Commit Graph

226 Commits

  • [codex] Load AGENTS.md from all bound environments (#27696)
    ## Why
    
    We already have the machinery to support multiple environments on a
    single thread, but we only show the model the contents of `AGENTS.md`
    files in the primary environment.
    
    We should show the model all of the relevant project instructions when
    we know there's more than one environment.
    
    ## Known Gaps
    
    As discussed in the RFC, this implementation:
    
    1. doesn't handle environments being added/removed to/from the thread
    after its creation
    2. it doesn't enforce an aggregate context budget across environments,
    and instead applies the configured project maximum independently to each
    environment
    
    ## Implementation
    
    - Discover project instructions in environment order with an independent
    byte budget per environment and preserve source provenance/order.
    - Keep the legacy fragment byte-for-byte when exactly one environment
    contributes project instructions; use environment-labeled sections when
    two or more environments contribute.
    - Freeze the complete rendered fragment in `LoadedAgentsMd`, insert it
    directly into requests, and recognize both layouts in contextual and
    memory filtering.
    - Add exact rendering, independent-budget, source-order,
    creation-snapshot, and consumer coverage without changing app-server
    schemas.
  • core: Consolidate Responses API Codex metadata (#27122)
    ## What
    Introduce a `CodexResponsesMetadata` struct that defines all the core
    metadata we send to Responses API. Example fields are `thread_id`,
    `turn_id`, `window_id`, etc.
    
    Going forward, `client_metadata["x-codex-turn-metadata"]` will be the
    canonical way Codex sends metadata to Responses API across both HTTP and
    websocket transports.
    
    For now, we continue to emit the existing top-level HTTP headers and
    top-level `client_metadata` fields from the same
    `CodexResponsesMetadata` struct for compatibility reasons.
    
    Also, app-server clients who specify additional
    `responsesapi_client_metadata` via `turn/start` and `turn/steer` will
    have those fields merged into
    `client_metadata["x-codex-turn-metadata"]`, but cannot override the
    reserved fields that core uses (i.e. the fields in
    `CodexResponsesMetadata`).
    
    ## Why
    
    Responses API request instrumentation is the source of truth for
    downstream Codex analytics that join requests by Codex IDs such as
    session, thread, turn, and context window. Before this change, those
    values were assembled through several request-specific paths: HTTP
    request bodies, websocket handshake headers, websocket `response.create`
    payloads, compaction requests, and the rich `x-codex-turn-metadata`
    envelope all had their own wiring.
    
    That made metadata propagation easy to drift across API-key/direct
    Responses API requests, ChatGPT-auth/proxied requests, websocket
    requests, and compaction requests. It also made additions like
    `window_id` error-prone because a field could be added to one transport
    projection but missed in another.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Added `CodexResponsesMetadata` as the core-owned snapshot for Codex
    metadata sent to ResponsesAPI.
    - Render `client_metadata["x-codex-turn-metadata"]`, flat
    `client_metadata` projections, and direct compatibility headers from
    that same snapshot.
    - Include the known Codex-owned fields in the turn metadata blob,
    including installation/session/thread/turn/window IDs, request kind,
    lineage, sandbox/workspace metadata, timing, and compaction details.
    - Treat app-server `responsesapi_client_metadata` as enrichment for the
    Codex turn metadata blob while preventing those extras from overriding
    Codex-owned fields.
    - Use the same metadata path for normal turns, websocket prewarm, local
    compaction, remote v1 compaction, and remote v2 compaction.
    - Keep websocket connection-only preconnect metadata separate so
    handshakes carry compatibility identity headers without inventing a fake
    turn metadata blob.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `cargo check -p codex-core`
    - `just fix -p codex-core`
  • [codex] Load user instructions through an injected provider (#27101)
    ## Why
    
    We want to remove implicit use of `$CODEX_HOME` from `codex-core` and
    make embedders responsible for supplying user-level instructions. This
    also ensures user instructions load when no primary environment is
    selected.
    
    ## What changed
    
    Stacked on #27415, which makes `codex exec` surface thread-scoped
    runtime warnings.
    
    - Added `UserInstructionsProvider` to `codex-extension-api`, with
    absolute source attribution and recoverable loading warnings.
    - Added `codex-home` with the filesystem-backed provider for
    `AGENTS.override.md` and `AGENTS.md`, preserving precedence, fallback,
    trimming, lossy UTF-8 handling, and the existing uncapped global
    instruction size.
    - Removed global instruction loading from `Config` and require
    `ThreadManager` callers to inject a provider.
    - Load provider instructions once for each fresh root runtime, including
    runtimes without a primary environment. Running sessions retain their
    snapshot, while child agents inherit the parent snapshot without
    invoking the provider.
    - Keep provider instructions separate while loading project `AGENTS.md`,
    then assemble the model-visible instructions with the existing ordering,
    source attribution, warning, and turn-context behavior.
    - Wired the Codex home provider through the CLI, app server, MCP server,
    core facade, and thread-manager sample.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `just test -p codex-home -p codex-extension-api`
    - `just test -p codex-core agents_md`
    - `just test -p codex-core guardian`
    - `just test -p codex-app-server
    thread_start_without_selected_environment_includes_only_global_instruction_source`
    - `just test -p codex-exec warning`
    - `just bazel-lock-check`
  • [codex] migrate ExecutorFileSystem paths to PathUri (#27424)
    ## Why
    
    We're moving exec-server to use PathUri for its internal path
    representations.
    
    ## What
    
    Move `ExecutorFileSystem` APIs to use `PathUri` instead of
    `AbsolutePathBuf`. Future changes will convert higher-level parts of
    exec-server.
  • Pair thread environment settings (#26687)
    ## Why
    
    Thread cwd and environment selections are a single logical setting in
    core: updating one without the other can silently desynchronize the
    next-turn execution context. This change makes that relationship
    explicit in the internal thread settings flow while preserving the
    existing app-server public API shape.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Moved the cwd/environment pair through internal
    `ThreadSettingsOverrides.environment_settings` instead of a top-level
    internal `cwd` field.
    - Kept `thread/settings/update` public params unchanged, with app-server
    translating top-level `cwd` into the paired internal settings shape.
    - Moved `Op::UserInput` environment overrides into thread settings so
    user turns and settings updates use the same core path.
    - Updated core, app-server, MCP, memories, sample, and test callsites to
    construct the paired settings shape.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `git diff --check`
    - Local test run starting after PR creation.
  • fix: preserve approval sandbox decisions in unified exec (#24981)
    ## Why
    
    This PR fixes approval sandbox semantics in the unified-exec path. The
    zsh-fork runtime exposed the bug because the shell can do meaningful
    work before any intercepted child `execv(2)` exists: redirections,
    builtins, globbing, and pipeline setup all happen in the launch process.
    If the model requested `sandbox_permissions=require_escalated`, or an
    exec-policy `allow` rule explicitly bypassed the sandbox, that approved
    sandbox decision needs to be preserved for the launch path and for
    intercepted execs that use the same approval machinery.
    
    The behavior is not only about zsh fork. The production changes are in
    shared approval/escalation code, so they also affect non-zsh-fork
    intercepted exec paths that go through the same sandbox decision logic.
    The narrow intent is to preserve the approval decision while still
    keeping denied-read profiles and bounded additional-permission requests
    sandboxed.
    
    ## Production Changes
    
    - `codex-rs/core/src/tools/runtimes/unified_exec.rs`: derives a
    `launch_sandbox_permissions` value from the requested sandbox
    permissions and the runtime filesystem policy, then uses that value for
    managed-network/env setup and launch sandbox selection. This keeps full
    approval or policy-bypass decisions visible to the first unified-exec
    attempt, while still preventing a full sandbox override from discarding
    denied-read restrictions. Direct unified exec keeps the same decision
    surface; the important difference is that zsh-fork launch setup no
    longer accidentally loses the approved parent sandbox decision.
    
    - `codex-rs/core/src/tools/runtimes/shell/unix_escalation.rs`: makes
    intercepted-exec escalation selection explicit for the three sandbox
    permission modes. `UseDefault` only escalates when an exec-policy
    decision allows sandbox bypass, `RequireEscalated` escalates when
    unsandboxed execution is allowed, and `WithAdditionalPermissions`
    escalates through the bounded additional-permissions path instead of
    being treated as a full unsandboxed override. Unsandboxed intercepted
    execs now also rebuild the environment as `RequireEscalated`, which
    strips managed-network proxy variables consistently with other
    unsandboxed execution.
    
    ## Test Coverage
    
    Most of the PR is tests. The new coverage verifies:
    
    - unified exec preserves parent approval and exec-policy sandbox
    decisions for zsh-fork launch selection;
    - bounded `with_additional_permissions` remains sandboxed and
    permission-profile based;
    - denied-read profiles are not weakened by parent approval;
    - explicit prompt rules still prompt for intercepted execs after the
    parent command is approved;
    - unsandboxed intercepted execs strip managed-network env vars.
    
    No documentation update is needed; this is an internal approval/sandbox
    correctness fix.
    
    
    
    
    
    ---
    [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
    Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
    with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/24981).
    * #24982
    * __->__ #24981
  • [codex] Use standalone tools for Responses Lite (#26490)
    ## Summary
    
    Responses Lite does not execute hosted Responses tools, so models using
    it must route web search and image generation through Codex-owned
    executors & standalone Response's API endpoints.
    
    This PR is stacked on #26487.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-core responses_lite_ --lib`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    standalone_executors_remain_hidden_without_flags_or_responses_lite
    --lib`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    hosted_tools_follow_provider_auth_model_and_config_gates --lib`
    - `cargo test -p codex-web-search-extension -p
    codex-image-generation-extension`
    - `cargo test -p codex-app-server --test all standalone_`
    - `cargo fmt --all -- --check`
  • Require absolute cwd in thread settings (#26532)
    ## Why
    
    Thread settings cwd overrides are expected to be resolved before they
    enter core. Keeping this boundary as a plain `PathBuf` made it easy for
    core/session code to keep fallback normalization and relative-path
    resolution logic in places that should only receive an already-resolved
    cwd.
    
    This is intentionally the absolute-cwd-only slice: it does not change
    environment selection stickiness or cwd-to-default-environment fallback
    behavior.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Changes `ThreadSettingsOverrides.cwd`,
    `CodexThreadSettingsOverrides.cwd`, and `SessionSettingsUpdate.cwd` to
    use `AbsolutePathBuf`.
    - Removes core-side cwd normalization/resolution from session settings
    updates.
    - Updates affected core/app-server test helpers and callsites to pass
    existing absolute cwd values or use `abs()` helpers.
    
    ## Validation
    
    Opening as draft so CI can start while local validation continues.
  • [codex] Preserve logical paths during AGENTS.md discovery (#26465)
    ## Intent
    
    Follow up on #26205 by avoiding unnecessary filesystem canonicalization
    during `AGENTS.md` discovery. The configured working directory is
    already absolute, and canonicalization incorrectly switches symlinked
    workspaces from their logical parent hierarchy to the target's
    hierarchy.
    
    ## User-facing behavior
    
    For a symlinked working directory such as:
    
    ```text
    test-root/
    |-- logical-repo/
    |   |-- AGENTS.md              ("logical parent doc")
    |   `-- workspace ------------> physical-repo/workspace/
    `-- physical-repo/
        |-- AGENTS.md              ("physical parent doc")
        `-- workspace/
            `-- AGENTS.md          ("workspace doc")
    ```
    
    Before this change, Codex canonicalized `logical-repo/workspace` to
    `physical-repo/workspace` before discovery. It therefore loaded
    `physical-repo/AGENTS.md` and `physical-repo/workspace/AGENTS.md`,
    ignoring the instructions from the repository through which the user
    entered the workspace.
    
    After this change, ancestor discovery walks the configured logical path,
    so Codex loads `logical-repo/AGENTS.md`. Opening
    `logical-repo/workspace/AGENTS.md` still follows the symlink through the
    host filesystem, so the workspace document is also loaded.
    `physical-repo/AGENTS.md` is not loaded.
    
    ## Implementation
    
    Use the logical absolute working directory when discovering project
    instructions and reporting instruction sources. Filesystem reads still
    follow the working-directory symlink, so an `AGENTS.md` in the target
    workspace continues to load while ancestor discovery uses the symlink's
    parents.
    
    ## Validation
    
    Added integration coverage proving that discovery loads the logical
    parent's instructions and the target workspace's instructions, but not
    the target parent's instructions.
  • Switch runtime to cloud config bundle (#24622)
    ## Summary
    
    - Adapts the moved `codex-cloud-config` crate from the legacy cloud
    requirements endpoint to the new config bundle endpoint.
    - Switches runtime consumers from `CloudRequirementsLoader` to
    `CloudConfigBundleLoader` so one shared bundle supplies cloud-delivered
    config and requirements.
    - Removes the legacy cloud requirements domain loader path.
    
    ## Details
    
    This intentionally keeps `codex-cloud-config` monolithic for review
    lineage: the previous PR establishes the crate move, and this PR shows
    the behavior change against that moved implementation. A follow-up PR
    splits the module back into focused files.
    
    The new bundle path preserves the important cloud requirements loader
    semantics where intended: account-scoped signed cache, 30 minute TTL, 5
    minute refresh cadence, retry/backoff, auth recovery, and fail-closed
    startup loading. The cached payload changes from a single requirements
    TOML string to the backend-delivered bundle, and validation rejects
    malformed config or requirements fragments before cache write/use.
  • [codex] Wait for MCP readiness in core integration tests (#24964)
    Ensures MCP-backed `codex-core` integration tests exercise initialized
    servers instead of racing server startup.
    
    I've been idly investigating a few flakes and the failure modes are much
    more confusing when a tool call fails because of a failed server start
    than when the failed server start causes the test to fail directly.
  • Add experimental turn additional context (#24154)
    ## Summary
    
    Adds experimental `additionalContext` support to `turn/start` and
    `turn/steer` so clients can provide ephemeral external context, such as
    browser or automation state, without turning that plumbing into a
    visible user prompt or triggering user-prompt lifecycle behavior.
    
    ## API Shape
    
    The parameter shape is:
    
    ```ts
    additionalContext?: Record<string, {
      value: string
      kind: "untrusted" | "application"
    }> | null
    ```
    
    Example:
    
    ```json
    {
      "additionalContext": {
        "browser_info": {
          "value": "Active tab is CI failures.",
          "kind": "untrusted"
        },
        "automation_info": {
          "value": "CI rerun is in progress.",
          "kind": "application"
        }
      }
    }
    ```
    
    The keys are opaque and caller-defined.
    
    ## Context Injection
    
    When provided, accepted entries are inserted into model context as
    hidden contextual message items, not as visible thread user-message
    items.
    
    `kind: "untrusted"` entries are inserted with role `user`:
    
    ```text
    <external_${key}>${value}</external_${key}>
    ```
    
    `kind: "application"` entries are inserted with role `developer`:
    
    ```text
    <${key}>${value}</${key}>
    ```
    
    Values are not escaped. Each value is truncated to 1k approximate tokens
    before wrapping.
    
    For `turn/start`, accepted additional context is inserted before normal
    user input. For `turn/steer`, additional context is merged only when the
    steer includes non-empty user input; context-only steers still reject as
    empty input.
    
    ## Dedupe Strategy
    
    `AdditionalContextStore` lives on session state and stores the latest
    complete additional-context map.
    
    Each `turn/start` or non-empty `turn/steer` treats its
    `additionalContext` as the current complete set of values. Entries are
    injected only when the key is new or the exact entry for that key
    changed, including `value` or `kind`. After merging, the store is
    replaced with the provided map, so omitted keys are removed from the
    retained set and can be injected again later if reintroduced.
    
    Omitting `additionalContext`, passing `null`, or passing an empty object
    resets the store to empty and injects nothing.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Threads experimental v2 `additionalContext` through app-server into
    core turn start and steer handling.
    - Adds separate contextual fragment types for untrusted user-role
    context and application developer-role context.
    - Uses pending response input items so additional context can be
    combined with normal user input without treating it as prompt text.
    - Adds integration coverage for start/steer flow, role routing,
    dedupe/reset behavior, deletion/re-add behavior, hook-blocked input
    behavior, empty context-only steer rejection, external-fragment marker
    matching, and truncation.
  • Move MCP tool naming mode into manager (#21576)
    ## Why
    
    The `non_prefixed_mcp_tool_names` feature should be applied where MCP
    tools become model-visible, not by remapping names later in core.
    Keeping the decision in `McpConnectionManager` construction makes
    `ToolInfo` the single shaped view that spec building, deferred tool
    search, routing, and unavailable-tool placeholders can consume directly.
    
    This also preserves the existing external behavior while the feature is
    off, and keeps the feature-on behavior for code mode and hooks explicit
    at the manager boundary.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Add `McpToolNameMode` to `codex-mcp` and flow it through `McpConfig`
    into `McpConnectionManager::new`.
    - Normalize MCP `ToolInfo` names in the manager using either
    legacy-prefixed namespaces or non-prefixed namespaces; the legacy path
    adds `mcp__` without restoring the old trailing namespace suffix.
    - Remove the core-side MCP name remapping path so specs, tool search,
    session resolution, and unavailable-tool placeholder construction use
    the manager-provided `ToolName` values directly.
    - Keep code mode flattening on the `__` namespace separator.
    - Preserve hook compatibility by giving non-prefixed MCP hook names
    legacy `mcp__...` matcher aliases.
    - Add/adjust integration and unit coverage for non-prefixed code-mode
    behavior, hook matching with the feature on and off, and manager-level
    legacy prefixing.
    
    ## Testing
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-mcp --lib`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --lib tools::spec::tests -- --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --lib mcp_tools -- --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --lib mcp_tool_exposure -- --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all mcp_tool -- --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all search_tool -- --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all hooks_mcp -- --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    code_mode_uses_non_prefixed_mcp_tool_names_when_feature_enabled --
    --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-tools`
    - `cargo test -p codex-features`
  • Honor client-resolved service tier defaults (#23537)
    ## Why
    
    Model catalog responses can now advertise a nullable
    `default_service_tier` for each model. Codex needs to preserve three
    distinct states all the way from config/app-server inputs to inference:
    
    - no explicit service tier, so the client may apply the current model
    catalog default when FastMode is enabled
    - explicit `default`, meaning the user intentionally wants standard
    routing
    - explicit catalog tier ids such as `priority`, `flex`, or future tiers
    
    Keeping those states distinct prevents the UI from showing one tier
    while core sends another, especially after model switches or app-server
    `thread/start` / `turn/start` updates.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Plumbed `default_service_tier` through model catalog protocol types,
    app-server model responses, generated schemas, model cache fixtures, and
    provider/model-manager conversions.
    - Added the request-only `default` service tier sentinel and normalized
    legacy config spelling so `fast` in `config.toml` still materializes as
    the runtime/request id `priority`.
    - Moved catalog default resolution to the TUI/client side, including
    recomputing the effective service tier when model/FastMode-dependent
    surfaces change.
    - Updated app-server thread lifecycle config construction so
    `serviceTier: null` preserves explicit standard-routing intent by
    mapping to `default` instead of internal `None`.
    - Kept core responsible for validating explicit tiers against the
    current model and stripping `default` before `/v1/responses`, without
    applying catalog defaults itself.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo build -p codex-cli`
    - `CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo test -p codex-app-server model_list`
    - `cargo test -p codex-tui service_tier`
    - `cargo test -p codex-protocol service_tier_for_request`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core get_service_tier`
    - `RUST_MIN_STACK=8388608 CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo test -p codex-core
    service_tier`
  • Make local environment optional in EnvironmentManager (#23369)
    ## Summary
    - make `EnvironmentManager` local environment/runtime paths optional
    - simplify constructor surface around snapshot materialization
    - rename local env accessors to `require_local_environment` /
    `try_local_environment`
    
    ## Validation
    - devbox Bazel build for touched crate surfaces
    - `//codex-rs/exec-server:exec-server-unit-tests`
    - `//codex-rs/app-server-client:app-server-client-unit-tests`
    - filtered touched `//codex-rs/core:core-unit-tests` cases
  • [5 of 7] Replace OverrideTurnContext with ThreadSettings (#22508)
    **Stack position:** [5 of 7]
    
    ## Summary
    
    This PR adds `Op::ThreadSettings`, a queued settings-only update
    mechanism for changing stored thread settings without starting a new
    turn. It also removes the legacy `Op::OverrideTurnContext` in the same
    layer, so reviewers can see the replacement and deletion together.
    
    ## Changes
    
    - Add `Op::ThreadSettings` for settings-only queued updates.
    - Emit `ThreadSettingsApplied` with the effective thread settings
    snapshot after core applies an update.
    - Route settings-only updates through the same submission queue as user
    input.
    - Migrate remaining `OverrideTurnContext` tests and callers to the
    queued `Op::ThreadSettings` path.
    - Delete `Op::OverrideTurnContext` from the core protocol and submission
    loop.
    
    This stack addresses #20656 and #22090.
    
    ## Stack
    
    1. [1 of 7] [Add thread settings to
    UserInput](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23080)
    2. [2 of 7] [Remove
    UserInputWithTurnContext](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23081)
    3. [3 of 7] [Remove
    UserTurn](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23075)
    4. [4 of 7] [Placeholder for OverrideTurnContext
    cleanup](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23087)
    5. [5 of 7] [Replace OverrideTurnContext with
    ThreadSettings](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22508) (this PR)
    6. [6 of 7] [Add app-server thread settings
    API](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22509)
    7. [7 of 7] [Sync TUI thread
    settings](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22510)
  • [3 of 7] Remove UserTurn (#23075)
    **Stack position:** [3 of 7]
    
    ## Summary
    
    This PR finishes the input-op consolidation by moving the remaining
    `Op::UserTurn` callers onto `Op::UserInput` and deleting `Op::UserTurn`.
    This touches a lot of files, but it is a low-risk mechanical migration.
    
    ## Stack
    
    1. [1 of 7] [Add thread settings to
    UserInput](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23080)
    2. [2 of 7] [Remove
    UserInputWithTurnContext](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23081)
    3. [3 of 7] [Remove
    UserTurn](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23075) (this PR)
    4. [4 of 7] [Placeholder for OverrideTurnContext
    cleanup](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/23087)
    5. [5 of 7] [Replace OverrideTurnContext with
    ThreadSettings](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22508)
    6. [6 of 7] [Add app-server thread settings
    API](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22509)
    7. [7 of 7] [Sync TUI thread
    settings](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/22510)
  • [codex] Remove legacy shell output formatting paths (#22706)
    ## Why
    
    The client and tool pipeline still carried compatibility code for legacy
    structured shell output. Current shell and apply_patch responses are
    already plain text for model consumption, so keeping a
    JSON-serialization path plus shell-item rewrite logic makes the request
    formatter and tests preserve a format we do not need anymore.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Removed the client-side shell output rewrite from
    `core/src/client_common.rs`.
    - Removed the structured exec-output formatter and the shell `freeform`
    switch so tool emitters use one model-facing formatter.
    - Collapsed apply_patch/shell serialization tests around the remaining
    plain-text output expectations and removed duplicate one-variant
    parameterized cases.
    - Kept the `ApplyPatchModelOutput::ShellCommandViaHeredoc` compatibility
    input shape, but no longer treats it as a separate output-format mode.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-core client_common`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core shell_serialization`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core apply_patch_cli`
    - `just fix -p codex-core`
    
    ## Documentation
    
    No external Codex documentation update is needed.
  • Add user_input_requested_during_turn to MCP turn metadata (#22237)
    ## Why
    - Similar change as https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/21219
    - Without change: MCP tool calls receive
    `_meta["x-codex-turn-metadata"]` with various key values.
    - Issue: MCP servers currently do not know if user input was requested
    during the turn (Ex: Model decides to prompt the user for approval
    mid-turn before making a possibly risky tool call). MCP servers may want
    to know this when tracking latency metrics because these instances are
    inflated.
    
    ## What Changed
    - With change: MCP turn metadata now includes
    `user_input_requested_during_turn` when a model-visible
    `request_user_input` call happened earlier in the turn, propagated in
    `_meta["x-codex-turn-metadata"]`.
    - `mark_turn_user_input_requested()` is called when user input is
    requested through either MCP elicitation (`mcp.rs`) or the
    `request_user_input` tool (`mod.rs`).
    - MCP tool call `_meta` is now built immediately before execution
    (`mcp_tool_call.rs`) so user input requested earlier in the same turn,
    including within the same tool call via elicitation, is reflected in the
    metadata.
    - Normal `/responses` turn metadata headers are unchanged.
    
    ## Verification
    - `codex-rs/core/src/session/mcp_tests.rs`
    - `codex-rs/core/src/tools/handlers/request_user_input_tests.rs`
    - `codex-rs/core/src/turn_metadata_tests.rs`
    - `codex-rs/core/tests/suite/search_tool.rs`
  • Remove SSE fixture loaders (#22684)
    ## Why
    
    The Responses API test support already has structured SSE event
    builders. Keeping separate JSON fixture loaders made small mock streams
    harder to read and left an on-disk fixture for a single event.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Removed `load_sse_fixture` and `load_sse_fixture_with_id_from_str`
    from `core_test_support`.
    - Deleted the one `tests/fixtures/incomplete_sse.json` Responses API
    fixture.
    - Replaced the remaining call sites with `responses::sse(...)` and
    existing event helpers.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    stream_no_completed::retries_on_early_close`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    history_dedupes_streamed_and_final_messages_across_turns`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all review::`
  • chore(features) rm Feature::ApplyPatchFreeform (#22711)
    ## Summary
    Removes the feature since this is effectively on by default in all cases
    where we should use it, or can be configured via models.json.
    
    ## Testing
    - [x] unit tests pass
  • Fix remote environment test fixtures (#22572)
    ## Why
    The Docker remote-env coverage was failing before it reached the
    behavior those tests are meant to exercise. The remote-aware test
    fixture only registered the remote environment, so tests that
    intentionally select both `local` and `remote` could not start a turn.
    After that was fixed, two tests exposed stale fixtures: the approval
    test was auto-approving under workspace-write, and the remote
    `view_image` test was writing invalid PNG bytes.
    
    ## What Changed
    - Added `EnvironmentManager::create_for_tests_with_local(...)` so tests
    can keep the provider default while also selecting `local` explicitly.
    - Updated `build_remote_aware()` to use that test-only manager when a
    remote exec-server URL is present.
    - Changed the remote apply-patch approval helper to use
    `SandboxPolicy::new_read_only_policy()` so the test actually exercises
    approval caching per environment.
    - Replaced the hardcoded remote `view_image` PNG blob with the existing
    `png_bytes(...)` helper so the test uses a valid image fixture.
    
    ## Validation
    Ran these isolated Docker remote-env tests on the devbox with
    `$remote-tests` setup:
    -
    `suite::remote_env::apply_patch_freeform_routes_to_selected_remote_environment`
    -
    `suite::remote_env::apply_patch_approvals_are_remembered_per_environment`
    -
    `suite::remote_env::apply_patch_intercepted_exec_command_routes_to_selected_remote_environment`
    -
    `suite::remote_env::exec_command_routes_to_selected_remote_environment`
    - `suite::view_image::view_image_routes_to_selected_remote_environment`
    
    All five pass.
  • feat: add layered --profile-v2 config files (#17141)
    ## Why
    
    `--profile-v2 <name>` gives launchers and runtime entry points a named
    profile config without making each profile duplicate the base user
    config. The base `$CODEX_HOME/config.toml` still loads first, then
    `$CODEX_HOME/<name>.config.toml` layers above it and becomes the active
    writable user config for that session.
    
    That keeps shared defaults, plugin/MCP setup, and managed/user
    constraints in one place while letting a named profile override only the
    pieces that need to differ.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Added the shared `--profile-v2 <name>` runtime option with validated
    plain names, now represented by `ProfileV2Name`.
    - Extended config layer state so the base user config and selected
    profile config are both `User` layers; APIs expose the active user layer
    and merged effective user config.
    - Threaded profile selection through runtime entry points: `codex`,
    `codex exec`, `codex review`, `codex resume`, `codex fork`, and `codex
    debug prompt-input`.
    - Made user-facing config writes go to the selected profile file when
    active, including TUI/settings persistence, app-server config writes,
    and MCP/app tool approval persistence.
    - Made plugin, marketplace, MCP, hooks, and config reload paths read
    from the merged user config so base and profile layers both participate.
    - Updated app-server config layer schemas to mark profile-backed user
    layers.
    
    ## Limits
    
    `--profile-v2` is still rejected for config-management subcommands such
    as feature, MCP, and marketplace edits. Those paths remain tied to the
    base `config.toml` until they have explicit profile-selection semantics.
    
    Some adjacent background writes may still update base or global state
    rather than the selected profile:
    
    - marketplace auto-upgrade metadata
    - automatic MCP dependency installs from skills
    - remote plugin sync or uninstall config edits
    - personality migration marker/default writes
    
    ## Verification
    
    Added targeted coverage for profile name validation, layer
    ordering/merging, selected-profile writes, app-server config writes,
    session hot reload, plugin config merging, hooks/config fixture updates,
    and MCP/app approval persistence.
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • [codex] Remove unused legacy shell tools (#22246)
    ## Why
    
    Recent session history showed no active use of the raw `shell`,
    `local_shell`, or `container.exec` execution surfaces. Keeping those
    handlers/specs wired into core leaves duplicate shell execution paths
    alongside the supported `shell_command` and unified exec tools.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Removed the raw `shell` handler/spec and its `ShellToolCallParams`
    protocol helper.
    - Removed the legacy `local_shell` and `container.exec` handler/spec
    plumbing while preserving persisted-history compatibility for old
    response items.
    - Normalized model/config `default` and `local` shell selections to
    `shell_command`.
    - Pruned tests that exercised removed raw-shell/local-shell/apply-patch
    variants and kept coverage on `shell_command`, unified exec, and
    freeform `apply_patch`.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `git diff --check`
    - `cargo test -p codex-protocol`
    - `cargo test -p codex-tools`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core tools::handlers::shell`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core tools::spec`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core tools::router`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    active_call_preserves_triggering_command_context`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core guardian_tests`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all shell_serialization`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all apply_patch_cli`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all shell_command_`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all local_shell`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all otel::`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all hooks::`
    - `just fix -p codex-core`
    - `just fix -p codex-tools`
  • Remove CODEX_RS_SSE_FIXTURE test hook (#22413)
    ## Why
    
    `CODEX_RS_SSE_FIXTURE` let integration-style CLI, exec, and TUI tests
    bypass the normal Responses transport by reading SSE from local files.
    That kept test-only behavior wired through production client code. The
    affected tests can stay hermetic by using the existing
    `core_test_support::responses` mock server and passing `openai_base_url`
    instead.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Removed the `CODEX_RS_SSE_FIXTURE` flag,
    `codex_api::stream_from_fixture`, the `env-flags` dependency, and the
    checked-in SSE fixture files.
    - Repointed the affected core, exec, and TUI tests at `MockServer` with
    the existing SSE event constructors.
    - Removed the Bazel test data plumbing for the deleted fixtures and
    refreshed cargo/Bazel lock state.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `cargo build -p codex-cli`
    - `cargo test -p codex-api`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all responses_api_stream_cli`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    integration_creates_and_checks_session_file`
    - `cargo test -p codex-exec --test all ephemeral`
    - `cargo test -p codex-exec --test all resume`
    - `cargo test -p codex-tui --test all
    resume_startup_does_not_consume_model_availability_nux_count`
    - `just bazel-lock-update`
    - `just bazel-lock-check`
    - `just fix -p codex-api -p codex-core -p codex-exec -p codex-tui`
    - `git diff --check`
  • extension: wire extension registries into sessions (#21737)
    ## Why
    
    [#21736](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/21736) introduces the
    typed extension API, but the runtime does not yet carry a registry
    through thread/session startup or give contributors host-owned stores to
    read from. This PR wires that host-side path so later feature migrations
    can move product-specific behavior behind typed contributions without
    adding another bespoke seam directly to `codex-core`.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Thread `ExtensionRegistry<Config>` through `ThreadManager`,
    `CodexSpawnArgs`, `Session`, and sub-agent spawn paths.
    - Wire `ThreadStartContributor` and `ContextContributor`
    - Expose the small supporting surface needed by non-core callers that
    construct threads directly, including `empty_extension_registry()`
    through `codex-core-api`.
    
    This PR lands the host plumbing only: the app-server registry is still
    empty, and concrete feature migrations are intended to follow
    separately.
  • tests: cover sandbox link write behavior (#21819)
    ## Why
    
    [PR #1705](https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1705) moved
    `apply_patch` execution under the configured sandbox and called out the
    need for integration coverage. We already covered textual `../` escapes,
    but did not have coverage for link aliases that live inside a writable
    workspace while pointing at, or aliasing, files visible outside it.
    
    This PR locks in the current sandbox boundary without changing
    production write semantics. Symlink escapes into a read-only outside
    root should fail and leave the outside file unchanged. Existing hard
    links are characterized separately: if a user-created hard link already
    exists inside the writable root, sandboxed writes preserve normal
    hard-link semantics rather than replacing the link and silently breaking
    that relationship.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Added
    `apply_patch_cli_does_not_write_through_symlink_escape_outside_workspace`
    to verify `apply_patch` cannot update a symlink that targets a file
    outside the writable workspace.
    - Added `apply_patch_cli_preserves_existing_hard_link_outside_workspace`
    to verify `apply_patch` intentionally writes through an existing hard
    link and does not unlink or replace it.
    - Added `file_system_sandboxed_write_preserves_existing_hard_link` to
    verify sandboxed `fs/writeFile` preserves an existing hard link and
    writes the shared inode.
    
    ## Testing
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-exec-server file_system_sandboxed_write`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    apply_patch_cli_does_not_write_through_symlink_escape_outside_workspace`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    apply_patch_cli_preserves_existing_hard_link_outside_workspace`
    - `just fix -p codex-exec-server -p codex-core`
    - `just fix -p codex-core`
    
    
    
    ---
    [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
    Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
    with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/21819).
    * #21845
    * __->__ #21819
  • [codex] Delete function-style apply_patch (#21651)
    ## Why
    
    `apply_patch` is now a freeform/custom tool. Keeping the old
    JSON/function-style registration and parsing path left another way for
    models and tests to invoke `apply_patch`, which made the tool surface
    harder to reason about.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Removed the `ApplyPatchToolType::Function` variant, JSON `apply_patch`
    spec, and handler support for function payloads.
    - Kept `apply_patch_tool_type = freeform` as the supported model
    metadata path, including Bedrock catalog metadata.
    - Migrated `apply_patch` tests and SSE fixtures to custom/freeform tool
    calls.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-tools -p codex-protocol -p codex-model-provider`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core tools::handlers::apply_patch --lib`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    apply_patch_tool_executes_and_emits_patch_events`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    apply_patch_reports_parse_diagnostics`
    - `cargo test -p codex-exec test_apply_patch_tool`
    - `just fix -p codex-core`
    - `just fix -p codex-tools -p codex-protocol -p codex-model-provider -p
    codex-exec`
  • [codex] request desktop attestation from app (#20619)
    ## Summary
    
    TL;DR: teaches `codex-rs` / app-server to request a desktop-provided
    attestation token and attach it as `x-oai-attestation` on the scoped
    ChatGPT Codex request paths.
    
    ![DeviceCheck attestation
    interface](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openai/codex/dev/jm/devicecheck-diagram-assets/pr-assets/devicecheck-attestation-interface.png)
    
    ## Details
    
    This PR teaches the Codex app-server runtime how to request and attach
    an attestation token. It does not generate DeviceCheck tokens directly;
    instead, it relies on the connected desktop app to advertise that it can
    generate attestation and then asks that app for a fresh header value
    when needed.
    
    The flow is:
    
    1. The Codex desktop app connects to app-server.
    2. During `initialize`, the app can advertise that it supports
    `requestAttestation`.
    3. Before app-server calls selected ChatGPT Codex endpoints, it sends
    the internal server request `attestation/generate` to the app.
    4. app-server receives a pre-encoded header value back.
    5. app-server forwards that value as `x-oai-attestation` on the scoped
    outbound requests.
    
    The code in this repo is mostly protocol and runtime plumbing: it adds
    the app-server request/response shape, introduces an attestation
    provider in core, wires that provider into Responses / compaction /
    realtime setup paths, and covers the intended scoping with tests. The
    signed macOS DeviceCheck generation remains owned by the desktop app PR.
    
    ## Related PR
    
    - Codex desktop app implementation:
    https://github.com/openai/openai/pull/878649
    
    ## Validation
    
    <details>
    <summary>Tests run</summary>
    
    ```sh
    cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol
    cargo test -p codex-core attestation --lib
    cargo test -p codex-app-server --lib attestation
    ```
    
    Also ran:
    
    ```sh
    just fix -p codex-core
    just fix -p codex-app-server
    just fix -p codex-app-server-protocol
    just fmt
    just write-app-server-schema
    ```
    
    </details>
    
    <details>
    <summary>E2E DeviceCheck validation</summary>
    
    First validated the signed desktop app boundary directly: launched a
    packaged signed `Codex.app`, sent `attestation/generate`, decoded the
    returned `v1.` attestation header, and validated the extracted
    DeviceCheck token with `personal/jm/verify_devicecheck_token.py` using
    bundle ID `com.openai.codex`. Apple returned `status_code: 200` and
    `is_ok: true`.
    
    Then ran the fuller app + app-server flow. The packaged `Codex.app`
    launched a current-branch app-server via `CODEX_CLI_PATH`, and a local
    MITM proxy intercepted outbound `chatgpt.com` traffic. The app-server
    requested `attestation/generate` from the real Electron app process, and
    the intercepted `/backend-api/codex/responses` traffic included
    `x-oai-attestation` on both routes:
    
    ```text
    GET  /backend-api/codex/responses  Upgrade: websocket  x-oai-attestation: present
    POST /backend-api/codex/responses  Upgrade: none       x-oai-attestation: present
    ```
    
    The captured header decoded to a DeviceCheck token that also validated
    with Apple for `com.openai.codex` (`status_code: 200`, `is_ok: true`,
    team `2DC432GLL2`).
    
    </details>
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • Add CODEX_HOME environments TOML provider (#20666)
    ## Why
    
    After stdio transports and provider-owned defaults exist, Codex needs a
    config-backed provider that can describe more than the single legacy
    `CODEX_EXEC_SERVER_URL` remote. This PR adds that provider without
    activating it in product entrypoints yet, keeping parser/validation
    review separate from runtime wiring.
    
    **Stack position:** this is PR 4 of 5. It builds on PR 3's
    provider/default model and adds the `environments.toml` provider used by
    PR 5.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Add `environment_toml.rs` as the TOML-specific home for parsing,
    validation, and provider construction.
    - Keep the TOML schema/provider structs private; the public constructor
    added here is `EnvironmentManager::from_codex_home(...)`.
    - Add `TomlEnvironmentProvider`, including validation for:
      - reserved ids such as `local` and `none`
      - duplicate ids
      - unknown explicit defaults
      - empty programs or URLs
      - exactly one of `url` or `program` per configured environment
    - Support websocket environments with `url = "ws://..."` / `wss://...`.
    - Support stdio-command environments with `program = "..."`.
    - Add helpers to load `environments.toml` from `CODEX_HOME`, but do not
    wire entrypoints to call them yet.
    - Add the `toml` dependency for parsing.
    
    ## Stack
    
    - 1. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20663 - Add stdio exec-server
    listener
    - 2. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20664 - Add stdio exec-server
    client transport
    - 3. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20665 - Make environment
    providers own default selection
    - **4. This PR:** https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20666 - Add
    CODEX_HOME environments TOML provider
    - 5. https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20667 - Load configured
    environments from CODEX_HOME
    
    Split from original draft: https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/20508
    
    ## Validation
    
    Not run locally; this was split out of the original draft stack.
    
    ## Documentation
    
    This introduces the config shape for `environments.toml`; user-facing
    documentation should be added before this stack is treated as a
    documented public workflow.
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • Disable empty Cargo test targets (#21584)
    ## Summary
    
    `cargo test` has entails both running standard Rust tests and doctests.
    It turns out that the doctest discovery is fairly slow, and it's a cost
    you pay even for crates that don't include any doctests.
    
    This PR disables doctests with `doctest = false` for crates that lack
    any doctests.
    
    For the collection of crates below, this speeds up test execution by
    >4x.
    
    E.g., before this PR:
    
    ```
    Benchmark 1: cargo test     -p codex-utils-absolute-path     -p codex-utils-cache     -p codex-utils-cli     -p codex-utils-home-dir     -p codex-utils-output-truncation     -p codex-utils-path     -p codex-utils-string     -p codex-utils-template     -p codex-utils-elapsed     -p codex-utils-json-to-toml
      Time (mean ± σ):      1.849 s ±  4.455 s    [User: 0.752 s, System: 1.367 s]
      Range (min … max):    0.418 s … 14.529 s    10 runs
    ```
    
    And after:
    
    ```
    Benchmark 1: cargo test     -p codex-utils-absolute-path     -p codex-utils-cache     -p codex-utils-cli     -p codex-utils-home-dir     -p codex-utils-output-truncation     -p codex-utils-path     -p codex-utils-string     -p codex-utils-template     -p codex-utils-elapsed     -p codex-utils-json-to-toml
      Time (mean ± σ):     428.6 ms ±   6.9 ms    [User: 187.7 ms, System: 219.7 ms]
      Range (min … max):   418.0 ms … 436.8 ms    10 runs
    ```
    
    For a single crate, with >2x speedup, before:
    
    ```
    Benchmark 1: cargo test -p codex-utils-string
      Time (mean ± σ):     491.1 ms ±   9.0 ms    [User: 229.8 ms, System: 234.9 ms]
      Range (min … max):   480.9 ms … 512.0 ms    10 runs
    ```
    
    And after:
    
    ```
    Benchmark 1: cargo test -p codex-utils-string
      Time (mean ± σ):     213.9 ms ±   4.3 ms    [User: 112.8 ms, System: 84.0 ms]
      Range (min … max):   206.8 ms … 221.0 ms    13 runs
    ```
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • Revert state DB injection and agent graph store (#21481)
    ## Why
    
    Reverts #20689 to restore the previous optional state DB plumbing. The
    conflict resolution keeps the newer installation ID and session/thread
    identity changes that landed after #20689, while removing the mandatory
    state DB and agent graph store dependency from ThreadManager
    construction.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Restored `Option<StateDbHandle>` through app-server, MCP server,
    prompt debug, and test entry points.
    - Removed the `codex-core` dependency on `codex-agent-graph-store` and
    reverted descendant lookup back to the existing state DB path when
    available.
    - Kept newer `installation_id` forwarding by passing it beside the
    optional DB handle.
    - Kept local thread-name updates working when the optional state DB
    handle is absent.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `git diff --check`
    - `cargo test -p codex-thread-store`
    - `cargo test -p codex-state -p codex-rollout -p
    codex-app-server-protocol`
    - Attempted `env CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0 cargo test -p codex-core -p
    codex-app-server -p codex-app-server-client -p codex-mcp-server -p
    codex-thread-manager-sample -p codex-tui`; blocked locally by a rustc
    ICE while compiling `v8 v146.4.0` with `rustc 1.93.0 (254b59607
    2026-01-19)` on `aarch64-apple-darwin`.
  • Remove core MCP list tools op (#21281)
    ## Why
    
    The core `Op::ListMcpTools` request path is no longer needed. Keeping it
    around left a dead request/response surface alongside the app-server MCP
    inventory APIs that own current server status listing.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Removed `Op::ListMcpTools`, `EventMsg::McpListToolsResponse`, and the
    core handler that built the MCP snapshot response.
    - Removed the now-unused `codex-mcp` snapshot wrapper/export and passive
    event handling arms in rollout and MCP-server consumers.
    - Updated tests that used the old op as a synchronization hook to wait
    on existing startup/skills events, and deleted the plugin test that only
    exercised the removed listing op.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-protocol`
    - `cargo test -p codex-mcp`
    - `cargo test -p codex-rollout -p codex-rollout-trace -p
    codex-mcp-server`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    pending_input::queued_inter_agent_mail`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    rmcp_client::stdio_mcp_tool_call_includes_sandbox_state_meta`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core --test all
    rmcp_client::stdio_image_responses`
    - `just fix -p codex-core -p codex-protocol -p codex-mcp -p
    codex-rollout -p codex-rollout-trace -p codex-mcp-server`
  • 2- Use string service tiers in session protocol (#20971)
    ## Summary
    - break service tier session/op/app-server protocol fields from the
    closed enum to string tier ids
    - send the service tier string directly through model requests, prewarm,
    compaction, memories, and TUI/app-server turn starts
    - regenerate app-server protocol JSON/TypeScript schemas, removing the
    standalone ServiceTier TS enum
    
    ## Verification
    - just fmt
    - cargo check -p codex-core -p codex-app-server -p codex-tui
    - just write-app-server-schema
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • Move installation ID resolution out of core startup (#21182)
    ## Summary
    
    - resolve or inject the installation ID before core startup and pass it
    through `ThreadManager`, `CodexSpawnArgs`, and `Session` as a plain
    `String`
    - keep child sessions on the parent installation ID instead of
    rediscovering it inside core
    - propagate installation ID startup failures in `mcp-server` instead of
    panicking
    
    ## Why
    
    Core was still touching the filesystem on the session startup path to
    discover `installation_id`. This moves that work to the outer host
    boundary so core no longer depends on `codex_home` reads during session
    construction.
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • Propagate cache key and service tiers in compact (#21249)
    ## Why
    
    `/responses/compact` should preserve the request-affinity fields that
    apply to the active auth mode. ChatGPT-auth compact requests need the
    effective `service_tier`, and compact requests for every auth mode need
    the stable `prompt_cache_key`, so compaction does not quietly lose
    routing or cache behavior that normal sampling already has.
    
    This follows the request-parity direction from #20719, but keeps the net
    change focused on the compact payload fields needed here.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Add `service_tier` and `prompt_cache_key` to the compact endpoint
    input payload.
    - Build the remote compact payload from the existing responses request
    builder output so `Fast` still maps to `priority` when compact sends a
    service tier.
    - Pass the turn service tier into remote compaction, but only include it
    in compact payloads for ChatGPT-backed auth.
    - Keep `prompt_cache_key` on compact payloads for all auth modes.
    - Add request-body diff snapshot coverage in
    `core/tests/suite/compact_remote.rs` for:
    - API-key auth reusing `prompt_cache_key` while omitting `service_tier`
    even when `Fast` is configured.
      - ChatGPT auth reusing both `service_tier` and `prompt_cache_key`.
    - Drive the snapshot coverage through five varied turns: plain text,
    multi-part text, tool-call continuation, image+text input, local-shell
    continuation, and final-turn reasoning output.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - Added insta snapshots for compact request-body parity against the last
    normal `/responses` request after five varied turns.
    - Not run locally per repo guidance; relying on GitHub CI for test
    execution.
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • Inject state DB, agent graph store (#20689)
    ## Why
    
    We want the agent graph store to be passed down the stack as a real
    dependency, the same way we already treat the thread store.
    
    This will let us inject the agent graph store as a real dependency and
    support implementations other than the local SQLite-backed one. Right
    now most code instantiates a state DB and an agent graph store
    just-in-time. Ideally, we would not depend on the state DB directly but
    only read through the higher-level interfaces.
    
    This change makes the dependency boundaries explicit and moves state DB
    initialization to process bootstrap instead of hiding it inside local
    store implementations.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - `ThreadManager` now requires a `StateDbHandle` and an
    `AgentGraphStore` at construction time instead of treating them as
    optional internals.
    - The local store constructors no longer lazily initialize SQLite.
    Callers now initialize the state DB once per process and use that shared
    handle to build:
      - `LocalThreadStore`
      - `LocalAgentGraphStore`
    - App bootstraps (`app-server`, `mcp-server`, `prompt_debug`, and the
    thread-manager sample) now initialize the state DB up front and inject
    the resulting handle down the stack.
    - `app-server` now consistently uses its process-scoped state DB handle
    instead of reopening SQLite or trying to recover it from loaded threads.
    - Device-key storage now reuses the shared state DB handle instead of
    maintaining its own lazy opener.
    - The thread archive / descendant traversal paths now use the injected
    `AgentGraphStore` instead of reaching through local
    thread-store-specific state.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `cargo check -p codex-core -p codex-thread-store -p codex-app-server
    -p codex-mcp-server -p codex-thread-manager-sample --tests`
    - `cargo test -p codex-thread-store`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    thread_manager_accepts_separate_agent_graph_store_and_thread_store --
    --nocapture`
    - `cargo test -p codex-app-server
    thread_archive_archives_spawned_descendants -- --nocapture`
  • hook trust metadata and enforcement (#20321)
    # Why
    
    We want shared hook trust that both the app and the TUI can build on,
    but the metadata is only useful if runtime behavior agrees with it. This
    PR adds a single backend trust model for hooks so unmanaged hooks cannot
    run until the current definition has been reviewed, while managed hooks
    remain runnable and non-configurable.
    
    # What
    
    - persist `trusted_hash` alongside hook state in `config.toml`
    - expose `currentHash` and derived `trustStatus` through `hooks/list`
    - derive trust from normalized hook definitions so equivalent hooks from
    `config.toml` and `hooks.json` share the same trust identity
    - gate unmanaged hooks on trust before they enter the runnable handler
    set
    
    # Reviewer Notes
    
    - key file to review is `codex-rs/hooks/src/engine/discovery.rs`
    - the only **core** change is schema related
  • core: fix apply_patch request permissions test (#21060)
    ## Why
    
    The Bazel test coverage change exposed
    `approved_folder_write_request_permissions_unblocks_later_apply_patch`,
    and `rust-ci-full.yml` showed the same test failing on `main` on macOS.
    There were two separate classes of problems here.
    
    ### Clean CI failure
    
    The test emits an `apply_patch` tool call, but its config did not enable
    the `apply_patch` tool, so the mocked response completed without an
    `apply-patch-call` output. After enabling the tool, the same path also
    needs the aggregate `codex-core` test binary to dispatch
    `--codex-run-as-fs-helper`; sandboxed `apply_patch` uses that helper
    under macOS Seatbelt.
    
    The test now also canonicalizes the temporary patch target before
    building the patch payload so the path matches normalized grants on
    macOS, where `/var` paths often normalize to `/private/var`.
    
    ### Local/enterprise config isolation
    
    The core test harness now builds its default test config with managed
    config disabled, so host-managed enterprise config cannot alter these
    tests. The request-permissions turns in this test also explicitly use
    the user reviewer path, keeping the assertions focused on
    `request_permissions` behavior rather than reviewer defaults from the
    host.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Enable `apply_patch` in
    `approved_folder_write_request_permissions_unblocks_later_apply_patch`.
    - Teach the core integration test binary to dispatch
    `CODEX_FS_HELPER_ARG1`, matching the existing apply-patch and
    linux-sandbox dispatch paths.
    - Canonicalize the tempdir-backed patch target before creating the
    patch.
    - Ignore managed config in default core test configs and explicitly pin
    this test to `ApprovalsReviewer::User`.
    
    ## Verification
    
    Run outside the Codex app sandbox because these macOS tests
    intentionally spawn Seatbelt:
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    approved_folder_write_request_permissions_unblocks_later_apply_patch`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    approved_folder_write_request_permissions_unblocks_later_exec_without_sandbox_args`
  • state: pass state db handles through consumers (#20561)
    ## Why
    
    SQLite state was still being opened from consumer paths, including lazy
    `OnceCell`-backed thread-store call sites. That let one process
    construct multiple state DB connections for the same Codex home, which
    makes SQLite lock contention and `database is locked` failures much
    easier to hit.
    
    State DB lifetime should be chosen by main-like entrypoints and tests,
    then passed through explicitly. Consumers should use the supplied
    `Option<StateDbHandle>` or `StateDbHandle` and keep their existing
    filesystem fallback or error behavior when no handle is available.
    
    The startup path also needs to keep the rollout crate in charge of
    SQLite state initialization. Opening `codex_state::StateRuntime`
    directly bypasses rollout metadata backfill, so entrypoints should
    initialize through `codex_rollout::state_db` and receive a handle only
    after required rollout backfills have completed.
    
    ## What Changed
    
    - Initialize the state DB in main-like entrypoints for CLI, TUI,
    app-server, exec, MCP server, and the thread-manager sample.
    - Pass `Option<StateDbHandle>` through `ThreadManager`,
    `LocalThreadStore`, app-server processors, TUI app wiring, rollout
    listing/recording, personality migration, shell snapshot cleanup,
    session-name lookup, and memory/device-key consumers.
    - Remove the lazy local state DB wrapper from the thread store so
    non-test consumers use only the supplied handle or their existing
    fallback path.
    - Make `codex_rollout::state_db::init` the local state startup path: it
    opens/migrates SQLite, runs rollout metadata backfill when needed, waits
    for concurrent backfill workers up to a bounded timeout, verifies
    completion, and then returns the initialized handle.
    - Keep optional/non-owning SQLite helpers, such as remote TUI local
    reads, as open-only paths that do not run startup backfill.
    - Switch app-server startup from direct
    `codex_state::StateRuntime::init` to the rollout state initializer so
    app-server cannot skip rollout backfill.
    - Collapse split rollout lookup/list APIs so callers use the normal
    methods with an optional state handle instead of `_with_state_db`
    variants.
    - Restore `getConversationSummary(ThreadId)` to delegate through
    `ThreadStore::read_thread` instead of a LocalThreadStore-specific
    rollout path special case.
    - Keep DB-backed rollout path lookup keyed on the DB row and file
    existence, without imposing the filesystem filename convention on
    existing DB rows.
    - Verify readable DB-backed rollout paths against `session_meta.id`
    before returning them, so a stale SQLite row that points at another
    thread's JSONL falls back to filesystem search and read-repairs the DB
    row.
    - Keep `debug prompt-input` filesystem-only so a one-off debug command
    does not initialize or backfill SQLite state just to print prompt input.
    - Keep goal-session test Codex homes alive only in the goal-specific
    helper, rather than leaking tempdirs from the shared session test
    helper.
    - Update tests and call sites to pass explicit state handles where DB
    behavior is expected and explicit `None` where filesystem-only behavior
    is intended.
    
    ## Validation
    
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo check -p
    codex-rollout -p codex-thread-store -p codex-app-server -p codex-core -p
    codex-tui -p codex-exec -p codex-cli --tests`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-rollout state_db_`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-rollout find_thread_path`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-rollout find_thread_path -- --nocapture`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-rollout try_init_ -- --nocapture`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-rollout`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo clippy -p
    codex-rollout --lib -- -D warnings`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-thread-store
    read_thread_falls_back_when_sqlite_path_points_to_another_thread --
    --nocapture`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-thread-store`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p codex-core
    shell_snapshot`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p codex-core
    --test all personality_migration`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p codex-core
    --test all rollout_list_find`
    - `RUST_MIN_STACK=8388608 CODEX_SKIP_VENDORED_BWRAP=1
    CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p codex-core
    --test all rollout_list_find::find_prefers_sqlite_path_by_id --
    --nocapture`
    - `RUST_MIN_STACK=8388608 CODEX_SKIP_VENDORED_BWRAP=1
    CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p codex-core
    --test all rollout_list_find -- --nocapture`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p codex-core
    interrupt_accounts_active_goal_before_pausing`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-app-server get_auth_status -- --test-threads=1`
    - `CODEX_SKIP_VENDORED_BWRAP=1
    CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo test -p
    codex-app-server --lib`
    - `CODEX_SKIP_VENDORED_BWRAP=1
    CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db cargo check -p codex-rollout
    -p codex-app-server --tests`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db just fix -p codex-rollout
    -p codex-thread-store -p codex-core -p codex-app-server -p codex-tui -p
    codex-exec -p codex-cli`
    - `CODEX_SKIP_VENDORED_BWRAP=1
    CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db just fix -p codex-rollout -p
    codex-app-server`
    - `CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db just fix -p
    codex-rollout`
    - `CODEX_SKIP_VENDORED_BWRAP=1
    CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/tmp/codex-target-state-db just fix -p codex-core`
    - `just argument-comment-lint -p codex-core`
    - `just argument-comment-lint -p codex-rollout`
    
    Focused coverage added in `codex-rollout`:
    
    - `recorder::tests::state_db_init_backfills_before_returning` verifies
    the rollout metadata row exists before startup init returns.
    - `state_db::tests::try_init_waits_for_concurrent_startup_backfill`
    verifies startup waits for another worker to finish backfill instead of
    disabling the handle for the process.
    -
    `state_db::tests::try_init_times_out_waiting_for_stuck_startup_backfill`
    verifies startup does not hang indefinitely on a stuck backfill lease.
    -
    `tests::find_thread_path_accepts_existing_state_db_path_without_canonical_filename`
    verifies DB-backed lookup accepts valid existing rollout paths even when
    the filename does not include the thread UUID.
    -
    `tests::find_thread_path_falls_back_when_db_path_points_to_another_thread`
    verifies DB-backed lookup ignores a stale row whose existing path
    belongs to another thread and read-repairs the row after filesystem
    fallback.
    
    Focused coverage updated in `codex-core`:
    
    - `rollout_list_find::find_prefers_sqlite_path_by_id` now uses a
    DB-preferred rollout file with matching `session_meta.id`, so it still
    verifies that valid SQLite paths win without depending on stale/empty
    rollout contents.
    
    `cargo test -p codex-app-server thread_list_respects_search_term_filter
    -- --test-threads=1 --nocapture` was attempted locally but timed out
    waiting for the app-server test harness `initialize` response before
    reaching the changed thread-list code path.
    
    `bazel test //codex-rs/thread-store:thread-store-unit-tests
    --test_output=errors` was attempted locally after the thread-store fix,
    but this container failed before target analysis while fetching `v8+`
    through BuildBuddy/direct GitHub. The equivalent local crate coverage,
    including `cargo test -p codex-thread-store`, passes.
    
    A plain local `cargo check -p codex-rollout -p codex-app-server --tests`
    also requires system `libcap.pc` for `codex-linux-sandbox`; the
    follow-up app-server check above used `CODEX_SKIP_VENDORED_BWRAP=1` in
    this container.
  • Make thread store process-scoped (#19474)
    - Build one app-server process ThreadStore from startup config and share
    it with ThreadManager and CodexMessageProcessor.
    - Remove per-thread/fork store reconstruction so effective thread config
    cannot switch the persistence backend.
    - Add params to ThreadStore create/resume for specifying thread
    metadata, since otherwise the metadata from store creation would be used
    (incorrectly).
  • Reduce the surface of collaboration modes (#20149)
    Collaboration modes were slightly invasive both into ThreadManager
    construction and ModelProvider
  • Add ThreadManager sample crate (#20141)
    Summary:
    - Add codex-thread-manager-sample, a one-shot binary that starts a
    ThreadManager thread, submits a prompt, and prints the final assistant
    output.
    - Pass ThreadStore into ThreadManager::new and expose
    thread_store_from_config for existing callsites.
    - Build the sample Config directly with only --model and prompt inputs.
    
    Verification:
    - just fmt
    - cargo check -p codex-thread-manager-sample -p codex-app-server -p
    codex-mcp-server
    - git diff --check
    
    Tests: Not run per request.
  • Add environment provider snapshot (#20058)
    ## Summary
    - Change `EnvironmentProvider` to return concrete `Environment`
    instances instead of `EnvironmentConfigurations`.
    - Make `DefaultEnvironmentProvider` provide the provider-visible `local`
    environment plus optional `remote` environment from
    `CODEX_EXEC_SERVER_URL`.
    - Keep `EnvironmentManager` as the concrete cache while exposing its own
    explicit local environment for `local_environment()` fallback paths.
    
    ## Validation
    - `just fmt`
    - `git diff --check`
    
    ---------
    
    Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
  • core tests: migrate zsh-fork permissions to profiles (#20034)
    ## Summary
    - Updates the zsh-fork test helper to configure `PermissionProfile`
    directly instead of constructing a legacy `SandboxPolicy`.
    - Sends permission-profile-backed turns from the skill approval zsh-fork
    tests so the runtime and request path exercise the canonical permissions
    model.
    - Leaves the broader approvals suite on legacy policies for now, except
    for the zsh-fork test that shares this helper.
    
    ## Verification
    - `cargo check -p codex-core --tests`
    - `just fmt`
  • core tests: build user turns from permission profiles (#20011)
    ## Summary
    - Add `turn_permission_fields()` so tests that construct `Op::UserTurn`
    directly can provide a canonical `PermissionProfile` while still filling
    the required legacy `sandbox_policy` compatibility field.
    - Migrate direct user-turn construction in core integration tests from
    `SandboxPolicy::DangerFullAccess` to `PermissionProfile::Disabled`.
    - Continue reducing direct `SandboxPolicy` usage in
    `codex-rs/core/tests`, from 41 files after #20010 to 32 files in this
    PR.
    
    ## Testing
    - `cargo check -p codex-core --tests`
    - `just fmt`
    - `just fix -p core_test_support`
    - `just fix -p codex-core`
  • core tests: submit turns with permission profiles (#20010)
    ## Summary
    
    - Add `PermissionProfile`-based turn submission helpers to
    `core_test_support`, while keeping the legacy `SandboxPolicy` helper for
    tests that intentionally exercise legacy fallback behavior.
    - Switch the default `TestCodex::submit_turn()` path to send a real
    `PermissionProfile` plus the required legacy compatibility projection in
    `Op::UserTurn`.
    - Migrate straightforward app/search/shell/truncation tests from
    `SandboxPolicy::{DangerFullAccess, ReadOnly}` to
    `PermissionProfile::{Disabled, read_only}`.
    - Add a TUI compatibility projection helper for legacy app-server fields
    so non-legacy writable roots are preserved instead of being downgraded
    to read-only.
    - Fix remote start/resume/fork sandbox-mode projection to classify any
    managed profile with writable roots as workspace-write, not only
    profiles that can write `cwd`.
    - Reduce `SandboxPolicy` references in `codex-rs/core/tests` from 47
    files to 41 files without changing production behavior.
    
    ## Testing
    
    - `cargo check -p codex-core --tests`
    - `cargo test -p codex-tui
    compatibility_profile_preserves_unbridgeable_write_roots`
    - `cargo test -p codex-tui
    sandbox_mode_preserves_non_cwd_write_roots_for_remote_sessions`
    - `just fmt`
    - `just fix -p core_test_support`
    - `just fix -p codex-core`
  • permissions: add built-in default profiles (#19900)
    ## Why
    
    The migration away from `SandboxPolicy` needs new configs to start from
    permissions profiles instead of deriving profiles from legacy sandbox
    modes. Existing users can have empty `config.toml` files, and we should
    not rewrite user-owned config files that may live in shared
    repositories.
    
    This PR introduces built-in profile names so an empty config can resolve
    to a canonical `PermissionProfile`, while explicit named `[permissions]`
    profiles still behave predictably.
    
    ## What changed
    
    - Adds built-in `default_permissions` profile names:
      - `:read-only` maps to `PermissionProfile::read_only()`.
    - `:workspace` maps to the workspace-write profile, including
    project-root metadata carveouts.
    - `:danger-no-sandbox` maps to `PermissionProfile::Disabled`, preserving
    the distinction between no sandbox and a broad managed sandbox.
    - Reserves the `:` prefix for built-in profiles so user-defined
    `[permissions]` profiles cannot collide with future built-ins.
    - Allows `default_permissions` to reference a built-in profile without
    requiring a `[permissions]` table.
    - Makes an otherwise empty config choose a built-in profile by
    trust/platform context: trusted or untrusted project roots use
    `:workspace` when the platform supports that sandbox, while roots
    without a trust decision use `:read-only`.
    - Keeps legacy `sandbox_mode` configs on the legacy path, and still
    rejects user-defined `[permissions]` profiles that omit
    `default_permissions` so we do not silently guess among custom profiles.
    - Preserves compatibility behavior for implicit defaults: bare
    `network.enabled = true` allows runtime network without starting the
    managed proxy, explicit profile proxy policy still starts the proxy, and
    implicit workspace/add-dir roots keep legacy metadata carveouts.
    
    ## Verification
    
    - `cargo test -p codex-core builtin --lib`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core profile_network_proxy_config`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    implicit_builtin_workspace_profile_preserves_add_dir_metadata_carveouts`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    permissions_profiles_network_enabled_allows_runtime_network_without_proxy`
    - `cargo test -p codex-core
    permissions_profiles_proxy_policy_starts_managed_network_proxy`
    
    ## Documentation
    
    Public Codex config docs should mention these built-in names when the
    `[permissions]` config format is ready to document as stable.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    ---
    [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
    Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
    with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/19900).
    * #20041
    * #20040
    * #20037
    * #20035
    * #20034
    * #20033
    * #20032
    * #20030
    * #20028
    * #20027
    * #20026
    * #20024
    * #20021
    * #20018
    * #20016
    * #20015
    * #20013
    * #20011
    * #20010
    * #20008
    * __->__ #19900