This all started because I was going to write a script to autogenerate
the Table of Contents in the root `README.md`, but I noticed that the
`href` for the "Why Codex?" heading was `#whycodex` instead of
`#why-codex`. This piqued my curiosity and it turned out that the space
in "Why Codex?" was not an ASCII space but **U+00A0**, a non-breaking
space, and so GitHub ignored it when generating the `href` for the
heading.
This also meant that when I did a text search for `why codex` in the
`README.md` in VS Code, the "Why Codex" heading did not match because of
the presence of **U+00A0**.
In short, these types of Unicode characters seem like a hazard, so I
decided to introduce this script to flag them, and if desired, to
replace them with "good enough" ASCII equivalents. For now, this only
applies to the root `README.md` file, but I think we should ultimately
apply this across our source code, as well, as we seem to have quite a
lot of non-ASCII Unicode and it's probably going to cause `rg` to miss
things.
Contributions of this PR:
* `./scripts/asciicheck.py`, which takes a list of filepaths and returns
non-zero if any of them contain non-ASCII characters. (Currently, there
is one exception for ✨ aka **U+2728**, though I would like to default to
an empty allowlist and then require all exceptions to be specified as
flags.)
* A `--fix` option that will attempt to rewrite files with violations
using a equivalents from a hardcoded substitution list.
* An update to `ci.yml` to verify `./scripts/asciicheck.py README.md`
succeeds.
* A cleanup of `README.md` using the `--fix` option as well as some
editorial decisions on my part.
* I tried to update the `href`s in the Table of Contents to reflect the
changes in the heading titles. (TIL that if a heading has a character
like `&` surrounded by spaces, it becomes `--` in the generated `href`.)
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)
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* #420
* #419
* #416
* __->__ #417
# 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.