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codex/codex-rs/app-server-test-client
T
Celia Chen cb255c52e9 [codex] handle request_user_input in app-server test client (#29476)
## Why

`codex-app-server-test-client` previously treated
`item/tool/requestUserInput` as an unsupported server request and
terminated the connection. That made it impossible to use the client for
end-to-end testing of interactive turns: an operator could observe the
request, but could not answer it and confirm that the same turn resumed.

## What changed

- Handle `ToolRequestUserInput` server requests in the test client's
central request dispatcher.
- Render numbered terminal choices, accept exact option labels, support
free-form `Other` and text-only questions, and collect multiple answers.
- Send a protocol-native `ToolRequestUserInputResponse` and continue
streaming the active turn.
- Fail clearly when interactive input is requested without a terminal.
- Document the interactive behavior and add focused tests for option
selection, free-form answers, multiple questions, and invalid-selection
retries.

## Testing

- `just test -p codex-app-server-test-client`
- `just bazel-lock-check`
- Manually exercised the app-server flow, selected `TUI`, observed
`serverRequest/resolved`, and verified that the same turn completed with
the selected answer.
cb255c52e9 ยท 2026-06-22 13:55:32 -07:00
History
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App Server Test Client

Quickstart for running and hitting codex app-server.

Quickstart

Run from <reporoot>/codex-rs.

# 1) Build debug codex binary
cargo build -p codex-cli --bin codex

# 2) Start websocket app-server in background
cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- \
  --codex-bin ./target/debug/codex \
  serve --listen ws://127.0.0.1:4222 --kill

# 3) Call app-server (defaults to ws://127.0.0.1:4222)
cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- model-list

send-message and send-message-v2 handle request_user_input server requests interactively. When Codex asks a question, choose a numbered option (or o for a free-form answer when offered) and the client will send the response and continue streaming the same turn.

Testing Plugin Analytics

The plugin-analytics-smoke command exercises plugin/installed, plugin enable/disable config writes, and a structured plugin mention through one app-server connection. Analytics are captured to a local JSONL file and are not sent to the analytics backend. The model turn uses a loopback Responses API server.

The selected plugin must already be installed and enabled remotely, and the active Codex profile must be authenticated. On a fresh local cache, the command retries ephemeral turns while the installed remote bundle finishes syncing.

# Build a debug Codex binary; analytics capture is unavailable in release builds.
cargo build -p codex-cli --bin codex

cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- \
  --codex-bin ./target/debug/codex \
  plugin-analytics-smoke \
  --plugin-id linear@openai-curated-remote

Use --capture-file /tmp/plugin-analytics.jsonl to select the output path. The command validates one codex_plugin_disabled, codex_plugin_enabled, and codex_plugin_used event with the expected local plugin identity and capability metadata. The enabled and disabled events come from successful writes to the temporary config; the command does not mutate the remote enabled state. It prints the events and leaves the JSONL file in place for inspection. It does not install or uninstall plugins and does not modify the profile's persistent config.

Testing remote install and uninstall analytics

plugin-analytics-mutation-smoke is a manually invoked live smoke test. It contacts the configured remote plugin API and temporarily changes the active account's installed-plugin state. It is not run by cargo test, just test, or CI.

Choose a remote plugin that is available to the active account and is not currently installed. The command refuses to run when the plugin is already installed, installs it, validates codex_plugin_installed, uninstalls it, and verifies that the original uninstalled state was restored. The current install event uses the backend ID as plugin_id. Uninstall is part of cleanup but is not yet an analytics assertion.

--remote-plugin-id takes the backend ID, such as plugins~Plugin_..., not the local <plugin>@<marketplace> ID.

cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- \
  --codex-bin ./target/debug/codex \
  plugin-analytics-mutation-smoke \
  --remote-plugin-id <REMOTE_PLUGIN_ID> \
  --confirm-account-mutation \
  --capture-file /tmp/plugin-mutation-analytics.jsonl

Analytics use the normal queue, reduction, batching, and serialization path, but the debug capture destination suppresses analytics network delivery. The command prints one of these final states:

  • PASS: the install event validated and the plugin is uninstalled.
  • FAIL-CLEAN: validation failed, but the original uninstalled state was restored.
  • FAIL-LOCAL-CACHE: the backend is uninstalled, but local cleanup reported an error.
  • FAIL-DIRTY: cleanup failed and the plugin still appears installed.
  • FAIL-UNKNOWN: the command could not verify the final installed state.

For a dirty or uncertain result, retry cleanup with:

cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- \
  --codex-bin ./target/debug/codex \
  plugin-remote-uninstall \
  --remote-plugin-id <REMOTE_PLUGIN_ID> \
  --confirm-account-mutation

Cleanup does not require analytics capture or a debug Codex binary. When the smoke uses global --config overrides, its printed recovery command preserves them so cleanup targets the same backend and account.

Watching Raw Inbound Traffic

Initialize a connection, then print every inbound JSON-RPC message until you stop it with Ctrl+C:

cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- watch

Testing Thread Rejoin Behavior

Build and start an app server using commands above. The app-server log is written to /tmp/codex-app-server-test-client/app-server.log

1) Get a thread id

Create at least one thread, then list threads:

cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- send-message-v2 "seed thread for rejoin test"
cargo run -p codex-app-server-test-client -- thread-list --limit 5

Copy a thread id from the thread-list output.

2) Rejoin while a turn is in progress (two terminals)

Terminal A:

cargo run --bin codex-app-server-test-client -- \
  resume-message-v2 <THREAD_ID> "respond with thorough docs on the rust core"

Terminal B (while Terminal A is still streaming):

cargo run --bin codex-app-server-test-client -- thread-resume <THREAD_ID>