When Codex CLI is installed via `npm`, we use a `.js` wrapper script to
launch the Rust binary.
- Previously, we were not listening for signals to ensure that killing
the Node.js process would also kill the underlying Rust process.
- We also did not have a proper `exit` handler in place on the child
process to ensure we exited from the Node.js process.
This PR fixes these things and hopefully addresses
https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/1570.
This also adds logic so that Windows falls back to the TypeScript CLI
again, which should address https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/1573.
This PR implements server name validation for MCP (Model Context
Protocol) servers to ensure they conform to the required pattern
^[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+$. This addresses the TODO comment in
mcp_connection_manager.rs:82.
+ Added validation before spawning MCP client tasks
+ Invalid server names are added to errors map with descriptive messages
I have read the CLA Document and I hereby sign the CLA
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Bolin <bolinfest@gmail.com>
- Added support for message and reasoning deltas
- Skipped adding the support in the cli and tui for later
- Commented a failing test (wrong merge) that needs fix in a separate
PR.
Side note: I think we need to disable merge when the CI don't pass.
While this does make it so that `ctrl-d` will not exit Codex when the
composer is not empty, `ctrl-d` will still exit Codex if it is in the
"working" state.
Fixes https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/1443.
It appears that `0.5.0` was built with `stage_release.sh` instead of
`stage_rust_release.py`, so add docs to clarify this and recommend
running `--version` on the release candidate to verify the right thing
was built.
## Summary
- add integration test for chat mode streaming via CLI using wiremock
- add integration test for Responses API streaming via fixture
- call `cargo run` to invoke the CLI during tests
## Testing
- `cargo test -p codex-core --test cli_stream -- --nocapture`
- `cargo clippy --all-targets --all-features -- -D warnings`
------
https://chatgpt.com/codex/tasks/task_i_68715980bbec8321999534fdd6a013c1
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In order to to this, I created a new `chatgpt` crate where we can put
any code that interacts directly with ChatGPT as opposed to the OpenAI
API. I added a disclaimer to the README for it that it should primarily
be modified by OpenAI employees.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/bb978e33-d2c9-4d8e-af28-c8c25b1988e8
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1524 introduced the new `config`
field on `ModelClient`, so this does the post-PR cleanup to remove the
now-unnecessary `model` field.
As noted in the updated docs, this makes it so that you can set:
```toml
model_supports_reasoning_summaries = true
```
as a way of overriding the existing heuristic for when to set the
`reasoning` field on a sampling request:
341c091c5b/codex-rs/core/src/client_common.rs (L152-L166)
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Bumps node from 22-slim to 24-slim.
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Bumps [toml](https://github.com/toml-rs/toml) from 0.9.0 to 0.9.1.
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
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<li><a
href="8c8ef44ea1"><code>8c8ef44</code></a>
chore: Release</li>
<li><a
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href="https://redirect.github.com/toml-rs/toml/issues/998">#998</a>)</li>
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href="966bd40511"><code>966bd40</code></a>
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## Summary
Add Android platform support to Codex CLI
## What?
- Added `android` to the list of supported platforms in
`codex-cli/bin/codex.js`
- Treats Android as Linux for binary compatibility
## Why?
- Fixes "Unsupported platform: android (arm64)" error on Termux
- Enables Codex CLI usage on Android devices via Termux
- Improves platform compatibility without affecting other platforms
## How?
- Modified the platform detection switch statement to include `case
"android":`
- Android falls through to the same logic as Linux, using appropriate
ARM64 binaries
- Minimal change with no breaking effects on existing functionality
## Testing
- Tested on Android/Termux environment
- Verified the fix resolves the platform detection error
- Confirmed no impact on other platforms
## Related Issues
Fixes the "Unsupported platform: android (arm64)" error reported by
Termux users
Current 0.4.0 release:
```
~/code/codex2/codex-rs$ codex completion | head
_codex-cli() {
local i cur prev opts cmd
COMPREPLY=()
if [[ "${BASH_VERSINFO[0]}" -ge 4 ]]; then
cur="$2"
else
cur="${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}"
fi
prev="$3"
cmd=""
```
with this change:
```
~/code/codex2/codex-rs$ just codex completion | head
cargo run --bin codex -- "$@"
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.82s
Running `target/debug/codex completion`
_codex() {
local i cur prev opts cmd
COMPREPLY=()
if [[ "${BASH_VERSINFO[0]}" -ge 4 ]]; then
cur="$2"
else
cur="${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}"
fi
prev="$3"
cmd=""
```
Some users have proxies or other setups where they are ultimately
hitting OpenAI endpoints, but need a custom `base_url` rather than the
default value of `"https://api.openai.com/v1"`. This PR makes it
possible to override the `base_url` for the `openai` provider via the
`OPENAI_BASE_URL` environment variable.
This is a stopgap solution before migrating the build for the npm
release to GitHub Actions (which is ultimately what should be done to
ensure hermetic builds).
The idea is that instead of continuing to create PRs like
https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1472 where I have to check in a
change to the `WORKFLOW_URL`, this script uses `gh run list` to get the
`WORKFLOW_URL` dynamically and then threads the value through to
`install_native_deps.sh`.
To create the 0.3.0 release on npm, I ran:
```shell
./codex-cli/scripts/stage_rust_release.py --release-version 0.3.0
```
and then did `npm publish --dry-run` followed by `npm publish` in the
temp directory created by `stage_rust_release.py`.
On a high-level, we try to design `config.toml` so that you don't have
to "comment out a lot of stuff" when testing different options.
Previously, defining a sandbox policy was somewhat at odds with this
principle because you would define the policy as attributes of
`[sandbox]` like so:
```toml
[sandbox]
mode = "workspace-write"
writable_roots = [ "/tmp" ]
```
but if you wanted to temporarily change to a read-only sandbox, you
might feel compelled to modify your file to be:
```toml
[sandbox]
mode = "read-only"
# mode = "workspace-write"
# writable_roots = [ "/tmp" ]
```
Technically, commenting out `writable_roots` would not be strictly
necessary, as `mode = "read-only"` would ignore `writable_roots`, but
it's still a reasonable thing to do to keep things tidy.
Currently, the various values for `mode` do not support that many
attributes, so this is not that hard to maintain, but one could imagine
this becoming more complex in the future.
In this PR, we change Codex CLI so that it no longer recognizes
`[sandbox]`. Instead, it introduces a top-level option, `sandbox_mode`,
and `[sandbox_workspace_write]` is used to further configure the sandbox
when when `sandbox_mode = "workspace-write"` is used:
```toml
sandbox_mode = "workspace-write"
[sandbox_workspace_write]
writable_roots = [ "/tmp" ]
```
This feels a bit more future-proof in that it is less tedious to
configure different sandboxes:
```toml
sandbox_mode = "workspace-write"
[sandbox_read_only]
# read-only options here...
[sandbox_workspace_write]
writable_roots = [ "/tmp" ]
[sandbox_danger_full_access]
# danger-full-access options here...
```
In this scheme, you never need to comment out the configuration for an
individual sandbox type: you only need to redefine `sandbox_mode`.
Relatedly, previous to this change, a user had to do `-c
sandbox.mode=read-only` to change the mode on the command line. With
this change, things are arguably a bit cleaner because the equivalent
option is `-c sandbox_mode=read-only` (and now `-c
sandbox_workspace_write=...` can be set separately).
Though more importantly, we introduce the `-s/--sandbox` option to the
CLI, which maps directly to `sandbox_mode` in `config.toml`, making
config override behavior easier to reason about. Moreover, as you can
see in the updates to the various Markdown files, it is much easier to
explain how to configure sandboxing when things like `--sandbox
read-only` can be used as an example.
Relatedly, this cleanup also made it straightforward to add support for
a `sandbox` option for Codex when used as an MCP server (see the changes
to `mcp-server/src/codex_tool_config.rs`).
Fixes https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/1248.
v0.2.0 of https://www.npmjs.com/package/@openai/codex now runs the Rust
CLI, so it makes sense to bring back the instructions to use `npm i -g
@openai/codex`.
In most places, I list `npm install` before `brew install` because I
believe `npm` is more readily available, though I in the more detailed
part of the documentation, I note that `brew install` will download
fewer bytes, and in that sense, is preferred.
This adds support for two new model provider config options:
- `http_headers` for hardcoded (key, value) pairs
- `env_http_headers` for headers whose values should be read from
environment variables
This also updates the built-in `openai` provider to use this feature to
set the following headers:
- `originator` => `codex_cli_rs`
- `version` => [CLI version]
- `OpenAI-Organization` => `OPENAI_ORGANIZATION` env var
- `OpenAI-Project` => `OPENAI_PROJECT` env var
for consistency with the TypeScript implementation:
bd5a9e8ba9/codex-cli/src/utils/agent/agent-loop.ts (L321-L329)
While here, this also consolidates some logic that was duplicated across
`client.rs` and `chat_completions.rs` by introducing
`ModelProviderInfo.create_request_builder()`.
Resolves https://github.com/openai/codex/discussions/1152
This introduces two changes to make a quick fix so we can deploy the
Rust CLI for `0.2.0` of `@openai/codex` on npm:
- Updates `WORKFLOW_URL` to point to
https://github.com/openai/codex/actions/runs/15981617627, which is the
GitHub workflow run used to create the binaries for the `0.2.0` release
we published to Homebrew.
- Adds a `--version` option to `stage_release.sh` to specify what the
`version` field in the `package.json` will be.
Locally, I ran the following:
```
./codex-cli/scripts/stage_release.sh --native --version 0.2.0
```
Previously, we only used the `--native` flag to publish to the `native`
tag of `@openai/codex` (e.g., `npm publish --tag native`), but we should
just publish this as the default tag for `0.2.0` to be consistent with
what is in Homebrew.
We can still publish one "final" version of the TypeScript CLI as 0.1.x
later.
Under the hood, this release will still contain `dist/cli.js`,
`bin/codex-linux-sandbox-x64`, and `bin/codex-x86_64-apple-darwin`,
which are not strictly necessary, but we'll fix that in `0.3.0`.
As promised on https://github.com/openai/codex/discussions/1405, we are
making the first official release of the Rust CLI as v0.2.0. As part of
this move, we are making it available in Homebrew:
https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/pull/228615
Ultimately, we also plan to continue to make the CLI available in npm,
as well, though brew is a bit nicer in that `brew install` will download
only the binary for your platform whereas an npm module is expected to
contain the binaries for _all_ supported platforms, so it is a bit more
heavyweight.
A big part of this change is updating the root `README.md` to document
the behavior of the Rust CLI, which differs in a number of ways from the
TypeScript CLI. The existing `README.md` is moved to
`codex-cli/README.md` as part of this PR, as it is still applicable to
that folder.
As this is still early days for the Rust CLI, I encourage folks to
provide feedback on the command line flags and configuration options.
As discovered in https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/1365, the Azure
provider needs to be able to specify `api-version` as a query param, so
this PR introduces a generic `query_params` option to the
`model_providers` config so that an Azure provider can be defined as
follows:
```toml
[model_providers.azure]
name = "Azure"
base_url = "https://YOUR_PROJECT_NAME.openai.azure.com/openai"
env_key = "AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY"
query_params = { api-version = "2025-04-01-preview" }
```
This PR also updates the docs with this example.
While here, we also update `wire_api` to default to `"chat"`, as that is
likely the common case for someone defining an external provider.
Fixes https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/1365.
Looking at existing releases such as
https://github.com/openai/codex/releases/tag/codex-rs-b289c9207090b2e27494545d7b5404e063bd86f3-1-rust-v0.1.0-alpha.4,
the `.tar.gz` for the source code still seems to have `0.0.0` as the
`version` in `codex-rs/Cargo.toml` instead of what the tag seems to say
it should have:
b289c92070/codex-rs/Cargo.toml (L21)
ChatGPT claims:
> When GitHub generates the Source code (tar.gz) archive for a tag:
• It uses the commit the tag points to.
• But in some cases (e.g., shallow clones, GitHub CI, or local tools
that only clone the default branch), that commit may not be included,
and you might get an outdated view or nothing at all depending on how
it’s fetched.
Trying this recommended fix.
This is a small quality-of-life feature, the addition of
`--compute-indices` to the CLI, which, if enabled, will compute and set
the `indices` field for each `FileMatch` returned by `run()`. Note we
only bother to compute `indices` once we have the top N results because
there could be a lot of intermediate "top N" results during the search
that are ultimately discarded.
When set, the indices are included in the JSON output when `--json` is
specified and the matching indices are displayed in bold when `--json`
is not specified.
Introduces support for `@` to trigger a fuzzy-filename search in the
composer. Under the hood, this leverages
https://crates.io/crates/nucleo-matcher to do the fuzzy matching and
https://crates.io/crates/ignore to build up the list of file candidates
(so that it respects `.gitignore`).
For simplicity (at least for now), we do not do any caching between
searches like VS Code does for its file search:
1d89ed699b/src/vs/workbench/services/search/node/rawSearchService.ts (L212-L218)
Because we do not do any caching, I saw queries take up to three seconds
on large repositories with hundreds of thousands of files. To that end,
we do not perform searches synchronously on each keystroke, but instead
dispatch an event to do the search on a background thread that
asynchronously reports back to the UI when the results are available.
This is largely handled by the `FileSearchManager` introduced in this
PR, which also has logic for debouncing requests so there is at most one
search in flight at a time.
While we could potentially polish and tune this feature further, it may
already be overengineered for how it will be used, in practice, so we
can improve things going forward if it turns out that this is not "good
enough" in the wild.
Note this feature does not work like `@` in the TypeScript CLI, which
was more like directory-based tab completion. In the Rust CLI, `@`
triggers a full-repo fuzzy-filename search.
Fixes https://github.com/openai/codex/issues/1261.
Update `run()` to take `cancel_flag: Arc<AtomicBool>` that the worker
threads will periodically check to see if it is `true`, exiting early
(and returning empty results) if so.