Commit Graph

5 Commits

  • [hooks] add non-streaming (non-stdin style) shell-only PostToolUse support (#15531)
    CHAINED PR - note that base is eternal/hooks-pretooluse-bash, not main
    -- so the following PR should be first
    
    Matching post-tool hook to the pre-tool functionality here:
    https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15211
    
    So, PreToolUse calls for plain shell calls, allows blocking. This
    PostToolUse call runs after the command executed
    
    example run:
    
    ```
    › as a test, run in parallel the following commands:
      - echo 'one'
      - echo '[block-pre-tool-use]'
      - echo '[block-post-tool-use]'
    
    
    ⚠ MCP startup incomplete (failed: notion, linear)
    
    • Cruising through those three commands in parallel now, and I’ll share the exact outputs right after
      they land.
    
    • Running PreToolUse hook: checking the observatory runes
    
    • Running PreToolUse hook: checking the observatory runes
    
    • Running PreToolUse hook: checking the observatory runes
    
    PreToolUse hook (blocked)
      warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo blocked a Bash command on purpose.
      feedback: PreToolUse demo blocked the command. Remove [block-pre-tool-use] to continue.
    
    PreToolUse hook (completed)
      warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo 'one'
    
    PreToolUse hook (completed)
      warning: wizard-tower PreToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo '[block-post-tool-use]'
    
    • Ran echo '[block-post-tool-use]'
      └ [block-post-tool-use]
    
    • Ran echo 'one'
      └ one
    
    • Running PostToolUse hook: reading the observatory aftermath
    
    • Running PostToolUse hook: reading the observatory aftermath
    
    PostToolUse hook (blocked)
      warning: wizard-tower PostToolUse demo blocked the Bash follow-through on purpose.
      feedback: PostToolUse demo blocked the result after execution. Remove [block-post-tool-use] to
    continue.
    
    PostToolUse hook (completed)
      warning: wizard-tower PostToolUse demo inspected Bash: echo 'one'
      hook context: PostToolUse demo saw the Bash result. Response preview: one
    
    ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
    
    • Ran them in parallel. Little wave report:
    
      - echo 'one' completed and returned one.
      - echo '[block-pre-tool-use]' was blocked before execution by the PreToolUse hook.
      - echo '[block-post-tool-use]' ran, but its result was blocked afterward by the PostToolUse hook.
    
      The hook messages were:
    
      - PreToolUse demo blocked the command. Remove [block-pre-tool-use] to continue.
      - PostToolUse demo blocked the result after execution. Remove [block-post-tool-use] to continue.
    
    
    › for the blocked messages (correctly blocked in this test) did the tool output land back into
      context?
    
    
    • Yeah, from this run:
    
      - PreToolUse block: the command itself did not execute, so no command output landed in context. Only
        the block message did.
      - PostToolUse block: the command did execute, but the actual stdout did not come back into context.
        Only the post-tool block message did.
    
      So the blocked notifications landed in context, but the blocked command payloads themselves did not.
      Nice clean guardrail, aloha.
    ```
  • Finish moving codex exec to app-server (#15424)
    This PR completes the conversion of non-interactive `codex exec` to use
    app server rather than directly using core events and methods.
    
    ### Summary
    - move `codex-exec` off exec-owned `AuthManager` and `ThreadManager`
    state
    - route exec bootstrap, resume, and auth refresh through existing
    app-server paths
    - replace legacy `codex/event/*` decoding in exec with typed app-server
    notification handling
    - update human and JSONL exec output adapters to translate existing
    app-server notifications only
    - clean up "app server client" layer by eliminating support for legacy
    notifications; this is no longer needed
    - remove exposure of `authManager` and `threadManager` from "app server
    client" layer
    
    ### Testing
    - `exec` has pretty extensive unit and integration tests already, and
    these all pass
    - In addition, I asked Codex to put together a comprehensive manual set
    of tests to cover all of the `codex exec` functionality (including
    command-line options), and it successfully generated and ran these tests
  • [codex-cli][app-server] Update self-serve business usage limit copy in error returned (#15478)
    ## Summary
    - update the self-serve business usage-based limit message to direct
    users to their admin for additional credits
    - add a focused unit test for the self_serve_business_usage_based plan
    branch
    
    Added also: 
    
    If you are at a rate limit but you still have credits, codex cli would
    tell you to switch the model. We shouldnt do this if you have credits so
    fixed this.
    
    ## Test
    - launched the source-built CLI and verified the updated message is
    shown for the self-serve business usage-based plan
    
    ![Test
    screenshot](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openai/codex/5cc3c013ef17ac5c66dfd9395c0d3c4837602231/docs/images/self-serve-business-usage-limit.png)
  • Move TUI on top of app server (parallel code) (#14717)
    This PR replicates the `tui` code directory and creates a temporary
    parallel `tui_app_server` directory. It also implements a new feature
    flag `tui_app_server` to select between the two tui implementations.
    
    Once the new app-server-based TUI is stabilized, we'll delete the old
    `tui` directory and feature flag.