## Why Remote-control app-server enrollments have both an internal server id and the environment id exposed to remote-control clients. App-server clients need one current status snapshot that says whether remote control is usable and which environment id, if any, is exposed. A temporary websocket disconnect is not itself an identity change. Account changes, stale enrollment invalidation, successful re-enrollment, and missing ChatGPT auth are meaningful status changes. Disabled remote control remains `disabled` regardless of auth or SQLite state. SQLite startup failure disablement and enrollment persistence failures are handled in #20068; this PR reports the resulting effective status to clients. ## What changed - Adds v2 `remoteControl/status/changed` carrying `state` and `environmentId`. - Adds `RemoteControlConnectionState` values: `disabled`, `connecting`, `connected`, and `errored`. - Exposes remote-control status updates through `RemoteControlHandle` using a Tokio watch channel. - Always sends the current remote-control status snapshot to newly initialized app-server clients. - Broadcasts status changes to initialized app-server clients when state or environment id changes. - Treats missing ChatGPT auth as an `errored` status while leaving it retryable because auth can change at runtime. - Clears `environmentId` when enrollment is cleared for account changes, auth loss, stale backend invalidation, or disabled remote control. - Updates app-server protocol schema fixtures, generated TypeScript, app-server README, remote-control tests, and TUI exhaustive notification matches. ## Stack - Builds on #20068. ## Verification - `just write-app-server-schema` - `cargo test -p codex-app-server-protocol` - `cargo test -p codex-app-server transport::remote_control --lib` - `cargo check -p codex-tui` - `just fix -p codex-app-server-protocol` - `just fix -p codex-app-server` - `just fix -p codex-tui`
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.
Each GitHub Release contains many executables, but in practice, you likely want one of these:
- 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.
Using Codex with your ChatGPT plan
Run codex and select Sign in with ChatGPT. We recommend signing into your ChatGPT account to use Codex as part of your Plus, Pro, Business, Edu, or Enterprise plan. Learn more about what's included in your ChatGPT plan.
You can also use Codex with an API key, but this requires additional setup.
Docs
This repository is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.
