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51 Commits

  • 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>
  • 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>
  • 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)
  • app-server: Add streaming and tty/pty capabilities to command/exec (#13640)
    * Add an ability to stream stdin, stdout, and stderr
    * Streaming of stdout and stderr has a configurable cap for total amount
    of transmitted bytes (with an ability to disable it)
    * Add support for overriding environment variables
    * Add an ability to terminate running applications (using
    `command/exec/terminate`)
    * Add TTY/PTY support, with an ability to resize the terminal (using
    `command/exec/resize`)
  • add @plugin mentions (#13510)
    ## Note-- added plugin mentions via @, but that conflicts with file
    mentions
    
    depends and builds upon #13433.
    
    - introduces explicit `@plugin` mentions. this injects the plugin's mcp
    servers, app names, and skill name format into turn context as a dev
    message.
    - we do not yet have UI for these mentions, so we currently parse raw
    text (as opposed to skills and apps which have UI chips, autocomplete,
    etc.) this depends on a `plugins/list` app-server endpoint we can feed
    the UI with, which is upcoming
    - also annotate mcp and app tool descriptions with the plugin(s) they
    come from. this gives the model a first class way of understanding what
    tools come from which plugins, which will help implicit invocation.
    
    ### Tests
    Added and updated tests, unit and integration. Also confirmed locally a
    raw `@plugin` injects the dev message, and the model knows about its
    apps, mcps, and skills.
  • image-gen-event/client_processing (#13512)
    enabling client-side to process with image-generation capabilities
    (setting app-server)
  • feat(app-server): add a skills/changed v2 notification (#13414)
    This adds a first-class app-server v2 `skills/changed` notification for
    the existing skills live-reload signal.
    
    Before this change, clients only had the legacy raw
    `codex/event/skills_update_available` event. With this PR, v2 clients
    can listen for a typed JSON-RPC notification instead of depending on the
    legacy `codex/event/*` stream, which we want to remove soon.
  • [codex] include plan type in account updates (#13181)
    This change fixes a Codex app account-state sync bug where clients could
    know the user was signed in but still miss the ChatGPT subscription
    tier, which could lead to incorrect upgrade messaging for paid users.
    
    The root cause was that `account/updated` only carried `authMode` while
    plan information was available separately via `account/read` and
    rate-limit snapshots, so this update adds `planType` to
    `account/updated`, populates it consistently across login and refresh
    paths.
  • app-server: Add ephemeral field to Thread object (#13084)
    Currently there is no alternative way to know that thread is ephemeral,
    only client which did create it has the knowledge.
  • app-server: Replay pending item requests on thread/resume (#12560)
    Replay pending client requests after `thread/resume` and emit resolved
    notifications when those requests clear so approval/input UI state stays
    in sync after reconnects and across subscribed clients.
    
    Affected RPCs:
    - `item/commandExecution/requestApproval`
    - `item/fileChange/requestApproval`
    - `item/tool/requestUserInput`
    
    Motivation:
    - Resumed clients need to see pending approval/input requests that were
    already outstanding before the reconnect.
    - Clients also need an explicit signal when a pending request resolves
    or is cleared so stale UI can be removed on turn start, completion, or
    interruption.
    
    Implementation notes:
    - Use pending client requests from `OutgoingMessageSender` in order to
    replay them after `thread/resume` attaches the connection, using
    original request ids.
    - Emit `serverRequest/resolved` when pending requests are answered
    or cleared by lifecycle cleanup.
    - Update the app-server protocol schema, generated TypeScript bindings,
    and README docs for the replay/resolution flow.
    
    High-level test plan:
    - Added automated coverage for replaying pending command execution and
    file change approval requests on `thread/resume`.
    - Added automated coverage for resolved notifications in command
    approval, file change approval, request_user_input, turn start, and turn
    interrupt flows.
    - Verified schema/docs updates in the relevant protocol and app-server
    tests.
    
    Manual testing:
    - Tested reconnect/resume with multiple connections.
    - Confirmed state stayed in sync between connections.
  • feat(app-server): thread/unsubscribe API (#10954)
    Adds a new v2 app-server API for a client to be able to unsubscribe to a
    thread:
    - New RPC method: `thread/unsubscribe`
    - New server notification: `thread/closed`
    
    Today clients can start/resume/archive threads, but there wasn’t a way
    to explicitly unload a live thread from memory without archiving it.
    With `thread/unsubscribe`, a client can indicate it is no longer
    actively working with a live Thread. If this is the only client
    subscribed to that given thread, the thread will be automatically closed
    by app-server, at which point the server will send `thread/closed` and
    `thread/status/changed` with `status: notLoaded` notifications.
    
    This gives clients a way to prevent long-running app-server processes
    from accumulating too many thread (and related) objects in memory.
    
    Closed threads will also be removed from `thread/loaded/list`.
  • feat(app-server): add ThreadItem::DynamicToolCall (#12732)
    Previously, clients would call `thread/start` with dynamic_tools set,
    and when a model invokes a dynamic tool, it would just make the
    server->client `item/tool/call` request and wait for the client's
    response to complete the tool call. This works, but it doesn't have an
    `item/started` or `item/completed` event.
    
    Now we are doing this:
    - [new] emit `item/started` with `DynamicToolCall` populated with the
    call arguments
    - send an `item/tool/call` server request
    - [new] once the client responds, emit `item/completed` with
    `DynamicToolCall` populated with the response.
    
    Also, with `persistExtendedHistory: true`, dynamic tool calls are now
    reconstructable in `thread/read` and `thread/resume` as
    `ThreadItem::DynamicToolCall`.
  • Add app-server v2 thread realtime API (#12715)
    Add experimental `thread/realtime/*` v2 requests and notifications, then
    route app-server realtime events through that thread-scoped surface with
    integration coverage.
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • ignore v1 in JSON schema codegen (#12408)
    ## Why
    
    The generated unnamespaced JSON envelope schemas (`ClientRequest` and
    `ServerNotification`) still contained both v1 and v2 variants, which
    pulled legacy v1/core types and v2 types into the same `definitions`
    graph. That caused `schemars` to produce numeric suffix names (for
    example `AskForApproval2`, `ByteRange2`, `MessagePhase2`).
    
    This PR moves JSON codegen toward v2-only output while preserving the
    unnamespaced envelope artifacts, and avoids reintroducing numeric-suffix
    tolerance by removing the v1/internal-only variants that caused the
    collisions in those envelope schemas.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - In `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/export.rs`, JSON generation now
    excludes v1 schema artifacts (`v1/*`) while continuing to emit
    unnamespaced/root JSON schemas and the JSON bundle.
    - Added a narrow JSON v1 allowlist (`JSON_V1_ALLOWLIST`) so
    `InitializeParams` and `InitializeResponse` are still emitted.
    - Added JSON-only post-processing for the mixed envelope schemas before
    collision checks run:
    - `ClientRequest`: strips v1 request variants from the generated `oneOf`
    using the temporary `V1_CLIENT_REQUEST_METHODS` list
    - `ServerNotification`: strips v1 notifications plus the internal-only
    `rawResponseItem/completed` notification using the temporary
    `EXCLUDED_SERVER_NOTIFICATION_METHODS_FOR_JSON` list
    - Added a temporary local-definition pruning pass for those envelope
    schemas so now-unreferenced v1/core definitions are removed from
    `definitions` after method filtering.
    - Updated the variant-title naming heuristic for single-property literal
    object variants to use the literal value (when available), avoiding
    collisions like multiple `state`-only variants all deriving the same
    title.
    - Collision handling remains fail-fast (no numeric suffix fallback map
    in this PR path).
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `just write-app-server-schema`
    
    ---
    [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
    Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
    with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/12408).
    * __->__ #12408
    * #12406
  • feat: use OAI Responses API MessagePhase type directly in App Server v2 (#12422)
    https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/10455 introduced the `phase` field,
    and then https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/12072 introduced a
    `MessagePhase` type in `v2.rs` that paralleled the `MessagePhase` type
    in `codex-rs/protocol/src/models.rs`.
    
    The app server protocol prefers `camelCase` while the Responses API uses
    `snake_case`, so this meant we had two versions of `MessagePhase` with
    different serialization rules. When the app server protocol refers to
    types from the Responses API, we use the wire format of the the
    Responses API even though it is inconsistent with the app server API.
    
    This PR deletes `MessagePhase` from `v2.rs` and consolidates on the
    Responses API version to eliminate confusion.
  • Wire realtime api to core (#12268)
    - Introduce `RealtimeConversationManager` for realtime API management 
    - Add `op::conversation` to start conversation, insert audio, insert
    text, and close conversation.
    - emit conversation lifecycle and realtime events.
    - Move shared realtime payload types into codex-protocol and add core
    e2e websocket tests for start/replace/transport-close paths.
    
    Things to consider:
    - Should we use the same `op::` and `Events` channel to carry audio? I
    think we should try this simple approach and later we can create
    separate one if the channels got congested.
    - Sending text updates to the client: we can start simple and later
    restrict that.
    - Provider auth isn't wired for now intentionally
  • Add field to Thread object for the latest rename set for a given thread (#12301)
    Exposes through the app server updated names set for a thread. This
    enables other surfaces to use the core as the source of truth for thread
    naming. `threadName` is gathered using the helper functions used to
    interact with `session_index.jsonl`, and is hydrated in:
    - `thread/list`
    - `thread/read`
    - `thread/resume`
    - `thread/unarchive`
    - `thread/rollback`
    
    We don't do this for `thread/start` and `thread/fork`.
  • feat: cleaner TUI for sub-agents (#12327)
    <img width="760" height="496" alt="Screenshot 2026-02-20 at 14 31 25"
    src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1983b825-bb47-417e-9925-6f727af56765"
    />
  • feat: add nick name to sub-agents (#12320)
    Adding random nick name to sub-agents. Used for UX
    
    At the same time, also storing and wiring the role of the sub-agent
  • feat: add Reject approval policy with granular prompt rejection controls (#12087)
    ## Why
    
    We need a way to auto-reject specific approval prompt categories without
    switching all approvals off.
    
    The goal is to let users independently control:
    - sandbox escalation approvals,
    - execpolicy `prompt` rule approvals,
    - MCP elicitation prompts.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Added a new primary approval mode in `protocol/src/protocol.rs`:
    
    ```rust
    pub enum AskForApproval {
        // ...
        Reject(RejectConfig),
        // ...
    }
    
    pub struct RejectConfig {
        pub sandbox_approval: bool,
        pub rules: bool,
        pub mcp_elicitations: bool,
    }
    ```
    
    - Wired `RejectConfig` semantics through approval paths in `core`:
      - `core/src/exec_policy.rs`
        - rejects rule-driven prompts when `rules = true`
        - rejects sandbox/escalation prompts when `sandbox_approval = true`
    - preserves rule priority when both rule and sandbox prompt conditions
    are present
      - `core/src/tools/sandboxing.rs`
    - applies `sandbox_approval` to default exec approval decisions and
    sandbox-failure retry gating
      - `core/src/safety.rs`
    - keeps `Reject { all false }` behavior aligned with `OnRequest` for
    patch safety
        - rejects out-of-root patch approvals when `sandbox_approval = true`
      - `core/src/mcp_connection_manager.rs`
        - auto-declines MCP elicitations when `mcp_elicitations = true`
    
    - Ensured approval policy used by MCP elicitation flow stays in sync
    with constrained session policy updates.
    
    - Updated app-server v2 conversions and generated schema/TypeScript
    artifacts for the new `Reject` shape.
    
    ## Verification
    
    Added focused unit coverage for the new behavior in:
    - `core/src/exec_policy.rs`
    - `core/src/tools/sandboxing.rs`
    - `core/src/mcp_connection_manager.rs`
    - `core/src/safety.rs`
    - `core/src/tools/runtimes/apply_patch.rs`
    
    Key cases covered include rule-vs-sandbox prompt precedence, MCP
    auto-decline behavior, and patch/sandbox retry behavior under
    `RejectConfig`.
  • app-server: expose loaded thread status via read/list and notifications (#11786)
    Motivation
    - Today, a newly connected client has no direct way to determine the
    current runtime status of threads from read/list responses alone.
    - This forces clients to infer state from transient events, which can
    lead to stale or inconsistent UI when reconnecting or attaching late.
    
    Changes
    - Add `status` to `thread/read` responses.
    - Add `statuses` to `thread/list` responses.
    - Emit `thread/status/changed` notifications with `threadId` and the new
    status.
    - Track runtime status for all loaded threads and default unknown
    threads to `idle`.
    - Update protocol/docs/tests/schema fixtures for the revised API.
    
    Testing
    - Validated protocol API changes with automated protocol tests and
    regenerated schema/type fixtures.
    - Validated app-server behavior with unit and integration test suites,
    including status transitions and notifications.
  • app-server support for Windows sandbox setup. (#12025)
    app-server support for initiating Windows sandbox setup.
    server responds quickly to setup request and makes a future RPC call
    back to client when the setup finishes.
    
    The TUI implementation is unaffected but in a future PR I'll update the
    TUI to use the shared setup helper
    (`windows_sandbox.run_windows_sandbox_setup`)
  • feat(core): plumb distinct approval ids for command approvals (#12051)
    zsh fork PR stack:
    - https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/12051 👈 
    - https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/12052
    
    With upcoming support for a fork of zsh that allows us to intercept
    `execve` and run execpolicy checks for each subcommand as part of a
    `CommandExecution`, it will be possible for there to be multiple
    approval requests for a shell command like `/path/to/zsh -lc 'git status
    && rg \"TODO\" src && make test'`.
    
    To support that, this PR introduces a new `approval_id` field across
    core, protocol, and app-server so that we can associate approvals
    properly for subcommands.
  • app-server: Emit thread archive/unarchive notifications (#12030)
    * Add v2 server notifications `thread/archived` and `thread/unarchived`
    with a `threadId` payload.
    * Wire new events into `thread/archive` and `thread/unarchive` success
    paths.
    * Update app-server protocol/schema/docs accordingly.
    
    Testing:
    - Updated archive/unarchive end-to-end tests to verify both
    notifications are emitted with the expected thread id payload.
  • [apps] Expose more fields from apps listing endpoints. (#11706)
    - [x] Expose app_metadata, branding, and labels in AppInfo.
  • Feat: add model reroute notification (#12001)
    ### Summary
    Builiding off
    https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/11964/files/5c75aa7b89a70bc2cc410a6fd238749306ec4c5e#diff-058ae8f109a8b84b4b79bbfa45f522c2233b9d9e139696044ae374d50b6196e0,
    we have created a `model/rerouted` notification that captures the event
    so that consumers can render as expected. Keep the `EventMsg::Warning`
    path in core so that this does not affect TUI rendering.
    
    `model/rerouted` is meant to be generic to account for future usage
    including capacity planning etc.
  • feat(core): add structured network approval plumbing and policy decision model (#11672)
    ### Description
    #### Summary
    Introduces the core plumbing required for structured network approvals
    
    #### What changed
    - Added structured network policy decision modeling in core.
    - Added approval payload/context types needed for network approval
    semantics.
    - Wired shell/unified-exec runtime plumbing to consume structured
    decisions.
    - Updated related core error/event surfaces for structured handling.
    - Updated protocol plumbing used by core approval flow.
    - Included small CLI debug sandbox compatibility updates needed by this
    layer.
    
    #### Why
    establishes the minimal backend foundation for network approvals without
    yet changing high-level orchestration or TUI behavior.
    
    #### Notes
    - Behavior remains constrained by existing requirements/config gating.
    - Follow-up PRs in the stack handle orchestration, UX, and app-server
    integration.
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <199175422+chatgpt-codex-connector[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
  • [app-server] add fuzzyFileSearch/sessionCompleted (#11773)
    this is to allow the client to know when to stop showing a spinner.
  • [apps] Add is_enabled to app info. (#11417)
    - [x] Add is_enabled to app info and the response of `app/list`.
    - [x] Update TUI to have Enable/Disable button on the app detail page.
  • chore(core) Deprecate approval_policy: on-failure (#11631)
    ## Summary
    In an effort to start simplifying our sandbox setup, we're announcing
    this approval_policy as deprecated. In general, it performs worse than
    `on-request`, and we're focusing on making fewer sandbox configurations
    perform much better.
    
    ## Testing
    - [x] Tested locally
    - [x] Existing tests pass
  • feat(app-server): experimental flag to persist extended history (#11227)
    This PR adds an experimental `persist_extended_history` bool flag to
    app-server thread APIs so rollout logs can retain a richer set of
    EventMsgs for non-lossy Thread > Turn > ThreadItems reconstruction (i.e.
    on `thread/resume`).
    
    ### Motivation
    Today, our rollout recorder only persists a small subset (e.g. user
    message, reasoning, assistant message) of `EventMsg` types, dropping a
    good number (like command exec, file change, etc.) that are important
    for reconstructing full item history for `thread/resume`, `thread/read`,
    and `thread/fork`.
    
    Some clients want to be able to resume a thread without lossiness. This
    lossiness is primarily a UI thing, since what the model sees are
    `ResponseItem` and not `EventMsg`.
    
    ### Approach
    This change introduces an opt-in `persist_full_history` flag to preserve
    those events when you start/resume/fork a thread (defaults to `false`).
    
    This is done by adding an `EventPersistenceMode` to the rollout
    recorder:
    - `Limited` (existing behavior, default)
    - `Extended` (new opt-in behavior)
    
    In `Extended` mode, persist additional `EventMsg` variants needed for
    non-lossy app-server `ThreadItem` reconstruction. We now store the
    following ThreadItems that we didn't before:
    - web search
    - command execution
    - patch/file changes
    - MCP tool calls
    - image view calls
    - collab tool outcomes
    - context compaction
    - review mode enter/exit
    
    For **command executions** in particular, we truncate the output using
    the existing `truncate_text` from core to store an upper bound of 10,000
    bytes, which is also the default value for truncating tool outputs shown
    to the model. This keeps the size of the rollout file and command
    execution items returned over the wire reasonable.
    
    And we also persist `EventMsg::Error` which we can now map back to the
    Turn's status and populates the Turn's error metadata.
    
    #### Updates to EventMsgs
    To truly make `thread/resume` non-lossy, we also needed to persist the
    `status` on `EventMsg::CommandExecutionEndEvent` and
    `EventMsg::PatchApplyEndEvent`. Previously it was not obvious whether a
    command failed or was declined (similar for apply_patch). These
    EventMsgs were never persisted before so I made it a required field.
  • feat: make sandbox read access configurable with ReadOnlyAccess (#11387)
    `SandboxPolicy::ReadOnly` previously implied broad read access and could
    not express a narrower read surface.
    This change introduces an explicit read-access model so we can support
    user-configurable read restrictions in follow-up work, while preserving
    current behavior today.
    
    It also ensures unsupported backends fail closed for restricted-read
    policies instead of silently granting broader access than intended.
    
    ## What
    
    - Added `ReadOnlyAccess` in protocol with:
      - `Restricted { include_platform_defaults, readable_roots }`
      - `FullAccess`
    - Updated `SandboxPolicy` to carry read-access configuration:
      - `ReadOnly { access: ReadOnlyAccess }`
      - `WorkspaceWrite { ..., read_only_access: ReadOnlyAccess }`
    - Preserved existing behavior by defaulting current construction paths
    to `ReadOnlyAccess::FullAccess`.
    - Threaded the new fields through sandbox policy consumers and call
    sites across `core`, `tui`, `linux-sandbox`, `windows-sandbox`, and
    related tests.
    - Updated Seatbelt policy generation to honor restricted read roots by
    emitting scoped read rules when full read access is not granted.
    - Added fail-closed behavior on Linux and Windows backends when
    restricted read access is requested but not yet implemented there
    (`UnsupportedOperation`).
    - Regenerated app-server protocol schema and TypeScript artifacts,
    including `ReadOnlyAccess`.
    
    ## Compatibility / rollout
    
    - Runtime behavior remains unchanged by default (`FullAccess`).
    - API/schema changes are in place so future config wiring can enable
    restricted read access without another policy-shape migration.
  • change model cap to server overload (#11388)
    # External (non-OpenAI) Pull Request Requirements
    
    Before opening this Pull Request, please read the dedicated
    "Contributing" markdown file or your PR may be closed:
    https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/main/docs/contributing.md
    
    If your PR conforms to our contribution guidelines, replace this text
    with a detailed and high quality description of your changes.
    
    Include a link to a bug report or enhancement request.
  • feat: support multiple rate limits (#11260)
    Added multi-limit support end-to-end by carrying limit_name in
    rate-limit snapshots and handling multiple buckets instead of only
    codex.
    Extended /usage client parsing to consume additional_rate_limits
    Updated TUI /status and in-memory state to store/render per-limit
    snapshots
    Extended app-server rate-limit read response: kept rate_limits and added
    rate_limits_by_name.
    Adjusted usage-limit error messaging for non-default codex limit buckets
  • chore: persist turn_id in rollout session and make turn_id uuid based (#11246)
    Problem:
    1. turn id is constructed in-memory;
    2. on resuming threads, turn_id might not be unique;
    3. client cannot no the boundary of a turn from rollout files easily.
    
    This PR does three things:
    1. persist `task_started` and `task_complete` events;
    1. persist `turn_id` in rollout turn events;
    5. generate turn_id as unique uuids instead of incrementing it in
    memory.
    
    This helps us resolve the issue of clients wanting to have unique turn
    ids for resuming a thread, and knowing the boundry of each turn in
    rollout files.
    
    example debug logs
    ```
    2026-02-11T00:32:10.746876Z DEBUG codex_app_server_protocol::protocol::thread_history: built turn from rollout items turn_index=8 turn=Turn { id: "019c4a07-d809-74c3-bc4b-fd9618487b4b", items: [UserMessage { id: "item-24", content: [Text { text: "hi", text_elements: [] }] }, AgentMessage { id: "item-25", text: "Hi. I’m in the workspace with your current changes loaded and ready. Send the next task and I’ll execute it end-to-end." }], status: Completed, error: None }
    2026-02-11T00:32:10.746888Z DEBUG codex_app_server_protocol::protocol::thread_history: built turn from rollout items turn_index=9 turn=Turn { id: "019c4a18-1004-76c0-a0fb-a77610f6a9b8", items: [UserMessage { id: "item-26", content: [Text { text: "hello", text_elements: [] }] }, AgentMessage { id: "item-27", text: "Hello. Ready for the next change in `codex-rs`; I can continue from the current in-progress diff or start a new task." }], status: Completed, error: None }
    2026-02-11T00:32:10.746899Z DEBUG codex_app_server_protocol::protocol::thread_history: built turn from rollout items turn_index=10 turn=Turn { id: "019c4a19-41f0-7db0-ad78-74f1503baeb8", items: [UserMessage { id: "item-28", content: [Text { text: "hello", text_elements: [] }] }, AgentMessage { id: "item-29", text: "Hello. Send the specific change you want in `codex-rs`, and I’ll implement it and run the required checks." }], status: Completed, error: None }
    ```
    
    backward compatibility:
    if you try to resume an old session without task_started and
    task_complete event populated, the following happens:
    - If you resume and do nothing: those reconstructed historical IDs can
    differ next time you resume.
    - If you resume and send a new turn: the new turn gets a fresh UUID from
    live submission flow and is persisted, so that new turn’s ID is stable
    on later resumes.
    I think this behavior is fine, because we only care about deterministic
    turn id once a turn is triggered.
  • feat: retain NetworkProxy, when appropriate (#11207)
    As of this PR, `SessionServices` retains a
    `Option<StartedNetworkProxy>`, if appropriate.
    
    Now the `network` field on `Config` is `Option<NetworkProxySpec>`
    instead of `Option<NetworkProxy>`.
    
    Over in `Session::new()`, we invoke `NetworkProxySpec::start_proxy()` to
    create the `StartedNetworkProxy`, which is a new struct that retains the
    `NetworkProxy` as well as the `NetworkProxyHandle`. (Note that `Drop` is
    implemented for `NetworkProxyHandle` to ensure the proxies are shutdown
    when it is dropped.)
    
    The `NetworkProxy` from the `StartedNetworkProxy` is threaded through to
    the appropriate places.
    
    
    ---
    [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
    Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
    with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/11207).
    * #11285
    * __->__ #11207
  • fix(tui): keep unified exec summary on working line (#10962)
    ## Problem
    When unified-exec background sessions appear while the status indicator
    is visible, the bottom pane can grow by one row to show a dedicated
    footer line. That row insertion/removal makes the composer jump
    vertically and produces visible jitter/flicker during streaming turns.
    
    ## Mental model
    The bottom pane should expose one canonical background-exec summary
    string, but it should surface that string in only one place at a time:
    - if the status indicator row is visible, show the summary inline on
    that row;
    - if the status indicator row is hidden, show the summary as the
    standalone unified-exec footer row.
    
    This keeps status information visible while preserving a stable pane
    height.
    
    ## Non-goals
    This change does not alter unified-exec lifecycle, process tracking, or
    `/ps` behavior. It does not redesign status text copy, spinner timing,
    or interrupt handling semantics.
    
    ## Tradeoffs
    Inlining the summary preserves layout stability and keeps interrupt
    affordances in a fixed location, but it reduces horizontal space for
    long status/detail text in narrow terminals. We accept that truncation
    risk in exchange for removing vertical jitter and keeping the composer
    anchored.
    
    ## Architecture
    `UnifiedExecFooter` remains the source of truth for background-process
    summary copy via `summary_text()`. `BottomPane` mirrors that text into
    `StatusIndicatorWidget::update_inline_message()` whenever process state
    changes or a status widget is created. Rendering enforces single-surface
    output: the standalone footer row is skipped while status is present,
    and the status row appends the summary after the elapsed/interrupt
    segment.
    
    ## Documentation pass
    Added non-functional docs/comments that make the new invariant explicit:
    - status row owns inline summary when present;
    - unified-exec footer row renders only when status row is absent;
    - summary ordering keeps elapsed/interrupt affordance in a stable
    position.
    
    ## Observability
    No new telemetry or logs are introduced. The behavior is traceable
    through:
    - `BottomPane::set_unified_exec_processes()` for state updates,
    - `BottomPane::sync_status_inline_message()` for status-row
    synchronization,
    - `StatusIndicatorWidget::render()` for final inline ordering.
    
    ## Tests
    - Added
    `bottom_pane::tests::unified_exec_summary_does_not_increase_height_when_status_visible`
    to lock the no-height-growth invariant.
    - Updated the unified-exec status restoration snapshot to match inline
    rendering order.
    - Validated with:
      - `just fmt`
      - `cargo test -p codex-tui --lib`
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Sayan Sisodiya <sayan@openai.com>
  • [apps] Improve app loading. (#10994)
    There are two concepts of apps that we load in the harness:
    
    - Directory apps, which is all the apps that the user can install.
    - Accessible apps, which is what the user actually installed and can be
    $ inserted and be used by the model. These are extracted from the tools
    that are loaded through the gateway MCP.
    
    Previously we wait for both sets of apps before returning the full apps
    list. Which causes many issues because accessible apps won't be
    available to the UI or the model if directory apps aren't loaded or
    failed to load.
    
    In this PR we are separating them so that accessible apps can be loaded
    separately and are instantly available to be shown in the UI and to be
    provided in model context. We also added an app-server event so that
    clients can subscribe to also get accessible apps without being blocked
    on the full app list.
    
    - [x] Separate accessible apps and directory apps loading.
    - [x] `app/list` request will also emit `app/list/updated` notifications
    that app-server clients can subscribe. Which allows clients to get
    accessible apps list to render in the $ menu without being blocked by
    directory apps.
    - [x] Cache both accessible and directory apps with 1 hour TTL to avoid
    reloading them when creating new threads.
    - [x] TUI improvements to redraw $ menu and /apps menu when app list is
    updated.
  • Add resume_agent collab tool (#10903)
    Summary
    - add the new resume_agent collab tool path through core, protocol, and
    the app server API, including the resume events
    - update the schema/TypeScript definitions plus docs so resume_agent
    appears in generated artifacts and README
    - note that resumed agents rehydrate rollout history without overwriting
    their base instructions
    
    Testing
    - Not run (not requested)
  • fix(tui): conditionally restore status indicator using message phase (#10947)
    TLDR: use new message phase field emitted by preamble-supported models
    to determine whether an AgentMessage is mid-turn commentary. if so,
    restore the status indicator afterwards to indicate the turn has not
    completed.
    
    ### Problem
    `commit_tick` hides the status indicator while streaming assistant text.
    For preamble-capable models, that text can be commentary mid-turn, so
    hiding was correct during streaming but restore timing mattered:
    - restoring too aggressively caused jitter/flashing
    - not restoring caused indicator to stay hidden before subsequent work
    (tool calls, web search, etc.)
    
    ### Fix
    - Add optional `phase` to `AgentMessageItem` and propagate it from
    `ResponseItem::Message`
    - Keep indicator hidden during streamed commit ticks, restore only when:
      - assistant item completes as `phase=commentary`, and
      - stream queues are idle + task is still running.
    - Treat `phase=None` as final-answer behavior (no restore) to keep
    existing behavior for non-preamble models
    
    ### Tests
    Add/update tests for:
    - no idle-tick restore without commentary completion
    - commentary completion restoring status before tool begin
    - snapshot coverage for preamble/status behavior
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Josh McKinney <joshka@openai.com>
  • feat(app-server, core): allow text + image content items for dynamic tool outputs (#10567)
    Took over the work that @aaronl-openai started here:
    https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/10397
    
    Now that app-server clients are able to set up custom tools (called
    `dynamic_tools` in app-server), we should expose a way for clients to
    pass in not just text, but also image outputs. This is something the
    Responses API already supports for function call outputs, where you can
    pass in either a string or an array of content outputs (text, image,
    file):
    https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/responses/create#responses_create-input-input_item_list-item-function_tool_call_output-output-array-input_image
    
    So let's just plumb it through in Codex (with the caveat that we only
    support text and image for now). This is implemented end-to-end across
    app-server v2 protocol types and core tool handling.
    
    ## Breaking API change
    NOTE: This introduces a breaking change with dynamic tools, but I think
    it's ok since this concept was only recently introduced
    (https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/9539) and it's better to get the
    API contract correct. I don't think there are any real consumers of this
    yet (not even the Codex App).
    
    Old shape:
    `{ "output": "dynamic-ok", "success": true }`
    
    New shape:
    ```
    {
        "contentItems": [
          { "type": "inputText", "text": "dynamic-ok" },
          { "type": "inputImage", "imageUrl": "data:image/png;base64,AAA" }
        ]
      "success": true
    }
    ```
  • feat: add APIs to list and download public remote skills (#10448)
    Add API to list / download from remote public skills
  • Cleanup collaboration mode variants (#10404)
    ## Summary
    
    This PR simplifies collaboration modes to the visible set `default |
    plan`, while preserving backward compatibility for older partners that
    may still send legacy mode
    names.
    
    Specifically:
    - Renames the old Code behavior to **Default**.
    - Keeps **Plan** as-is.
    - Removes **Custom** mode behavior (fallbacks now resolve to Default).
    - Keeps `PairProgramming` and `Execute` internally for compatibility
    plumbing, while removing them from schema/API and UI visibility.
    - Adds legacy input aliasing so older clients can still send old mode
    names.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    1. Mode enum and compatibility
    - `ModeKind` now uses `Plan` + `Default` as active/public modes.
    - `ModeKind::Default` deserialization accepts legacy values:
      - `code`
      - `pair_programming`
      - `execute`
      - `custom`
    - `PairProgramming` and `Execute` variants remain in code but are hidden
    from protocol/schema generation.
    - `Custom` variant is removed; previous custom fallbacks now map to
    `Default`.
    
    2. Collaboration presets and templates
    - Built-in presets now return only:
      - `Plan`
      - `Default`
    - Template rename:
      - `core/templates/collaboration_mode/code.md` -> `default.md`
    - `execute.md` and `pair_programming.md` remain on disk but are not
    surfaced in visible preset lists.
    
    3. TUI updates
    - Updated user-facing naming and prompts from “Code” to “Default”.
    - Updated mode-cycle and indicator behavior to reflect only visible
    `Plan` and `Default`.
    - Updated corresponding tests and snapshots.
    
    4. request_user_input behavior
    - `request_user_input` remains allowed only in `Plan` mode.
    - Rejection messaging now consistently treats non-plan modes as
    `Default`.
    
    5. Schemas
    - Regenerated config and app-server schemas.
    - Public schema types now advertise mode values as:
      - `plan`
      - `default`
    
    ## Backward Compatibility Notes
    
    - Incoming legacy mode names (`code`, `pair_programming`, `execute`,
    `custom`) are accepted and coerced to `default`.
    - Outgoing/public schema surfaces intentionally expose only `plan |
    default`.
    - This allows tolerant ingestion of older partner payloads while
    standardizing new integrations on the reduced mode set.
    
    ## Codex author
    `codex fork 019c1fae-693b-7840-b16e-9ad38ea0bd00`
  • chore: add phase to message responseitem (#10455)
    ### What
    
    add wiring for `phase` field on `ResponseItem::Message` to lay
    groundwork for differentiating model preambles and final messages.
    currently optional.
    
    follows pattern in #9698.
    
    updated schemas with `just write-app-server-schema` so we can see type
    changes.
    
    ### Tests
    Updated existing tests for SSE parsing and hydrating from history
  • feat: replace custom mcp-types crate with equivalents from rmcp (#10349)
    We started working with MCP in Codex before
    https://crates.io/crates/rmcp was mature, so we had our own crate for
    MCP types that was generated from the MCP schema:
    
    
    https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/8b95d3e082376f4cb23e92641705a22afb28a9da/codex-rs/mcp-types/README.md
    
    Now that `rmcp` is more mature, it makes more sense to use their MCP
    types in Rust, as they handle details (like the `_meta` field) that our
    custom version ignored. Though one advantage that our custom types had
    is that our generated types implemented `JsonSchema` and `ts_rs::TS`,
    whereas the types in `rmcp` do not. As such, part of the work of this PR
    is leveraging the adapters between `rmcp` types and the serializable
    types that are API for us (app server and MCP) introduced in #10356.
    
    Note this PR results in a number of changes to
    `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/schema`, which merit special attention
    during review. We must ensure that these changes are still
    backwards-compatible, which is possible because we have:
    
    ```diff
    - export type CallToolResult = { content: Array<ContentBlock>, isError?: boolean, structuredContent?: JsonValue, };
    + export type CallToolResult = { content: Array<JsonValue>, structuredContent?: JsonValue, isError?: boolean, _meta?: JsonValue, };
    ```
    
    so `ContentBlock` has been replaced with the more general `JsonValue`.
    Note that `ContentBlock` was defined as:
    
    ```typescript
    export type ContentBlock = TextContent | ImageContent | AudioContent | ResourceLink | EmbeddedResource;
    ```
    
    so the deletion of those individual variants should not be a cause of
    great concern.
    
    Similarly, we have the following change in
    `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/schema/typescript/Tool.ts`:
    
    ```
    - export type Tool = { annotations?: ToolAnnotations, description?: string, inputSchema: ToolInputSchema, name: string, outputSchema?: ToolOutputSchema, title?: string, };
    + export type Tool = { name: string, title?: string, description?: string, inputSchema: JsonValue, outputSchema?: JsonValue, annotations?: JsonValue, icons?: Array<JsonValue>, _meta?: JsonValue, };
    ```
    
    so:
    
    - `annotations?: ToolAnnotations` ➡️ `JsonValue`
    - `inputSchema: ToolInputSchema` ➡️ `JsonValue`
    - `outputSchema?: ToolOutputSchema` ➡️ `JsonValue`
    
    and two new fields: `icons?: Array<JsonValue>, _meta?: JsonValue`
    
    ---
    [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
    Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
    with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/10349).
    * #10357
    * __->__ #10349
    * #10356