23 14:32:59 -07:00
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
Charley Cunningham
e838645fa2 tui: queue follow-ups during manual /compact (#15259)
## Summary
- queue input after the user submits `/compact` until that manual
compact turn ends
- mirror the same behavior in the app-server TUI
- add regressions for input queued before compact starts and while it is
running

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-23 10:19:44 -07:00
alexsong-oai
ec32866c37 Pass platform param to featured plugins (#15348) 2026-03-21 01:42:40 +00:00
jif-oai
79ad7b247b feat: change multi-agent to use path-like system instead of uuids (#15313)
This PR add an URI-based system to reference agents within a tree. This
comes from a sync between research and engineering.

The main agent (the one manually spawned by a user) is always called
`/root`. Any sub-agent spawned by it will be `/root/agent_1` for example
where `agent_1` is chosen by the model.

Any agent can contact any agents using the path.

Paths can be used either in absolute or relative to the calling agents

Resume is not supported for now on this new path
2026-03-20 18:23:48 +00:00
xl-openai
db5781a088 feat: support product-scoped plugins. (#15041)
1. Added SessionSource::Custom(String) and --session-source.
  2. Enforced plugin and skill products by session_source.
  3. Applied the same filtering to curated background refresh.
2026-03-19 00:46:15 -07:00
xl-openai
86982ca1f9 Revert "fix: harden plugin feature gating" (#15102)
Reverts openai/codex#15020

I messed up the commit in my PR and accidentally merged changes that
were still under review.
2026-03-18 15:19:29 -07:00
xl-openai
580f32ad2a fix: harden plugin feature gating (#15020)
1. Use requirement-resolved config.features as the plugin gate.
2. Guard plugin/list, plugin/read, and related flows behind that gate.
3. Skip bad marketplace.json files instead of failing the whole list.
4. Simplify plugin state and caching.
2026-03-18 10:11:43 -07:00
jif-oai
a265d6043e feat: add memory citation to agent message (#14821)
Client side to come
2026-03-18 10:03:38 +00:00
Andrei Eternal
6fef421654 [hooks] userpromptsubmit - hook before user's prompt is executed (#14626)
- this allows blocking the user's prompts from executing, and also
prevents them from entering history
- handles the edge case where you can both prevent the user's prompt AND
add n amount of additionalContexts
- refactors some old code into common.rs where hooks overlap
functionality
- refactors additionalContext being previously added to user messages,
instead we use developer messages for them
- handles queued messages correctly

Sample hook for testing - if you write "[block-user-submit]" this hook
will stop the thread:

example run
```
› sup


• Running UserPromptSubmit hook: reading the observatory notes

UserPromptSubmit hook (completed)
  warning: wizard-tower UserPromptSubmit demo inspected: sup
  hook context: Wizard Tower UserPromptSubmit demo fired. For this reply only, include the exact
phrase 'observatory lanterns lit' exactly once near the end.

• Just riding the cosmic wave and ready to help, my friend. What are we building today? observatory
  lanterns lit


› and [block-user-submit]


• Running UserPromptSubmit hook: reading the observatory notes

UserPromptSubmit hook (stopped)
  warning: wizard-tower UserPromptSubmit demo blocked the prompt on purpose.
  stop: Wizard Tower demo block: remove [block-user-submit] to continue.
```

.codex/config.toml
```
[features]
codex_hooks = true
```

.codex/hooks.json
```
{
  "hooks": {
    "UserPromptSubmit": [
      {
        "hooks": [
          {
            "type": "command",
            "command": "/usr/bin/python3 .codex/hooks/user_prompt_submit_demo.py",
            "timeoutSec": 10,
            "statusMessage": "reading the observatory notes"
          }
        ]
      }
    ]
  }
}
```

.codex/hooks/user_prompt_submit_demo.py
```
#!/usr/bin/env python3

import json
import sys
from pathlib import Path


def prompt_from_payload(payload: dict) -> str:
    prompt = payload.get("prompt")
    if isinstance(prompt, str) and prompt.strip():
        return prompt.strip()

    event = payload.get("event")
    if isinstance(event, dict):
        user_prompt = event.get("user_prompt")
        if isinstance(user_prompt, str):
            return user_prompt.strip()

    return ""


def main() -> int:
    payload = json.load(sys.stdin)
    prompt = prompt_from_payload(payload)
    cwd = Path(payload.get("cwd", ".")).name or "wizard-tower"

    if "[block-user-submit]" in prompt:
        print(
            json.dumps(
                {
                    "systemMessage": (
                        f"{cwd} UserPromptSubmit demo blocked the prompt on purpose."
                    ),
                    "decision": "block",
                    "reason": (
                        "Wizard Tower demo block: remove [block-user-submit] to continue."
                    ),
                }
            )
        )
        return 0

    prompt_preview = prompt or "(empty prompt)"
    if len(prompt_preview) > 80:
        prompt_preview = f"{prompt_preview[:77]}..."

    print(
        json.dumps(
            {
                "systemMessage": (
                    f"{cwd} UserPromptSubmit demo inspected: {prompt_preview}"
                ),
                "hookSpecificOutput": {
                    "hookEventName": "UserPromptSubmit",
                    "additionalContext": (
                        "Wizard Tower UserPromptSubmit demo fired. "
                        "For this reply only, include the exact phrase "
                        "'observatory lanterns lit' exactly once near the end."
                    ),
                },
            }
        )
    )
    return 0


if __name__ == "__main__":
    raise SystemExit(main())
```
2026-03-17 22:09:22 -07:00
xl-openai
a5d3114e97 feat: Add product-aware plugin policies and clean up manifest naming (#14993)
- Add shared Product support to marketplace plugin policy and skill
policy (no enforced yet).
- Move marketplace installation/authentication under policy and model it
as MarketplacePluginPolicy.
- Rename plugin/marketplace local manifest types to separate raw serde
shapes from resolved in-memory models.
2026-03-17 17:01:34 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
c6ab4ee537 Gate realtime audio interruption logic to v2 (#14984)
- thread the realtime version into conversation start and app-server
notifications
- keep playback-aware mic gating and playback interruption behavior on
v2 only, leaving v1 on the legacy path
2026-03-17 15:24:37 -07:00
xl-openai
1a9555eda9 Cleanup skills/remote/xxx endpoints. (#14977)
Remote skills/remote/xxx as they are not in used for now.
2026-03-17 15:22:36 -07:00
jif-oai
e8add54e5d feat: show effective model in spawn agent event (#14944)
Show effective model after the full config layering for the sub agent
2026-03-17 16:58:58 +00:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
fbd7f9b986 [stack 2/4] Align main realtime v2 wire and runtime flow (#14830)
## Stack Position
2/4. Built on top of #14828.

## Base
- #14828

## Unblocks
- #14829
- #14827

## Scope
- Port the realtime v2 wire parsing, session, app-server, and
conversation runtime behavior onto the split websocket-method base.
- Branch runtime behavior directly on the current realtime session kind
instead of parser-derived flow flags.
- Keep regression coverage in the existing e2e suites.

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-16 21:38:07 -07:00
jif-oai
3f266bcd68 feat: make interrupt state not final for multi-agents (#13850)
Make `interrupted` an agent state and make it not final. As a result, a
`wait` won't return on an interrupted agent and no notification will be
send to the parent agent.

The rationals are:
* If a user interrupt a sub-agent for any reason, you don't want the
parent agent to instantaneously ask the sub-agent to restart
* If a parent agent interrupt a sub-agent, no need to add a noisy
notification in the parent agen
2026-03-16 16:39:40 +00:00
friel-openai
ba463a9dc7 Preserve background terminals on interrupt and rename cleanup command to /stop (#14602)
### Motivation
- Interrupting a running turn (Ctrl+C / Esc) currently also terminates
long‑running background shells, which is surprising for workflows like
local dev servers or file watchers.
- The existing cleanup command name was confusing; callers expect an
explicit command to stop background terminals rather than a UI clear
action.
- Make background‑shell termination explicit and surface a clearer
command name while preserving backward compatibility.

### Description
- Renamed the background‑terminal cleanup slash command from `Clean`
(`/clean`) to `Stop` (`/stop`) and kept `clean` as an alias in the
command parsing/visibility layer, updated the user descriptions and
command popup wiring accordingly.
- Updated the unified‑exec footer text and snapshots to point to `/stop`
(and trimmed corresponding snapshot output to match the new label).
- Changed interrupt behavior so `Op::Interrupt` (Ctrl+C / Esc interrupt)
no longer closes or clears tracked unified exec / background terminal
processes in the TUI or core cleanup path; background shells are now
preserved after an interrupt.
- Updated protocol/docs to clarify that `turn/interrupt` (or
`Op::Interrupt`) interrupts the active turn but does not terminate
background terminals, and that `thread/backgroundTerminals/clean` is the
explicit API to stop those shells.
- Updated unit/integration tests and insta snapshots in the TUI and core
unified‑exec suites to reflect the new semantics and command name.

### Testing
- Ran formatting with `just fmt` in `codex-rs` (succeeded). 
- Ran `cargo test -p codex-protocol` (succeeded). 
- Attempted `cargo test -p codex-tui` but the build could not complete
in this environment due to a native build dependency that requires
`libcap` development headers (the `codex-linux-sandbox` vendored build
step); install `libcap-dev` / make `libcap.pc` available in
`PKG_CONFIG_PATH` to run the TUI test suite locally.
- Updated and accepted the affected `insta` snapshots for the TUI
changes so visual diffs reflect the new `/stop` wording and preserved
interrupt behavior.

------
[Codex
Task](https://chatgpt.com/codex/tasks/task_i_69b39c44b6dc8323bd133ae206310fae)
2026-03-15 22:17:25 -07:00
viyatb-oai
9060dc7557 fix: fix symlinked writable roots in sandbox policies (#14674)
## Summary
- normalize effective readable, writable, and unreadable sandbox roots
after resolving special paths so symlinked roots use canonical runtime
paths
- add a protocol regression test for a symlinked writable root with a
denied child and update protocol expectations to canonicalized effective
paths
- update macOS seatbelt tests to assert against effective normalized
roots produced by the shared policy helpers

## Testing
- just fmt
- cargo test -p codex-protocol
- cargo test -p codex-core explicit_unreadable_paths_are_excluded_
- cargo clippy -p codex-protocol -p codex-core --tests -- -D warnings

## Notes
- This is intended to fix the symlinked TMPDIR bind failure in
bubblewrap described in #14672.
Fixes #14672
2026-03-14 13:24:43 -07:00
sayan-oai
d272f45058 move plugin/skill instructions into dev msg and reorder (#14609)
Move the general `Apps`, `Skills` and `Plugins` instructions blocks out
of `user_instructions` and into the developer message, with new `Apps ->
Skills -> Plugins` order for better clarity.

Also wrap those sections in stable XML-style instruction tags (like
other sections) and update prompt-layout tests/snapshots. This makes the
tests less brittle in snapshot output (we can parse the sections), and
it consolidates the capability instructions in one place.

#### Tests
Updated snapshots, added tests.

`<AGENTS_MD>` disappearing in snapshots is expected: before this change,
the wrapped user-instructions message was kept alive by `Skills`
content. Now that `Skills` and `Plugins` are in the developer message,
that wrapper only appears when there is real
project-doc/user-instructions content.

---------

Co-authored-by: Charley Cunningham <ccunningham@openai.com>
2026-03-13 20:51:01 -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
014e19510d feat(app-server, core): add more spans (#14479)
## Description

This PR expands tracing coverage across app-server thread startup, core
session initialization, and the Responses transport layer. It also gives
core dispatch spans stable operation-specific names so traces are easier
to follow than the old generic `submission_dispatch` spans.

Also use `fmt::Display` for types that we serialize in traces so we send
strings instead of rust types
2026-03-13 13:16:33 -07:00
Jack Mousseau
b7dba72dbd Rename reject approval policy to granular (#14516) 2026-03-12 16:38:04 -07:00
Jack Mousseau
a314c7d3ae Decouple request permissions feature and tool (#14426) 2026-03-12 14:47:08 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
bf5e997b31 Include spawn agent model metadata in app-server items (#14410)
- add model and reasoning effort to app-server collab spawn items and
notifications
- regenerate app-server protocol schemas for the new fields

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-11 19:25:21 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
285b3a5143 Show spawned agent model and effort in TUI (#14273)
- include the requested sub-agent model and reasoning effort in the
spawn begin event\n- render that metadata next to the spawned agent name
and role in the TUI transcript

---------

Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
2026-03-11 12:33:09 -07:00
Celia Chen
c1a424691f chore: add a separate reject-policy flag for skill approvals (#14271)
## Summary
- add `skill_approval` to `RejectConfig` and the app-server v2
`AskForApproval::Reject` payload so skill-script prompts can be
configured independently from sandbox and rule-based prompts
- update Unix shell escalation to reject prompts based on the actual
decision source, keeping prefix rules tied to `rules`, unmatched command
fallbacks tied to `sandbox_approval`, and skill scripts tied to
`skill_approval`
- regenerate the affected protocol/config schemas and expand
unit/integration coverage for the new flag and skill approval behavior
2026-03-11 12:33:09 -07:00
Ahmed Ibrahim
2e24be2134 Use realtime transcript for handoff context (#14132)
- collect input/output transcript deltas into active handoff transcript
state
- attach and clear that transcript on each handoff, and regenerate
schema/tests
2026-03-09 22:30:03 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
772259b01f fix(core) default RejectConfig.request_permissions (#14165)
## Summary
Adds a default here so existing config deserializes

## Testing
- [x] Added a unit test
2026-03-10 04:56:23 +00:00
Andrei Eternal
244b2d53f4 start of hooks engine (#13276)
(Experimental)

This PR adds a first MVP for hooks, with SessionStart and Stop

The core design is:

- hooks live in a dedicated engine under codex-rs/hooks
- each hook type has its own event-specific file
- hook execution is synchronous and blocks normal turn progression while
running
- matching hooks run in parallel, then their results are aggregated into
a normalized HookRunSummary

On the AppServer side, hooks are exposed as operational metadata rather
than transcript-native items:

- new live notifications: hook/started, hook/completed
- persisted/replayed hook results live on Turn.hookRuns
- we intentionally did not add hook-specific ThreadItem variants

Hooks messages are not persisted, they remain ephemeral. The context
changes they add are (they get appended to the user's prompt)
2026-03-10 04:11:31 +00:00
viyatb-oai
b0cbc25a48 fix(protocol): preserve legacy workspace-write semantics (#13957)
## Summary
This is a fast follow to the initial `[permissions]` structure.

- keep the new split-policy carveout behavior for narrower non-write
entries under broader writable roots
- preserve legacy `WorkspaceWrite` semantics by using a cwd-aware bridge
that drops only redundant nested readable roots when projecting from
`SandboxPolicy`
- route the legacy macOS seatbelt adapter through that same legacy
bridge so redundant nested readable roots do not become read-only
carveouts on macOS
- derive the legacy bridge for `command_exec` using the sandbox root cwd
rather than the request cwd so policy derivation matches later sandbox
enforcement
- add regression coverage for the legacy macOS nested-readable-root case

## Examples
### Legacy `workspace-write` on macOS
A legacy `workspace-write` policy can redundantly list a nested readable
root under an already-writable workspace root.

For example, legacy config can effectively mean:
- workspace root (`.` / `cwd`) is writable
- `docs/` is also listed in `readable_roots`

The new shared split-policy helper intentionally treats a narrower
non-write entry under a broader writable root as a carveout for real
`[permissions]` configs. Without this fast follow, the unchanged macOS
seatbelt legacy adapter could project that legacy shape into a
`FileSystemSandboxPolicy` that treated `docs/` like a read-only carveout
under the writable workspace root. In practice, legacy callers on macOS
could unexpectedly lose write access inside `docs/`, even though that
path was writable before the `[permissions]` migration work.

This change fixes that by routing the legacy seatbelt path through the
cwd-aware legacy bridge, so:
- legacy `workspace-write` keeps `docs/` writable when `docs/` was only
a redundant readable root
- explicit `[permissions]` entries like `'.' = 'write'` and `'docs' =
'read'` still make `docs/` read-only, which is the new intended
split-policy behavior

### Legacy `command_exec` with a subdirectory cwd
`command_exec` can run a command from a request cwd that is narrower
than the sandbox root cwd.

For example:
- sandbox root cwd is `/repo`
- request cwd is `/repo/subdir`
- legacy policy is still `workspace-write` rooted at `/repo`

Before this fast follow, `command_exec` derived the legacy bridge using
the request cwd, but the sandbox was later built using the sandbox root
cwd. That mismatch could miss redundant legacy readable roots during
projection and accidentally reintroduce read-only carveouts for paths
that should still be writable under the legacy model.

This change fixes that by deriving the legacy bridge with the same
sandbox root cwd that sandbox enforcement later uses.

## Verification
- `just fmt`
- `cargo test -p codex-core
seatbelt_legacy_workspace_write_nested_readable_root_stays_writable`
- `cargo test -p codex-core test_sandbox_config_parsing`
- `cargo clippy -p codex-core -p codex-app-server --all-targets -- -D
warnings`
- `cargo clean`
2026-03-09 18:43:27 -07:00
Dylan Hurd
6da84efed8 feat(approvals) RejectConfig for request_permissions (#14118)
## Summary
We need to support allowing request_permissions calls when using
`Reject` policy

<img width="1133" height="588" alt="Screenshot 2026-03-09 at 12 06
40 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a8df987f-c225-4866-b8ab-5590960daec5"
/>

Note that this is a backwards-incompatible change for Reject policy. I'm
not sure if we need to add a default based on our current use/setup

## Testing
- [x] Added tests
- [x] Tested locally
2026-03-09 18:16:54 -07:00
Jack Mousseau
e6b93841c5 Add request permissions tool (#13092)
Adds a built-in `request_permissions` tool and wires it through the
Codex core, protocol, and app-server layers so a running turn can ask
the client for additional permissions instead of relying on a static
session policy.

The new flow emits a `RequestPermissions` event from core, tracks the
pending request by call ID, forwards it through app-server v2 as an
`item/permissions/requestApproval` request, and resumes the tool call
once the client returns an approved subset of the requested permission
profile.
2026-03-08 20:23:06 -07:00
Celia Chen
340f9c9ecb app-server: include experimental skill metadata in exec approval requests (#13929)
## Summary

This change surfaces skill metadata on command approval requests so
app-server clients can tell when an approval came from a skill script
and identify the originating `SKILL.md`.

- add `skill_metadata` to exec approval events in the shared protocol
- thread skill metadata through core shell escalation and delegated
approval handling for skill-triggered approvals
- expose the field in app-server v2 as experimental `skillMetadata`
- regenerate the JSON/TypeScript schemas and cover the new field in
protocol, transport, core, and TUI tests

## Why

Skill-triggered approvals already carry skill context inside core, but
app-server clients could not see which skill caused the prompt. Sending
the skill metadata with the approval request makes it possible for
clients to present better approval UX and connect the prompt back to the
relevant skill definition.


## example event in app-server-v2
verified that we see this event when experimental api is on:
```
< {
<   "id": 11,
<   "method": "item/commandExecution/requestApproval",
<   "params": {
<     "additionalPermissions": {
<       "fileSystem": null,
<       "macos": {
<         "accessibility": false,
<         "automations": {
<           "bundle_ids": [
<             "com.apple.Notes"
<           ]
<         },
<         "calendar": false,
<         "preferences": "read_only"
<       },
<       "network": null
<     },
<     "approvalId": "25d600ee-5a3c-4746-8d17-e2e61fb4c563",
<     "availableDecisions": [
<       "accept",
<       "acceptForSession",
<       "cancel"
<     ],
<     "command": "/Applications/ChatGPT.app/Contents/Resources/CodexAppServer_CodexAppServerBundledSkills.bundle/Contents/Resources/skills/apple-notes/scripts/notes_info",
<     "commandActions": [
<       {
<         "command": "/Applications/ChatGPT.app/Contents/Resources/CodexAppServer_CodexAppServerBundledSkills.bundle/Contents/Resources/skills/apple-notes/scripts/notes_info",
<         "type": "unknown"
<       }
<     ],
<     "cwd": "/Applications/ChatGPT.app/Contents/Resources/CodexAppServer_CodexAppServerBundledSkills.bundle/Contents/Resources/skills/apple-notes",
<     "itemId": "call_jZp3xFpNg4D8iKAD49cvEvZy",
<     "skillMetadata": {
<       "pathToSkillsMd": "/Applications/ChatGPT.app/Contents/Resources/CodexAppServer_CodexAppServerBundledSkills.bundle/Contents/Resources/skills/apple-notes/SKILL.md"
<     },
<     "threadId": "019ccc10-b7d3-7ff2-84fe-3a75e7681e69",
<     "turnId": "019ccc10-b848-76f1-81b3-4a1fa225493f"
<   }
< }`
```

& verified that this is the event when experimental api is off:
```
< {
<   "id": 13,
<   "method": "item/commandExecution/requestApproval",
<   "params": {
<     "approvalId": "5fbbf776-261b-4cf8-899b-c125b547f2c0",
<     "availableDecisions": [
<       "accept",
<       "acceptForSession",
<       "cancel"
<     ],
<     "command": "/Applications/ChatGPT.app/Contents/Resources/CodexAppServer_CodexAppServerBundledSkills.bundle/Contents/Resources/skills/apple-notes/scripts/notes_info",
<     "commandActions": [
<       {
<         "command": "/Applications/ChatGPT.app/Contents/Resources/CodexAppServer_CodexAppServerBundledSkills.bundle/Contents/Resources/skills/apple-notes/scripts/notes_info",
<         "type": "unknown"
<       }
<     ],
<     "cwd": "/Users/celia/code/codex/codex-rs",
<     "itemId": "call_OV2DHzTgYcbYtWaTTBWlocOt",
<     "threadId": "019ccc16-2a2b-7be1-8500-e00d45b892d4",
<     "turnId": "019ccc16-2a8e-7961-98ec-649600e7d06a"
<   }
< }
```
2026-03-08 18:07:46 -07:00
Michael Bolin
3b5fe5ca35 protocol: keep root carveouts sandboxed (#13452)
## Why

A restricted filesystem policy that grants `:root` read or write access
but also carries explicit deny entries should still behave like scoped
access with carveouts, not like unrestricted disk access.

Without that distinction, later platform backends cannot preserve
blocked subpaths under root-level permissions because the protocol layer
reports the policy as fully unrestricted.

## What changed

- taught `FileSystemSandboxPolicy` to treat root access plus explicit
deny entries as scoped access rather than full-disk access
- derived readable and writable roots from the filesystem root when root
access is combined with carveouts, while preserving the denied paths as
read-only subpaths
- added protocol coverage for root-write policies with carveouts and a
core sandboxing regression so those policies still require platform
sandboxing

## Verification

- added protocol coverage in `protocol/src/permissions.rs` and
`protocol/src/protocol.rs` for root access with explicit carveouts
- added platform-sandbox regression coverage in
`core/src/sandboxing/mod.rs`
- verified the current PR state with `just clippy`




---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/13452).
* #13453
* __->__ #13452
* #13451
* #13449
* #13448
* #13445
* #13440
* #13439

---------

Co-authored-by: viyatb-oai <viyatb@openai.com>
2026-03-07 21:15:47 -08:00
Michael Bolin
07a30da3fb linux-sandbox: plumb split sandbox policies through helper (#13449)
## Why

The Linux sandbox helper still only accepted the legacy `SandboxPolicy`
payload.

That meant the runtime could compute split filesystem and network
policies, but the helper would immediately collapse them back to the
compatibility projection before applying seccomp or staging the
bubblewrap inner command.

## What changed

- added hidden `--file-system-sandbox-policy` and
`--network-sandbox-policy` flags alongside the legacy `--sandbox-policy`
flag so the helper can migrate incrementally
- updated the core-side Landlock wrapper to pass the split policies
explicitly when launching `codex-linux-sandbox`
- added helper-side resolution logic that accepts either the legacy
policy alone or a complete split-policy pair and normalizes that into
one effective configuration
- switched Linux helper network decisions to use `NetworkSandboxPolicy`
directly
- added `FromStr` support for the split policy types so the helper can
parse them from CLI JSON

## Verification

- added helper coverage in `linux-sandbox/src/linux_run_main_tests.rs`
for split-policy flags and policy resolution
- added CLI argument coverage in `core/src/landlock.rs`
- verified the current PR state with `just clippy`




---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/13449).
* #13453
* #13452
* #13451
* __->__ #13449
* #13448
* #13445
* #13440
* #13439

---------

Co-authored-by: viyatb-oai <viyatb@openai.com>
2026-03-07 19:40:10 -08:00
Michael Bolin
b52c18e414 protocol: derive effective file access from filesystem policies (#13440)
## Why

`#13434` and `#13439` introduce split filesystem and network policies,
but the only code that could answer basic filesystem questions like "is
access effectively unrestricted?" or "which roots are readable and
writable for this cwd?" still lived on the legacy `SandboxPolicy` path.

That would force later backends to either keep projecting through
`SandboxPolicy` or duplicate path-resolution logic. This PR moves those
queries onto `FileSystemSandboxPolicy` itself so later runtime and
platform changes can consume the split policy directly.

## What changed

- added `FileSystemSandboxPolicy` helpers for full-read/full-write
checks, platform-default reads, readable roots, writable roots, and
explicit unreadable roots resolved against a cwd
- added a shared helper for the default read-only carveouts under
writable roots so the legacy and split-policy paths stay aligned
- added protocol coverage for full-access detection and derived
readable, writable, and unreadable roots

## Verification

- added protocol coverage in `protocol/src/protocol.rs` and
`protocol/src/permissions.rs` for full-root access and derived
filesystem roots
- verified the current PR state with `just clippy`




---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/13440).
* #13453
* #13452
* #13451
* #13449
* #13448
* #13445
* __->__ #13440
* #13439

---------

Co-authored-by: viyatb-oai <viyatb@openai.com>
2026-03-07 03:49:29 +00:00
Michael Bolin
f82678b2a4 config: add initial support for the new permission profile config language in config.toml (#13434)
## Why

`SandboxPolicy` currently mixes together three separate concerns:

- parsing layered config from `config.toml`
- representing filesystem sandbox state
- carrying basic network policy alongside filesystem choices

That makes the existing config awkward to extend and blocks the new TOML
proposal where `[permissions]` becomes a table of named permission
profiles selected by `default_permissions`. (The idea is that if
`default_permissions` is not specified, we assume the user is opting
into the "traditional" way to configure the sandbox.)

This PR adds the config-side plumbing for those profiles while still
projecting back to the legacy `SandboxPolicy` shape that the current
macOS and Linux sandbox backends consume.

It also tightens the filesystem profile model so scoped entries only
exist for `:project_roots`, and so nested keys must stay within a
project root instead of using `.` or `..` traversal.

This drops support for the short-lived `[permissions.network]` in
`config.toml` because now that would be interpreted as a profile named
`network` within `[permissions]`.

## What Changed

- added `PermissionsToml`, `PermissionProfileToml`,
`FilesystemPermissionsToml`, and `FilesystemPermissionToml` so config
can parse named profiles under `[permissions.<profile>.filesystem]`
- added top-level `default_permissions` selection, validation for
missing or unknown profiles, and compilation from a named profile into
split `FileSystemSandboxPolicy` and `NetworkSandboxPolicy` values
- taught config loading to choose between the legacy `sandbox_mode` path
and the profile-based path without breaking legacy users
- introduced `codex-protocol::permissions` for the split filesystem and
network sandbox types, and stored those alongside the legacy projected
`sandbox_policy` in runtime `Permissions`
- modeled `FileSystemSpecialPath` so only `ProjectRoots` can carry a
nested `subpath`, matching the intended config syntax instead of
allowing invalid states for other special paths
- restricted scoped filesystem maps to `:project_roots`, with validation
that nested entries are non-empty descendant paths and cannot use `.` or
`..` to escape the project root
- kept existing runtime consumers working by projecting
`FileSystemSandboxPolicy` back into `SandboxPolicy`, with an explicit
error for profiles that request writes outside the workspace root
- loaded proxy settings from top-level `[network]`
- regenerated `core/config.schema.json`

## Verification

- added config coverage for profile deserialization,
`default_permissions` selection, top-level `[network]` loading, network
enablement, rejection of writes outside the workspace root, rejection of
nested entries for non-`:project_roots` special paths, and rejection of
parent-directory traversal in `:project_roots` maps
- added protocol coverage for the legacy bridge rejecting non-workspace
writes

## Docs

- update the Codex config docs on developers.openai.com/codex to
document named `[permissions.<profile>]` entries, `default_permissions`,
scoped `:project_roots` syntax, the descendant-path restriction for
nested `:project_roots` entries, and top-level `[network]` proxy
configuration






---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/13434).
* #13453
* #13452
* #13451
* #13449
* #13448
* #13445
* #13440
* #13439
* __->__ #13434
2026-03-06 15:39:13 -08:00
Matthew Zeng
98dca99db7 [elicitations] Switch to use MCP style elicitation payload for mcp tool approvals. (#13621)
- [x] Switch to use MCP style elicitation payload for mcp tool
approvals.
- [ ] TODO: Update the UI to support the full spec.
2026-03-06 01:50:26 -08:00
Won Park
ee1a20258a Enabling CWD Saving for Image-Gen (#13607)
Codex now saves the generated image on to your current working
directory.
2026-03-06 00:47:21 -08:00
viyatb-oai
6a79ed5920 refactor: remove proxy admin endpoint (#13687)
## Summary
- delete the network proxy admin server and its runtime listener/task
plumbing
- remove the admin endpoint config, runtime, requirement, protocol,
schema, and debug-surface fields
- update proxy docs to reflect the remaining HTTP and SOCKS listeners
only
2026-03-05 22:03:16 -08:00
Owen Lin
aa3fe8abf8 feat(core): persist trace_id for turns in RolloutItem::TurnContext (#13602)
This PR adds a durable trace linkage for each turn by storing the active
trace ID on the rollout TurnContext record stored in session rollout
files.

Before this change, we propagated trace context at runtime but didn’t
persist a stable per-turn trace key in rollout history. That made
after-the-fact debugging harder (for example, mapping a historical turn
to the corresponding trace in datadog). This sets us up for much easier
debugging in the future.

### What changed
- Added an optional `trace_id` to TurnContextItem (rollout schema).
- Added a small OTEL helper to read the current span trace ID.
- Captured `trace_id` when creating `TurnContext` and included it in
`to_turn_context_item()`.
- Updated tests and fixtures that construct TurnContextItem so
older/no-trace cases still work.

### Why this approach
TurnContext is already the canonical durable per-turn metadata in
rollout. This keeps ownership clean: trace linkage lives with other
persisted turn metadata.
2026-03-05 13:26:48 -08:00
Owen Lin
926b2f19e8 feat(app-server): support mcp elicitations in v2 api (#13425)
This adds a first-class server request for MCP server elicitations:
`mcpServer/elicitation/request`.

Until now, MCP elicitation requests only showed up as a raw
`codex/event/elicitation_request` event from core. That made it hard for
v2 clients to handle elicitations using the same request/response flow
as other server-driven interactions (like shell and `apply_patch`
tools).

This also updates the underlying MCP elicitation request handling in
core to pass through the full MCP request (including URL and form data)
so we can expose it properly in app-server.

### Why not `item/mcpToolCall/elicitationRequest`?
This is because MCP elicitations are related to MCP servers first, and
only optionally to a specific MCP tool call.

In the MCP protocol, elicitation is a server-to-client capability: the
server sends `elicitation/create`, and the client replies with an
elicitation result. RMCP models it that way as well.

In practice an elicitation is often triggered by an MCP tool call, but
not always.

### What changed
- add `mcpServer/elicitation/request` to the v2 app-server API
- translate core `codex/event/elicitation_request` events into the new
v2 server request
- map client responses back into `Op::ResolveElicitation` so the MCP
server can continue
- update app-server docs and generated protocol schema
- add an end-to-end app-server test that covers the full round trip
through a real RMCP elicitation flow
- The new test exercises a realistic case where an MCP tool call
triggers an elicitation, the app-server emits
mcpServer/elicitation/request, the client accepts it, and the tool call
resumes and completes successfully.

### app-server API flow
- Client starts a thread with `thread/start`.
- Client starts a turn with `turn/start`.
- App-server sends `item/started` for the `mcpToolCall`.
- While that tool call is in progress, app-server sends
`mcpServer/elicitation/request`.
- Client responds to that request with `{ action: "accept" | "decline" |
"cancel" }`.
- App-server sends `serverRequest/resolved`.
- App-server sends `item/completed` for the mcpToolCall.
- App-server sends `turn/completed`.
- If the turn is interrupted while the elicitation is pending,
app-server still sends `serverRequest/resolved` before the turn
finishes.
2026-03-05 07:20:20 -08:00