Files
codex/codex-rs
efrazer-oai d32cb2c6ac fix: harden plugin creator sharing validation (#22893)
# Summary

Before this change, the sample plugin creator could emit
placeholder-heavy manifests that fail workspace sharing, and it chose a
repo-local marketplace implicitly whenever it ran from inside a git
checkout.

This PR makes generated plugins share-ready by default. It switches
creation to the personal marketplace unless the caller explicitly opts
into repo-local paths, adds a validator that mirrors the workspace
plugin ingestion contract, and updates the skill prompt and docs to
describe the real flow.

The goal is to stop malformed generated plugins before they reach
sharing and to make the default placement match the personal marketplace
behavior users expect.

## Changes

- Generate share-safe plugin manifests instead of `[TODO: ...]`
placeholder payloads.
- Default plugin and marketplace creation to `~/plugins` and
`~/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json`.
- Keep repo-local marketplace creation available through explicit
`--path` and `--marketplace-path` arguments.
- Add `validate_plugin.py` to check manifests, companion files, skill
frontmatter, skill agent YAML, asset paths, and backend-shaped contracts
before sharing.
- Refresh the plugin creator skill text, reference docs, and default
prompt to describe validation and the personal default.

## Design decisions

- The validator tracks the workspace ingestion schema directly,
including the required `defaultPrompt` alias handling and skill
`agents/openai.yaml` checks.
- The validator keeps one intentional extra preflight rule: leftover
`[TODO: ...]` placeholders are rejected before sharing even when a
single placeholder would not independently violate backend type
validation.
- Repo-local creation stays possible, but it is now explicit instead of
cwd-sensitive.

## Testing

Tests: targeted Python syntax checks, plugin skill validation, staged
diff whitespace validation, 15 generated plugin smoke runs, backend
manifest-schema acceptance for all 15 generated bundles, and a git-repo
cwd regression proving the creator still writes to the personal
marketplace by default.
2026-05-18 11:22:42 -07:00
..
2026-05-18 19:25:27 +02:00
2026-05-18 15:19:23 +02:00
2026-05-18 13:32:21 +02:00

Codex CLI (Rust Implementation)

We provide Codex CLI as a standalone executable to ensure a zero-dependency install.

Installing Codex

Today, the easiest way to install Codex is via npm:

npm i -g @openai/codex
codex

You can also install via Homebrew (brew install --cask codex) or download a platform-specific release directly from our GitHub Releases.

Documentation quickstart

What's new in the Rust CLI

The Rust implementation is now the maintained Codex CLI and serves as the default experience. It includes a number of features that the legacy TypeScript CLI never supported.

Config

Codex supports a rich set of configuration options. Note that the Rust CLI uses config.toml instead of config.json. See docs/config.md for details.

Model Context Protocol Support

MCP client

Codex CLI functions as an MCP client that allows the Codex CLI and IDE extension to connect to MCP servers on startup. See the configuration documentation for details.

MCP server (experimental)

Codex can be launched as an MCP server by running codex mcp-server. This allows other MCP clients to use Codex as a tool for another agent.

Use the @modelcontextprotocol/inspector to try it out:

npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector codex mcp-server

Use codex mcp to add/list/get/remove MCP server launchers defined in config.toml, and codex mcp-server to run the MCP server directly.

Notifications

You can enable notifications by configuring a script that is run whenever the agent finishes a turn. The notify documentation includes a detailed example that explains how to get desktop notifications via terminal-notifier on macOS. When Codex detects that it is running under WSL 2 inside Windows Terminal (WT_SESSION is set), the TUI automatically falls back to native Windows toast notifications so approval prompts and completed turns surface even though Windows Terminal does not implement OSC 9.

codex exec to run Codex programmatically/non-interactively

To run Codex non-interactively, run codex exec PROMPT (you can also pass the prompt via stdin) and Codex will work on your task until it decides that it is done and exits. If you provide both a prompt argument and piped stdin, Codex appends stdin as a <stdin> block after the prompt so patterns like echo "my output" | codex exec "Summarize this concisely" work naturally. Output is printed to the terminal directly. You can set the RUST_LOG environment variable to see more about what's going on. Use codex exec --ephemeral ... to run without persisting session rollout files to disk.

Experimenting with the Codex Sandbox

To test to see what happens when a command is run under the sandbox provided by Codex, we provide the following subcommands in Codex CLI:

# macOS
codex sandbox macos [--log-denials] [COMMAND]...

# Linux
codex sandbox linux [COMMAND]...

# Windows
codex sandbox windows [COMMAND]...

# Legacy aliases
codex debug seatbelt [--log-denials] [COMMAND]...
codex debug landlock [COMMAND]...

To try a writable legacy sandbox mode with these commands, pass an explicit config override such as -c 'sandbox_mode="workspace-write"'.

Selecting a sandbox policy via --sandbox

The Rust CLI exposes a dedicated --sandbox (-s) flag that lets you pick the sandbox policy without having to reach for the generic -c/--config option:

# Run Codex with the default, read-only sandbox
codex --sandbox read-only

# Allow the agent to write within the current workspace while still blocking network access
codex --sandbox workspace-write

# Danger! Disable sandboxing entirely (only do this if you are already running in a container or other isolated env)
codex --sandbox danger-full-access

The same setting can be persisted in ~/.codex/config.toml via the top-level sandbox_mode = "MODE" key, e.g. sandbox_mode = "workspace-write". In workspace-write, Codex also includes ~/.codex/memories in its writable roots so memory maintenance does not require an extra approval.

Code Organization

This folder is the root of a Cargo workspace. It contains quite a bit of experimental code, but here are the key crates:

  • core/ contains the business logic for Codex. Ultimately, we hope this becomes a library crate that is generally useful for building other Rust/native applications that use Codex.
  • exec/ "headless" CLI for use in automation.
  • tui/ CLI that launches a fullscreen TUI built with Ratatui.
  • cli/ CLI multitool that provides the aforementioned CLIs via subcommands.

If you want to contribute or inspect behavior in detail, start by reading the module-level README.md files under each crate and run the project workspace from the top-level codex-rs directory so shared config, features, and build scripts stay aligned.