## Why This PR make the `morpheus` agent (memory phase 2) use a git diff to start it's consolidation. The workflow is the following: 1. The agent acquire a lock 2. If `.codex/memories` does not exist or is not a git root, initialize everything (and make a first empty commit) 3. Update `raw_memories.md` and `rollout_summaries/` as before. Basically we select max N phase 1 memories based on a given policy 4. We use git (`gix`) to get a diff between the current state of `.codex/memories` and the last commit. 5. Dump the diff in `phase2_workspace_diff.md` 6. Spawn `morpheus` and point it to `phase2_workspace_diff.md` 7. Wait for `morpheus` to be done 8. Re-create a new `.git` and make one single commit on it. We do this because we don't want to preserve history through `.git` and this is cheap anyway 9. We release the lock On top of this, we keep the retry policies etc etc The goals of this new workflow are: * Better support of any memory extensions such as `chronicle` * Allow the user to manually edit memories and this will be considered by the phase 2 agent As a follow-up we will need to add support for user's edition while `morpheus` is running ## What Changed - Added memory workspace helpers that prepare the git baseline, compute the diff, write `phase2_workspace_diff.md`, and reset the baseline after successful consolidation. - Updated Phase 2 to sync current inputs into `raw_memories.md` and `rollout_summaries/`, prune old extension resources, skip clean workspaces, and run the consolidation subagent only when the workspace has changes. - Tightened Phase 2 job ownership around long-running consolidation with heartbeats and an ownership check before resetting the baseline. - Simplified the prompt and state APIs so DB watermarks are bookkeeping, while workspace dirtiness decides whether consolidation work exists. - Updated the memory pipeline README and tests for workspace diffs, extension-resource cleanup, pollution-driven forgetting, selection ranking, and baseline persistence. ## Verification - Added/updated coverage in `core/src/memories/tests.rs`, `core/src/memories/workspace_tests.rs`, `state/src/runtime/memories.rs`, and `core/tests/suite/memories.rs`. --------- Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
npm i -g @openai/codex
or brew install --cask codex
Codex CLI is a coding agent from OpenAI that runs locally on your computer.
If you want Codex in your code editor (VS Code, Cursor, Windsurf), install in your IDE.
If you want the desktop app experience, run
codex app or visit the Codex App page.
If you are looking for the cloud-based agent from OpenAI, Codex Web, go to chatgpt.com/codex.
Quickstart
Installing and running Codex CLI
Install globally with your preferred package manager:
# Install using npm
npm install -g @openai/codex
# Install using Homebrew
brew install --cask codex
Then simply run codex to get started.
You can also go to the latest GitHub Release and download the appropriate binary for your platform.
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- macOS
- Apple Silicon/arm64:
codex-aarch64-apple-darwin.tar.gz - x86_64 (older Mac hardware):
codex-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar.gz
- Apple Silicon/arm64:
- Linux
- x86_64:
codex-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl.tar.gz - arm64:
codex-aarch64-unknown-linux-musl.tar.gz
- x86_64:
Each archive contains a single entry with the platform baked into the name (e.g., codex-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl), so you likely want to rename it to codex after extracting it.
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This repository is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.
