## Problem This addresses several user-reported cases where active goals were paused even though the user had not explicitly asked for that transition: - the guardian approval-review circuit breaker interrupted a turn and implicitly paused the goal - a shutdown in one app-server instance could pause a goal while a second instance was still actively running the same thread - steering-style interrupts could also pause the goal even though they are meant to redirect work, not stop the goal lifecycle The common problem was that core treated `TurnAbortReason::Interrupted` as an implicit request to transition the persisted goal to `paused`. That made unrelated interrupt paths mutate goal state as a side effect, and in the multi-app-server case it allowed stale process teardown to pause a live goal owned by another running client. After this change, transitioning a goal to `paused` is always an explicit action performed by a client or another intentional goal-state mutation. It is never an implicit transition triggered by generic interrupt handling. Refs #22884. ## What changed - Remove the goal runtime path that paused active goals after interrupted task aborts. - Drop the now-unused abort reason from `GoalRuntimeEvent::TaskAborted`. - Update the focused regression coverage so an interrupted active goal still accounts usage but remains `active`.
npm i -g @openai/codex
or brew install --cask codex
Codex CLI is a coding agent from OpenAI that runs locally on your computer.
If you want Codex in your code editor (VS Code, Cursor, Windsurf), install in your IDE.
If you want the desktop app experience, run
codex app or visit the Codex App page.
If you are looking for the cloud-based agent from OpenAI, Codex Web, go to chatgpt.com/codex.
Quickstart
Installing and running Codex CLI
Install globally with your preferred package manager:
# Install using npm
npm install -g @openai/codex
# Install using Homebrew
brew install --cask codex
Then simply run codex to get started.
You can also go to the latest GitHub Release and download the appropriate binary for your platform.
Each GitHub Release contains many executables, but in practice, you likely want one of these:
- macOS
- Apple Silicon/arm64:
codex-aarch64-apple-darwin.tar.gz - x86_64 (older Mac hardware):
codex-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar.gz
- Apple Silicon/arm64:
- Linux
- x86_64:
codex-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl.tar.gz - arm64:
codex-aarch64-unknown-linux-musl.tar.gz
- x86_64:
Each archive contains a single entry with the platform baked into the name (e.g., codex-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl), so you likely want to rename it to codex after extracting it.
Using Codex with your ChatGPT plan
Run codex and select Sign in with ChatGPT. We recommend signing into your ChatGPT account to use Codex as part of your Plus, Pro, Business, Edu, or Enterprise plan. Learn more about what's included in your ChatGPT plan.
You can also use Codex with an API key, but this requires additional setup.
Docs
This repository is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.
