Commit Graph

4 Commits

  • feat: add justification arg to prefix_rule() in *.rules (#8751)
    Adds an optional `justification` parameter to the `prefix_rule()`
    execpolicy DSL so policy authors can attach human-readable rationale to
    a rule. That justification is propagated through parsing/matching and
    can be surfaced to the model (or approval UI) when a command is blocked
    or requires approval.
    
    When a command is rejected (or gated behind approval) due to policy, a
    generic message makes it hard for the model/user to understand what went
    wrong and what to do instead. Allowing policy authors to supply a short
    justification improves debuggability and helps guide the model toward
    compliant alternatives.
    
    Example:
    
    ```python
    prefix_rule(
        pattern = ["git", "push"],
        decision = "forbidden",
        justification = "pushing is blocked in this repo",
    )
    ```
    
    If Codex tried to run `git push origin main`, now the failure would
    include:
    
    ```
    `git push origin main` rejected: pushing is blocked in this repo
    ```
    
    whereas previously, all it was told was:
    
    ```
    execpolicy forbids this command
    ```
  • Update cargo to 2024 edition (#842)
    Some effects of this change:
    - New formatting changes across many files. No functionality changes
    should occur from that.
    - Calls to `set_env` are considered unsafe, since this only happens in
    tests we wrap them in `unsafe` blocks
  • feat: introduce codex_execpolicy crate for defining "safe" commands (#634)
    As described in detail in `codex-rs/execpolicy/README.md` introduced in
    this PR, `execpolicy` is a tool that lets you define a set of _patterns_
    used to match [`execv(3)`](https://linux.die.net/man/3/execv)
    invocations. When a pattern is matched, `execpolicy` returns the parsed
    version in a structured form that is amenable to static analysis.
    
    The primary use case is to define patterns match commands that should be
    auto-approved by a tool such as Codex. This supports a richer pattern
    matching mechanism that the sort of prefix-matching we have done to
    date, e.g.:
    
    
    https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/5e40d9d2211737f46136610497bcd9a8271009e0/codex-cli/src/approvals.ts#L333-L354
    
    Note we are still playing with the API and the `system_path` option in
    particular still needs some work.