Commit Graph

52 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Bolin
a32d305ae6 fix: update UI treatment of slash command menu to match that of the TS CLI (#1161)
Uses the same colors as in the TypeScript CLI:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/919cd472-ffb4-4654-a46a-d84f0cd9c097)

Now it is also readable on a light theme, e.g., in Ghostty:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/468c37b0-ea63-4455-9b48-73dc2c95f0f6)
2025-05-29 14:57:55 -07:00
Michael Bolin
a768a6a41d fix: introduce ResponseInputItem::McpToolCallOutput variant (#1151)
The output of an MCP server tool call can be one of several types, but
to date, we treated all outputs as text by showing the serialized JSON
as the "tool output" in Codex:


25a9949c49/codex-rs/mcp-types/src/lib.rs (L96-L101)

This PR adds support for the `ImageContent` variant so we can now
display an image output from an MCP tool call.

In making this change, we introduce a new
`ResponseInputItem::McpToolCallOutput` variant so that we can work with
the `mcp_types::CallToolResult` directly when the function call is made
to an MCP server.

Though arguably the more significant change is the introduction of
`HistoryCell::CompletedMcpToolCallWithImageOutput`, which is a cell that
uses `ratatui_image` to render an image into the terminal. To support
this, we introduce `ImageRenderCache`, cache a
`ratatui_image::picker::Picker`, and `ensure_image_cache()` to cache the
appropriate scaled image data and dimensions based on the current
terminal size.

To test, I created a minimal `package.json`:

```json
{
  "name": "kitty-mcp",
  "version": "1.0.0",
  "type": "module",
  "description": "MCP that returns image of kitty",
  "main": "index.js",
  "dependencies": {
    "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk": "^1.12.0"
  }
}
```

with the following `index.js` to define the MCP server:

```js
#!/usr/bin/env node

import { McpServer } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/mcp.js";
import { StdioServerTransport } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/stdio.js";
import { readFile } from "node:fs/promises";
import { join } from "node:path";

const IMAGE_URI = "image://Ada.png";

const server = new McpServer({
  name: "Demo",
  version: "1.0.0",
});

server.tool(
  "get-cat-image",
  "If you need a cat image, this tool will provide one.",
  async () => ({
    content: [
      { type: "image", data: await getAdaPngBase64(), mimeType: "image/png" },
    ],
  })
);

server.resource("Ada the Cat", IMAGE_URI, async (uri) => {
  const base64Image = await getAdaPngBase64();
  return {
    contents: [
      {
        uri: uri.href,
        mimeType: "image/png",
        blob: base64Image,
      },
    ],
  };
});

async function getAdaPngBase64() {
  const __dirname = new URL(".", import.meta.url).pathname;
  // From 9705ce2c59/assets/Ada.png
  const filePath = join(__dirname, "Ada.png");
  const imageData = await readFile(filePath);
  const base64Image = imageData.toString("base64");
  return base64Image;
}

const transport = new StdioServerTransport();
await server.connect(transport);
```

With the local changes from this PR, I added the following to my
`config.toml`:

```toml
[mcp_servers.kitty]
command = "node"
args = ["/Users/mbolin/code/kitty-mcp/index.js"]
```

Running the TUI from source:

```
cargo run --bin codex -- --model o3 'I need a picture of a cat'
```

I get:

<img width="732" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/bf80b721-9ca0-4d81-aec7-77d6899e2869"
/>

Now, that said, I have only tested in iTerm and there is definitely some
funny business with getting an accurate character-to-pixel ratio
(sometimes the `CompletedMcpToolCallWithImageOutput` thinks it needs 10
rows to render instead of 4), so there is still work to be done here.
2025-05-28 19:03:17 -07:00
Michael Bolin
ae1a83f095 feat: introduce CellWidget trait (#1148)
The motivation behind this PR is to make it so a `HistoryCell` is more
like a `WidgetRef` that knows how to render itself into a `Rect` so that
it can be backed by something other than a `Vec<Line>`. Because a
`HistoryCell` is intended to appear in a scrollable list, we want to
ensure the stack of cells can be scrolled one `Line` at a time even if
the `HistoryCell` is not backed by a `Vec<Line>` itself.

To this end, we introduce the `CellWidget` trait whose key method is:

```
fn render_window(&self, first_visible_line: usize, area: Rect, buf: &mut Buffer);
```

The `first_visible_line` param is what differs from
`WidgetRef::render_ref()`, as a `CellWidget` needs to know the offset
into its "full view" at which it should start rendering.

The bookkeeping in `ConversationHistoryWidget` has been updated
accordingly to ensure each `CellWidget` in the history is rendered
appropriately.
2025-05-28 14:03:19 -07:00
Michael Bolin
d60f350cf8 feat: add support for -c/--config to override individual config items (#1137)
This PR introduces support for `-c`/`--config` so users can override
individual config values on the command line using `--config
name=value`. Example:

```
codex --config model=o4-mini
```

Making it possible to set arbitrary config values on the command line
results in a more flexible configuration scheme and makes it easier to
provide single-line examples that can be copy-pasted from documentation.

Effectively, it means there are four levels of configuration for some
values:

- Default value (e.g., `model` currently defaults to `o4-mini`)
- Value in `config.toml` (e.g., user could override the default to be
`model = "o3"` in their `config.toml`)
- Specifying `-c` or `--config` to override `model` (e.g., user can
include `-c model=o3` in their list of args to Codex)
- If available, a config-specific flag can be used, which takes
precedence over `-c` (e.g., user can specify `--model o3` in their list
of args to Codex)

Now that it is possible to specify anything that could be configured in
`config.toml` on the command line using `-c`, we do not need to have a
custom flag for every possible config option (which can clutter the
output of `--help`). To that end, as part of this PR, we drop support
for the `--disable-response-storage` flag, as users can now specify `-c
disable_response_storage=true` to get the equivalent functionality.

Under the hood, this works by loading the `config.toml` into a
`toml::Value`. Then for each `key=value`, we create a small synthetic
TOML file with `value` so that we can run the TOML parser to get the
equivalent `toml::Value`. We then parse `key` to determine the point in
the original `toml::Value` to do the insert/replace. Once all of the
overrides from `-c` args have been applied, the `toml::Value` is
deserialized into a `ConfigToml` and then the `ConfigOverrides` are
applied, as before.
2025-05-27 23:11:44 -07:00
Michael Bolin
6b5b184f21 fix: TUI was not honoring --skip-git-repo-check correctly (#1105)
I discovered that if I ran `codex <PROMPT>` in a cwd that was not a Git
repo, Codex did not automatically run `<PROMPT>` after I accepted the
Git warning. It appears that we were not managing the `AppState`
transition correctly, so this fixes the bug and ensures the Codex
session does not start until the user accepts the Git warning.

In particular, we now create the `ChatWidget` lazily and store it in the
`AppState::Chat` variant.
2025-05-24 08:33:49 -07:00
Michael Bolin
89ef4efdcf fix: overhaul how we spawn commands under seccomp/landlock on Linux (#1086)
Historically, we spawned the Seatbelt and Landlock sandboxes in
substantially different ways:

For **Seatbelt**, we would run `/usr/bin/sandbox-exec` with our policy
specified as an arg followed by the original command:


d1de7bb383/codex-rs/core/src/exec.rs (L147-L219)

For **Landlock/Seccomp**, we would do
`tokio::runtime::Builder::new_current_thread()`, _invoke
Landlock/Seccomp APIs to modify the permissions of that new thread_, and
then spawn the command:


d1de7bb383/codex-rs/core/src/exec_linux.rs (L28-L49)

While it is neat that Landlock/Seccomp supports applying a policy to
only one thread without having to apply it to the entire process, it
requires us to maintain two different codepaths and is a bit harder to
reason about. The tipping point was
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1061, in which we had to start
building up the `env` in an unexpected way for the existing
Landlock/Seccomp approach to continue to work.

This PR overhauls things so that we do similar things for Mac and Linux.
It turned out that we were already building our own "helper binary"
comparable to Mac's `sandbox-exec` as part of the `cli` crate:


d1de7bb383/codex-rs/cli/Cargo.toml (L10-L12)

We originally created this to build a small binary to include with the
Node.js version of the Codex CLI to provide support for Linux
sandboxing.

Though the sticky bit is that, at this point, we still want to deploy
the Rust version of Codex as a single, standalone binary rather than a
CLI and a supporting sandboxing binary. To satisfy this goal, we use
"the arg0 trick," in which we:

* use `std::env::current_exe()` to get the path to the CLI that is
currently running
* use the CLI as the `program` for the `Command`
* set `"codex-linux-sandbox"` as arg0 for the `Command`

A CLI that supports sandboxing should check arg0 at the start of the
program. If it is `"codex-linux-sandbox"`, it must invoke
`codex_linux_sandbox::run_main()`, which runs the CLI as if it were
`codex-linux-sandbox`. When acting as `codex-linux-sandbox`, we make the
appropriate Landlock/Seccomp API calls and then use `execvp(3)` to spawn
the original command, so do _replace_ the process rather than spawn a
subprocess. Incidentally, we do this before starting the Tokio runtime,
so the process should only have one thread when `execvp(3)` is called.

Because the `core` crate that needs to spawn the Linux sandboxing is not
a CLI in its own right, this means that every CLI that includes `core`
and relies on this behavior has to (1) implement it and (2) provide the
path to the sandboxing executable. While the path is almost always
`std::env::current_exe()`, we needed to make this configurable for
integration tests, so `Config` now has a `codex_linux_sandbox_exe:
Option<PathBuf>` property to facilitate threading this through,
introduced in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1089.

This common pattern is now captured in
`codex_linux_sandbox::run_with_sandbox()` and all of the `main.rs`
functions that should use it have been updated as part of this PR.

The `codex-linux-sandbox` crate added to the Cargo workspace as part of
this PR now has the bulk of the Landlock/Seccomp logic, which makes
`core` a bit simpler. Indeed, `core/src/exec_linux.rs` and
`core/src/landlock.rs` were removed/ported as part of this PR. I also
moved the unit tests for this code into an integration test,
`linux-sandbox/tests/landlock.rs`, in which I use
`env!("CARGO_BIN_EXE_codex-linux-sandbox")` as the value for
`codex_linux_sandbox_exe` since `std::env::current_exe()` is not
appropriate in that case.
2025-05-23 11:37:07 -07:00
Michael Bolin
d1de7bb383 feat: add codex_linux_sandbox_exe: Option<PathBuf> field to Config (#1089)
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1086 is a work-in-progress to make
Linux sandboxing work more like Seatbelt where, for the command we want
to sandbox, we build up the command and then hand it, and some sandbox
configuration flags, to another command to set up the sandbox and then
run it.

In the case of Seatbelt, macOS provides this helper binary and provides
it at `/usr/bin/sandbox-exec`. For Linux, we have to build our own and
pass it through (which is what #1086 does), so this makes the new
`codex_linux_sandbox_exe` available on `Config` so that it will later be
available in `exec.rs` when we need it in #1086.
2025-05-22 21:52:28 -07:00
Michael Bolin
5746561428 chore: move types out of config.rs into config_types.rs (#1054)
`config.rs` is already quite long without these definitions. Since they
have no real dependencies of their own, let's move them to their own
file so `config.rs` can focus on the business logic of loading a config.
2025-05-20 11:55:25 -07:00
Michael Bolin
d766e845b3 feat: experimental --output-last-message flag to exec subcommand (#1037)
This introduces an experimental `--output-last-message` flag that can be
used to identify a file where the final message from the agent will be
written. Two use cases:

- Ultimately, we will likely add a `--quiet` option to `exec`, but even
if the user does not want any output written to the terminal, they
probably want to know what the agent did. Writing the output to a file
makes it possible to get that information in a clean way.
- Relatedly, when using `exec` in CI, it is easier to review the
transcript written "normally," (i.e., not as JSON or something with
extra escapes), but getting programmatic access to the last message is
likely helpful, so writing the last message to a file gets the best of
both worlds.

I am calling this "experimental" because it is possible that we are
overfitting and will want a more general solution to this problem that
would justify removing this flag.
2025-05-19 16:08:18 -07:00
Michael Bolin
1c6a3f1097 fix: artifacts from previous frames were bleeding through in TUI (#989)
Prior to this PR, I would frequently see glyphs from previous frames
"bleed" through like this:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8784b3d7-f691-4df6-8666-34e2f134ee85)

I think this was due to two issues (now addressed in this PR):

* We were not making use of `ratatui::widgets::Clear` to clear out the
buffer before drawing into it.
* To calculate the `width` used with `wrapped_line_count_for_cell()`, we
were not accounting for the scrollbar.
* Now we calculate `effective_width` using
`inner.width.saturating_sub(1)` where the `1` is for the scrollbar.
* We compute `text_area` using `effective_with` and pass the `text_area`
to `paragraph.render()`.
* We eliminate the conditional `needs_scrollbar` check and always call
`render(Scrollbar)`

I suspect this bug was introduced in
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/937, though I did not try to
verify: I'm just happy that it appears to be fixed!
2025-05-17 10:51:11 -07:00
Michael Bolin
f8b6b1db81 fix: ensure the first user message always displays after the session info (#988)
Previously, if the first user message was sent with the command
invocation, e.g.:

```
$ cargo run --bin codex 'hello'
```

Then the user message was added as the first entry in the history and
then `is_first_event` would be `false` here:


031df77dfb/codex-rs/tui/src/conversation_history_widget.rs (L178-L179)

which would prevent the "welcome" message with things like the the model
version from displaying.

The fix in this PR is twofold:

* Reorganize the logic so the `ChatWidget` constructor stores
`initial_user_message` rather than sending it right away. Now inside
`handle_codex_event()`, it waits for the `SessionConfigured` event and
sends the `initial_user_message`, if it exists.
* In `conversation_history_widget.rs`, `add_session_info()` checks to
see whether a `WelcomeMessage` exists in the history when determining
the value of `has_welcome_message`. By construction, we expect that
`WelcomeMessage` is always the first message (in which case the existing
`let is_first_event = self.entries.is_empty();` logic would be sound),
but we decide to be extra defensive in case an `EventMsg::Error` is
processed before `EventMsg::SessionConfigured`.
2025-05-17 09:00:23 -07:00
Michael Bolin
f9143d0361 fix: do not let Tab keypress flow through to composer when used to toggle focus (#977)
One line fix from Codex!
2025-05-16 19:27:49 -07:00
Michael Bolin
7ca84087e6 feat: make it possible to toggle mouse mode in the Rust TUI (#971)
I did a bit of research to understand why I could not use my mouse to
drag to select text to copy to the clipboard in iTerm.

Apparently https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/641 to enable mousewheel
scrolling broke this functionality. It seems that, unless we put in a
bit of effort, we can have drag-to-select or scrolling, but not both.
Though if you know the trick to hold down `Option` will dragging with
the mouse in iTerm, you can probably get by with this. (I did not know
about this option prior to researching this issue.)

Nevertheless, users may still prefer to disable mouse capture
altogether, so this PR introduces:

* the ability to set `tui.disable_mouse_capture = true` in `config.toml`
to disable mouse capture
* a new command, `/toggle-mouse-mode` to toggle mouse capture
2025-05-16 16:16:50 -07:00
Michael Bolin
67ac8ef605 fix: use text other than 'TODO' as test example (#969)
I casually `rg TODO` to look for TODOs, so the use of TODO in a sample
string in test output was throwing things off.
2025-05-16 14:51:03 -07:00
Michael Bolin
1e39189393 feat: add support for file_opener option in Rust, similiar to #911 (#957)
This ports the enhancement introduced in
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/911 (and the fixes in
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/919) for the TypeScript CLI to the
Rust one.
2025-05-16 11:33:08 -07:00
Michael Bolin
ce2ecbe72f feat: record messages from user in ~/.codex/history.jsonl (#939)
This is a large change to support a "history" feature like you would
expect in a shell like Bash.

History events are recorded in `$CODEX_HOME/history.jsonl`. Because it
is a JSONL file, it is straightforward to append new entries (as opposed
to the TypeScript file that uses `$CODEX_HOME/history.json`, so to be
valid JSON, each new entry entails rewriting the entire file). Because
it is possible for there to be multiple instances of Codex CLI writing
to `history.jsonl` at once, we use advisory file locking when working
with `history.jsonl` in `codex-rs/core/src/message_history.rs`.

Because we believe history is a sufficiently useful feature, we enable
it by default. Though to provide some safety, we set the file
permissions of `history.jsonl` to be `o600` so that other users on the
system cannot read the user's history. We do not yet support a default
list of `SENSITIVE_PATTERNS` as the TypeScript CLI does:


3fdf9df133/codex-cli/src/utils/storage/command-history.ts (L10-L17)

We are going to take a more conservative approach to this list in the
Rust CLI. For example, while `/\b[A-Za-z0-9-_]{20,}\b/` might exclude
sensitive information like API tokens, it would also exclude valuable
information such as references to Git commits.

As noted in the updated documentation, users can opt-out of history by
adding the following to `config.toml`:

```toml
[history]
persistence = "none" 
```

Because `history.jsonl` could, in theory, be quite large, we take a[n
arguably overly pedantic] approach in reading history entries into
memory. Specifically, we start by telling the client the current number
of entries in the history file (`history_entry_count`) as well as the
inode (`history_log_id`) of `history.jsonl` (see the new fields on
`SessionConfiguredEvent`).

The client is responsible for keeping new entries in memory to create a
"local history," but if the user hits up enough times to go "past" the
end of local history, then the client should use the new
`GetHistoryEntryRequest` in the protocol to fetch older entries.
Specifically, it should pass the `history_log_id` it was given
originally and work backwards from `history_entry_count`. (It should
really fetch history in batches rather than one-at-a-time, but that is
something we can improve upon in subsequent PRs.)

The motivation behind this crazy scheme is that it is designed to defend
against:

* The `history.jsonl` being truncated during the session such that the
index into the history is no longer consistent with what had been read
up to that point. We do not yet have logic to enforce a `max_bytes` for
`history.jsonl`, but once we do, we will aspire to implement it in a way
that should result in a new inode for the file on most systems.
* New items from concurrent Codex CLI sessions amending to the history.
Because, in absence of truncation, `history.jsonl` is an append-only
log, so long as the client reads backwards from `history_entry_count`,
it should always get a consistent view of history. (That said, it will
not be able to read _new_ commands from concurrent sessions, but perhaps
we will introduce a `/` command to reload latest history or something
down the road.)

Admittedly, my testing of this feature thus far has been fairly light. I
expect we will find bugs and introduce enhancements/fixes going forward.
2025-05-15 16:26:23 -07:00
Michael Bolin
3fdf9df133 chore: introduce AppEventSender to help fix clippy warnings and update to Rust 1.87 (#948)
Moving to Rust 1.87 introduced a clippy warning that
`SendError<AppEvent>` was too large.

In practice, the only thing we ever did when we got this error was log
it (if the mspc channel is closed, then the app is likely shutting down
or something, so there's not much to do...), so this finally motivated
me to introduce `AppEventSender`, which wraps
`std::sync::mpsc::Sender<AppEvent>` with a `send()` method that invokes
`send()` on the underlying `Sender` and logs an `Err` if it gets one.

This greatly simplifies the code, as many functions that previously
returned `Result<(), SendError<AppEvent>>` now return `()`, so we don't
have to propagate an `Err` all over the place that we don't really
handle, anyway.

This also makes it so we can upgrade to Rust 1.87 in CI.
2025-05-15 14:50:30 -07:00
Michael Bolin
5fc9fc3e3e chore: expose codex_home via Config (#941) 2025-05-15 00:30:13 -07:00
Michael Bolin
0b9ef93da5 fix: properly wrap lines in the Rust TUI (#937)
As discussed on
699ec5a87f (commitcomment-156776835),
to properly support scrolling long content in Ratatui for a sequence of
cells, we need to:

* take the `Vec<Line>` for each cell
* using the wrapping logic we want to use at render time, compute the
_effective line count_ using `Paragraph::line_count()` (see
`wrapped_line_count_for_cell()` in this PR)
* sum up the effective line count to compute the height of the area
being scrolled
* given a `scroll_position: usize`, index into the list of "effective
lines" and accumulate the appropriate `Vec<Line>` for the cells that
should be displayed
* take that `Vec<Line>` to create a `Paragraph` and use the same
line-wrapping policy that was used in `wrapped_line_count_for_cell()`
* display the resulting `Paragraph` and use the accounting to display a
scrollbar with the appropriate thumb size and offset without having to
render the `Vec<Line>` for the full history

With this change, lines wrap as I expect and everything appears to
redraw correctly as I resize my terminal!
2025-05-14 16:51:41 -07:00
Michael Bolin
497c5396c0 feat: add mcp subcommand to CLI to run Codex as an MCP server (#934)
Previously, running Codex as an MCP server required a standalone binary
in our Cargo workspace, but this PR makes it available as a subcommand
(`mcp`) of the main CLI.

Ran this with:

```
RUST_LOG=debug npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector cargo run --bin codex -- mcp
```

and verified it worked as expected in the inspector at
`http://127.0.0.1:6274/`.
2025-05-14 13:15:41 -07:00
Michael Bolin
a12e4b0b31 feat: add support for commands in the Rust TUI (#935)
Introduces support for slash commands like in the TypeScript CLI. We do
not support the full set of commands yet, but the core abstraction is
there now.

In particular, we have a `SlashCommand` enum and due to thoughtful use
of the [strum](https://crates.io/crates/strum) crate, it requires
minimal boilerplate to add a new command to the list.

The key new piece of UI is `CommandPopup`, though the keyboard events
are still handled by `ChatComposer`. The behavior is roughly as follows:

* if the first character in the composer is `/`, the command popup is
displayed (if you really want to send a message to Codex that starts
with a `/`, simply put a space before the `/`)
* while the popup is displayed, up/down can be used to change the
selection of the popup
* if there is a selection, hitting tab completes the command, but does
not send it
* if there is a selection, hitting enter sends the command
* if the prefix of the composer matches a command, the command will be
visible in the popup so the user can see the description (commands could
take arguments, so additional text may appear after the command name
itself)


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/39c3e6ee-eeb7-4ef7-a911-466d8184975f

Incidentally, Codex wrote almost all the code for this PR!
2025-05-14 12:55:49 -07:00
Michael Bolin
0402aef126 chore: move each view used in BottomPane into its own file (#928)
`BottomPane` was getting a bit unwieldy because it maintained a
`PaneState` enum with three variants and many of its methods had `match`
statements to handle each variant. To replace the enum, this PR:

* Introduces a `trait BottomPaneView` that has two implementations:
`StatusIndicatorView` and `ApprovalModalView`.
* Migrates `PaneState::TextInput` into its own struct, `ChatComposer`,
that does **not** implement `BottomPaneView`.
* Updates `BottomPane` so it has `composer: ChatComposer` and
`active_view: Option<Box<dyn BottomPaneView<'a> + 'a>>`. The idea is
that `active_view` takes priority and is displayed when it is `Some`;
otherwise, `ChatComposer` is displayed.
* While methods of `BottomPane` often have to check whether
`active_view` is present to decide which component to delegate to, the
code is more straightforward than before and introducing new
implementations of `BottomPaneView` should be less painful.

Because we want to retain the `TextArea` owned by `ChatComposer` even
when another view is displayed, to keep the ownership logic simple, it
seemed best to keep `ChatComposer` distinct from `BottomPaneView`.
2025-05-14 10:13:29 -07:00
Michael Bolin
1bf00a3a95 feat: Ctrl+J for newline in Rust TUI, default to one line of height (#926)
While the `TextArea` used in the Rust TUI is "multiline," it is not like
an HTML `<textarea>` in that it does not wrap, so there was not much
benefit to setting `MIN_TEXTAREA_ROWS` to `3`, so this PR changes it to
`1`. Though there are now three ways to "increase" the height due to
actual linebreaks:

* paste in multiline content (this worked before this PR)
* pressing `Ctrl+J` will insert a newline
* if you have your terminal emulator set such that it is possible to
press something that `crossterm` interprets as "Enter plus some
modifier," then now that will also work

Now things look a bit more compact on startup:

<img width="745" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/86e2857f-f31c-46f5-a80b-1ab2120b266e"
/>
2025-05-13 21:42:14 -07:00
Michael Bolin
a5f3a34827 fix: change EventMsg enum so every variant takes a single struct (#925)
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/922 did this for the
`SessionConfigured` enum variant, and I think it is generally helpful to
be able to work with the values as each enum variant as their own type,
so this converts the remaining variants and updates all of the
callsites.

Added a simple unit test to verify that the JSON-serialized version of
`Event` does not have any unexpected nesting.
2025-05-13 20:44:42 -07:00
Michael Bolin
e6c206d19d fix: tighten up some logic around session timestamps and ids (#922)
* update `SessionConfigured` event to include the UUID for the session
* show the UUID in the Rust TUI
* use local timestamps in log files instead of UTC
* include timestamps in log file names for easier discovery
2025-05-13 19:22:16 -07:00
Michael Bolin
3c03c25e56 feat: introduce --profile for Rust CLI (#921)
This introduces a much-needed "profile" concept where users can specify
a collection of options under one name and then pass that via
`--profile` to the CLI.

This PR introduces the `ConfigProfile` struct and makes it a field of
`CargoToml`. It further updates
`Config::load_from_base_config_with_overrides()` to respect
`ConfigProfile`, overriding default values where appropriate. A detailed
unit test is added at the end of `config.rs` to verify this behavior.

Details on how to use this feature have also been added to
`codex-rs/README.md`.
2025-05-13 16:52:52 -07:00
Michael Bolin
55142e3e6c fix: use "thinking" instead of "codex reasoning" as the label for reasoning events in the TUI (#905) 2025-05-12 15:19:45 -07:00
Michael Bolin
a1f51bf91b fix: fix border style for BottomPane (#893)
This PR fixes things so that:

* when the `BottomPane` is in the `StatusIndicator` state, the border
should be dim
* when the `BottomPane` does not have input focus, the border should be
dim

To make it easier to enforce this invariant, this PR introduces
`BottomPane::set_state()` that will:

* update `self.state`
* call `update_border_for_input_focus()`
* request a repaint

This should make it easier to enforce other updates for state changes
going forward.
2025-05-10 23:34:13 -07:00
Michael Bolin
b4785b5f88 feat: include "reasoning" messages in Rust TUI (#892)
As shown in the screenshot, we now include reasoning messages from the
model in the TUI under the heading "codex reasoning":


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d8eb3dc3-2f9f-4e95-847e-d24b421249a8)

To ensure these are visible by default when using `o4-mini`, this also
changes the default value for `summary` (formerly `generate_summary`,
which is deprecated in favor of `summary` according to the docs) from
unset to `"auto"`.
2025-05-10 21:43:27 -07:00
jcoens-openai
78843c3940 feat: Allow pasting newlines (#866)
Noticed that when pasting multi-line blocks, each newline was treated
like a new submission.
Update tui to handle Paste directly and map newlines to shift+enter.

# Test

Copied this into clipboard:
```
Do nothing.
Explain this repo to me.
```

Pasted in and saw multi-line input. Hitting Enter then submitted the
full block.
2025-05-09 11:33:46 -07:00
Michael Bolin
e924070cee feat: support the chat completions API in the Rust CLI (#862)
This is a substantial PR to add support for the chat completions API,
which in turn makes it possible to use non-OpenAI model providers (just
like in the TypeScript CLI):

* It moves a number of structs from `client.rs` to `client_common.rs` so
they can be shared.
* It introduces support for the chat completions API in
`chat_completions.rs`.
* It updates `ModelProviderInfo` so that `env_key` is `Option<String>`
instead of `String` (for e.g., ollama) and adds a `wire_api` field
* It updates `client.rs` to choose between `stream_responses()` and
`stream_chat_completions()` based on the `wire_api` for the
`ModelProviderInfo`
* It updates the `exec` and TUI CLIs to no longer fail if the
`OPENAI_API_KEY` environment variable is not set
* It updates the TUI so that `EventMsg::Error` is displayed more
prominently when it occurs, particularly now that it is important to
alert users to the `CodexErr::EnvVar` variant.
* `CodexErr::EnvVar` was updated to include an optional `instructions`
field so we can preserve the behavior where we direct users to
https://platform.openai.com if `OPENAI_API_KEY` is not set.
* Cleaned up the "welcome message" in the TUI to ensure the model
provider is displayed.
* Updated the docs in `codex-rs/README.md`.

To exercise the chat completions API from OpenAI models, I added the
following to my `config.toml`:

```toml
model = "gpt-4o"
model_provider = "openai-chat-completions"

[model_providers.openai-chat-completions]
name = "OpenAI using Chat Completions"
base_url = "https://api.openai.com/v1"
env_key = "OPENAI_API_KEY"
wire_api = "chat"
```

Though to test a non-OpenAI provider, I installed ollama with mistral
locally on my Mac because ChatGPT said that would be a good match for my
hardware:

```shell
brew install ollama
ollama serve
ollama pull mistral
```

Then I added the following to my `~/.codex/config.toml`:

```toml
model = "mistral"
model_provider = "ollama"
```

Note this code could certainly use more test coverage, but I want to get
this in so folks can start playing with it.

For reference, I believe https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/247 was
roughly the comparable PR on the TypeScript side.
2025-05-08 21:46:06 -07:00
Michael Bolin
699ec5a87f fix: remove wrapping in Rust TUI that was incompatible with scrolling math (#868)
I noticed that sometimes I would enter a new message, but it would not
show up in the conversation history. Even if I focused the conversation
history and tried to scroll it to the bottom, I could not bring it into
view. At first, I was concerned that messages were not making it to the
UI layer, but I added debug statements and verified that was not the
issue.

It turned out that, previous to this PR, lines that are wider than the
viewport take up multiple lines of vertical space because `wrap()` was
set on the `Paragraph` inside the scroll pane. Unfortunately, that broke
our "scrollbar math" that assumed each `Line` contributes one line of
height in the UI.

This PR removes the `wrap()`, but introduces a new issue, which is that
now you cannot see long lines without resizing your terminal window. For
now, I filed an issue here:

https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/869

I think the long-term fix is to fix our math so it calculates the height
of a `Line` after it is wrapped given the current width of the viewport.
2025-05-08 15:17:17 -07:00
jcoens-openai
87cf120873 Workspace lints and disallow unwrap (#855)
Sets submodules to use workspace lints. Added denying unwrap as a
workspace level lint, which found a couple of cases where we could have
propagated errors. Also manually labeled ones that were fine by my eye.
2025-05-08 09:46:18 -07:00
Michael Bolin
86022f097e feat: read model_provider and model_providers from config.toml (#853)
This is the first step in supporting other model providers in the Rust
CLI. Specifically, this PR adds support for the new entries in `Config`
and `ConfigOverrides` to specify a `ModelProviderInfo`, which is the
basic config needed for an LLM provider. This PR does not get us all the
way there yet because `client.rs` still categorically appends
`/responses` to the URL and expects the endpoint to support the OpenAI
Responses API. Will fix that next!
2025-05-07 17:38:28 -07:00
Michael Bolin
0360b4d0d7 feat: introduce the use of tui-markdown (#851)
This introduces the use of the `tui-markdown` crate to parse an
assistant message as Markdown and style it using ANSI for a better user
experience. As shown in the screenshot below, it has support for syntax
highlighting for _tagged_ fenced code blocks:

<img width="907" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/900dc229-80bb-46e8-b1bb-efee4c70ba3c"
/>

That said, `tui-markdown` is not as configurable (or stylish!) as
https://www.npmjs.com/package/marked-terminal, which is what we use in
the TypeScript CLI. In particular:

* The styles are hardcoded and `tui_markdown::from_str()` does not take
any options whatsoever. It uses "bold white" for inline code style which
does not stand out as much as the yellow used by `marked-terminal`:


65402cbda7/tui-markdown/src/lib.rs (L464)

I asked Codex to take a first pass at this and it came up with:

https://github.com/joshka/tui-markdown/pull/80

* If a fenced code block is not tagged, then it does not get
highlighted. I would rather add some logic here:


65402cbda7/tui-markdown/src/lib.rs (L262)

that uses something like https://pypi.org/project/guesslang/ to examine
the value of `text` and try to use the appropriate syntax highlighter.

* When we have a fenced code block, we do not want to show the opening
and closing triple backticks in the output.

To unblock ourselves, we might want to bundle our own fork of
`tui-markdown` temporarily until we figure out what the shape of the API
should be and then try to upstream it.
2025-05-07 10:46:32 -07:00
jcoens-openai
a080d7b0fd Update submodules version to come from the workspace (#850)
Tie the version of submodules to the workspace version.
2025-05-07 10:08:06 -07:00
jcoens-openai
8a89d3aeda Update cargo to 2024 edition (#842)
Some effects of this change:
- New formatting changes across many files. No functionality changes
should occur from that.
- Calls to `set_env` are considered unsafe, since this only happens in
tests we wrap them in `unsafe` blocks
2025-05-07 08:37:48 -07:00
Michael Bolin
c577e94b67 chore: introduce codex-common crate (#843)
I started this PR because I wanted to share the `format_duration()`
utility function in `codex-rs/exec/src/event_processor.rs` with the TUI.
The question was: where to put it?

`core` should have as few dependencies as possible, so moving it there
would introduce a dependency on `chrono`, which seemed undesirable.
`core` already had this `cli` feature to deal with a similar situation
around sharing common utility functions, so I decided to:

* make `core` feature-free
* introduce `common`
* `common` can have as many "special interest" features as it needs,
each of which can declare their own deps
* the first two features of common are `cli` and `elapsed`

In practice, this meant updating a number of `Cargo.toml` files,
replacing this line:

```toml
codex-core = { path = "../core", features = ["cli"] }
```

with these:

```toml
codex-core = { path = "../core" }
codex-common = { path = "../common", features = ["cli"] }
```

Moving `format_duration()` into its own file gave it some "breathing
room" to add a unit test, so I had Codex generate some tests and new
support for durations over 1 minute.
2025-05-06 17:38:56 -07:00
Michael Bolin
6f87f4c69f feat: drop support for q in the Rust TUI since we already support ctrl+d (#799)
Out of the box, we will make `/` the only official "escape sequence" for
commands in the Rust TUI. We will look to support `q` (or any string you
want to use as a "macro") via a plugin, but not make it part of the
default experience.

Existing `q` users will have to get by with `ctrl+d` for now.
2025-05-06 16:34:17 -07:00
Michael Bolin
88e7ca5f2b feat: show MCP tool calls in TUI (#836)
Adds logic for the `McpToolCallBegin` and `McpToolCallEnd` events in
`codex-rs/tui/src/chatwidget.rs` so they get entries in the conversation
history in the TUI.

Building on top of https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/829, here is the
result of running:

```
cargo run --bin codex -- 'what is the weather in san francisco tomorrow'
```


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/db4a79bb-4988-46cb-acb2-446d5ba9e058)
2025-05-06 16:12:15 -07:00
Michael Bolin
a134bdde49 fix: is_inside_git_repo should take the directory as a param (#809)
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/800 made `cwd` a property of
`Config` and made it so the `cwd` is not necessarily
`std::env::current_dir()`. As such, `is_inside_git_repo()` should check
`Config.cwd` rather than `std::env::current_dir()`.

This PR updates `is_inside_git_repo()` to take `Config` instead of an
arbitrary `PathBuf` to force the check to operate on a `Config` where
`cwd` has been resolved to what the user specified.
2025-05-04 11:39:10 -07:00
Michael Bolin
cd12f0c24a fix: TUI should use cwd from Config (#808)
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/800 made `cwd` a property of
`Config`, so the TUI should use this instead of running
`std::env::current_dir()`.
2025-05-04 11:12:40 -07:00
Michael Bolin
421e159888 feat: make cwd a required field of Config so we stop assuming std::env::current_dir() in a session (#800)
In order to expose Codex via an MCP server, I realized that we should be
taking `cwd` as a parameter rather than assuming
`std::env::current_dir()` as the `cwd`. Specifically, the user may want
to start a session in a directory other than the one where the MCP
server has been started.

This PR makes `cwd: PathBuf` a required field of `Session` and threads
it all the way through, though I think there is still an issue with not
honoring `workdir` for `apply_patch`, which is something we also had to
fix in the TypeScript version: https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/556.

This also adds `-C`/`--cd` to change the cwd via the command line.

To test, I ran:

```
cargo run --bin codex -- exec -C /tmp 'show the output of ls'
```

and verified it showed the contents of my `/tmp` folder instead of
`$PWD`.
2025-05-04 10:57:12 -07:00
Michael Bolin
27bc4516bf feat: bring back -s option to specify sandbox permissions (#739) 2025-04-29 18:42:52 -07:00
Michael Bolin
0a00b5ed29 fix: overhaul SandboxPolicy and config loading in Rust (#732)
Previous to this PR, `SandboxPolicy` was a bit difficult to work with:


237f8a11e1/codex-rs/core/src/protocol.rs (L98-L108)

Specifically:

* It was an `enum` and therefore options were mutually exclusive as
opposed to additive.
* It defined things in terms of what the agent _could not_ do as opposed
to what they _could_ do. This made things hard to support because we
would prefer to build up a sandbox config by starting with something
extremely restrictive and only granting permissions for things the user
as explicitly allowed.

This PR changes things substantially by redefining the policy in terms
of two concepts:

* A `SandboxPermission` enum that defines permissions that can be
granted to the agent/sandbox.
* A `SandboxPolicy` that internally stores a `Vec<SandboxPermission>`,
but externally exposes a simpler API that can be used to configure
Seatbelt/Landlock.

Previous to this PR, we supported a `--sandbox` flag that effectively
mapped to an enum value in `SandboxPolicy`. Though now that
`SandboxPolicy` is a wrapper around `Vec<SandboxPermission>`, the single
`--sandbox` flag no longer makes sense. While I could have turned it
into a flag that the user can specify multiple times, I think the
current values to use with such a flag are long and potentially messy,
so for the moment, I have dropped support for `--sandbox` altogether and
we can bring it back once we have figured out the naming thing.

Since `--sandbox` is gone, users now have to specify `--full-auto` to
get a sandbox that allows writes in `cwd`. Admittedly, there is no clean
way to specify the equivalent of `--full-auto` in your `config.toml`
right now, so we will have to revisit that, as well.

Because `Config` presents a `SandboxPolicy` field and `SandboxPolicy`
changed considerably, I had to overhaul how config loading works, as
well. There are now two distinct concepts, `ConfigToml` and `Config`:

* `ConfigToml` is the deserialization of `~/.codex/config.toml`. As one
might expect, every field is `Optional` and it is `#[derive(Deserialize,
Default)]`. Consistent use of `Optional` makes it clear what the user
has specified explicitly.
* `Config` is the "normalized config" and is produced by merging
`ConfigToml` with `ConfigOverrides`. Where `ConfigToml` contains a raw
`Option<Vec<SandboxPermission>>`, `Config` presents only the final
`SandboxPolicy`.

The changes to `core/src/exec.rs` and `core/src/linux.rs` merit extra
special attention to ensure we are faithfully mapping the
`SandboxPolicy` to the Seatbelt and Landlock configs, respectively.

Also, take note that `core/src/seatbelt_readonly_policy.sbpl` has been
renamed to `codex-rs/core/src/seatbelt_base_policy.sbpl` and that
`(allow file-read*)` has been removed from the `.sbpl` file as now this
is added to the policy in `core/src/exec.rs` when
`sandbox_policy.has_full_disk_read_access()` is `true`.
2025-04-29 15:01:16 -07:00
Michael Bolin
e7ad9449ea feat: make it possible to set disable_response_storage = true in config.toml (#714)
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/642 introduced support for the
`--disable-response-storage` flag, but if you are a ZDR customer, it is
tedious to set this every time, so this PR makes it possible to set this
once in `config.toml` and be done with it.

Incidentally, this tidies things up such that now `init_codex()` takes
only one parameter: `Config`.
2025-04-28 15:39:34 -07:00
Michael Bolin
77e2918049 fix: drop d as keyboard shortcut for scrolling in the TUI (#704)
The existing `b` and `space` are sufficient and `d` and `u` default to
half-page scrolling in `less`, so the way we supported `d` and `u`
wasn't faithful to that, anyway:

https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/less.1.html

If we decide to bring `d` and `u` back, they should probably match
`less`?
2025-04-28 10:39:58 -07:00
Michael Bolin
4eda4dd772 feat: load defaults into Config and introduce ConfigOverrides (#677)
This changes how instantiating `Config` works and also adds
`approval_policy` and `sandbox_policy` as fields. The idea is:

* All fields of `Config` have appropriate default values.
* `Config` is initially loaded from `~/.codex/config.toml`, so values in
`config.toml` will override those defaults.
* Clients must instantiate `Config` via
`Config::load_with_overrides(ConfigOverrides)` where `ConfigOverrides`
has optional overrides that are expected to be settable based on CLI
flags.

The `Config` should be defined early in the program and then passed
down. Now functions like `init_codex()` take fewer individual parameters
because they can just take a `Config`.

Also, `Config::load()` used to fail silently if `~/.codex/config.toml`
had a parse error and fell back to the default config. This seemed
really bad because it wasn't clear why the values in my `config.toml`
weren't getting picked up. I changed things so that
`load_with_overrides()` returns `Result<Config>` and verified that the
various CLIs print a reasonable error if `config.toml` is malformed.

Finally, I also updated the TUI to show which **sandbox** value is being
used, as we do for other key values like **model** and **approval**.
This was also a reminder that the various values of `--sandbox` are
honored on Linux but not macOS today, so I added some TODOs about fixing
that.
2025-04-27 21:47:50 -07:00
Michael Bolin
b0ba65a936 fix: write logs to ~/.codex/log instead of /tmp (#669)
Previously, the Rust TUI was writing log files to `/tmp`, which is
world-readable and not available on Windows, so that isn't great.

This PR tries to clean things up by adding a function that provides the
path to the "Codex config dir," e.g., `~/.codex` (though I suppose we
could support `$CODEX_HOME` to override this?) and then defines other
paths in terms of the result of `codex_dir()`.

For example, `log_dir()` returns the folder where log files should be
written which is defined in terms of `codex_dir()`. I updated the TUI to
use this function. On UNIX, we even go so far as to `chmod 600` the log
file by default, though as noted in a comment, it's a bit tedious to do
the equivalent on Windows, so we just let that go for now.

This also changes the default logging level to `info` for `codex_core`
and `codex_tui` when `RUST_LOG` is not specified. I'm not really sure if
we should use a more verbose default (it may be helpful when debugging
user issues), though if so, we should probably also set up log rotation?
2025-04-25 17:37:41 -07:00
Michael Bolin
b323d10ea7 feat: add ZDR support to Rust implementation (#642)
This adds support for the `--disable-response-storage` flag across our
multiple Rust CLIs to support customers who have opted into Zero-Data
Retention (ZDR). The analogous changes to the TypeScript CLI were:

* https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/481
* https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/543

For a client using ZDR, `previous_response_id` will never be available,
so the `input` field of an API request must include the full transcript
of the conversation thus far. As such, this PR changes the type of
`Prompt.input` from `Vec<ResponseInputItem>` to `Vec<ResponseItem>`.

Practically speaking, `ResponseItem` was effectively a "superset" of
`ResponseInputItem` already. The main difference for us is that
`ResponseItem` includes the `FunctionCall` variant that we have to
include as part of the conversation history in the ZDR case.

Another key change in this PR is modifying `try_run_turn()` so that it
returns the `Vec<ResponseItem>` for the turn in addition to the
`Vec<ResponseInputItem>` produced by `try_run_turn()`. This is because
the caller of `run_turn()` needs to record the `Vec<ResponseItem>` when
ZDR is enabled.

To that end, this PR introduces `ZdrTranscript` (and adds
`zdr_transcript: Option<ZdrTranscript>` to `struct State` in `codex.rs`)
to take responsibility for maintaining the conversation transcript in
the ZDR case.
2025-04-25 12:08:18 -07:00