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>
llmx_execpolicy
The goal of this library is to classify a proposed execv(3) command into one of the following states:
safeThe command is safe to run (*).matchThe command matched a rule in the policy, but the caller should decide whether it is safe to run based on the files it will write.forbiddenThe command is not allowed to be run.unverifiedThe safety cannot be determined: make the user decide.
(*) Whether an execv(3) call should be considered "safe" often requires additional context beyond the arguments to execv() itself. For example, if you trust an autonomous software agent to write files in your source tree, then deciding whether /bin/cp foo bar is "safe" depends on getcwd(3) for the calling process as well as the realpath of foo and bar when resolved against getcwd().
To that end, rather than returning a boolean, the validator returns a structured result that the client is expected to use to determine the "safety" of the proposed execv() call.
For example, to check the command ls -l foo, the checker would be invoked as follows:
cargo run -- check ls -l foo | jq
It will exit with 0 and print the following to stdout:
{
"result": "safe",
"match": {
"program": "ls",
"flags": [
{
"name": "-l"
}
],
"opts": [],
"args": [
{
"index": 1,
"type": "ReadableFile",
"value": "foo"
}
],
"system_path": ["/bin/ls", "/usr/bin/ls"]
}
}
Of note:
foois tagged as aReadableFile, so the caller should resolvefoorelative togetcwd()andrealpathit (as it may be a symlink) to determine whetherfoois safe to read.- While the specified executable is
ls,"system_path"offers/bin/lsand/usr/bin/lsas viable alternatives to avoid using whateverlshappens to appear first on the user's$PATH. If either exists on the host, it is recommended to use it as the first argument toexecv(3)instead ofls.
Further, "safety" in this system is not a guarantee that the command will execute successfully. As an example, cat /Users/mbolin/code/llmx/README.md may be considered "safe" if the system has decided the agent is allowed to read anything under /Users/mbolin/code/llmx, but it will fail at runtime if README.md does not exist. (Though this is "safe" in that the agent did not read any files that it was not authorized to read.)
Policy
Currently, the default policy is defined in default.policy within the crate.
The system uses Starlark as the file format because, unlike something like JSON or YAML, it supports "macros" without compromising on safety or reproducibility. (Under the hood, we use starlark-rust as the specific Starlark implementation.)
This policy contains "rules" such as:
define_program(
program="cp",
options=[
flag("-r"),
flag("-R"),
flag("--recursive"),
],
args=[ARG_RFILES, ARG_WFILE],
system_path=["/bin/cp", "/usr/bin/cp"],
should_match=[
["foo", "bar"],
],
should_not_match=[
["foo"],
],
)
This rule means that:
cpcan be used with any of the following flags (where "flag" means "an option that does not take an argument"):-r,-R,--recursive.- The initial
ARG_RFILESpassed toargsmeans that it expects one or more arguments that correspond to "readable files" - The final
ARG_WFILEpassed toargsmeans that it expects exactly one argument that corresponds to a "writeable file." - As a means of a lightweight way of including a unit test alongside the definition, the
should_matchlist is a list of examples ofexecv(3)args that should match the rule andshould_not_matchis a list of examples that should not match. These examples are verified when the.policyfile is loaded.
Note that the language of the .policy file is still evolving, as we have to continue to expand it so it is sufficiently expressive to accept all commands we want to consider "safe" without allowing unsafe commands to pass through.
The integrity of default.policy is verified via unit tests.
Further, the CLI supports a --policy option to specify a custom .policy file for ad-hoc testing.
Output Type: match
Going back to the cp example, because the rule matches an ARG_WFILE, it will return match instead of safe:
cargo run -- check cp src1 src2 dest | jq
If the caller wants to consider allowing this command, it should parse the JSON to pick out the WriteableFile arguments and decide whether they are safe to write:
{
"result": "match",
"match": {
"program": "cp",
"flags": [],
"opts": [],
"args": [
{
"index": 0,
"type": "ReadableFile",
"value": "src1"
},
{
"index": 1,
"type": "ReadableFile",
"value": "src2"
},
{
"index": 2,
"type": "WriteableFile",
"value": "dest"
}
],
"system_path": ["/bin/cp", "/usr/bin/cp"]
}
}
Note the exit code is still 0 for a match unless the --require-safe flag is specified, in which case the exit code is 12.
Output Type: forbidden
It is also possible to define a rule that, if it matches a command, should flag it as forbidden. For example, we do not want agents to be able to run applied deploy ever, so we define the following rule:
define_program(
program="applied",
args=["deploy"],
forbidden="Infrastructure Risk: command contains 'applied deploy'",
should_match=[
["deploy"],
],
should_not_match=[
["lint"],
],
)
Note that for a rule to be forbidden, the forbidden keyword arg must be specified as the reason the command is forbidden. This will be included in the output:
cargo run -- check applied deploy | jq
{
"result": "forbidden",
"reason": "Infrastructure Risk: command contains 'applied deploy'",
"cause": {
"Exec": {
"exec": {
"program": "applied",
"flags": [],
"opts": [],
"args": [
{
"index": 0,
"type": {
"Literal": "deploy"
},
"value": "deploy"
}
],
"system_path": []
}
}
}
}