## What does this PR do?
* Implements the full `/clear` command in **codex‑cli**:
* Resets chat history **and** wipes the terminal screen.
* Shows a single system message: `Context cleared`.
* Adds comprehensive unit tests for the new behaviour.
## Why is it needed?
* Fixes user‑reported bugs:
* **#395**
* **#405**
## How is it implemented?
* **Code** – Adds `process.stdout.write('\x1b[3J\x1b[H\x1b[2J')` in
`terminal.tsx`. Removed reference to `prev` in `
setItems((prev) => [
...prev,
` in `terminal-chat-new-input.tsx` & `terminal-chat-input.tsx`.
## CI / QA
All commands pass locally:
```bash
pnpm test # green
pnpm run lint # green
pnpm run typecheck # zero TS errors
```
## Results
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/11dcf05c-e054-495a-8ecb-ac6ef21a9da4
---------
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
Another one that I noticed.
The dist structure is very simple rn, so unlikely to run into orphaned
files as you're emitting a single built artifact which wil be
overwritten on build, but I always prefer to do clean builds as
"hygiene".
I had a dirty dist personally after local development and testing some
things, as an example.
Alternatives could be to create a `clean` script with cross platform
`rimraf dist`
This PR tidies up primitives under storage/.
**Noop changes:**
* Promote logger implementation to top-level utility outside of agent/
* Use logger within storage primitives
* Cleanup doc strings and comments
**Functional changes:**
* Increase command history size to 10_000
* Remove unnecessary debounce implementation and ensure a session ID is
created only once per agent loop
---------
Signed-off-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
## Background
Addressing feedback from
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/333#discussion_r2050893224, this PR
adds support for Bun alongside npm, pnpm while keeping the code simple.
## Summary
The update‑check flow is refactored to use a direct registry lookup
(`fast-npm-meta` + `semver`) instead of shelling out to `npm outdated`,
and adds a lightweight installer‑detection mechanism that:
1. Checks if the invoked script lives under a known global‑bin directory
(npm, pnpm, or bun)
2. If not, falls back to local detection via `getUserAgent()` (the
`package‑manager‑detector` library)
## What’s Changed
- **Registry‑based version check**
- Replace `execFile("npm", ["outdated"])` with `getLatestVersion()` and
`semver.gt()`
- **Multi‑manager support**
- New `renderUpdateCommand` handles update commands for `npm`, `pnpm`,
and `bun`.
- Detect global installer first via `detectInstallerByPath()`
- Fallback to local detection via `getUserAgent()`
- **Module cleanup**
- Extract `detectInstallerByPath` into
`utils/package-manager-detector.ts`
- Remove legacy `checkOutdated`, `getNPMCommandPath`, and child‑process
JSON parsing
- **Flow improvements in `checkForUpdates`**
1. Short‑circuit by `UPDATE_CHECK_FREQUENCY`
3. Fetch & compare versions
4. Persist new timestamp immediately
5. Render & display styled box only when an update exists
- **Maintain simplicity**
- All multi‑manager logic lives in one small helper and a concise lookup
rather than a complex adapter hierarchy
- Core `checkForUpdates` remains a single, easy‑to‑follow async function
- **Dependencies added**
- `fast-npm-meta`, `semver`, `package-manager-detector`, `@types/semver`
## Considerations
If we decide to drop the interactive update‑message (`npm install -g
@openai/codex`) rendering altogether, we could remove most of the
installer‑detection code and dependencies, which would simplify the
codebase further but result in a less friendly UX.
## Preview
* npm

* bun

## Simple Flow Chart
```mermaid
flowchart TD
A(Start) --> B[Read state]
B --> C{Recent check?}
C -- Yes --> Z[End]
C -- No --> D[Fetch latest version]
D --> E[Save check time]
E --> F{Version data OK?}
F -- No --> Z
F -- Yes --> G{Update available?}
G -- No --> Z
G -- Yes --> H{Global install?}
H -- Yes --> I[Select global manager]
H -- No --> K{Local install?}
K -- No --> Z
K -- Yes --> L[Select local manager]
I & L --> M[Render update message]
M --> N[Format with boxen]
N --> O[Print update]
O --> Z
```
This PR removes always included files and folders from the
[`package.json#files`
field](https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v11/configuring-npm/package-json#files):
> Certain files are always included, regardless of settings:
> - package.json
> - README
> - LICENSE / LICENCE
> - The file in the "main" field
> - The file(s) in the "bin" field
Validated by running `pnpm i && cd codex-cli && pnpm build && pnpm
release:readme && pnpm pack` and confirming both the `README.md` file
and `bin` directory are still included in the tarball:
<img width="227" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ecd90a07-73c7-4940-8c83-cb1d51dfcf96"
/>
## What
This PR targets #402 and refactors the `history-overlay.tsx`component to
reduce cognitive complexity by splitting the `buildLists` function into
smaller, focused helper functions. It also adds comprehensive test
coverage to ensure the functionality remains intact.
## Why
The original `buildLists` function had high cognitive complexity due to
multiple nested conditionals, complex string manipulation, and mixed
responsibilities. This refactor makes the code more maintainable and
easier to understand while preserving all existing functionality.
## How
- Split `buildLists` into focused helper functions
- Added comprehensive test coverage for all functionality
- Maintained existing behavior and keyboard interactions
- Improved code organization and readability
## Testing
All tests pass, including:
- Command mode functionality
- File mode functionality
- Keyboard interactions
- Error handling
As described in
https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/392#issuecomment-2817090022
introduced by #400
The testing I'd done worked correctly because I was using the (s)
shortcut, but selecting the same option using arrow‑key → Enter on
“Switch approval mode” was preventing the user from subsequently exiting
the Switch approval mode dialog, requiring a ^C to quit codex entirely.
With this fix, both entry methods work correctly in my testing.
Per codex:
Issue
- When you navigated down (↓) to “Switch approval mode (s)” in the Shell
Command review dialog and pressed Enter, the ApprovalModeOverlay would
open—but because the underlying `TerminalChatCommandReview` component
stayed mounted (albeit disabled), its own Ink input handlers immediately
re‑captured the same key events and re‑opened the overlay as soon as you
hit Esc or Enter again. In practice this made it impossible to exit the
submenu.
Root cause
- We only disabled the SelectInput via `isDisabled`, but never fully
unmounted the review UI when an overlay was shown, so its `useInput` and
`<Select>` hooks were still active and “stealing” keys.
Fix
- In `terminal-chat.tsx` we now only render `<TerminalChatInput>` (and
by extension `TerminalChatCommandReview`) when `overlayMode === "none"`.
That unmounts all of its key handlers whenever any overlay (history,
model, approval, help, diff) is open, so no input leaks through.
Files changed
- **src/components/chat/terminal-chat.tsx**: Wrapped the entire
`<TerminalChatInput>` block in `overlayMode === "none" && agent`
With that in place, arrow‑key → Enter on “Switch approval mode”
correctly opens the overlay, and then you can use Enter/Esc inside the
overlay without getting stuck or immediately re‑opening it.
## Description
This PR fixes Issue #421 where commands with pipes (e.g., `grep -R ...
-n | head -n 20`) were failing to execute properly after PR #391 was
merged.
## Changes
- Modified the `requiresShell` function to only enable shell mode when
the command is a single string containing shell operators
- Added logic to handle the case where shell operators are passed as
separate arguments
- Added comprehensive tests to verify the fix
## Root Cause
The issue was that the `requiresShell` function was detecting shell
operators like `|` even when they were passed as separate arguments,
which caused the command to be executed with `shell: true`
unnecessarily. This was causing syntax errors when running commands with
pipes.
## Testing
- Added unit tests to verify the fix
- Manually tested with real commands using pipes
- Ensured all existing tests pass
Fixes#421
This PR improves the reliability of `raw-exec-process-group.test`,
addressing [#415](https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/415)
Before: The test would fail sporadically in CI because it checked for
process termination immediately after abort, without accounting for the
time it takes for processes to fully terminate.
Now: We've added a robust `ensureProcessGone` helper that:
- Polls the process status with a 500ms timeout
- Retries every 50ms if the process is still alive
- Provides clear error messages if termination takes too long
We now wait for the child process to fully exit after sending abort
signals, instead of assuming instant death, fixing flakiness caused by
asynchronous process termination.
Changes:
- Added `ensureProcessGone` helper function with retry logic
- Improved error handling and timeout management
See [this bash
demo](https://gist.github.com/jdocherty/a84dbca2fbf7b47e5f95c87a07034ae8)
for a minimal reproduction of why process death is asynchronous and why
the test needs to retry after aborting.
It appears that use of `isLoggingEnabled()` was erroneously copypasta'd
in many places. This PR updates its docstring to clarify that should
only be used to avoid constructing a potentially expensive docstring.
With this change, the only function that merits/uses this check is
`execCommand()`.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/420).
* #423
* __->__ #420
* #419
To play it safe, let's keep `CONFIG_DIR` out of the default list of
writable roots.
This also fixes an issue where `execWithSeatbelt()` was modifying
`writableRoots` instead of creating a new array.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/419).
* #423
* #420
* __->__ #419
## Description
This PR implements multi-line input support for Codex when it asks for
user feedback (Issue #344). Users can now use Shift+Enter to add new
lines in their responses, making it easier to provide formatted code
snippets, lists, or other structured content.
## Changes
- Replace the single-line TextInput component with the
MultilineTextEditor component in terminal-chat-input.tsx
- Add support for Shift+Enter to create new lines
- Update key handling logic to properly handle history navigation in a
multi-line context
- Add reference to the editor to access cursor position information
- Update help text to inform users about the Shift+Enter functionality
- Add tests for the new functionality
## Testing
- Added new test file (terminal-chat-input-multiline.test.tsx) to test
the multi-line input functionality
- All existing tests continue to pass
- Manually tested the feature to ensure it works as expected
## Fixes
Closes#344
## Screenshots
N/A
## Additional Notes
This implementation maintains backward compatibility while adding the
requested multi-line input functionality. The UI remains clean and
intuitive, with a simple hint about using Shift+Enter for new lines.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/160 introduced a call to `exec()`
that takes a format string as an argument, but it is not clear that the
expansions within the format string are escaped safely. As written, it
is possible a carefully crafted command (e.g., if `cwd` were `"; && rm
-rf` or something...) could run arbitrary code.
Moving to `spawn()` makes this a bit better, as now at least `spawn()`
itself won't run an arbitrary process, though I suppose `osascript`
itself still could if the value passed to `-e` were abused. I'm not
clear on the escaping rules for AppleScript to ensure that `safePreview`
and `cwd` are injected safely.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/416).
* #423
* #420
* #419
* __->__ #416
This check was lost in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/287. Both
the root folder and `codex-cli/` have their own `pnpm format` commands
that check the formatting of different things.
Also ran `pnpm format:fix` to fix the formatting violations that got in
while this was disabled in CI.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/417).
* #420
* #419
* #416
* __->__ #417
Add interactive slash‑command autocomplete & navigation in chat input
Description
This PR enhances the chat input component by adding first‑class support
for slash commands (/help, /clear, /compact, etc.)
with:
* **Live filtering:** As soon as the user types leading `/`, a list of
matching commands is shown below the prompt.
* **Arrow‑key navigation:** Up/Down arrows cycle through suggestions.
* **Enter to autocomplete:** Pressing Enter on a partial command will
fill it (without submitting) so you can add
arguments or simply press Enter again to execute.
* **Type‑safe registry:** A new `slash‑commands.ts` file declares all
supported commands in one place, along with
TypeScript types to prevent drift.
* **Validation:** Only registered commands will ever autocomplete or be
suggested; unknown single‑word slash inputs still
show an “Invalid command” system message.
* **Automated tests:**
* Unit tests for the command registry and prefix filtering
* Existing tests continue passing with no regressions
Motivation
Slash commands provide a quick, discoverable way to control the agent
(clearing history, compacting context, opening overlays,
etc.). Before, users had to memorize the exact command or rely on the
generic /help list—autocomplete makes them far more
accessible and reduces typos.
Changes
* `src/utils/slash‑commands.ts` – defines `SlashCommand` and exports a
flat list of supported commands + descriptions
* `terminal‑chat‑input.tsx`
* Import and type the command registry
* Render filtered suggestions under the prompt when input starts with
`/`
* Hook into `useInput` to handle Up/Down and Enter for selection & fill
* Flag to swallow the first Enter (autocomplete) and only submit on the
next
* Updated tests in `tests/slash‑commands.test.ts` to cover registry
contents and filtering logic
* Removed old JS version and fixed stray `@ts‑expect‑error`
How to test locally
1. Type `/` in the prompt—you should see matching commands.
2. Use arrows to move the highlight, press Enter to fill, then Enter
again to execute.
3. Run the full test suite (`npm test`) to verify no regressions.
Notes
* Future work could include fuzzy matching, paging long lists, or more
visual styling.
* This change is purely additive and does not affect non‑slash inputs or
existing slash handlers.
---------
Co-authored-by: Fouad Matin <169186268+fouad-openai@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
This PR implements support for reading the approvalMode setting from the
user's config file (`~/.codex/config.json` or `~/.codex/config.yaml`),
allowing users to set a persistent default approval mode without needing
to specify command-line flags for each session.
Changes:
- Added approvalMode to the AppConfig type in config.ts
- Updated loadConfig() to read the approval mode from the config file
- Modified saveConfig() to persist the approval mode setting
- Updated CLI logic to respect the config-defined approval mode (while
maintaining CLI flag priority)
- Added comprehensive tests for approval mode config functionality
- Updated README to document the new config option in both YAML and JSON
formats
- additions to `.gitignore` for other CLI tools
Motivation:
As a user who regularly works with CLI-tools, I found it odd to have to
alias this with the command flags I wanted when `approvalMode` simply
wasn't being parsed even though it was an optional prop in `config.ts`.
This change allows me (and other users) to set the preference once in
the config file, streamlining daily usage while maintaining the ability
to override via command-line flags when needed.
Testing:
I've added a new test case loads and saves approvalMode correctly that
verifies:
- Reading the approvalMode from the config file works correctly
- Saving the approvalMode to the config file works as expected
- The value persists through load/save operations
All tests related to the implementation are passing.
Implements https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/392
When the user is in suggest or auto-edit mode and gets an approval
request, they now have an option in the `Shell Command` dialog to:
`Switch approval mode (v)`
That option brings up the standard `Switch approval mode` dialog,
allowing the user to switch into the desired mode, then drops them back
to the `Shell Command` dialog's `Allow command?` prompt, allowing them
to approve the current command and let the agent continue doing the rest
of what it was doing without interruption.
```
╭────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
│Shell Command
│
│$ apply_patch << 'PATCH'
│*** Begin Patch
│*** Update File: foo.txt
│@@ -1 +1 @@
│-foo
│+bar
│*** End Patch
│PATCH
│
│
│Allow command?
│
│ Yes (y)
│ Explain this command (x)
│ Edit or give feedback (e)
│ Switch approval mode (v)
│ No, and keep going (n)
│ No, and stop for now (esc)
╰────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╭────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
│ Switch approval mode
│ Current mode: suggest
│
│
│
│ ❯ suggest
│ auto-edit
│ full-auto
│ type to search · enter to confirm · esc to cancel
╰────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
```
# Improve Developer Experience with Husky and lint-staged for pnpm
Monorepo
## Summary
This PR enhances the developer experience by configuring Husky and
lint-staged to work properly with our pnpm monorepo structure. It
centralizes Git hooks at the root level and ensures consistent code
quality across the project.
## Changes
- Centralized Husky and lint-staged configuration at the monorepo root
- Added pre-commit hook that runs lint-staged to enforce code quality
- Configured lint-staged to:
- Format JSON, MD, and YAML files with Prettier
- Lint and typecheck TypeScript files before commits
- Fixed release script in codex-cli package.json (changed "pmpm" to "npm
publish")
- Removed duplicate Husky and lint-staged configurations from codex-cli
package.json
## Benefits
- **Consistent Code Quality**: Ensures all committed code meets project
standards
- **Automated Formatting**: Automatically formats code during commits
- **Early Error Detection**: Catches type errors and lint issues before
they're committed
- **Centralized Configuration**: Easier to maintain and update in one
place
- **Improved Collaboration**: Ensures consistent code style across the
team
## Future Improvements
We could further enhance this setup by
**Commit Message Validation**: Add commitlint to enforce conventional
commit messages
---------
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
# What?
* When a prompt references an image path that doesn’t exist, replace it
with
```[missing image: <path>]``` instead of throwing an ENOENT.
* Adds a few unit tests for input-utils as there weren't any beforehand.
# Why?
Right now if you enter an invalid image path (e.g. it doesn't exist),
codex immediately crashes with a ENOENT error like so:
```
Error: ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'test.png'
...
{
errno: -2,
code: 'ENOENT',
syscall: 'open',
path: 'test.png'
}
```
This aborts the entire session. A soft fallback lets the rest of the
input continue.
# How?
Wraps the image encoding + inputItem content pushing in a try-catch.
This is a minimal patch to avoid completely crashing — future work could
surface a warning to the user when this happens, or something to that
effect.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
## Changes
- Added a `requiresShell` function to detect when a command contains
shell operators
- In the `exec` function, enabled the `shell: true` option if shell
operators are present
## Why This Is Necessary
See the discussion in this issue comment:
https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/320#issuecomment-2816528014
## Code Explanation
The `requiresShell` function parses the command arguments and checks for
any shell‑specific operators. If it finds shell operators, it adds the
`shell: true` option when running the command so that it’s executed
through a shell interpreter.
This pull request adds a feature that allows users to configure
auto-approved commands via a `safeCommands` array in the configuration
file.
## Related Issue
#380
## Changes
- Added loading and validation of the `safeCommands` array in
`src/utils/config.ts`
- Implemented auto-approval logic for commands matching `safeCommands`
prefixes in `src/approvals.ts`
- Added test cases in `src/tests/approvals.test.ts` to verify
`safeCommands` behavior
- Updated documentation with examples and explanations of the
configuration
Adding in an option to turn on flex processing mode to reduce costs when
running the agent.
Bumped the openai typescript version to add the new feature.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
**Summary**
This change introduces a new startup check that notifies users if a
newer `@openai/codex` version is available. To avoid spamming, it writes
a small state file recording the last check time and will only re‑check
once every 24 hours.
**What’s Changed**
- **New file** `src/utils/check-updates.ts`
- Runs `npm outdated --global @openai/codex`
- Reads/writes `codex-state.json` under `CONFIG_DIR`
- Limits checks to once per day (`UPDATE_CHECK_FREQUENCY = 24h`)
- Uses `boxen` for a styled alert and `which` to locate the npm binary
- **Hooked into** `src/cli.tsx` entrypoint:
```ts
import { checkForUpdates } from "./utils/check-updates";
// …
// after loading config
await checkForUpdates().catch();
```
- **Dependencies**
- Added `boxen@^8.0.1`, `which@^5.0.0`, `@types/which@^3.0.4`
- **Tests**
- Vitest suite under `tests/check-updates.test.ts`
- Snapshot in `__snapshots__/check-updates.test.ts.snap`
**Motivation**
Addresses issue #244. Users running a stale global install will now see
a friendly reminder—at most once per day—to upgrade and enjoy the latest
features.
**Test Plan**
- `getNPMCommandPath()` resolves npm correctly
- `checkOutdated()` parses `npm outdated` JSON
- State file prevents repeat alerts within 24h
- Boxen snapshot matches expected output
- No console output when state indicates a recent check
**Related Issue**
try resolves#244
**Preview**
Prompt a pnpm‑style alert when outdated

Let me know if you’d tweak any of the messaging, throttle frequency,
placement in the startup flow, or anything else.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thibault Sottiaux <tibo@openai.com>
- Docker container name based on work directory
- Centralize container removal logic
- Improve quoting for command arguments
- Ensure workdir is always set and normalized
Resolves: #371
Signed-off-by: BadPirate <badpirate@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: BadPirate <badpirate@gmail.com>
# Migrate to pnpm for improved monorepo management
## Summary
This PR migrates the Codex repository from npm to pnpm, providing faster
dependency installation, better disk space usage, and improved monorepo
management.
## Changes
- Added `pnpm-workspace.yaml` to define workspace packages
- Added `.npmrc` with optimal pnpm configuration
- Updated root package.json with workspace scripts
- Moved resolutions and overrides to the root package.json
- Updated scripts to use pnpm instead of npm
- Added documentation for the migration
- Updated GitHub Actions workflow for pnpm
## Benefits
- **Faster installations**: pnpm is significantly faster than npm
- **Disk space savings**: pnpm's content-addressable store avoids
duplication
- **Strict dependency management**: prevents phantom dependencies
- **Simplified monorepo management**: better workspace coordination
- **Preparation for Turborepo**: as discussed, this is the first step
before adding Turborepo
## Testing
- Verified that `pnpm install` works correctly
- Verified that `pnpm run build` completes successfully
- Ensured all existing functionality is preserved
## Documentation
Added a detailed migration guide in `PNPM_MIGRATION.md` explaining:
- Why we're migrating to pnpm
- How to use pnpm with this repository
- Common commands and workspace-specific commands
- Monorepo structure and configuration
## Next Steps
As discussed, once this change is stable, we can consider adding
Turborepo as a follow-up enhancement.
# Fix CLI launcher on Windows by replacing `sh`-based entrypoint with
cross-platform Node script
## What's changed
* This PR attempts to replace the sh-based entry point with a node
script that works on all platforms including Windows Powershell and CMD
## Why
* Previously, when installing Codex globally via `npm i -g
@openai/codex`, Windows resulted in a broken CLI issue due to the `ps1`
launcher trying to execute `sh.exe`.
* If users don't have Unix-style shell, running the command will fail as
seen below since `sh.exe` can't be found
* Output:
```
& : The term 'sh.exe' is not recognized as the name of a cmdlet,
function, script file, or operable program. Check the
spelling of the name, or if a path was included, verify that the path is
correct and try again.
At C:\Users\{user}\AppData\Roaming\npm\codex.ps1:24 char:7
+ & "sh$exe" "$basedir/node_modules/@openai/codex/bin/codex" $args
+ ~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : ObjectNotFound: (sh.exe:String) [],
CommandNotFoundException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : CommandNotFoundException
```
## How
* By using a Node based entry point that resolves the path to the compiled ESM bundle and dynamically loads it using native ESM
* Removed dependency on platform-specific launchers allowing a single entrypoint to work everywhere Node.js runs.
## Result
Codex CLI now supports cross-platform and launches correctly via:
* macOS / Linux
* Windows PowerShell
* GitBash
* CMD
* WSL
Directly addresses #316


Fix: Shift + Enter no longer prints “[27;2;13~” in the single‑line
input. Validated as working and necessary in Ghostty on Linux.
## Key points
- src/components/vendor/ink-text-input.tsx
- Added early handler that recognises the two modifyOtherKeys
escape‑sequences
- [13;<mod>u (mode 2 / CSI‑u)
- [27;<mod>;13~ (mode 1 / legacy CSI‑~)
- If Ctrl is held (hasCtrl flag) → call onSubmit() (same as plain
Enter).
- Otherwise → insert a real newline at the caret (same as Option+Enter).
- Prevents the raw sequence from being inserted into the buffer.
- src/components/chat/multiline-editor.tsx
- Replaced non‑breaking spaces with normal spaces to satisfy eslint
no‑irregular‑whitespace rule (no behaviour change).
All unit tests (114) and ESLint now pass:
npm test ✔️
npm run lint ✔️
closes#207
I'd be lying if I said I was familiar with these particulars more than a
couple hours ago, but after investigating and testing locally, this does
fix the go issue, I prefer it over #272 which is a lot of code and a one
off fix
----
cc @bolinfest do you mind taking a look here?
1. Seatbelt compares the paths it gets from the kernal to its policies
1. Go is attempting to write to the os.tmpdir, which we have
allowlisted.
1. The kernel rewrites /var/… to /private/var/… before the sandbox
check.
1. The policy still said /var/…, so writes were denied.
Fix: canonicalise every writable root we feed into the policy
(realpathSync(...)).
We do not have to touch runtime file paths—the kernel already
canonicalises those.
### before
see that the command exited 1, and that the command was reported to be
prohibited, despite using the allowlisted tmpdir
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/23911101-0ec0-4a59-a0a1-423be04063f0
### after
command exits 0
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6ab2bcd6-68bd-4f89-82bb-2c8612e39ac3