Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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
34aa1991f1 chore: handle all cases for EventMsg (#936)
For now, this removes the `#[non_exhaustive]` directive on `EventMsg` so
that we are forced to handle all `EventMsg` by default. (We may revisit
this if/when we publish `core/` as a `lib` crate.) For now, it is
helpful to have this as a forcing function because we have effectively
two UIs (`tui` and `exec`) and usually when we add a new variant to
`EventMsg`, we want to be sure that we update both.
2025-05-14 13:36:43 -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
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
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
jcoens-openai
f3bd143867 Disallow expect via lints (#865)
Adds `expect()` as a denied lint. Same deal applies with `unwrap()`
where we now need to put `#[expect(...` on ones that we legit want. Took
care to enable `expect()` in test contexts.

# Tests

```
cargo fmt
cargo clippy --all-features --all-targets --no-deps -- -D warnings
cargo test
```
2025-05-12 08:45:46 -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
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
2b72d05c5e feat: make Codex available as a tool when running it as an MCP server (#811)
This PR replaces the placeholder `"echo"` tool call in the MCP server
with a `"codex"` tool that calls Codex. Events such as
`ExecApprovalRequest` and `ApplyPatchApprovalRequest` are not handled
properly yet, but I have `approval_policy = "never"` set in my
`~/.codex/config.toml` such that those codepaths are not exercised.

The schema for this MPC tool is defined by a new `CodexToolCallParam`
struct introduced in this PR. It is fairly similar to `ConfigOverrides`,
as the param is used to help create the `Config` used to start the Codex
session, though it also includes the `prompt` used to kick off the
session.

This PR also introduces the use of the third-party `schemars` crate to
generate the JSON schema, which is verified in the
`verify_codex_tool_json_schema()` unit test.

Events that are dispatched during the Codex session are sent back to the
MCP client as MCP notifications. This gives the client a way to monitor
progress as the tool call itself may take minutes to complete depending
on the complexity of the task requested by the user.

In the video below, I launched the server via:

```shell
mcp-server$ RUST_LOG=debug npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector cargo run --
```

In the video, you can see the flow of:

* requesting the list of tools
* choosing the **codex** tool
* entering a value for **prompt** and then making the tool call

Note that I left the other fields blank because when unspecified, the
values in my `~/.codex/config.toml` were used:


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1975058c-b004-43ef-8c8d-800a953b8192

Note that while using the inspector, I did run into
https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/inspector/issues/293, though the
tip about ensuring I had only one instance of the **MCP Inspector** tab
open in my browser seemed to fix things.
2025-05-05 07:16:19 -07:00
Michael Bolin
21cd953dbd feat: introduce mcp-server crate (#792)
This introduces the `mcp-server` crate, which contains a barebones MCP
server that provides an `echo` tool that echoes the user's request back
to them.

To test it out, I launched
[modelcontextprotocol/inspector](https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/inspector)
like so:

```
mcp-server$ npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector cargo run --
```

and opened up `http://127.0.0.1:6274` in my browser:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/83fc55d4-25c2-4497-80cd-e9702283ff93)

I also had to make a small fix to `mcp-types`, adding
`#[serde(untagged)]` to a number of `enum`s.
2025-05-02 17:25:58 -07:00