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Thu 2 18:23 Tue 7 00:40 Wed 8 00:40 Wed 8 18:32 Thu 9 00:33 Fri 10 18:23 Sun 12 06:38 Mon 13 00:44 Mon 13 18:37 Tue 14 12:29 Tue 14 18:31 Wed 15 06:44 Wed 15 18:31 Thu 16 00:46 Thu 16 18:31 Fri 17 00:44 Sat 18 18:18 Mon 20 06:53 Mon 20 18:26 Tue 21 06:45 Tue 21 12:30 Tue 21 18:29 Wed 22 00:42 Wed 22 18:29 Thu 23 00:46 Thu 23 12:28 Thu 23 18:31 Fri 24 12:28 Fri 24 18:20 Sat 25 00:42 Sat 25 06:37 Wed 29 00:50 Wed 29 12:40 Thu 30 18:36

app/windows.md +2 −2

Details

1# Windows1# Windows

2 2 

3The [Codex app for Windows](https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9plm9xgg6vks?hl=en-US&gl=US) gives you one interface for3The [Codex app for Windows](https://get.microsoft.com/installer/download/9PLM9XGG6VKS?cid=website_cta_psi) gives you one interface for

4working across projects, running parallel agent threads, and reviewing results.4working across projects, running parallel agent threads, and reviewing results.

5It runs natively on Windows using PowerShell and the5It runs natively on Windows using PowerShell and the

6[Windows sandbox](https://developers.openai.com/codex/windows#windows-sandbox), or you can configure it to6[Windows sandbox](https://developers.openai.com/codex/windows#windows-sandbox), or you can configure it to


11## Download and update the Codex app11## Download and update the Codex app

12 12 

13Download the Codex app from the13Download the Codex app from the

14[Microsoft Store](https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9plm9xgg6vks?hl=en-US&gl=US).14[Microsoft Store](https://get.microsoft.com/installer/download/9PLM9XGG6VKS?cid=website_cta_psi).

15 15 

16Then follow the [quickstart](https://developers.openai.com/codex/quickstart?setup=app) to get started.16Then follow the [quickstart](https://developers.openai.com/codex/quickstart?setup=app) to get started.

17 17 

cli.md +1 −1

Details

69 69 

70Launch a Codex Cloud task, choose environments, and apply the resulting diffs without leaving your terminal.](https://developers.openai.com/codex/cli/features#working-with-codex-cloud)[### Scripting Codex70Launch a Codex Cloud task, choose environments, and apply the resulting diffs without leaving your terminal.](https://developers.openai.com/codex/cli/features#working-with-codex-cloud)[### Scripting Codex

71 71 

72Automate repeatable workflows by scripting Codex with the `exec` command.](https://developers.openai.com/codex/sdk#using-codex-cli-programmatically)[### Model Context Protocol72Automate repeatable workflows by scripting Codex with the `exec` command.](https://developers.openai.com/codex/noninteractive)[### Model Context Protocol

73 73 

74Give Codex access to additional third-party tools and context with Model Context Protocol (MCP).](https://developers.openai.com/codex/mcp)[### Approval modes74Give Codex access to additional third-party tools and context with Model Context Protocol (MCP).](https://developers.openai.com/codex/mcp)[### Approval modes

75 75 

Details

22| `--enable` | `feature` | Force-enable a feature flag (translates to `-c features.<name>=true`). Repeatable. |22| `--enable` | `feature` | Force-enable a feature flag (translates to `-c features.<name>=true`). Repeatable. |

23| `--full-auto` | `boolean` | Shortcut for low-friction local work: sets `--ask-for-approval on-request` and `--sandbox workspace-write`. |23| `--full-auto` | `boolean` | Shortcut for low-friction local work: sets `--ask-for-approval on-request` and `--sandbox workspace-write`. |

24| `--image, -i` | `path[,path...]` | Attach one or more image files to the initial prompt. Separate multiple paths with commas or repeat the flag. |24| `--image, -i` | `path[,path...]` | Attach one or more image files to the initial prompt. Separate multiple paths with commas or repeat the flag. |

25| `--model, -m` | `string` | Override the model set in configuration (for example `gpt-5-codex`). |25| `--model, -m` | `string` | Override the model set in configuration (for example `gpt-5.4`). |

26| `--no-alt-screen` | `boolean` | Disable alternate screen mode for the TUI (overrides `tui.alternate_screen` for this run). |26| `--no-alt-screen` | `boolean` | Disable alternate screen mode for the TUI (overrides `tui.alternate_screen` for this run). |

27| `--oss` | `boolean` | Use the local open source model provider (equivalent to `-c model_provider="oss"`). Validates that Ollama is running. |27| `--oss` | `boolean` | Use the local open source model provider (equivalent to `-c model_provider="oss"`). Validates that Ollama is running. |

28| `--profile, -p` | `string` | Configuration profile name to load from `~/.codex/config.toml`. |28| `--profile, -p` | `string` | Configuration profile name to load from `~/.codex/config.toml`. |


148 148 

149Details149Details

150 150 

151Override the model set in configuration (for example `gpt-5-codex`).151Override the model set in configuration (for example `gpt-5.4`).

152 152 

153Key153Key

154 154 

Details

54Skills are often the best fit for reusable workflows because they support richer instructions, scripts, and references while staying reusable across tasks.54Skills are often the best fit for reusable workflows because they support richer instructions, scripts, and references while staying reusable across tasks.

55Skills are loaded and visible to the agent (at least their metadata), so Codex can discover and choose them implicitly. This keeps rich workflows available without bloating context up front.55Skills are loaded and visible to the agent (at least their metadata), so Codex can discover and choose them implicitly. This keeps rich workflows available without bloating context up front.

56 56 

57Use skill folders to author and iterate on workflows locally. If a plugin

58already exists for the workflow, install it first to reuse a proven setup. When

59you want to distribute your own workflow across teams or bundle it with app

60integrations, package it as a [plugin](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins/build). Skills remain the

61authoring format; plugins are the installable distribution unit.

62 

57A skill is typically a `SKILL.md` file plus optional scripts, references, and assets.63A skill is typically a `SKILL.md` file plus optional scripts, references, and assets.

58 64 

59- my-skill/65- my-skill/


87 93 

88Skills can be global (in your user directory, for you as a developer) or repo-specific (checked into `.agents/skills`, for your team). Put repo skills in `.agents/skills` when the workflow applies to that project; use your user directory for skills you want across all repos.94Skills can be global (in your user directory, for you as a developer) or repo-specific (checked into `.agents/skills`, for your team). Put repo skills in `.agents/skills` when the workflow applies to that project; use your user directory for skills you want across all repos.

89 95 

90| Layer | Global | repo |96| Layer | Global | Repo |

91| :----- | :--------------------- | :--------------------------------------------- |97| :----- | :--------------------- | :--------------------------------------------- |

92| AGENTS | `~/.codex/AGENTS.md` | `AGENTS.md` in repo root or nested directories |98| AGENTS | `~/.codex/AGENTS.md` | `AGENTS.md` in repo root or nested directories |

93| Skills | `$HOME/.agents/skills` | `.agents/skills` in repo |99| Skills | `$HOME/.agents/skills` | `.agents/skills` in repo |


145Build in this order:151Build in this order:

146 152 

1471. [Custom instructions with AGENTS.md](https://developers.openai.com/codex/guides/agents-md) so Codex follows your repo conventions. Add pre-commit hooks and linters to enforce those rules.1531. [Custom instructions with AGENTS.md](https://developers.openai.com/codex/guides/agents-md) so Codex follows your repo conventions. Add pre-commit hooks and linters to enforce those rules.

1482. [Skills](https://developers.openai.com/codex/skills) so you never have the same conversation twice. Skills can include a `scripts/` directory with CLI scripts or pair with [MCP](https://developers.openai.com/codex/mcp) for external systems.1542. Install a [plugin](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins) when a reusable workflow already exists. Otherwise, create a [skill](https://developers.openai.com/codex/skills) and package it as a plugin when you want to share it.

1493. [MCP](https://developers.openai.com/codex/mcp) when workflows need external systems (Linear, GitHub, docs servers, design tools).1553. [MCP](https://developers.openai.com/codex/mcp) when workflows need external systems (Linear, GitHub, docs servers, design tools).

1504. [Subagents](https://developers.openai.com/codex/subagents) when you're ready to delegate noisy or specialized tasks to subagents.1564. [Subagents](https://developers.openai.com/codex/subagents) when you're ready to delegate noisy or specialized tasks to subagents.

Details

36inside enforced limits. That makes it easier to let Codex work independently36inside enforced limits. That makes it easier to let Codex work independently

37while still knowing when it will stop and ask for help.37while still knowing when it will stop and ask for help.

38 38 

39## Getting started

40 

41Codex applies sandboxing automatically when you use the default permissions

42mode.

43 

44### Prerequisites

45 

46On **macOS**, sandboxing works out of the box using the built-in Seatbelt

47framework.

48 

49On **Windows**, Codex uses the native [Windows

50sandbox](https://developers.openai.com/codex/windows#windows-sandbox) when you run in PowerShell and the

51Linux sandbox implementation when you run in WSL2.

52 

53On **Linux and WSL2**, install `bubblewrap` with your package manager first:

54 

55```bash

56sudo apt install bubblewrap

57```

58 

59```bash

60sudo dnf install bubblewrap

61```

62 

63Codex uses the system `bwrap` at `/usr/bin/bwrap` when it is available. If it

64is missing, Codex falls back to a bundled helper, but that helper requires

65unprivileged user namespaces. Installing your distro’s `bubblewrap` package is

66the most reliable setup.

67 

68Codex surfaces a startup warning when `bwrap` is missing or cannot create user

69namespaces. On distributions that restrict them with AppArmor, you can enable

70them with:

71 

72```bash

73sudo sysctl -w kernel.apparmor_restrict_unprivileged_userns=0

74```

75 

39## How you control it76## How you control it

40 77 

41Most people start with the permissions controls in the product.78Most people start with the permissions controls in the product.

Details

15Define profiles under `[profiles.<name>]` in `config.toml`, then run `codex --profile <name>`:15Define profiles under `[profiles.<name>]` in `config.toml`, then run `codex --profile <name>`:

16 16 

17```toml17```toml

18model = "gpt-5-codex"18model = "gpt-5.4"

19approval_policy = "on-request"19approval_policy = "on-request"

20model_catalog_json = "/Users/me/.codex/model-catalogs/default.json"20model_catalog_json = "/Users/me/.codex/model-catalogs/default.json"

21 21 


88 88 

89Relative paths inside a project config (for example, `model_instructions_file`) are resolved relative to the `.codex/` folder that contains the `config.toml`.89Relative paths inside a project config (for example, `model_instructions_file`) are resolved relative to the `.codex/` folder that contains the `config.toml`.

90 90 

91## Hooks (experimental)

92 

93Codex can also load lifecycle hooks from `hooks.json` files that sit next to

94active config layers.

95 

96In practice, the two most useful locations are:

97 

98- `~/.codex/hooks.json`

99- `<repo>/.codex/hooks.json`

100 

101Turn hooks on with:

102 

103```toml

104[features]

105codex_hooks = true

106```

107 

108For the current event list, input fields, output behavior, and limitations, see

109[Hooks](https://developers.openai.com/codex/hooks).

110 

91## Agent roles (`[agents]` in `config.toml`)111## Agent roles (`[agents]` in `config.toml`)

92 112 

93For subagent role configuration (`[agents]` in `config.toml`), see [Subagents](https://developers.openai.com/codex/subagents).113For subagent role configuration (`[agents]` in `config.toml`), see [Subagents](https://developers.openai.com/codex/subagents).


112Define additional providers and point `model_provider` at them:132Define additional providers and point `model_provider` at them:

113 133 

114```toml134```toml

115model = "gpt-5.1"135model = "gpt-5.4"

116model_provider = "proxy"136model_provider = "proxy"

117 137 

118[model_providers.proxy]138[model_providers.proxy]

config-basic.md +3 −0

Details

148| Key | Default | Maturity | Description |148| Key | Default | Maturity | Description |

149| -------------------- | :-------------------: | ------------ | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |149| -------------------- | :-------------------: | ------------ | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |

150| `apps` | false | Experimental | Enable ChatGPT Apps/connectors support |150| `apps` | false | Experimental | Enable ChatGPT Apps/connectors support |

151| `codex_hooks` | false | Under development | Enable lifecycle hooks from `hooks.json`. See [Hooks](https://developers.openai.com/codex/hooks). |

151| `fast_mode` | true | Stable | Enable Fast mode selection and the `service_tier = "fast"` path |152| `fast_mode` | true | Stable | Enable Fast mode selection and the `service_tier = "fast"` path |

152| `multi_agent` | true | Stable | Enable subagent collaboration tools |153| `multi_agent` | true | Stable | Enable subagent collaboration tools |

153| `personality` | true | Stable | Enable personality selection controls |154| `personality` | true | Stable | Enable personality selection controls |


166 167 

167Omit feature keys to keep their defaults.168Omit feature keys to keep their defaults.

168 169 

170For the current lifecycle hooks MVP, see [Hooks](https://developers.openai.com/codex/hooks).

171 

169### Enabling features172### Enabling features

170 173 

171- In `config.toml`, add `feature_name = true` under `[features]`.174- In `config.toml`, add `feature_name = true` under `[features]`.

Details

46| `experimental_compact_prompt_file` | `string (path)` | Load the compaction prompt override from a file (experimental). |46| `experimental_compact_prompt_file` | `string (path)` | Load the compaction prompt override from a file (experimental). |

47| `experimental_use_unified_exec_tool` | `boolean` | Legacy name for enabling unified exec; prefer `[features].unified_exec` or `codex --enable unified_exec`. |47| `experimental_use_unified_exec_tool` | `boolean` | Legacy name for enabling unified exec; prefer `[features].unified_exec` or `codex --enable unified_exec`. |

48| `features.apps` | `boolean` | Enable ChatGPT Apps/connectors support (experimental). |48| `features.apps` | `boolean` | Enable ChatGPT Apps/connectors support (experimental). |

49| `features.codex_hooks` | `boolean` | Enable lifecycle hooks loaded from `hooks.json` (under development; off by default). |

49| `features.enable_request_compression` | `boolean` | Compress streaming request bodies with zstd when supported (stable; on by default). |50| `features.enable_request_compression` | `boolean` | Compress streaming request bodies with zstd when supported (stable; on by default). |

50| `features.fast_mode` | `boolean` | Enable Fast mode selection and the `service_tier = "fast"` path (stable; on by default). |51| `features.fast_mode` | `boolean` | Enable Fast mode selection and the `service_tier = "fast"` path (stable; on by default). |

51| `features.multi_agent` | `boolean` | Enable multi-agent collaboration tools (`spawn_agent`, `send_input`, `resume_agent`, `wait_agent`, and `close_agent`) (stable; on by default). |52| `features.multi_agent` | `boolean` | Enable multi-agent collaboration tools (`spawn_agent`, `send_input`, `resume_agent`, `wait_agent`, and `close_agent`) (stable; on by default). |


90| `mcp_servers.<id>.startup_timeout_sec` | `number` | Override the default 10s startup timeout for an MCP server. |91| `mcp_servers.<id>.startup_timeout_sec` | `number` | Override the default 10s startup timeout for an MCP server. |

91| `mcp_servers.<id>.tool_timeout_sec` | `number` | Override the default 60s per-tool timeout for an MCP server. |92| `mcp_servers.<id>.tool_timeout_sec` | `number` | Override the default 60s per-tool timeout for an MCP server. |

92| `mcp_servers.<id>.url` | `string` | Endpoint for an MCP streamable HTTP server. |93| `mcp_servers.<id>.url` | `string` | Endpoint for an MCP streamable HTTP server. |

93| `model` | `string` | Model to use (e.g., `gpt-5-codex`). |94| `model` | `string` | Model to use (e.g., `gpt-5.4`). |

94| `model_auto_compact_token_limit` | `number` | Token threshold that triggers automatic history compaction (unset uses model defaults). |95| `model_auto_compact_token_limit` | `number` | Token threshold that triggers automatic history compaction (unset uses model defaults). |

95| `model_catalog_json` | `string (path)` | Optional path to a JSON model catalog loaded on startup. Profile-level `profiles.<name>.model_catalog_json` can override this per profile. |96| `model_catalog_json` | `string (path)` | Optional path to a JSON model catalog loaded on startup. Profile-level `profiles.<name>.model_catalog_json` can override this per profile. |

96| `model_context_window` | `number` | Context window tokens available to the active model. |97| `model_context_window` | `number` | Context window tokens available to the active model. |


645 646 

646Key647Key

647 648 

649`features.codex_hooks`

650 

651Type / Values

652 

653`boolean`

654 

655Details

656 

657Enable lifecycle hooks loaded from `hooks.json` (under development; off by default).

658 

659Key

660 

648`features.enable_request_compression`661`features.enable_request_compression`

649 662 

650Type / Values663Type / Values


1181 1194 

1182Details1195Details

1183 1196 

1184Model to use (e.g., `gpt-5-codex`).1197Model to use (e.g., `gpt-5.4`).

1185 1198 

1186Key1199Key

1187 1200 

Details

350# hide_rate_limit_model_nudge = true350# hide_rate_limit_model_nudge = true

351# hide_gpt5_1_migration_prompt = true351# hide_gpt5_1_migration_prompt = true

352# "hide_gpt-5.1-codex-max_migration_prompt" = true352# "hide_gpt-5.1-codex-max_migration_prompt" = true

353# model_migrations = { "gpt-4.1" = "gpt-5.1" }353# model_migrations = { "gpt-5.3-codex" = "gpt-5.4" }

354 354 

355################################################################################355################################################################################

356# Centralized Feature Flags (preferred)356# Centralized Feature Flags (preferred)


360# Leave this table empty to accept defaults. Set explicit booleans to opt in/out.360# Leave this table empty to accept defaults. Set explicit booleans to opt in/out.

361# shell_tool = true361# shell_tool = true

362# apps = false362# apps = false

363# codex_hooks = false

363# unified_exec = true364# unified_exec = true

364# shell_snapshot = true365# shell_snapshot = true

365# multi_agent = true366# multi_agent = true

Details

2 2 

3# Running Codex as an MCP server3# Running Codex as an MCP server

4 4 

5You can run Codex as an MCP server and connect it from other MCP clients (for example, an agent built with the [OpenAI Agents SDK](https://openai.github.io/openai-agents-js/guides/mcp/)).5You can run Codex as an MCP server and connect it from other MCP clients (for example, an agent built with the [OpenAI Agents SDK MCP integration](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/agents/integrations-observability#mcp)).

6 6 

7To start Codex as an MCP server, you can use the following command:7To start Codex as an MCP server, you can use the following command:

8 8 

hooks.md +398 −0 added

Details

1# Hooks

2 

3Experimental. Hooks are under active development. Windows support temporarily

4disabled.

5 

6Hooks are an extensibility framework for Codex. They allow

7you to inject your own scripts into the agentic loop, enabling features such as:

8 

9- Send the conversation to a custom logging/analytics engine

10- Scan your team's prompts to block accidentally pasting API keys

11- Summarize conversations to create persistent memories automatically

12- Run a custom validator when a conversation turn stops, enforcing standards

13- Customize prompting when in a certain directory

14 

15Hooks are behind a feature flag in `config.toml`:

16 

17```toml

18[features]

19codex_hooks = true

20```

21 

22Runtime behavior to keep in mind:

23 

24- Matching hooks from multiple files all run.

25- Multiple matching command hooks for the same event are launched concurrently,

26 so one hook cannot prevent another matching hook from starting.

27- `PreToolUse`, `PostToolUse`, `UserPromptSubmit`, and `Stop` run at turn

28 scope.

29- Hooks are currently disabled on Windows.

30 

31## Where Codex looks for hooks

32 

33Codex discovers `hooks.json` next to active config layers.

34 

35In practice, the two most useful locations are:

36 

37- `~/.codex/hooks.json`

38- `<repo>/.codex/hooks.json`

39 

40If more than one `hooks.json` file exists, Codex loads all matching hooks.

41Higher-precedence config layers do not replace lower-precedence hooks.

42 

43## Config shape

44 

45Hooks are organized in three levels:

46 

47- A hook event such as `PreToolUse`, `PostToolUse`, or `Stop`

48- A matcher group that decides when that event matches

49- One or more hook handlers that run when the matcher group matches

50 

51```json

52{

53 "hooks": {

54 "SessionStart": [

55 {

56 "matcher": "startup|resume",

57 "hooks": [

58 {

59 "type": "command",

60 "command": "python3 ~/.codex/hooks/session_start.py",

61 "statusMessage": "Loading session notes"

62 }

63 ]

64 }

65 ],

66 "PreToolUse": [

67 {

68 "matcher": "Bash",

69 "hooks": [

70 {

71 "type": "command",

72 "command": "/usr/bin/python3 \"$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/.codex/hooks/pre_tool_use_policy.py\"",

73 "statusMessage": "Checking Bash command"

74 }

75 ]

76 }

77 ],

78 "PostToolUse": [

79 {

80 "matcher": "Bash",

81 "hooks": [

82 {

83 "type": "command",

84 "command": "/usr/bin/python3 \"$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/.codex/hooks/post_tool_use_review.py\"",

85 "statusMessage": "Reviewing Bash output"

86 }

87 ]

88 }

89 ],

90 "UserPromptSubmit": [

91 {

92 "hooks": [

93 {

94 "type": "command",

95 "command": "/usr/bin/python3 \"$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/.codex/hooks/user_prompt_submit_data_flywheel.py\""

96 }

97 ]

98 }

99 ],

100 "Stop": [

101 {

102 "hooks": [

103 {

104 "type": "command",

105 "command": "/usr/bin/python3 \"$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/.codex/hooks/stop_continue.py\"",

106 "timeout": 30

107 }

108 ]

109 }

110 ]

111 }

112}

113```

114 

115Notes:

116 

117- `timeout` is in seconds.

118- `timeoutSec` is also accepted as an alias.

119- If `timeout` is omitted, Codex uses `600` seconds.

120- `statusMessage` is optional.

121- Commands run with the session `cwd` as their working directory.

122- For repo-local hooks, prefer resolving from the git root instead of using a

123 relative path such as `.codex/hooks/...`. Codex may be started from a

124 subdirectory, and a git-root-based path keeps the hook location stable.

125 

126## Matcher patterns

127 

128The `matcher` field is a regex string that filters when hooks fire. Use `"*"`,

129`""`, or omit `matcher` entirely to match every occurrence of a supported

130event.

131 

132Only some current Codex events honor `matcher`:

133 

134| Event | What `matcher` filters | Notes |

135| --- | --- | --- |

136| `PostToolUse` | tool name | Current Codex runtime only emits `Bash`. |

137| `PreToolUse` | tool name | Current Codex runtime only emits `Bash`. |

138| `SessionStart` | start source | Current runtime values are `startup` and `resume`. |

139| `UserPromptSubmit` | not supported | Any configured `matcher` is ignored for this event. |

140| `Stop` | not supported | Any configured `matcher` is ignored for this event. |

141 

142Examples:

143 

144- `Bash`

145- `startup|resume`

146- `Edit|Write`

147 

148That last example is still a valid regex, but current Codex `PreToolUse` and

149`PostToolUse` events only emit `Bash`, so it will not match anything today.

150 

151## Common input fields

152 

153Every command hook receives one JSON object on `stdin`.

154 

155These are the shared fields you will usually use:

156 

157| Field | Type | Meaning |

158| --- | --- | --- |

159| `session_id` | `string` | Current session or thread id. |

160| `transcript_path` | `string | null` | Path to the session transcript file, if any |

161| `cwd` | `string` | Working directory for the session |

162| `hook_event_name` | `string` | Current hook event name |

163| `model` | `string` | Active model slug |

164 

165Turn-scoped hooks list `turn_id` in their event-specific tables.

166 

167If you need the full wire format, see [Schemas](#schemas).

168 

169## Common output fields

170 

171`SessionStart`, `UserPromptSubmit`, and `Stop` support these shared JSON

172fields:

173 

174```json

175{

176 "continue": true,

177 "stopReason": "optional",

178 "systemMessage": "optional",

179 "suppressOutput": false

180}

181```

182 

183| Field | Effect |

184| ---------------- | ----------------------------------------------- |

185| `continue` | If `false`, marks that hook run as stopped |

186| `stopReason` | Recorded as the reason for stopping |

187| `systemMessage` | Surfaced as a warning in the UI or event stream |

188| `suppressOutput` | Parsed today but not yet implemented |

189 

190Exit `0` with no output is treated as success and Codex continues.

191 

192`PreToolUse` supports `systemMessage`, but `continue`, `stopReason`, and

193`suppressOutput` are not currently supported for that event.

194 

195`PostToolUse` supports `systemMessage`, `continue: false`, and `stopReason`.

196`suppressOutput` is parsed but not currently supported for that event.

197 

198## Hooks

199 

200### SessionStart

201 

202`matcher` is applied to `source` for this event.

203 

204Fields in addition to [Common input fields](#common-input-fields):

205 

206| Field | Type | Meaning |

207| --- | --- | --- |

208| `source` | `string` | How the session started: `startup` or `resume` |

209 

210Plain text on `stdout` is added as extra developer context.

211 

212JSON on `stdout` supports [Common output fields](#common-output-fields) and this

213hook-specific shape:

214 

215```json

216{

217 "hookSpecificOutput": {

218 "hookEventName": "SessionStart",

219 "additionalContext": "Load the workspace conventions before editing."

220 }

221}

222```

223 

224That `additionalContext` text is added as extra developer context.

225 

226### PreToolUse

227 

228Currently `PreToolUse` only supports Bash tool interception. The model can

229still work around this by writing its own script to disk and then running that

230script with Bash, so treat this as a useful guardrail rather than a complete

231enforcement boundary.

232 

233`matcher` is applied to `tool_name`, which currently always equals `Bash`.

234 

235Fields in addition to [Common input fields](#common-input-fields):

236 

237| Field | Type | Meaning |

238| --- | --- | --- |

239| `turn_id` | `string` | Codex-specific extension. Active Codex turn id |

240| `tool_name` | `string` | Currently always `Bash` |

241| `tool_use_id` | `string` | Tool-call id for this invocation |

242| `tool_input.command` | `string` | Shell command Codex is about to run |

243 

244Plain text on `stdout` is ignored.

245 

246JSON on `stdout` can use `systemMessage` and can block a Bash command with this

247hook-specific shape:

248 

249```json

250{

251 "hookSpecificOutput": {

252 "hookEventName": "PreToolUse",

253 "permissionDecision": "deny",

254 "permissionDecisionReason": "Destructive command blocked by hook."

255 }

256}

257```

258 

259Codex also accepts this older block shape:

260 

261```json

262{

263 "decision": "block",

264 "reason": "Destructive command blocked by hook."

265}

266```

267 

268You can also use exit code `2` and write the blocking reason to `stderr`.

269 

270`permissionDecision: "allow"` and `"ask"`, legacy `decision: "approve"`,

271`updatedInput`, `additionalContext`, `continue: false`, `stopReason`, and

272`suppressOutput` are parsed but not supported yet, so they fail open.

273 

274### PostToolUse

275 

276Currently `PostToolUse` only supports Bash tool results. It is not limited to

277commands that exit successfully: non-interactive `exec_command` calls can still

278trigger `PostToolUse` when Codex emits a Bash post-tool payload. It cannot undo

279side effects from the command that already ran.

280 

281`matcher` is applied to `tool_name`, which currently always equals `Bash`.

282 

283Fields in addition to [Common input fields](#common-input-fields):

284 

285| Field | Type | Meaning |

286| --- | --- | --- |

287| `turn_id` | `string` | Codex-specific extension. Active Codex turn id |

288| `tool_name` | `string` | Currently always `Bash` |

289| `tool_use_id` | `string` | Tool-call id for this invocation |

290| `tool_input.command` | `string` | Shell command Codex just ran |

291| `tool_response` | `JSON value` | Bash tool output payload. Today this is usually a JSON string |

292 

293Plain text on `stdout` is ignored.

294 

295JSON on `stdout` can use `systemMessage` and this hook-specific shape:

296 

297```json

298{

299 "decision": "block",

300 "reason": "The Bash output needs review before continuing.",

301 "hookSpecificOutput": {

302 "hookEventName": "PostToolUse",

303 "additionalContext": "The command updated generated files."

304 }

305}

306```

307 

308That `additionalContext` text is added as extra developer context.

309 

310For this event, `decision: "block"` does not undo the completed Bash command.

311Instead, Codex records the feedback, replaces the tool result with that

312feedback, and continues the model from the hook-provided message.

313 

314You can also use exit code `2` and write the feedback reason to `stderr`.

315 

316To stop normal processing of the original tool result after the command has

317already run, return `continue: false`. Codex will replace the tool result with

318your feedback or stop text and continue from there.

319 

320`updatedMCPToolOutput` and `suppressOutput` are parsed but not supported yet,

321so they fail open.

322 

323### UserPromptSubmit

324 

325`matcher` is not currently used for this event.

326 

327Fields in addition to [Common input fields](#common-input-fields):

328 

329| Field | Type | Meaning |

330| --- | --- | --- |

331| `turn_id` | `string` | Codex-specific extension. Active Codex turn id |

332| `prompt` | `string` | User prompt that is about to be sent |

333 

334Plain text on `stdout` is added as extra developer context.

335 

336JSON on `stdout` supports [Common output fields](#common-output-fields) and

337this hook-specific shape:

338 

339```json

340{

341 "hookSpecificOutput": {

342 "hookEventName": "UserPromptSubmit",

343 "additionalContext": "Ask for a clearer reproduction before editing files."

344 }

345}

346```

347 

348That `additionalContext` text is added as extra developer context.

349 

350To block the prompt, return:

351 

352```json

353{

354 "decision": "block",

355 "reason": "Ask for confirmation before doing that."

356}

357```

358 

359You can also use exit code `2` and write the blocking reason to `stderr`.

360 

361### Stop

362 

363`matcher` is not currently used for this event.

364 

365Fields in addition to [Common input fields](#common-input-fields):

366 

367| Field | Type | Meaning |

368| --- | --- | --- |

369| `turn_id` | `string` | Codex-specific extension. Active Codex turn id |

370| `stop_hook_active` | `boolean` | Whether this turn was already continued by `Stop` |

371| `last_assistant_message` | `string | null` | Latest assistant message text, if available |

372 

373`Stop` expects JSON on `stdout` when it exits `0`. Plain text output is invalid

374for this event.

375 

376JSON on `stdout` supports [Common output fields](#common-output-fields). To keep

377Codex going, return:

378 

379```json

380{

381 "decision": "block",

382 "reason": "Run one more pass over the failing tests."

383}

384```

385 

386You can also use exit code `2` and write the continuation reason to `stderr`.

387 

388For this event, `decision: "block"` does not reject the turn. Instead, it tells

389Codex to continue and automatically creates a new continuation prompt that acts

390as a new user prompt, using your `reason` as that prompt text.

391 

392If any matching `Stop` hook returns `continue: false`, that takes precedence

393over continuation decisions from other matching `Stop` hooks.

394 

395## Schemas

396 

397If you need the exact current wire format, see the generated schemas in the

398[Codex GitHub repository](https://github.com/openai/codex/tree/main/codex-rs/hooks/schema/generated).

ide.md +7 −3

Details

20is experimental. For the best Windows experience, use Codex in a WSL workspace20is experimental. For the best Windows experience, use Codex in a WSL workspace

21and follow our [Windows setup guide](https://developers.openai.com/codex/windows).21and follow our [Windows setup guide](https://developers.openai.com/codex/windows).

22 22 

23After you install it, youll find the extension in your left sidebar next to your other extensions.23After you install it, you'll find Codex in your editor sidebar.

24In VS Code, Codex opens in the right sidebar by default.

24If you're using VS Code, restart the editor if you don't see Codex right away.25If you're using VS Code, restart the editor if you don't see Codex right away.

25 26 

26If you're using Cursor, the activity bar displays horizontally by default. Collapsed items can hide Codex, so you can pin it and reorganize the order of the extensions.27If you're using Cursor, the activity bar displays horizontally by default. Collapsed items can hide Codex, so you can pin it and reorganize the order of the extensions.


35 36 

36### Move Codex to the right sidebar37### Move Codex to the right sidebar

37 38 

38In VS Code, you can drag the Codex icon to the right of your editor to move it to the right sidebar.39In VS Code, Codex appears in the right sidebar automatically.

40If you prefer it in the primary (left) sidebar, drag the Codex icon back to the left activity bar.

39 41 

40In some IDEs, like Cursor, you may need to temporarily change the activity bar orientation first:42In VS Code forks like Cursor, you may need to move Codex to the right sidebar manually.

43To do that, you may need to temporarily change the activity bar orientation first:

41 44 

421. Open your editor settings and search for `activity bar` (in Workbench settings).451. Open your editor settings and search for `activity bar` (in Workbench settings).

432. Change the orientation to `vertical`.462. Change the orientation to `vertical`.


48Now drag the Codex icon to the right sidebar (for example, next to your Cursor chat). Codex appears as another tab in the sidebar.51Now drag the Codex icon to the right sidebar (for example, next to your Cursor chat). Codex appears as another tab in the sidebar.

49 52 

50After you move it, reset the activity bar orientation to `horizontal` to restore the default behavior.53After you move it, reset the activity bar orientation to `horizontal` to restore the default behavior.

54If you change your mind later, you can drag Codex back to the primary (left) sidebar at any time.

51 55 

52### Sign in56### Sign in

53 57 

ide/features.md +1 −1

Details

20 20 

21## Adjust reasoning effort21## Adjust reasoning effort

22 22 

23You can adjust reasoning effort to control how long Codex thinks before responding. Higher effort can help on complex tasks, but responses take longer. Higher effort also uses more tokens and can consume your rate limits faster (especially with GPT-5-Codex).23You can adjust reasoning effort to control how long Codex thinks before responding. Higher effort can help on complex tasks, but responses take longer. Higher effort also uses more tokens and can consume your rate limits faster, especially with higher-capability models.

24 24 

25Use the same model switcher shown above, and choose `low`, `medium`, or `high` for each model. Start with `medium`, and only switch to `high` when you need more depth.25Use the same model switcher shown above, and choose `low`, `medium`, or `high` for each model. Start with `medium`, and only switch to `high` when you need more depth.

26 26 

ide/settings.md +4 −0

Details

12 12 

13The Codex IDE extension uses the Codex CLI. Configure some behavior, such as the default model, approvals, and sandbox settings, in the shared `~/.codex/config.toml` file instead of in editor settings. See [Config basics](https://developers.openai.com/codex/config-basic).13The Codex IDE extension uses the Codex CLI. Configure some behavior, such as the default model, approvals, and sandbox settings, in the shared `~/.codex/config.toml` file instead of in editor settings. See [Config basics](https://developers.openai.com/codex/config-basic).

14 14 

15The extension also honors VS Code's built-in chat font settings for Codex conversation surfaces.

16 

15## Settings reference17## Settings reference

16 18 

17| Setting | Description |19| Setting | Description |

18| -------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |20| -------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |

21| `chat.fontSize` | Controls chat text in the Codex sidebar, including conversation content and the composer. |

22| `chat.editor.fontSize` | Controls code-rendered content in Codex conversations, including code snippets and diffs. |

19| `chatgpt.cliExecutable` | Development only: Path to the Codex CLI executable. You don't need to set this unless you're actively developing the Codex CLI. If you set this manually, parts of the extension might not work as expected. |23| `chatgpt.cliExecutable` | Development only: Path to the Codex CLI executable. You don't need to set this unless you're actively developing the Codex CLI. If you set this manually, parts of the extension might not work as expected. |

20| `chatgpt.commentCodeLensEnabled` | Show CodeLens above to-do comments so you can complete them with Codex. |24| `chatgpt.commentCodeLensEnabled` | Show CodeLens above to-do comments so you can complete them with Codex. |

21| `chatgpt.localeOverride` | Preferred language for the Codex UI. Leave empty to detect automatically. |25| `chatgpt.localeOverride` | Preferred language for the Codex UI. Leave empty to detect automatically. |

Details

161- Telemetry or incident summaries161- Telemetry or incident summaries

162- Standard debugging flows162- Standard debugging flows

163 163 

164The `$skill-creator` skill is the best place to start to scaffold the first version of a skill and to use the `$skill-installer` skill to install it locally. One of the most important parts of a skill is the description. It should say what the skill does and when to use it.164The `$skill-creator` skill is the best place to start to scaffold the first version of a skill. Keep the first version local while you iterate. When it's ready to share broadly, package it as a [plugin](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins/build). One of the most important parts of a skill is the description. It should say what the skill does and when to use it.

165 165 

166Personal skills are stored in `$HOME/.agents/skills`, and shared team skills166Personal skills are stored in `$HOME/.agents/skills`, and shared team skills

167 can be checked into `.agents/skills` inside a repository. This is especially167 can be checked into `.agents/skills` inside a repository. This is especially

models.md +2 −86

Details

107 107 

108## Alternative models108## Alternative models

109 109 

110![gpt-5.2-codex](/images/codex/gpt-5.2-codex.png)

111 

112gpt-5.2-codex

113 

114Advanced coding model for real-world engineering. Succeeded by GPT-5.3-Codex.

115 

116codex -m gpt-5.2-codex

117 

118Copy command

119 

120Show details

121 

122![gpt-5.2](/images/api/models/gpt-5.2.jpg)110![gpt-5.2](/images/api/models/gpt-5.2.jpg)

123 111 

124gpt-5.2112gpt-5.2

125 113 

126Previous general-purpose model for coding and agentic tasks across industries and domains. Succeeded by GPT-5.4.114Previous general-purpose model for coding and agentic tasks, including hard debugging tasks that benefit from deeper deliberation.

127 115 

128codex -m gpt-5.2116codex -m gpt-5.2

129 117 


131 119 

132Show details120Show details

133 121 

134![gpt-5.1-codex-max](/images/api/models/gpt-5.1-codex-max.jpg)

135 

136gpt-5.1-codex-max

137 

138Optimized for long-horizon, agentic coding tasks in Codex.

139 

140codex -m gpt-5.1-codex-max

141 

142Copy command

143 

144Show details

145 

146![gpt-5.1](/images/api/models/gpt-5.1.jpg)

147 

148gpt-5.1

149 

150Great for coding and agentic tasks across domains. Succeeded by GPT-5.2.

151 

152codex -m gpt-5.1

153 

154Copy command

155 

156Show details

157 

158![gpt-5.1-codex](/images/api/models/gpt-5.1-codex.jpg)

159 

160gpt-5.1-codex

161 

162Optimized for long-running, agentic coding tasks in Codex. Succeeded by GPT-5.1-Codex-Max.

163 

164codex -m gpt-5.1-codex

165 

166Copy command

167 

168Show details

169 

170![gpt-5-codex](/images/api/models/gpt-5-codex.jpg)

171 

172gpt-5-codex

173 

174Version of GPT-5 tuned for long-running, agentic coding tasks. Succeeded by GPT-5.1-Codex.

175 

176codex -m gpt-5-codex

177 

178Copy command

179 

180Show details

181 

182![gpt-5-codex-mini](/images/api/models/gpt-5-codex.jpg)

183 

184gpt-5-codex-mini

185 

186Smaller, more cost-effective version of GPT-5-Codex. Succeeded by GPT-5.1-Codex-Mini.

187 

188codex -m gpt-5-codex

189 

190Copy command

191 

192Show details

193 

194![gpt-5](/images/api/models/gpt-5.jpg)

195 

196gpt-5

197 

198Reasoning model for coding and agentic tasks across domains. Succeeded by GPT-5.1.

199 

200codex -m gpt-5

201 

202Copy command

203 

204Show details

205 

206## Other models122## Other models

207 123 

208Codex works best with the models listed above.124When you sign in with ChatGPT, Codex works best with the models listed above.

209 125 

210You can also point Codex at any model and provider that supports either the [Chat Completions](https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/chat) or [Responses APIs](https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/responses) to fit your specific use case.126You can also point Codex at any model and provider that supports either the [Chat Completions](https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/chat) or [Responses APIs](https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/responses) to fit your specific use case.

211 127 

plugins.md +114 −0 added

Details

1# Plugins

2 

3## Overview

4 

5Plugins bundle skills, app integrations, and MCP servers into reusable

6workflows for Codex.

7 

8Extend what Codex can do, for example:

9 

10- Install the Gmail plugin to let Codex read and manage Gmail.

11- Install the Google Drive plugin to work across Drive, Docs, Sheets, and

12 Slides.

13- Install the Slack plugin to summarize channels or draft replies.

14 

15A plugin can contain:

16 

17- **Skills:** reusable instructions for specific kinds of work. Codex can load

18 them when needed so it follows the right steps and uses the right references

19 or helper scripts for a task.

20- **Apps:** connections to tools like GitHub, Slack, or Google Drive, so

21 Codex can read information from those tools and take actions in them.

22- **MCP servers:** services that give Codex access to additional tools or

23 shared information, often from systems outside your local project.

24 

25More plugin capabilities are coming soon.

26 

27## Use and install plugins

28 

29### Plugin Directory in the Codex app

30 

31Open **Plugins** in the Codex app to browse and install curated plugins.

32 

33![Codex Plugins page](/images/codex/plugins/directory.png)

34 

35### Plugin directory in the CLI

36 

37In Codex CLI, run the following command to open the plugins list:

38 

39```text

40codex

41/plugins

42```

43 

44![Plugins list in Codex CLI](/images/codex/plugins/cli_light.png)

45 

46### Install and use a plugin

47 

48Once you open the plugin directory:

49 

501. Search or browse for a plugin, then open its details.

512. Select the install button. In the app, select the plus button or

52 **Add to Codex**. In the CLI, select `Install plugin`.

533. If the plugin needs an external app, connect it when prompted. Some plugins

54 ask you to authenticate during install. Others wait until the first time you

55 use them.

564. After installation, start a new thread and ask Codex to use the plugin.

57 

58After you install a plugin, you can use it directly in the prompt window:

59 

60![Codex Plugins page](/images/codex/plugins/plugin-github-invoke.png)

61 

62Describe the task directly

63 

64 Ask for the outcome you want, such as "Summarize unread Gmail threads

65 from today" or "Pull the latest launch notes from Google Drive."

66 

67 Use this when you want Codex to choose the right installed tools for the

68 task.

69 

70Choose a specific plugin

71 

72 Type <code>@</code> to invoke the plugin or one of its bundled skills

73 explicitly.

74 

75 Use this when you want to be specific about which plugin or skill Codex

76should use. See [Codex app commands](https://developers.openai.com/codex/app/commands) and

77[Skills](https://developers.openai.com/codex/skills).

78 

79### How permissions and data sharing work

80 

81Installing a plugin makes its workflows available in Codex, but your existing

82[approval settings](https://developers.openai.com/codex/agent-approvals-security) still apply. Any

83connected external services remain subject to their own authentication,

84privacy, and data-sharing policies.

85 

86- Bundled skills are available as soon as you install the plugin.

87- If a plugin includes apps, Codex may prompt you to install or sign in to

88 those apps in ChatGPT during setup or the first time you use them.

89- If a plugin includes MCP servers, they may require additional setup or

90 authentication before you can use them.

91- When Codex sends data through a bundled app, that app's terms and privacy

92 policy apply.

93 

94### Remove or turn off a plugin

95 

96To remove a plugin, reopen it from the plugin browser and select

97**Uninstall plugin**.

98 

99Uninstalling a plugin removes the plugin bundle from Codex, but bundled apps

100stay installed until you manage them in ChatGPT.

101 

102If you want to keep a plugin installed but turn it off, set its entry in

103`~/.codex/config.toml` to `enabled = false`, then restart Codex:

104 

105```toml

106[plugins."gmail@openai-curated"]

107enabled = false

108```

109 

110## Build your own plugin

111 

112If you want to create, test, or distribute your own plugin, see

113[Build plugins](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins/build). That page covers local scaffolding,

114manual marketplace setup, plugin manifests, and packaging guidance.

plugins/build.md +359 −0 added

Details

1# Build plugins

2 

3This page is for plugin authors. If you want to browse, install, and use

4plugins in Codex, see [Plugins](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins). If you are still iterating on

5one repo or one personal workflow, start with a local skill. Build a plugin

6when you want to share that workflow across teams, bundle app integrations or

7MCP config, or publish a stable package.

8 

9## Create a plugin with `$plugin-creator`

10 

11For the fastest setup, use the built-in `$plugin-creator` skill.

12 

13![plugin-creator skill in Codex](/images/codex/plugins/plugin-creator.png)

14 

15It scaffolds the required `.codex-plugin/plugin.json` manifest and can also

16generate a local marketplace entry for testing. If you already have a plugin

17folder, you can still use `$plugin-creator` to wire it into a local

18marketplace.

19 

20![how to invoke the plugin-creator skill](/images/codex/plugins/plugin-creator-invoke.png)

21 

22### Build your own curated plugin list

23 

24A marketplace is a JSON catalog of plugins. `$plugin-creator` can generate one

25for a single plugin, and you can keep adding entries to that same marketplace

26to build your own curated list for a repo, team, or personal workflow.

27 

28In Codex, each marketplace appears as a selectable source in the plugin

29directory. Use `$REPO_ROOT/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json` for a repo-scoped

30list or `~/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json` for a personal list. Add one

31entry per plugin under `plugins[]`, point each `source.path` at the plugin

32folder with a `./`-prefixed path relative to the marketplace root, and set

33`interface.displayName` to the label you want Codex to show in the marketplace

34picker. Then restart Codex. After that, open the plugin directory, choose your

35marketplace, and browse or install the plugins in that curated list.

36 

37You don't need a separate marketplace per plugin. One marketplace can expose a

38single plugin while you are testing, then grow into a larger curated catalog as

39you add more plugins.

40 

41![custom local marketplace in the plugin directory](/images/codex/plugins/codex-local-plugin-light.png)

42 

43### Create a plugin manually

44 

45Start with a minimal plugin that packages one skill.

46 

471. Create a plugin folder with a manifest at `.codex-plugin/plugin.json`.

48 

49```bash

50mkdir -p my-first-plugin/.codex-plugin

51```

52 

53`my-first-plugin/.codex-plugin/plugin.json`

54 

55```json

56{

57 "name": "my-first-plugin",

58 "version": "1.0.0",

59 "description": "Reusable greeting workflow",

60 "skills": "./skills/"

61}

62```

63 

64Use a stable plugin `name` in kebab-case. Codex uses it as the plugin

65identifier and component namespace.

66 

672. Add a skill under `skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md`.

68 

69```bash

70mkdir -p my-first-plugin/skills/hello

71```

72 

73`my-first-plugin/skills/hello/SKILL.md`

74 

75```md

76---

77name: hello

78description: Greet the user with a friendly message.

79---

80 

81Greet the user warmly and ask how you can help.

82```

83 

843. Add the plugin to a marketplace. Use `$plugin-creator` to generate one, or

85 follow [Build your own curated plugin list](#build-your-own-curated-plugin-list)

86 to wire the plugin into Codex manually.

87 

88From there, you can add MCP config, app integrations, or marketplace metadata

89as needed.

90 

91### Install a local plugin manually

92 

93Use a repo marketplace or a personal marketplace, depending on who should be

94able to access the plugin or curated list.

95 

96 Add a marketplace file at `$REPO_ROOT/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json`

97 and store your plugins under `$REPO_ROOT/plugins/`.

98 

99 **Repo marketplace example**

100 

101 Step 1: Copy the plugin folder into `$REPO_ROOT/plugins/my-plugin`.

102 

103```bash

104mkdir -p ./plugins

105cp -R /absolute/path/to/my-plugin ./plugins/my-plugin

106```

107 

108 Step 2: Add or update `$REPO_ROOT/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json` so

109 that `source.path` points to that plugin directory with a `./`-prefixed

110 relative path:

111 

112```json

113{

114 "name": "local-repo",

115 "plugins": [

116 {

117 "name": "my-plugin",

118 "source": {

119 "source": "local",

120 "path": "./plugins/my-plugin"

121 },

122 "policy": {

123 "installation": "AVAILABLE",

124 "authentication": "ON_INSTALL"

125 },

126 "category": "Productivity"

127 }

128 ]

129}

130```

131 

132 Step 3: Restart Codex and verify that the plugin appears.

133 

134 Add a marketplace file at `~/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json` and store

135 your plugins under `~/.codex/plugins/`.

136 

137 **Personal marketplace example**

138 

139 Step 1: Copy the plugin folder into `~/.codex/plugins/my-plugin`.

140 

141```bash

142mkdir -p ~/.codex/plugins

143cp -R /absolute/path/to/my-plugin ~/.codex/plugins/my-plugin

144```

145 

146 Step 2: Add or update `~/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json` so that the

147 plugin entry's `source.path` points to that directory.

148 

149 Step 3: Restart Codex and verify that the plugin appears.

150 

151The marketplace file points to the plugin location, so those directories are

152examples rather than fixed requirements. Codex resolves `source.path` relative

153to the marketplace root, not relative to the `.agents/plugins/` folder. See

154[Marketplace metadata](#marketplace-metadata) for the file format.

155 

156After you change the plugin, update the plugin directory that your marketplace

157entry points to and restart Codex so the local install picks up the new files.

158 

159### Marketplace metadata

160 

161If you maintain a repo marketplace, define it in

162`$REPO_ROOT/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json`. For a personal marketplace, use

163`~/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json`. A marketplace file controls plugin

164ordering and install policies in Codex-facing catalogs. It can represent one

165plugin while you are testing or a curated list of plugins that you want Codex

166to show together under one marketplace name. Before you add a plugin to a

167marketplace, make sure its `version`, publisher metadata, and install-surface

168copy are ready for other developers to see.

169 

170```json

171{

172 "name": "local-example-plugins",

173 "interface": {

174 "displayName": "Local Example Plugins"

175 },

176 "plugins": [

177 {

178 "name": "my-plugin",

179 "source": {

180 "source": "local",

181 "path": "./plugins/my-plugin"

182 },

183 "policy": {

184 "installation": "AVAILABLE",

185 "authentication": "ON_INSTALL"

186 },

187 "category": "Productivity"

188 },

189 {

190 "name": "research-helper",

191 "source": {

192 "source": "local",

193 "path": "./plugins/research-helper"

194 },

195 "policy": {

196 "installation": "AVAILABLE",

197 "authentication": "ON_INSTALL"

198 },

199 "category": "Productivity"

200 }

201 ]

202}

203```

204 

205- Use top-level `name` to identify the marketplace.

206- Use `interface.displayName` for the marketplace title shown in Codex.

207- Add one object per plugin under `plugins` to build a curated list that Codex

208 shows under that marketplace title.

209- Point each plugin entry's `source.path` at the plugin directory you want

210 Codex to load. For repo installs, that often lives under `./plugins/`. For

211 personal installs, a common pattern is `./.codex/plugins/<plugin-name>`.

212- Keep `source.path` relative to the marketplace root, start it with `./`, and

213 keep it inside that root.

214- Always include `policy.installation`, `policy.authentication`, and

215 `category` on each plugin entry.

216- Use `policy.installation` values such as `AVAILABLE`,

217 `INSTALLED_BY_DEFAULT`, or `NOT_AVAILABLE`.

218- Use `policy.authentication` to decide whether auth happens on install or

219 first use.

220 

221The marketplace controls where Codex loads the plugin from. `source.path` can

222point somewhere else if your plugin lives outside those example directories. A

223marketplace file can live in the repo where you are developing the plugin or in

224a separate marketplace repo, and one marketplace file can point to one plugin

225or many.

226 

227### How Codex uses marketplaces

228 

229A plugin marketplace is a JSON catalog of plugins that Codex can read and

230install.

231 

232Codex can read marketplace files from:

233 

234- the curated marketplace that powers the official Plugin Directory

235- a repo marketplace at `$REPO_ROOT/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json`

236- a personal marketplace at `~/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json`

237 

238You can install any plugin exposed through a marketplace. Codex installs

239plugins into

240`~/.codex/plugins/cache/$MARKETPLACE_NAME/$PLUGIN_NAME/$VERSION/`. For local

241plugins, `$VERSION` is `local`, and Codex loads the installed copy from that

242cache path rather than directly from the marketplace entry.

243 

244You can enable or disable each plugin individually. Codex stores each plugin's

245on or off state in `~/.codex/config.toml`.

246 

247## Package and distribute plugins

248 

249### Plugin structure

250 

251Every plugin has a manifest at `.codex-plugin/plugin.json`. It can also include

252a `skills/` directory, an `.app.json` file that points at one or more apps or

253connectors, and assets used to present the plugin across supported surfaces.

254 

255- my-plugin/

256 

257 - .codex-plugin/

258 

259 - plugin.json Required: plugin manifest

260 - skills/

261 

262 - my-skill/

263 

264 - SKILL.md Optional: skill instructions

265 - .app.json Optional: app or connector mappings

266 - .mcp.json Optional: MCP server configuration

267 - assets/ Optional: icons, logos, screenshots

268 

269Only `plugin.json` belongs in `.codex-plugin/`. Keep `skills/`, `assets/`,

270`.mcp.json`, and `.app.json` at the plugin root.

271 

272Published plugins typically use a richer manifest than the minimal example that

273appears in quick-start scaffolds. The manifest has three jobs:

274 

275- Identify the plugin.

276- Point to bundled components such as skills, apps, or MCP servers.

277- Provide install-surface metadata such as descriptions, icons, and legal

278 links.

279 

280Here's a complete manifest example:

281 

282```json

283{

284 "name": "my-plugin",

285 "version": "0.1.0",

286 "description": "Bundle reusable skills and app integrations.",

287 "author": {

288 "name": "Your team",

289 "email": "team@example.com",

290 "url": "https://example.com"

291 },

292 "homepage": "https://example.com/plugins/my-plugin",

293 "repository": "https://github.com/example/my-plugin",

294 "license": "MIT",

295 "keywords": ["research", "crm"],

296 "skills": "./skills/",

297 "mcpServers": "./.mcp.json",

298 "apps": "./.app.json",

299 "interface": {

300 "displayName": "My Plugin",

301 "shortDescription": "Reusable skills and apps",

302 "longDescription": "Distribute skills and app integrations together.",

303 "developerName": "Your team",

304 "category": "Productivity",

305 "capabilities": ["Read", "Write"],

306 "websiteURL": "https://example.com",

307 "privacyPolicyURL": "https://example.com/privacy",

308 "termsOfServiceURL": "https://example.com/terms",

309 "defaultPrompt": [

310 "Use My Plugin to summarize new CRM notes.",

311 "Use My Plugin to triage new customer follow-ups."

312 ],

313 "brandColor": "#10A37F",

314 "composerIcon": "./assets/icon.png",

315 "logo": "./assets/logo.png",

316 "screenshots": ["./assets/screenshot-1.png"]

317 }

318}

319```

320 

321`.codex-plugin/plugin.json` is the required entry point. The other manifest

322fields are optional, but published plugins commonly use them.

323 

324### Manifest fields

325 

326Use the top-level fields to define package metadata and point to bundled

327components:

328 

329- `name`, `version`, and `description` identify the plugin.

330- `author`, `homepage`, `repository`, `license`, and `keywords` provide

331 publisher and discovery metadata.

332- `skills`, `mcpServers`, and `apps` point to bundled components relative to

333 the plugin root.

334- `interface` controls how install surfaces present the plugin.

335 

336Use the `interface` object for install-surface metadata:

337 

338- `displayName`, `shortDescription`, and `longDescription` control the title

339 and descriptive copy.

340- `developerName`, `category`, and `capabilities` add publisher and capability

341 metadata.

342- `websiteURL`, `privacyPolicyURL`, and `termsOfServiceURL` provide external

343 links.

344- `defaultPrompt`, `brandColor`, `composerIcon`, `logo`, and `screenshots`

345 control starter prompts and visual presentation.

346 

347### Path rules

348 

349- Keep manifest paths relative to the plugin root and start them with `./`.

350- Store visual assets such as `composerIcon`, `logo`, and `screenshots` under

351 `./assets/` when possible.

352- Use `skills` for bundled skill folders, `apps` for `.app.json`, and

353 `mcpServers` for `.mcp.json`.

354 

355### Publish official public plugins

356 

357Adding plugins to the official Plugin Directory is coming soon.

358 

359Self-serve plugin publishing and management are coming soon.

quickstart.md +1 −5

Details

1# Quickstart1# Quickstart

2 2 

3ChatGPT Plus, Pro, Business, Edu, and Enterprise plans include Codex. Using Codex with your ChatGPT subscription gives you access to the latest Codex models and features.3Every ChatGPT plan includes Codex.

4 4 

5You can also use Codex with API credits by signing in with an OpenAI API key.5You can also use Codex with API credits by signing in with an OpenAI API key.

6 6 

7For a limited time, **try Codex for free in ChatGPT Free and Go**, or enjoy

8**2x Codex rate limits** with Plus, Pro, Business and Enterprise

9subscriptions.

10 

11## Setup7## Setup

12 8 

13The Codex app is available on macOS (Apple Silicon).9The Codex app is available on macOS (Apple Silicon).

skills.md +26 −4

Details

1# Agent Skills1# Agent Skills

2 2 

3Use agent skills to extend Codex with task-specific capabilities. A skill packages instructions, resources, and optional scripts so Codex can follow a workflow reliably. You can share skills across teams or with the community. Skills build on the [open agent skills standard](https://agentskills.io).3Use agent skills to extend Codex with task-specific capabilities. A skill packages instructions, resources, and optional scripts so Codex can follow a workflow reliably. Skills build on the [open agent skills standard](https://agentskills.io).

4 

5Skills are the authoring format for reusable workflows. Plugins are the installable distribution unit for reusable skills and apps in Codex. Use skills to design the workflow itself, then package it as a [plugin](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins/build) when you want other developers to install it.

4 6 

5Skills are available in the Codex CLI, IDE extension, and Codex app.7Skills are available in the Codex CLI, IDE extension, and Codex app.

6 8 


65 67 

66Codex supports symlinked skill folders and follows the symlink target when scanning these locations.68Codex supports symlinked skill folders and follows the symlink target when scanning these locations.

67 69 

68## Install skills70These locations are for authoring and local discovery. When you want to

71distribute reusable skills beyond a single repo, or optionally bundle them with

72app integrations, use [plugins](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins/build).

73 

74## Distribute skills with plugins

75 

76Direct skill folders are best for local authoring and repo-scoped workflows. If

77you want to distribute a reusable skill, bundle two or more skills together, or

78ship a skill alongside an app integration, package them as a

79[plugin](https://developers.openai.com/codex/plugins/build).

69 80 

70To install skills beyond the built-ins, use `$skill-installer`. For example, to install the `$linear` skill:81Plugins can include one or more skills. They can also optionally bundle app

82mappings, MCP server configuration, and presentation assets in a single

83package.

84 

85## Install curated skills for local use

86 

87To add curated skills beyond the built-ins for your own local Codex setup, use `$skill-installer`. For example, to install the `$linear` skill:

71 88 

72```bash89```bash

73$skill-installer linear90$skill-installer linear

74```91```

75 92 

76You can also prompt the installer to download skills from other repositories. Codex detects newly installed skills automatically; if one doesn’t appear, restart Codex.93You can also prompt the installer to download skills from other repositories.

94Codex detects newly installed skills automatically; if one doesn't appear,

95restart Codex.

96 

97Use this for local setup and experimentation. For reusable distribution of your

98own skills, prefer plugins.

77 99 

78## Enable or disable skills100## Enable or disable skills

79 101 

subagents.md +1 −1

Details

105**Notes:**105**Notes:**

106 106 

107- `agents.max_threads` defaults to `6` when you leave it unset.107- `agents.max_threads` defaults to `6` when you leave it unset.

108- `agents.max_depth` defaults to `1`, which allows a direct child agent to spawn but prevents deeper nesting.108- `agents.max_depth` defaults to `1`, which allows a direct child agent to spawn but prevents deeper nesting. Keep the default unless you specifically need recursive delegation. Raising this value can turn broad delegation instructions into repeated fan-out, which increases token usage, latency, and local resource consumption. `agents.max_threads` still caps concurrent open threads, but it doesn't remove the cost and predictability risks of deeper recursion.

109- `agents.job_max_runtime_seconds` is optional. When you leave it unset, `spawn_agents_on_csv` falls back to its per-call default timeout of 1800 seconds per worker.109- `agents.job_max_runtime_seconds` is optional. When you leave it unset, `spawn_agents_on_csv` falls back to its per-call default timeout of 1800 seconds per worker.

110- If a custom agent name matches a built-in agent such as `explorer`, your custom agent takes precedence.110- If a custom agent name matches a built-in agent such as `explorer`, your custom agent takes precedence.

111 111 

Details

1# Upgrade your API integration | Codex use cases

2 

3[← All use cases](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases)

4 

5Use Codex to update your existing OpenAI API integration to the latest recommended models and API features, while checking for regressions before you ship.

6 

7Intermediate

8 

91h

10 

11Related links

12 

13[Latest model guide](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/latest-model) [Prompt guidance](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/prompt-guidance) [OpenAI Docs MCP](/learn/docs-mcp) [Evals guide](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/evals)

14 

15## Best for

16 

17 - Teams upgrading from older models or API surfaces

18 - Repos that need behavior-preserving migrations with explicit validation

19 

20## Skills & Plugins

21 

22- [OpenAI Docs](https://github.com/openai/skills/tree/main/skills/.curated/openai-docs)

23 

24 Pull the current model, migration, and API guidance before Codex makes edits to your implementation.

25 

26## Starter prompt

27 

28Use $openai-docs to upgrade this OpenAI integration to the latest recommended model and API features.

29Specifically, look for the latest model and prompt guidance for this specific model.

30 Requirements:

31- Start by inventorying the current models, endpoints, and tool assumptions in the repo.

32- Identify the smallest migration plan that gets us onto the latest supported path.

33 - Preserve behavior unless a change is required by the new API or model.

34 - Update prompts using the latest model prompt guidance.

35- Call out any prompt, tool, or response-shape changes we need to review manually.

36 

37## Introduction

38 

39As we release new models and API features, we recommend upgrading your integration to benefit from the latest improvements.

40Changing from one model to another is often not as simple as just updating the model name.

41 

42There might be changes to the API–for example, for the GPT-5.4 model, we added a new `phase` parameter to the assistant message that is important to include in your integration–but most importantly, model behavior can be different and require changes to your existing prompts.

43 

44When migrating to a new model, you should make sure to not only make the necessary code changes, but also evaluate the impact on your workflows.

45 

46## Leverage the OpenAI Docs skill

47 

48All the specifics about the new API features and model behavior are documented in our docs, in the [latest model](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/latest-model) and [prompt guidance](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/prompt-guidance) guides.

49 

50The OpenAI Docs skill also includes [specific guidance](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/6323f0104d17d211029faab149231ba787f7da37/codex-rs/skills/src/assets/samples/openai-docs/references/upgrading-to-gpt-5p4.md) as reference, codifying how to upgrade to the latest model–currently [GPT-5.4](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/models/gpt-5.4).

51 

52Codex now automatically comes with the OpenAI Docs skill, so make sure to mention it in your prompt to access all the latest documentation and guidance when building with the OpenAI API.

53 

54## Build a robust evals pipeline

55 

56Codex can automatically update your prompts based on the latest prompt guidance, but you should have a way to automate verifying your integration is working as expected.

57 

58Make sure to build an evals pipeline that you can run every time you make changes to your integration, to verify there is no regression in behavior.

59 

60This [cookbook guide](https://developers.openai.com/cookbook/examples/evaluation/building_resilient_prompts_using_an_evaluation_flywheel) covers in detail how to do this using our [Evals API](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/evals).

61 

62## Related use cases

63 

64[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

65 

66### Create browser-based games

67 

68Use Codex to turn a game brief into first a well-defined plan, and then a real browser-based...

69 

70Engineering Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/browser-games)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

71 

72### Bring your app to ChatGPT

73 

74Build one narrow ChatGPT app outcome end to end: define the tools, scaffold the MCP server...

75 

76Integrations Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/chatgpt-apps)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-3.webp)

77 

78### Build for iOS and macOS

79 

80Use Codex to scaffold SwiftUI projects, keep the build loop CLI-first with `xcodebuild` or...

81 

82Mobile Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/native-ios-macos-apps)

Details

1# Create browser-based games | Codex use cases

2 

3Need

4 

5Backend stack

6 

7Default options

8 

9[Fastify](https://fastify.dev/) , WebSockets, [Postgres](https://www.postgresql.org/) , and [Redis](https://redis.io/)

10 

11Why it's needed

12 

13A strong default when the game needs persistence, matchmaking, leaderboards, or pub/sub.

use-cases/chatgpt-apps.md +13 −0 added

Details

1# Bring your app to ChatGPT | Codex use cases

2 

3Need

4 

5Widget framework

6 

7Default options

8 

9[React](https://react.dev/)

10 

11Why it's needed

12 

13A strong default for stateful widgets, especially when the UI needs filters, tables, or multi-step interaction.

Details

1# Understand large codebases | Codex use cases

2 

3[← All use cases](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases)

4 

5Use Codex to map unfamiliar codebases, explain different modules and data flow, and point you to the next files worth reading before you edit.

6 

7Easy

8 

95m

10 

11Related links

12 

13[Codex app](https://developers.openai.com/codex/app)

14 

15## Best for

16 

17 - New engineers onboarding to a new repo or service

18 - Anyone trying to understand how a feature works before changing it

19 

20## Starter prompt

21 

22Explain how the request flows through <name of the system area> in the codebase.

23 Include:

24 - which modules own what

25 - where data is validated

26 - the top gotchas to watch for before making changes

27 End with the files I should read next.

28 

29## Introduction

30 

31When you are new to a repo or dropped into an unfamiliar feature, Codex can help you get oriented before you start changing code. The goal is not just to get a high-level summary, but to map the request flow, understand which modules own what, and identify the next files worth reading.

32 

33## How to use

34 

35If you're new to a project, you can simply start by asking Codex to explain the whole codebase:

36 

37Explain this repo to me

38 

39If you need to contribute a new feature to an existing codebase, you can ask codex to explain a specific system area. The better you scope the request, the more concrete the explanation will be:

40 

411. Give Codex the relevant files, directories, or feature area you are trying to understand.

422. Ask it to trace the request flow and explain which modules own the business logic, transport, persistence, or UI.

433. Ask where validation, side effects, or state transitions happen before you edit anything.

444. End by asking which files you should read next and what the risky spots are.

45 

46A useful onboarding answer should leave you with a concrete map, not just a list of filenames. By the end, Codex should have explained the main flow, highlighted the risky parts, and pointed you to the next files or checks that matter before you start editing.

47 

48## Questions to ask next

49 

50Once Codex gives you a first pass, keep going until the explanation is specific enough that you would trust yourself to make the first edit. Good follow-up questions usually force it to call out assumptions, hidden dependencies, and the checks that matter after a change.

51 

52- Which module owns the actual business logic versus the transport or UI layer?

53- Where does validation happen, and what assumptions are enforced there?

54- What related files or background jobs are easy to miss if I change this flow?

55- Which tests or checks should I run after editing this area?

56 

57## Related use cases

58 

59[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-3.webp)

60 

61### Iterate on difficult problems

62 

63Give Codex an evaluation system, such as scripts and reviewable artifacts, so it can keep...

64 

65Engineering Analysis](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/iterate-on-difficult-problems)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

66 

67### Create browser-based games

68 

69Use Codex to turn a game brief into first a well-defined plan, and then a real browser-based...

70 

71Engineering Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/browser-games)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

72 

73### Analyze datasets and ship reports

74 

75Use Codex to clean data, join sources, explore hypotheses, model results, and package the...

76 

77Data Analysis](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/datasets-and-reports)

Details

1# Analyze datasets and ship reports | Codex use cases

2 

3Need

4 

5Analysis stack

6 

7Default options

8 

9[pandas](https://pandas.pydata.org/) with [matplotlib](https://matplotlib.org/) or [seaborn](https://seaborn.pydata.org/)

10 

11Why it's needed

12 

13Good defaults for import, profiling, joins, cleaning, and the first round of charts.

Details

1# Turn Figma designs into code | Codex use cases

2 

3Need

4 

5Design source

6 

7Default options

8 

9[Figma](https://www.figma.com/)

10 

11Why it's needed

12 

13A concrete frame or component selection keeps the implementation grounded.

Details

1# Build responsive front-end designs | Codex use cases

2 

3[← All use cases](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases)

4 

5Use Codex to translate screenshots and design briefs into code that matches the repo's design system, then use Playwright to compare the implementation to your references for different screen sizes and iterate until it looks right.

6 

7Intermediate

8 

91h

10 

11Related links

12 

13[Codex skills](https://developers.openai.com/codex/skills)

14 

15## Best for

16 

17 - Creating new front-end projects from scratch

18- Implementing already designed screens or flows from screenshots in an existing codebase

19 

20## Skills & Plugins

21 

22- [Playwright](https://github.com/openai/skills/tree/main/skills/.curated/playwright-interactive)

23 

24 Open the app in a real browser to verify the implementation and iterate on layout and behavior.

25 

26## Starter prompt

27 

28Implement this UI in the current project using the screenshots and notes I provide as the source of truth.

29 Requirements:

30 - Reuse the existing design system components and tokens.

31- Translate the screenshots into this repo's utilities and component patterns instead of inventing a parallel system.

32 - Match spacing, layout, hierarchy, and responsive behavior closely.

33 - Respect the repo's routing, state, and data-fetch patterns.

34 - Make the page responsive on desktop and mobile.

35- If any screenshot detail is ambiguous, choose the simplest implementation that still matches the overall direction and note the assumption briefly.

36 Validation:

37- Compare the finished UI against the provided screenshots for both look and behavior.

38- Use $playwright-interactive to check that the UI matches the references and iterate as needed until it does.

39 

40## Introduction

41 

42When you have screenshots, a short design brief, or a few references for inspiration, Codex can turn those into responsive UI without ignoring the patterns already established in your project.

43 

44With the Playwright skill, Codex can open the app in a real browser, compare the implementation to your screenshots for different screen sizes, and iterate on layout or behavior until the result is closer to the target.

45 

46## Start from references

47 

48Give Codex the clearest references you have for the UI you want. A single screenshot can be enough for a narrow task, but the handoff gets better when you include multiple states such as desktop and mobile layouts, hover or selected states, and any empty or loading views that matter.

49 

50The references do not need to be perfect design deliverables. They just need to make the intended hierarchy, spacing, and direction concrete enough that Codex is not guessing.

51 

52## Be specific

53 

54The more specific you are about the expected interaction patterns and the style you want, the better the result will be.

55The model tends to default to high-frequency patterns and style so if it's not obvious from your references that you want something else, the UI might look generic.

56The more input you give, be it more reference inspiration or more specific instructions, the more you can expect to have a UI that stands out.

57 

58## Prepare the design system

59 

60Codex works best when the target repo already has a clear component layer. Codex can automatically use your existing component and design system instead of recreating them from scratch.

61 

62If you think it's necessary (i.e. if you're not using a standard stack), specify to Codex which primitives to reuse, where your tokens live, and what the repo considers canonical for buttons, inputs, cards, typography, and icons.

63 

64If you're starting from an existing codebase, it's very likely that Codex will understand on its own how to use your components and design system, but if starting from scratch, it's a good idea to be explicit.

65 

66Ask Codex to treat the screenshots as a visual target but to translate that target into the project's actual utilities, component wrappers, color system, typography scale, spacing tokens, routing, state management, and data-fetch patterns.

67 

68## Leverage Playwright

69 

70Playwright is a great tool to help Codex iterate on the UI. With it, Codex can open the app in a real browser, compare the implementation to the screenshots you provided, and iterate on layout or behavior.

71 

72It can resize the browser window to different screen sizes and check the layout at different breakpoints.

73 

74Make sure you have the Playwright interactive skill enabled in Codex. For more details, see the [skills documentation](https://developers.openai.com/codex/skills).

75 

76## Iterate

77 

78The first pass should already be directionally close to the screenshots. For complex layouts, interactions, or animation-heavy UI, expect a few rounds of adjustment.

79 

80Ask Codex to compare the implementation back to the screenshots, not just whether the page builds. When conflicts come up, it should prefer the repo's design-system tokens and only make minimal spacing or sizing adjustments needed to preserve the overall look of the design.

81 

82Use additional screenshots or short notes if they help clarify states that are not obvious from one image.

83 

84### Suggested follow-up prompt

85 

86[current implementation image] [reference image]

87This doesn't look right. Make sure to implement something that matches closely the reference:

88[if needed, specify what is different]

89 

90## Related use cases

91 

92[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

93 

94### Turn Figma designs into code

95 

96Use Codex to pull design context, assets, and variants from Figma, translate them into code...

97 

98Front-end Design](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/figma-designs-to-code)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-3.webp)

99 

100### Generate slide decks

101 

102Use Codex to update existing presentations or build new decks by editing slides directly...

103 

104Data Workflow](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/generate-slide-decks)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

105 

106### Create browser-based games

107 

108Use Codex to turn a game brief into first a well-defined plan, and then a real browser-based...

109 

110Engineering Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/browser-games)

Details

1# Generate slide decks | Codex use cases

2 

3[← All use cases](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases)

4 

5Use Codex to update existing presentations or build new decks by editing slides directly through code, generating visuals, and applying repeatable layout rules slide by slide.

6 

7Easy

8 

930m

10 

11Related links

12 

13[Image generation guide](https://developers.openai.com/api/docs/guides/image-generation)

14 

15## Best for

16 

17 - Teams turning notes or structured inputs into repeatable slide decks

18 - Creating new visual presentations from scratch

19- Rebuilding or extending decks from screenshots, PDFs, or reference presentations

20 

21## Skills & Plugins

22 

23- [Slides](https://github.com/openai/skills/tree/main/skills/.curated/slides)

24 

25 Create and edit `.pptx` decks in JavaScript with PptxGenJS, bundled helpers, and render and validation scripts for overflow, overlap, and font checks.

26- [ImageGen](https://github.com/openai/skills/tree/main/skills/.curated/imagegen)

27 

28 Generate illustrations, cover art, diagrams, and slide visuals that match one reusable visual direction.

29 

30## Starter prompt

31 

32Use $slides with $imagegen to edit this slide deck in the following way:

33 - If present, add logo.png in the bottom right corner on every slide

34- On slides X, Y and Z, move the text to the left and use image generation to generate an illustration (style: abstract, digital art) on the right

35- Preserve text as text and simple charts as native PowerPoint charts where practical.

36 - Add these slides: [describe new slides here]

37- Use the existing branding on new slides and new text (colors, fonts, layout, etc.)

38- Render the updated deck to slide images, review the output, and fix layout issues before delivery.

39- Run overflow and font-substitution checks before delivery, especially if the deck is dense.

40- Save reusable prompts or generation notes when you create a batch of related images.

41 Output:

42 - A copy of the slide deck with the changes applied

43 - notes on which slides were generated, rewritten, or left unchanged

44 

45## Introduction

46 

47You can use Codex to manipulate PowerPoint decks in a systematic way, using the Slides skill to create and edit decks with PptxGenJS, and using image generation to generate visuals for the slides.

48 

49Skills can be installed directly from the Codex app–see our [skills documentation](https://developers.openai.com/codex/skills) for more details.

50 

51You can create new decks from scratch, describing what you want, but the ideal workflow is to start from an existing deck–already set up with your branding guidelines–and ask Codex to edit it.

52 

53## Start from the source deck and references

54 

55If a deck already exists, ask Codex to inspect it before making changes.

56 

57The slides skill is opinionated here: match the source aspect ratio before you rebuild layout, and default to 16:9 only when the source material does not already define the deck size. If the references are screenshots or a PDF, ask Codex to render or inspect them first so it can compare slide geometry visually instead of guessing.

58 

59## Keep the deck editable

60 

61When building out new slides, ask Codex to keep the slides editable: when slides contain text, charts, or simple layout elements, those should stay PowerPoint-native when practical. Text should stay text. Simple bar, line, pie, and histogram visuals should stay native charts when possible. For diagrams or visuals that are too custom for native slide objects, Codex can generate or place SVG and image assets deliberately instead of rasterizing the whole slide.

62 

63For example, if you want to build a complex timeline with illustrations, instead of generating a whole image, ask Codex to generate each illustration separately (using a set style prompt as reference), place them on the slide, then link them using native lines. The text and dates should be text objects as well, and not included in the illustrations.

64 

65## Generate visuals intentionally

66 

67Image generation is most useful when the slides need a cover image, a concept illustration, or a lightweight diagram that would otherwise take manual design work. Ask Codex to define the visual direction first, then reuse that direction consistently across the whole deck.

68 

69When several slides need related visuals, have Codex save the prompts or generation notes it used. That makes the deck easier to extend later without starting over stylistically.

70 

71## Keep slide logic explicit

72 

73Deck automation works better when Codex treats each slide as its own decision. Some slides should preserve exact copy, some need a stronger headline and cleaner structure, and some should stay mostly untouched apart from asset cleanup or formatting fixes.

74 

75The slides skill also ships with bundled layout helpers. Ask Codex to copy those helpers into the working directory and reuse them instead of reimplementing spacing, text-sizing, and image-placement logic on every deck.

76 

77## Validation before delivery

78 

79Decks are easy to get almost right and still ship with clipped text, substituted fonts, or layout drift that only shows up after export. The slides skill includes scripts to render decks to per-slide PNGs, build a quick montage for review, detect overflow beyond the slide canvas, and report missing or substituted fonts.

80 

81Ask Codex to use those checks before it hands back the final deck, especially when slides are dense or margins are tight.

82 

83## Example ideas

84 

85Here are some ideas you could try with this use case:

86 

87### New deck from scratch

88 

89You can create new slide decks from scratch, describing what you want slide by slide and the overall vibe.

90If you have assets like logos or images, you can copy them in the same folder so that Codex can easily access them.

91 

92Create a new slide deck with the following slides:

93- Slide 1: Title slide with the company logo (logo.png) and the title of the presentation

94- Slide 2: Agenda slide with the key points of the presentation

95- Slide 3: [TITLE] [TAGLINE] [DESCRIPTION]

96- ...

97- Slide N: Conclusion slide with the key takeaways

98- Slide N+1: Q&A slide with my picture (my-picture.png)

99 

100### Deck template update

101 

102You can update a deck template on a regular basis (weekly, monthly, quarterly, etc.) with new content.

103If you're doing this frequently, create a file like `guidelines.md` to define the content and structure of the deck and how it should be updated.

104 

105Combine it with other skills to fetch information from your preferred data

106 sources.

107 

108For example, if you need to give quarterly updates to your stakeholders, you can update the deck template with new numbers and insights.

109 

110Update the deck template, pulling content from [integration 1] and [integration 2].

111Make sure to follow guidelines defined in guidelines.md.

112 

113### Adjust existing deck

114 

115If you built a deck but want to adjust it to fix spacing, misaligned text, or other layout issues, you can ask Codex to fix it.

116 

117Adjust the deck to make sure the following layout rules are followed:

118- Spacing should be consistent when there are multiple items on the same slide displayed in a row or grid.

119- When there are multiple items on the same slide displayed in a row or grid, the items are aligned horizontally or vertically depending on the content.

120- All text boxes should be aligned left, except when they are below an illustration

121- All titles should use the font [font name] and size [size]

122- All captions should be in [color]

123- ....

124 

125## Related use cases

126 

127[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

128 

129### Kick off coding tasks from Slack

130 

131Mention `@Codex` in Slack to start a task tied to the right repo and environment, then...

132 

133Integrations Workflow](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/slack-coding-tasks)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

134 

135### Analyze datasets and ship reports

136 

137Use Codex to clean data, join sources, explore hypotheses, model results, and package the...

138 

139Data Analysis](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/datasets-and-reports)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

140 

141### Build responsive front-end designs

142 

143Use Codex to translate screenshots and design briefs into code that matches the repo's...

144 

145Front-end Design](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/frontend-designs)

Details

1# Review pull requests faster | Codex use cases

2 

3[← All use cases](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases)

4 

5Use Codex in GitHub to automatically surface regressions, missing tests, and documentation issues directly on a pull request.

6 

7Easy

8 

95s

10 

11Related links

12 

13[Use Codex in GitHub](https://developers.openai.com/codex/integrations/github) [Custom instructions with AGENTS.md](https://developers.openai.com/codex/guides/agents-md)

14 

15## Best for

16 

17 - Teams that want another review signal before human merge approval

18 - Large codebases for projects in production

19 

20## Skills & Plugins

21 

22- [Security Best Practices](https://github.com/openai/skills/tree/main/skills/.curated/security-best-practices)

23 

24 Focus the review on risky surfaces such as secrets, auth, and dependency changes.

25 

26## Starter prompt

27 

28@codex review for security regressions, missing tests, and risky behavior changes.

29 

30## How to use

31 

32Start by adding Codex code review to your GitHub organization or repository. See [Use Codex in GitHub](https://developers.openai.com/codex/integrations/github) for more details.

33 

34You can set up Codex to automatically review every pull request, or you can request a review with `@codex review` in a pull request comment.

35 

36If Codex flags a regression or potential issue, you can ask it to fix it by commenting on the pull request with a follow-up prompt like `@codex fix it`.

37 

38This will start a new cloud task that will fix the issue and update the pull request.

39 

40## Define additional guidance

41 

42To customize what Codex reviews, add or update a top-level `AGENTS.md` with a section like this:

43 

44```md

45## Review guidelines

46 

47- Flag typos and grammar issues as P0 issues.

48- Flag potential missing documentation as P1 issues.

49- Flag missing tests as P1 issues.

50 ...

51```

52 

53Codex applies guidance from the closest `AGENTS.md` to each changed file. You can place more specific instructions deeper in the tree when particular packages need extra scrutiny.

54 

55## Related use cases

56 

57[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

58 

59### Bring your app to ChatGPT

60 

61Build one narrow ChatGPT app outcome end to end: define the tools, scaffold the MCP server...

62 

63Integrations Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/chatgpt-apps)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-3.webp)

64 

65### Generate slide decks

66 

67Use Codex to update existing presentations or build new decks by editing slides directly...

68 

69Data Workflow](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/generate-slide-decks)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

70 

71### Kick off coding tasks from Slack

72 

73Mention `@Codex` in Slack to start a task tied to the right repo and environment, then...

74 

75Integrations Workflow](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/slack-coding-tasks)

Details

1# Iterate on difficult problems | Codex use cases

2 

3[← All use cases](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases)

4 

5Give Codex an evaluation system, such as scripts and reviewable artifacts, so it can keep improving a hard task until the scores are good enough.

6 

7Advanced

8 

9Long-running

10 

11Related links

12 

13[Custom instructions with AGENTS.md](https://developers.openai.com/codex/guides/agents-md) [Codex workflows](https://developers.openai.com/codex/workflows)

14 

15## Best for

16 

17- Problems where each iteration can be scored, but the best result usually takes many passes

18- Tasks with visual or subjective outputs that need both deterministic checks and an LLM-as-a-judge score

19- Long-running Codex sessions where you want progress tracked clearly instead of relying on context

20 

21## Starter prompt

22 

23I have a difficult task in this workspace and I want you to run it as an eval-driven improvement loop.

24 Before changing anything:

25 - Read `AGENTS.md`.

26 - Find the script or command that scores the current output.

27 Iteration loop:

28 - Make one focused improvement at a time.

29 - Re-run the eval command after each meaningful change.

30 - Log the scores and what changed.

31- Inspect generated artifacts directly. If the output is visual, use `view\_image`.

32 - Keep going until both the overall score and the LLM average are above 90%.

33 Constraints:

34 - Do not stop at the first acceptable result.

35- Do not revert to an earlier version unless the new result is clearly worse in scores or artifacts.

36- If the eval improves but is still below target, explain the bottleneck and continue.

37 Output:

38 - current best scores

39 - log of major iterations

40 - remaining risks or weak spots

41 

42## Introduction

43 

44Some tasks are easy to verify in one shot: the build passes, the tests go green, and you are done. But there are some optimization problems that are difficult to solve, and need many iterations with a tight evaluation loop. To know which direction to go in, Codex needs to inspect the current output, score it, decide the next change, and repeat until the result is actually good.

45 

46This type of use case pairs well with a custom UI that lets you inspect progress visually, by having Codex log the outputs and generated artifacts for each iteration.

47You can watch Codex continue working in the app while the target artifact, model output, or generated asset keeps improving.

48The key is to give Codex the necessary scripts to generate the evaluation metrics and the artifacts to inspect.

49 

50## Start with evals

51 

52Before the task begins, define how success will be measured. The best setup usually combines:

53 

54- **Deterministic checks:** things the scripts can score directly, such as constraint violations or deterministic metrics computed with code

55- **LLM-as-a-judge checks:** rubric-based scores for qualities that are harder to encode exactly, such as resemblance, readability, usefulness, or overall quality - this can rely on text or image outputs

56 

57If the subjective part matters, give Codex a script that can call a model for example using the [Responses API](https://developers.openai.com/api/reference/resources/responses/methods/create) and return structured scores. The point is not to replace deterministic checks, it's to supplement them with a consistent judge for the part humans would otherwise assess by eye.

58 

59The loop works best when the eval output is machine-readable, saved after every run, and easy to compare over time.

60 

61**Tip**: Ask Codex to generate the evaluation script for you, describing the

62 checks you want to run.

63 

64## Give Codex a stopping rule

65 

66Hard tasks often drift because the prompt says “keep improving” without saying when to stop. Make the stopping rule explicit.

67 

68A practical pattern is:

69 

701. Set a target for the overall score.

712. Set a separate target for the LLM-judge average.

723. Tell Codex to continue until both are above the threshold, not just one.

73 

74For example, if the goal is a high-quality artifact, ask Codex to keep going until both the overall score and the LLM average are above 90%. That makes the task legible: Codex can tell whether it is still below target, where the gap is, and whether the latest change helped.

75 

76## Keep a running log of the loop

77 

78Long-running work is much more reliable when Codex keeps notes about the loop instead of trying to remember everything from the thread.

79 

80That running log should record:

81 

82- the current best scores

83- what changed on the last iteration

84- what the eval said got better or worse

85- what Codex plans to try next

86 

87This is especially important when the task runs for a long time. The log becomes the handoff point for the next session and the self-evaluation record for the current one.

88 

89## Inspect the artifact, not just the logs

90 

91For some difficult tasks, the code diff and metric output are not enough. Codex should look at the artifact it produced.

92 

93If the output is visual, such as a generated image, layout, or rendered state, let Codex inspect that artifact directly, for example when the output lives on disk as an image and compare the current result to the prior best result or to the intended rubric.

94 

95This makes the loop stronger:

96 

97- the eval script reports the score

98- the artifact shows what the score missed

99- the next change is grounded in both

100 

101That combination is much more effective than changing code blindly between runs.

102 

103## Make every iteration explicit

104 

105Ask Codex to follow the same loop every time:

106 

1071. Run the evals on the current baseline.

1082. Identify the biggest failure mode from the scores and artifacts.

1093. Make one focused change that addresses that bottleneck.

1104. Re-run the evals.

1115. Log the new scores and whether the change helped.

1126. Continue until the thresholds are met.

113 

114This discipline matters. If each iteration changes too many things at once, Codex cannot tell which idea improved the score. If it skips logging, the session becomes hard to trust and hard to resume.

115 

116## Related use cases

117 

118[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

119 

120### Understand large codebases

121 

122Use Codex to map unfamiliar codebases, explain different modules and data flow, and point...

123 

124Engineering Analysis](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/codebase-onboarding)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

125 

126### Create browser-based games

127 

128Use Codex to turn a game brief into first a well-defined plan, and then a real browser-based...

129 

130Engineering Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/browser-games)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

131 

132### Analyze datasets and ship reports

133 

134Use Codex to clean data, join sources, explore hypotheses, model results, and package the...

135 

136Data Analysis](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/datasets-and-reports)

Details

1# Build for iOS and macOS | Codex use cases

2 

3Need

4 

5Project automation

6 

7Default options

8 

9[XcodeBuildMCP](https://www.xcodebuildmcp.com/)

10 

11Why it's needed

12 

13A strong option once you need Codex to inspect schemes and targets, launch the app, capture screenshots, and keep iterating without leaving the agentic loop.

Details

1# Kick off coding tasks from Slack | Codex use cases

2 

3[← All use cases](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases)

4 

5Mention `@Codex` in Slack to start a task tied to the right repo and environment, then review the result back in the thread or in Codex cloud.

6 

7Easy

8 

95m

10 

11Related links

12 

13[Use Codex in Slack](https://developers.openai.com/codex/integrations/slack) [Codex cloud environments](https://developers.openai.com/codex/cloud/environments)

14 

15## Best for

16 

17- Async handoffs that start in a Slack thread and already have enough context to act on

18- Teams that want quick issue triage, bug fixes, or scoped implementation work without context switching

19 

20## Starter prompt

21 

22@Codex analyze the issue mentioned in this thread and implement a fix in <name of your environment>.

23 

24## How to use

25 

261. Install the Slack app, connect the right repositories and environments, and add `@Codex` to the channel.

272. Mention `@Codex` in a thread with a clear request, constraints, and the outcome you want.

283. Open the task link, review the result, and continue the follow-up in Slack if the task needs another pass.

29 

30You can learn more about how to use Codex in Slack in the [dedicated guide](https://developers.openai.com/codex/integrations/slack).

31 

32## Tips

33 

34- If the thread does not already include enough context or suggested fix, include in your prompt some guidance

35- Make sure the repo and environment mapping are correct by mentioning the name of the project or environment in your prompt

36- Scope the request so Codex can finish it without a second planning loop

37- If your project is a large codebase, guide Codex by mentioning which files or folders are relevant to the task

38 

39## Related use cases

40 

41[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-3.webp)

42 

43### Generate slide decks

44 

45Use Codex to update existing presentations or build new decks by editing slides directly...

46 

47Data Workflow](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/generate-slide-decks)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-2.webp)

48 

49### Analyze datasets and ship reports

50 

51Use Codex to clean data, join sources, explore hypotheses, model results, and package the...

52 

53Data Analysis](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/datasets-and-reports)[![](/images/codex/codex-wallpaper-1.webp)

54 

55### Bring your app to ChatGPT

56 

57Build one narrow ChatGPT app outcome end to end: define the tools, scaffold the MCP server...

58 

59Integrations Code](https://developers.openai.com/codex/use-cases/chatgpt-apps)

windows.md +189 −14

Details

1# Windows1# Windows

2 2 

3The easiest way to use Codex on Windows is to use the [Codex app](https://developers.openai.com/codex/app/windows). You can also [set up the IDE extension](https://developers.openai.com/codex/ide) or [install the CLI](https://developers.openai.com/codex/cli) and run it from PowerShell.3Use Codex on Windows with the native [Codex app](https://developers.openai.com/codex/app/windows), the

4[CLI](https://developers.openai.com/codex/cli), or the [IDE extension](https://developers.openai.com/codex/ide).

4 5 

5[![](/images/codex/codex-banner-icon.webp)6[![](/images/codex/codex-banner-icon.webp)

6 7 


8 9 

9Work across projects, run parallel agent threads, and review results in one place with the native Windows app.](https://developers.openai.com/codex/app/windows)10Work across projects, run parallel agent threads, and review results in one place with the native Windows app.](https://developers.openai.com/codex/app/windows)

10 11 

11When you run Codex natively on Windows, agent mode uses a [Windows sandbox](#windows-sandbox) to block filesystem writes outside the working folder and prevent network access without your explicit approval. [Learn more below](#windows-sandbox).12Depending on the surface and your setup, Codex can run on Windows in three

13practical ways:

12 14 

13If you prefer to have Codex use [Windows Subsystem for Linux](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install) (WSL2), [read the instructions](#windows-subsystem-for-linux) below.15- natively on Windows with the stronger `elevated` sandbox,

16- natively on Windows with the fallback `unelevated` sandbox,

17- or inside [Windows Subsystem for Linux](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install) (WSL), which uses the Linux sandbox implementation.

14 18 

15## Windows sandbox19## Windows sandbox

16 20 

17Native Windows sandbox support includes two modes that you can configure in `config.toml`:21When you run Codex natively on Windows, agent mode uses a Windows sandbox to

22block filesystem writes outside the working folder and prevent network access

23without your explicit approval.

18 24 

19```25Native Windows sandbox support includes two modes that you can configure in

26`config.toml`:

27 

28```toml

20[windows]29[windows]

21sandbox = "unelevated" # or "elevated"30sandbox = "elevated" # or "unelevated"

22```31```

23 32 

24How `elevated` mode works:33`elevated` is the preferred native Windows sandbox. It uses dedicated

34lower-privilege sandbox users, filesystem permission boundaries, firewall

35rules, and local policy changes needed for sandboxed command execution.

36 

37`unelevated` is the fallback native Windows sandbox. It runs commands with a

38restricted Windows token derived from your current user, applies ACL-based

39filesystem boundaries, and uses environment-level offline controls instead of

40the dedicated offline-user firewall rule. It is weaker than `elevated`, but it

41is still useful when administrator-approved setup is blocked by local or

42enterprise policy.

25 43 

26- Uses a Restricted Token approach with filesystem ACLs to limit which files the sandbox can write to.44If both modes are available, use `elevated`. If the default native sandbox

27- Runs commands as a dedicated Windows Sandbox User.45doesn't work in your environment, use `unelevated` as a fallback while you

28- Limits network access by installing Windows Firewall rules.46troubleshoot the setup.

29- Uses a private desktop by default for stronger UI isolation. Set `windows.sandbox_private_desktop = false` only if you need the older `Winsta0\\Default` behavior for compatibility.47 

48By default, both sandbox modes also use a private desktop for stronger UI

49isolation. Set `windows.sandbox_private_desktop = false` only if you need the

50older `Winsta0\\Default` behavior for compatibility.

30 51 

31### Sandbox permissions52### Sandbox permissions

32 53 


38 Codex attempt to solve problems without asking for escalated permissions,59 Codex attempt to solve problems without asking for escalated permissions,

39 based on your [approval and security setup](https://developers.openai.com/codex/agent-approvals-security).60 based on your [approval and security setup](https://developers.openai.com/codex/agent-approvals-security).

40 61 

62### Windows version matrix

63 

64| Windows version | Support level | Notes |

65| -------------------------------- | --------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |

66| Windows 11 | Recommended | Best baseline for Codex on Windows. Use this if you are standardizing an enterprise deployment. |

67| Recent, fully updated Windows 10 | Best effort | Can work, but is less reliable than Windows 11. For Windows 10, Codex depends on modern console support, including ConPTY. In practice, Windows 10 October 2018 Update or newer is required. |

68| Older Windows 10 builds | Not recommended | More likely to miss required console components such as ConPTY and more likely to fail in enterprise setups. |

69 

70Additional environment assumptions:

71 

72- `winget` should be available. If it is missing, update Windows or install

73 the Windows Package Manager before setting up Codex.

74- The recommended native sandbox depends on administrator-approved setup.

75- Some enterprise-managed devices block the required setup steps even when the

76 OS version itself is acceptable.

77 

41### Grant sandbox read access78### Grant sandbox read access

42 79 

43When a command fails because the Windows sandbox can't read a directory, use:80When a command fails because the Windows sandbox can't read a directory, use:


48 85 

49The path must be an existing absolute directory. After the command succeeds, later commands that run in the sandbox can read that directory during the current session.86The path must be an existing absolute directory. After the command succeeds, later commands that run in the sandbox can read that directory during the current session.

50 87 

88We recommend using the native Windows sandbox by default. The native Windows sandbox will offer the best perfomance and highest speeds while keeping the same security. Choose WSL when you

89need a Linux-native environment on Windows, when your workflow already lives in

90WSL, or when neither native Windows sandbox mode meets your needs.

91 

51## Windows Subsystem for Linux92## Windows Subsystem for Linux

52 93 

94If you choose WSL, Codex runs inside the Linux environment instead of using the

95native Windows sandbox. This is useful if you need Linux-native tooling on

96Windows, if your repositories and developer workflow already live in WSL, or

97if neither native Windows sandbox mode works for your environment.

98 

53### Launch VS Code from inside WSL99### Launch VS Code from inside WSL

54 100 

55For step-by-step instructions, see the [official VS Code WSL tutorial](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/wsl-tutorial).101For step-by-step instructions, see the [official VS Code WSL tutorial](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/wsl-tutorial).


85 `WSL: Reopen Folder in WSL`, and keep your repository under `/home/...` (not131 `WSL: Reopen Folder in WSL`, and keep your repository under `/home/...` (not

86 `C:\`) for best performance.132 `C:\`) for best performance.

87 133 

134If the Windows app or project picker does not show your WSL repository, type

135`\wsl$` into the file picker or Explorer, then navigate to your

136 distro's home directory.

137 

88### Use Codex CLI with WSL138### Use Codex CLI with WSL

89 139 

90Run these commands from an elevated PowerShell or Windows Terminal:140Run these commands from an elevated PowerShell or Windows Terminal:


125 175 

126## Troubleshooting and FAQ176## Troubleshooting and FAQ

127 177 

128#### Installed extension, but it’s unresponsive178If you are troubleshooting a managed Windows machine, start with the native

179sandbox mode, Windows version, and any policy error shown by Codex. Most native

180Windows support issues come from sandbox setup, logon rights, or filesystem

181permissions rather than from the editor itself.

182 

183My native sandbox setup failed

184 

185If Codex cannot complete the `elevated` sandbox setup, the most common causes

186are:

187 

188- the Windows UAC or administrator prompt was declined,

189- the machine does not allow local user or group creation,

190- the machine does not allow firewall rule changes,

191- the machine blocks the logon rights needed by the sandbox users,

192- or another enterprise policy blocks part of the setup flow.

193 

194What to try:

195 

1961. Try the `elevated` sandbox setup again and approve the administrator prompt

197 if your environment allows it.

1982. If your company laptop blocks this, ask your IT team whether the machine

199 allows administrator-approved setup for local user/group creation, firewall

200 configuration, and the required sandbox-user logon rights.

2013. If the default setup still fails, use the `unelevated` sandbox so you can

202 continue working while the issue is investigated.

203 

204Codex switched me to the unelevated sandbox

205 

206This means Codex could not finish the stronger `elevated` sandbox setup on your

207machine.

208 

209- Codex can still run in a sandboxed mode.

210- It still applies ACL-based filesystem boundaries, but it does not use the

211 separate sandbox-user boundary from `elevated` and has weaker network

212 isolation.

213- This is a useful fallback, but not the preferred long-term enterprise

214 configuration.

215 

216If you are on a managed enterprise laptop, the best long-term fix is usually to

217get the `elevated` sandbox working with help from your IT team.

218 

219I see Windows error 1385

220 

221If sandboxed commands fail with error `1385`, Windows is denying the logon type

222the sandbox user needs in order to start the command.

223 

224In practice, this usually means Codex created the sandbox users successfully,

225but Windows policy is still preventing those users from launching sandboxed

226commands.

227 

228What to do:

229 

2301. Ask your IT team whether the device policy grants the required logon rights

231 to the Codex-created sandbox users.

2322. Compare group policy or OU differences if the issue affects only some

233 machines or teams.

2343. If you need to keep working immediately, use the `unelevated` sandbox while

235 the policy issue is investigated.

2364. Send `CODEX_HOME/.sandbox/sandbox.log` along with your Windows version and a

237 short description of the failure.

238 

239Codex warns that some folders are writable by Everyone

240 

241Codex may warn that some folders are writable by `Everyone`.

242 

243If you see this warning, Windows permissions on those folders are too broad for

244the sandbox to fully protect them.

245 

246What to do:

247 

2481. Review the folders Codex lists in the warning.

2492. Remove `Everyone` write access from those folders if that is appropriate in

250 your environment.

2513. Restart Codex or re-run the sandbox setup after those permissions are

252 corrected.

253 

254If you are not sure how to change those permissions, ask your IT team for help.

255 

256Sandboxed commands cannot reach the network

257 

258Some Codex tasks are intentionally run without outbound network access,

259depending on the permissions mode in use.

260 

261If a task fails because it cannot reach the network:

262 

2631. Check whether the task was supposed to run with network disabled.

2642. If you expected network access, restart Codex and try again.

2653. If the issue keeps happening, collect the sandbox log so the team can check

266 whether the machine is in a partial or broken sandbox state.

267 

268Sandboxing worked before and then stopped

269 

270This can happen after:

271 

272- moving a repo or workspace,

273- changing machine permissions,

274- changing Windows policies,

275- or other system configuration changes.

276 

277What to try:

278 

2791. Restart Codex.

2802. Try the `elevated` sandbox setup again.

2813. If that does not fix it, use the `unelevated` sandbox as a temporary

282 fallback.

2834. Collect the sandbox log for review.

284 

285I need to send diagnostics to OpenAI

286 

287If you still have problems, send:

288 

289- `CODEX_HOME/.sandbox/sandbox.log`

290 

291It is also helpful to include:

292 

293- a short description of what you were trying to do,

294- whether the `elevated` sandbox failed or the `unelevated` sandbox was used,

295- any error message shown in the app,

296- whether you saw `1385` or another Windows or PowerShell error,

297- and whether you are on Windows 11 or Windows 10.

298 

299Do not send:

300 

301- the contents of `CODEX_HOME/.sandbox-secrets/`

302 

303The IDE extension is installed but unresponsive

129 304 

130Your system may be missing C++ development tools, which some native dependencies require:305Your system may be missing C++ development tools, which some native dependencies require:

131 306 


135 310 

136Then fully restart VS Code after installation.311Then fully restart VS Code after installation.

137 312 

138#### If it feels slow on large repositories313Large repositories feel slow in WSL

139 314 

140- Make sure you’re not working under `/mnt/c`. Move the repository to WSL (for example, `~/code/…`).315- Make sure you’re not working under `/mnt/c`. Move the repository to WSL (for example, `~/code/…`).

141- Increase memory and CPU for WSL if needed; update WSL to the latest version:316- Increase memory and CPU for WSL if needed; update WSL to the latest version:


145 wsl --shutdown320 wsl --shutdown

146 ```321 ```

147 322 

148#### VS Code in WSL can’t find `codex`323VS Code in WSL cannot find codex

149 324 

150Verify the binary exists and is on PATH inside WSL:325Verify the binary exists and is on PATH inside WSL:

151 326