Commit Graph

9 Commits

  • Remove test-support feature from codex-core and replace it with explicit test toggles (#11405)
    ## Why
    
    `codex-core` was being built in multiple feature-resolved permutations
    because test-only behavior was modeled as crate features. For a large
    crate, those permutations increase compile cost and reduce cache reuse.
    
    ## Net Change
    
    - Removed the `test-support` crate feature and related feature wiring so
    `codex-core` no longer needs separate feature shapes for test consumers.
    - Standardized cross-crate test-only access behind
    `codex_core::test_support`.
    - External test code now imports helpers from
    `codex_core::test_support`.
    - Underlying implementation hooks are kept internal (`pub(crate)`)
    instead of broadly public.
    
    ## Outcome
    
    - Fewer `codex-core` build permutations.
    - Better incremental cache reuse across test targets.
    - No intended production behavior change.
  • feat: introduce codex-utils-cargo-bin as an alternative to assert_cmd::Command (#8496)
    This PR introduces a `codex-utils-cargo-bin` utility crate that
    wraps/replaces our use of `assert_cmd::Command` and
    `escargot::CargoBuild`.
    
    As you can infer from the introduction of `buck_project_root()` in this
    PR, I am attempting to make it possible to build Codex under
    [Buck2](https://buck2.build) as well as `cargo`. With Buck2, I hope to
    achieve faster incremental local builds (largely due to Buck2's
    [dice](https://buck2.build/docs/insights_and_knowledge/modern_dice/)
    build strategy, as well as benefits from its local build daemon) as well
    as faster CI builds if we invest in remote execution and caching.
    
    See
    https://buck2.build/docs/getting_started/what_is_buck2/#why-use-buck2-key-advantages
    for more details about the performance advantages of Buck2.
    
    Buck2 enforces stronger requirements in terms of build and test
    isolation. It discourages assumptions about absolute paths (which is key
    to enabling remote execution). Because the `CARGO_BIN_EXE_*` environment
    variables that Cargo provides are absolute paths (which
    `assert_cmd::Command` reads), this is a problem for Buck2, which is why
    we need this `codex-utils-cargo-bin` utility.
    
    My WIP-Buck2 setup sets the `CARGO_BIN_EXE_*` environment variables
    passed to a `rust_test()` build rule as relative paths.
    `codex-utils-cargo-bin` will resolve these values to absolute paths,
    when necessary.
    
    
    ---
    [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
    Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
    with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/8496).
    * #8498
    * __->__ #8496
  • chore: add cargo-deny configuration (#7119)
    - add GitHub workflow running cargo-deny on push/PR
    - document cargo-deny allowlist with workspace-dep notes and advisory
    ignores
    - align workspace crates to inherit version/edition/license for
    consistent checks
  • [app-server] feat: v2 Thread APIs (#6214)
    Implements:
    ```
    thread/list
    thread/start
    thread/resume
    thread/archive
    ```
    
    along with their integration tests. These are relatively light wrappers
    around the existing core logic, and changes to core logic are minimal.
    
    However, an improvement made for developer ergonomics:
    - `thread/start` and `thread/resume` automatically attaches a
    conversation listener internally, so clients don't have to make a
    separate `AddConversationListener` call like they do today.
    
    For consistency, also updated `model/list` and `feedback/upload` (naming
    conventions, list API params).
  • [app-server] read rate limits API (#5302)
    Adds a `GET account/rateLimits/read` API to app-server. This calls the
    codex backend to fetch the user's current rate limits.
    
    This would be helpful in checking rate limits without having to send a
    message.
    
    For calling the codex backend usage API, I generated the types and
    manually copied the relevant ones into `codex-backend-openapi-types`.
    It'll be nice to extend our internal openapi generator to support Rust
    so we don't have to run these manual steps.
    
    # 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.
  • fix: remove mcp-types from app server protocol (#4537)
    We continue the separation between `codex app-server` and `codex
    mcp-server`.
    
    In particular, we introduce a new crate, `codex-app-server-protocol`,
    and migrate `codex-rs/protocol/src/mcp_protocol.rs` into it, renaming it
    `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/protocol.rs`.
    
    Because `ConversationId` was defined in `mcp_protocol.rs`, we move it
    into its own file, `codex-rs/protocol/src/conversation_id.rs`, and
    because it is referenced in a ton of places, we have to touch a lot of
    files as part of this PR.
    
    We also decide to get away from proper JSON-RPC 2.0 semantics, so we
    also introduce `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/src/jsonrpc_lite.rs`, which
    is basically the same `JSONRPCMessage` type defined in `mcp-types`
    except with all of the `"jsonrpc": "2.0"` removed.
    
    Getting rid of `"jsonrpc": "2.0"` makes our serialization logic
    considerably simpler, as we can lean heavier on serde to serialize
    directly into the wire format that we use now.
  • fix: separate codex mcp into codex mcp-server and codex app-server (#4471)
    This is a very large PR with some non-backwards-compatible changes.
    
    Historically, `codex mcp` (or `codex mcp serve`) started a JSON-RPC-ish
    server that had two overlapping responsibilities:
    
    - Running an MCP server, providing some basic tool calls.
    - Running the app server used to power experiences such as the VS Code
    extension.
    
    This PR aims to separate these into distinct concepts:
    
    - `codex mcp-server` for the MCP server
    - `codex app-server` for the "application server"
    
    Note `codex mcp` still exists because it already has its own subcommands
    for MCP management (`list`, `add`, etc.)
    
    The MCP logic continues to live in `codex-rs/mcp-server` whereas the
    refactored app server logic is in the new `codex-rs/app-server` folder.
    Note that most of the existing integration tests in
    `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/suite` were actually for the app server, so
    all the tests have been moved with the exception of
    `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/suite/mod.rs`.
    
    Because this is already a large diff, I tried not to change more than I
    had to, so `codex-rs/app-server/tests/common/mcp_process.rs` still uses
    the name `McpProcess` for now, but I will do some mechanical renamings
    to things like `AppServer` in subsequent PRs.
    
    While `mcp-server` and `app-server` share some overlapping functionality
    (like reading streams of JSONL and dispatching based on message types)
    and some differences (completely different message types), I ended up
    doing a bit of copypasta between the two crates, as both have somewhat
    similar `message_processor.rs` and `outgoing_message.rs` files for now,
    though I expect them to diverge more in the near future.
    
    One material change is that of the initialize handshake for `codex
    app-server`, as we no longer use the MCP types for that handshake.
    Instead, we update `codex-rs/protocol/src/mcp_protocol.rs` to add an
    `Initialize` variant to `ClientRequest`, which takes the `ClientInfo`
    object we need to update the `USER_AGENT_SUFFIX` in
    `codex-rs/app-server/src/message_processor.rs`.
    
    One other material change is in
    `codex-rs/app-server/src/codex_message_processor.rs` where I eliminated
    a use of the `send_event_as_notification()` method I am generally trying
    to deprecate (because it blindly maps an `EventMsg` into a
    `JSONNotification`) in favor of `send_server_notification()`, which
    takes a `ServerNotification`, as that is intended to be a custom enum of
    all notification types supported by the app server. So to make this
    update, I had to introduce a new variant of `ServerNotification`,
    `SessionConfigured`, which is a non-backwards compatible change with the
    old `codex mcp`, and clients will have to be updated after the next
    release that contains this PR. Note that
    `codex-rs/app-server/tests/suite/list_resume.rs` also had to be update
    to reflect this change.
    
    I introduced `codex-rs/utils/json-to-toml/src/lib.rs` as a small utility
    crate to avoid some of the copying between `mcp-server` and
    `app-server`.