Files
codex/sdk/typescript
Michael Bolin 95845cf6ce fix: disable plugins in SDK integration tests (#16036)
## Why

The TypeScript SDK tests create a fresh `CODEX_HOME` for each Jest case
and delete it during teardown. That cleanup has been flaking because the
real `codex` binary can still be doing background curated-plugin startup
sync under `.tmp/plugins-clone-*`, which races the test harness's
recursive delete and leaves `ENOTEMPTY` failures behind.

This path is unrelated to what the SDK tests are exercising, so letting
plugin startup run during these tests only adds nondeterministic
filesystem activity. This showed up recently in the `sdk` CI lane for
[#16031](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/16031).

## What Changed

- updated `sdk/typescript/tests/testCodex.ts` to merge test config
through a single helper
- disabled `features.plugins` unconditionally for SDK integration tests
so the CLI does not start curated-plugin sync in the temporary
`CODEX_HOME`
- preserved other explicit feature overrides from individual tests while
forcing `plugins` back to `false`
- kept the existing mock-provider override behavior intact for
SSE-backed tests

## Verification

- `pnpm test --runInBand`
- `pnpm lint`
2026-03-27 13:04:34 -07:00
..
2025-10-01 12:39:04 -07:00
2025-09-29 13:27:13 -07:00

Codex SDK

Embed the Codex agent in your workflows and apps.

The TypeScript SDK wraps the codex CLI from @openai/codex. It spawns the CLI and exchanges JSONL events over stdin/stdout.

Installation

npm install @openai/codex-sdk

Requires Node.js 18+.

Quickstart

import { Codex } from "@openai/codex-sdk";

const codex = new Codex();
const thread = codex.startThread();
const turn = await thread.run("Diagnose the test failure and propose a fix");

console.log(turn.finalResponse);
console.log(turn.items);

Call run() repeatedly on the same Thread instance to continue that conversation.

const nextTurn = await thread.run("Implement the fix");

Streaming responses

run() buffers events until the turn finishes. To react to intermediate progress—tool calls, streaming responses, and file change notifications—use runStreamed() instead, which returns an async generator of structured events.

const { events } = await thread.runStreamed("Diagnose the test failure and propose a fix");

for await (const event of events) {
  switch (event.type) {
    case "item.completed":
      console.log("item", event.item);
      break;
    case "turn.completed":
      console.log("usage", event.usage);
      break;
  }
}

Structured output

The Codex agent can produce a JSON response that conforms to a specified schema. The schema can be provided for each turn as a plain JSON object.

const schema = {
  type: "object",
  properties: {
    summary: { type: "string" },
    status: { type: "string", enum: ["ok", "action_required"] },
  },
  required: ["summary", "status"],
  additionalProperties: false,
} as const;

const turn = await thread.run("Summarize repository status", { outputSchema: schema });
console.log(turn.finalResponse);

You can also create a JSON schema from a Zod schema using the zod-to-json-schema package and setting the target to "openAi".

const schema = z.object({
  summary: z.string(),
  status: z.enum(["ok", "action_required"]),
});

const turn = await thread.run("Summarize repository status", {
  outputSchema: zodToJsonSchema(schema, { target: "openAi" }),
});
console.log(turn.finalResponse);

Attaching images

Provide structured input entries when you need to include images alongside text. Text entries are concatenated into the final prompt while image entries are passed to the Codex CLI via --image.

const turn = await thread.run([
  { type: "text", text: "Describe these screenshots" },
  { type: "local_image", path: "./ui.png" },
  { type: "local_image", path: "./diagram.jpg" },
]);

Resuming an existing thread

Threads are persisted in ~/.codex/sessions. If you lose the in-memory Thread object, reconstruct it with resumeThread() and keep going.

const savedThreadId = process.env.CODEX_THREAD_ID!;
const thread = codex.resumeThread(savedThreadId);
await thread.run("Implement the fix");

Working directory controls

Codex runs in the current working directory by default. To avoid unrecoverable errors, Codex requires the working directory to be a Git repository. You can skip the Git repository check by passing the skipGitRepoCheck option when creating a thread.

const thread = codex.startThread({
  workingDirectory: "/path/to/project",
  skipGitRepoCheck: true,
});

Controlling the Codex CLI environment

By default, the Codex CLI inherits the Node.js process environment. Provide the optional env parameter when instantiating the Codex client to fully control which variables the CLI receives—useful for sandboxed hosts like Electron apps.

const codex = new Codex({
  env: {
    PATH: "/usr/local/bin",
  },
});

The SDK still injects its required variables (such as CODEX_API_KEY) on top of the environment you provide. If you set baseUrl, the SDK passes it as a --config openai_base_url=... override.

Passing --config overrides

Use the config option to provide additional Codex CLI configuration overrides. The SDK accepts a JSON object, flattens it into dotted paths, and serializes values as TOML literals before passing them as repeated --config key=value flags.

const codex = new Codex({
  config: {
    show_raw_agent_reasoning: true,
    sandbox_workspace_write: { network_access: true },
  },
});

Thread options still take precedence for overlapping settings because they are emitted after these global overrides.