This release represents a comprehensive transformation of the codebase from Codex to LLMX, enhanced with LiteLLM integration to support 100+ LLM providers through a unified API. ## Major Changes ### Phase 1: Repository & Infrastructure Setup - Established new repository structure and branching strategy - Created comprehensive project documentation (CLAUDE.md, LITELLM-SETUP.md) - Set up development environment and tooling configuration ### Phase 2: Rust Workspace Transformation - Renamed all Rust crates from `codex-*` to `llmx-*` (30+ crates) - Updated package names, binary names, and workspace members - Renamed core modules: codex.rs → llmx.rs, codex_delegate.rs → llmx_delegate.rs - Updated all internal references, imports, and type names - Renamed directories: codex-rs/ → llmx-rs/, codex-backend-openapi-models/ → llmx-backend-openapi-models/ - Fixed all Rust compilation errors after mass rename ### Phase 3: LiteLLM Integration - Integrated LiteLLM for multi-provider LLM support (Anthropic, OpenAI, Azure, Google AI, AWS Bedrock, etc.) - Implemented OpenAI-compatible Chat Completions API support - Added model family detection and provider-specific handling - Updated authentication to support LiteLLM API keys - Renamed environment variables: OPENAI_BASE_URL → LLMX_BASE_URL - Added LLMX_API_KEY for unified authentication - Enhanced error handling for Chat Completions API responses - Implemented fallback mechanisms between Responses API and Chat Completions API ### Phase 4: TypeScript/Node.js Components - Renamed npm package: @codex/codex-cli → @valknar/llmx - Updated TypeScript SDK to use new LLMX APIs and endpoints - Fixed all TypeScript compilation and linting errors - Updated SDK tests to support both API backends - Enhanced mock server to handle multiple API formats - Updated build scripts for cross-platform packaging ### Phase 5: Configuration & Documentation - Updated all configuration files to use LLMX naming - Rewrote README and documentation for LLMX branding - Updated config paths: ~/.codex/ → ~/.llmx/ - Added comprehensive LiteLLM setup guide - Updated all user-facing strings and help text - Created release plan and migration documentation ### Phase 6: Testing & Validation - Fixed all Rust tests for new naming scheme - Updated snapshot tests in TUI (36 frame files) - Fixed authentication storage tests - Updated Chat Completions payload and SSE tests - Fixed SDK tests for new API endpoints - Ensured compatibility with Claude Sonnet 4.5 model - Fixed test environment variables (LLMX_API_KEY, LLMX_BASE_URL) ### Phase 7: Build & Release Pipeline - Updated GitHub Actions workflows for LLMX binary names - Fixed rust-release.yml to reference llmx-rs/ instead of codex-rs/ - Updated CI/CD pipelines for new package names - Made Apple code signing optional in release workflow - Enhanced npm packaging resilience for partial platform builds - Added Windows sandbox support to workspace - Updated dotslash configuration for new binary names ### Phase 8: Final Polish - Renamed all assets (.github images, labels, templates) - Updated VSCode and DevContainer configurations - Fixed all clippy warnings and formatting issues - Applied cargo fmt and prettier formatting across codebase - Updated issue templates and pull request templates - Fixed all remaining UI text references ## Technical Details **Breaking Changes:** - Binary name changed from `codex` to `llmx` - Config directory changed from `~/.codex/` to `~/.llmx/` - Environment variables renamed (CODEX_* → LLMX_*) - npm package renamed to `@valknar/llmx` **New Features:** - Support for 100+ LLM providers via LiteLLM - Unified authentication with LLMX_API_KEY - Enhanced model provider detection and handling - Improved error handling and fallback mechanisms **Files Changed:** - 578 files modified across Rust, TypeScript, and documentation - 30+ Rust crates renamed and updated - Complete rebrand of UI, CLI, and documentation - All tests updated and passing **Dependencies:** - Updated Cargo.lock with new package names - Updated npm dependencies in llmx-cli - Enhanced OpenAPI models for LLMX backend This release establishes LLMX as a standalone project with comprehensive LiteLLM integration, maintaining full backward compatibility with existing functionality while opening support for a wide ecosystem of LLM providers. 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com> Co-Authored-By: Sebastian Krüger <support@pivoine.art>
137 lines
3.8 KiB
Rust
137 lines
3.8 KiB
Rust
use llmx_execpolicy::ArgMatcher;
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use llmx_execpolicy::ArgType;
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use llmx_execpolicy::Error;
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use llmx_execpolicy::ExecCall;
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use llmx_execpolicy::MatchedArg;
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use llmx_execpolicy::MatchedExec;
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use llmx_execpolicy::MatchedOpt;
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use llmx_execpolicy::Policy;
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use llmx_execpolicy::Result;
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use llmx_execpolicy::ValidExec;
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use llmx_execpolicy::get_default_policy;
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extern crate llmx_execpolicy;
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#[expect(clippy::expect_used)]
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fn setup() -> Policy {
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get_default_policy().expect("failed to load default policy")
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}
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#[test]
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fn test_head_no_args() {
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let policy = setup();
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let head = ExecCall::new("head", &[]);
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// It is actually valid to call `head` without arguments: it will read from
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// stdin instead of from a file. Though recall that a command rejected by
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// the policy is not "unsafe:" it just means that this library cannot
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// *guarantee* that the command is safe.
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//
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// If we start verifying individual components of a shell command, such as:
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// `find . -name | head -n 10`, then it might be important to allow the
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// no-arg case.
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assert_eq!(
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Err(Error::VarargMatcherDidNotMatchAnything {
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program: "head".to_string(),
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matcher: ArgMatcher::ReadableFiles,
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}),
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policy.check(&head)
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)
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}
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#[test]
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fn test_head_one_file_no_flags() -> Result<()> {
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let policy = setup();
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let head = ExecCall::new("head", &["src/extension.ts"]);
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assert_eq!(
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Ok(MatchedExec::Match {
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exec: ValidExec::new(
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"head",
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vec![MatchedArg::new(
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0,
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ArgType::ReadableFile,
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"src/extension.ts"
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)?],
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&["/bin/head", "/usr/bin/head"]
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)
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}),
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policy.check(&head)
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);
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Ok(())
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}
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#[test]
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fn test_head_one_flag_one_file() -> Result<()> {
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let policy = setup();
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let head = ExecCall::new("head", &["-n", "100", "src/extension.ts"]);
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assert_eq!(
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Ok(MatchedExec::Match {
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exec: ValidExec {
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program: "head".to_string(),
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flags: vec![],
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opts: vec![
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MatchedOpt::new("-n", "100", ArgType::PositiveInteger)
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.expect("should validate")
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],
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args: vec![MatchedArg::new(
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2,
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ArgType::ReadableFile,
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"src/extension.ts"
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)?],
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system_path: vec!["/bin/head".to_string(), "/usr/bin/head".to_string()],
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}
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}),
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policy.check(&head)
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);
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Ok(())
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}
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#[test]
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fn test_head_invalid_n_as_0() {
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let policy = setup();
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let head = ExecCall::new("head", &["-n", "0", "src/extension.ts"]);
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assert_eq!(
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Err(Error::InvalidPositiveInteger {
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value: "0".to_string(),
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}),
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policy.check(&head)
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)
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}
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#[test]
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fn test_head_invalid_n_as_nonint_float() {
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let policy = setup();
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let head = ExecCall::new("head", &["-n", "1.5", "src/extension.ts"]);
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assert_eq!(
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Err(Error::InvalidPositiveInteger {
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value: "1.5".to_string(),
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}),
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policy.check(&head)
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)
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}
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#[test]
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fn test_head_invalid_n_as_float() {
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let policy = setup();
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let head = ExecCall::new("head", &["-n", "1.0", "src/extension.ts"]);
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assert_eq!(
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Err(Error::InvalidPositiveInteger {
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value: "1.0".to_string(),
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}),
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policy.check(&head)
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)
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}
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#[test]
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fn test_head_invalid_n_as_negative_int() {
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let policy = setup();
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let head = ExecCall::new("head", &["-n", "-1", "src/extension.ts"]);
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assert_eq!(
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Err(Error::OptionFollowedByOptionInsteadOfValue {
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program: "head".to_string(),
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option: "-n".to_string(),
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value: "-1".to_string(),
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}),
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policy.check(&head)
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)
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}
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