core-agent-ide/codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/common/lib.rs

23 lines
828 B
Rust
Raw Normal View History

test: add integration test for MCP server (#1633) This PR introduces a single integration test for `cargo mcp`, though it also introduces a number of reusable components so that it should be easier to introduce more integration tests going forward. The new test is introduced in `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/elicitation.rs` and the reusable pieces are in `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/common`. The test itself verifies new functionality around elicitations introduced in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1623 (and the fix introduced in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1629) by doing the following: - starts a mock model provider with canned responses for `/v1/chat/completions` - starts the MCP server with a `config.toml` to use that model provider (and `approval_policy = "untrusted"`) - sends the `codex` tool call which causes the mock model provider to request a shell call for `git init` - the MCP server sends an elicitation to the client to approve the request - the client replies to the elicitation with `"approved"` - the MCP server runs the command and re-samples the model, getting a `"finish_reason": "stop"` - in turn, the MCP server sends the final response to the original `codex` tool call - verifies that `git init` ran as expected To test: ``` cargo test shell_command_approval_triggers_elicitation ``` In writing this test, I discovered that `ExecApprovalResponse` does not conform to `ElicitResult`, so I added a TODO to fix that, since I think that should be updated in a separate PR. As it stands, this PR does not update any business logic, though it does make a number of members of the `mcp-server` crate `pub` so they can be used in the test. One additional learning from this PR is that `std::process::Command::cargo_bin()` from the `assert_cmd` trait is only available for `std::process::Command`, but we really want to use `tokio::process::Command` so that everything is async and we can leverage utilities like `tokio::time::timeout()`. The trick I came up with was to use `cargo_bin()` to locate the program, and then to use `std::process::Command::get_program()` when constructing the `tokio::process::Command`.
2025-07-21 10:27:07 -07:00
mod mcp_process;
mod mock_model_server;
mod responses;
pub use core_test_support::format_with_current_shell;
pub use core_test_support::format_with_current_shell_display_non_login;
pub use core_test_support::format_with_current_shell_non_login;
test: add integration test for MCP server (#1633) This PR introduces a single integration test for `cargo mcp`, though it also introduces a number of reusable components so that it should be easier to introduce more integration tests going forward. The new test is introduced in `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/elicitation.rs` and the reusable pieces are in `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/common`. The test itself verifies new functionality around elicitations introduced in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1623 (and the fix introduced in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1629) by doing the following: - starts a mock model provider with canned responses for `/v1/chat/completions` - starts the MCP server with a `config.toml` to use that model provider (and `approval_policy = "untrusted"`) - sends the `codex` tool call which causes the mock model provider to request a shell call for `git init` - the MCP server sends an elicitation to the client to approve the request - the client replies to the elicitation with `"approved"` - the MCP server runs the command and re-samples the model, getting a `"finish_reason": "stop"` - in turn, the MCP server sends the final response to the original `codex` tool call - verifies that `git init` ran as expected To test: ``` cargo test shell_command_approval_triggers_elicitation ``` In writing this test, I discovered that `ExecApprovalResponse` does not conform to `ElicitResult`, so I added a TODO to fix that, since I think that should be updated in a separate PR. As it stands, this PR does not update any business logic, though it does make a number of members of the `mcp-server` crate `pub` so they can be used in the test. One additional learning from this PR is that `std::process::Command::cargo_bin()` from the `assert_cmd` trait is only available for `std::process::Command`, but we really want to use `tokio::process::Command` so that everything is async and we can leverage utilities like `tokio::time::timeout()`. The trick I came up with was to use `cargo_bin()` to locate the program, and then to use `std::process::Command::get_program()` when constructing the `tokio::process::Command`.
2025-07-21 10:27:07 -07:00
pub use mcp_process::McpProcess;
pub use mock_model_server::create_mock_responses_server;
pub use responses::create_apply_patch_sse_response;
test: add integration test for MCP server (#1633) This PR introduces a single integration test for `cargo mcp`, though it also introduces a number of reusable components so that it should be easier to introduce more integration tests going forward. The new test is introduced in `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/elicitation.rs` and the reusable pieces are in `codex-rs/mcp-server/tests/common`. The test itself verifies new functionality around elicitations introduced in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1623 (and the fix introduced in https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/1629) by doing the following: - starts a mock model provider with canned responses for `/v1/chat/completions` - starts the MCP server with a `config.toml` to use that model provider (and `approval_policy = "untrusted"`) - sends the `codex` tool call which causes the mock model provider to request a shell call for `git init` - the MCP server sends an elicitation to the client to approve the request - the client replies to the elicitation with `"approved"` - the MCP server runs the command and re-samples the model, getting a `"finish_reason": "stop"` - in turn, the MCP server sends the final response to the original `codex` tool call - verifies that `git init` ran as expected To test: ``` cargo test shell_command_approval_triggers_elicitation ``` In writing this test, I discovered that `ExecApprovalResponse` does not conform to `ElicitResult`, so I added a TODO to fix that, since I think that should be updated in a separate PR. As it stands, this PR does not update any business logic, though it does make a number of members of the `mcp-server` crate `pub` so they can be used in the test. One additional learning from this PR is that `std::process::Command::cargo_bin()` from the `assert_cmd` trait is only available for `std::process::Command`, but we really want to use `tokio::process::Command` so that everything is async and we can leverage utilities like `tokio::time::timeout()`. The trick I came up with was to use `cargo_bin()` to locate the program, and then to use `std::process::Command::get_program()` when constructing the `tokio::process::Command`.
2025-07-21 10:27:07 -07:00
pub use responses::create_final_assistant_message_sse_response;
pub use responses::create_shell_command_sse_response;
feat: replace custom mcp-types crate with equivalents from rmcp (#10349) We started working with MCP in Codex before https://crates.io/crates/rmcp was mature, so we had our own crate for MCP types that was generated from the MCP schema: https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/8b95d3e082376f4cb23e92641705a22afb28a9da/codex-rs/mcp-types/README.md Now that `rmcp` is more mature, it makes more sense to use their MCP types in Rust, as they handle details (like the `_meta` field) that our custom version ignored. Though one advantage that our custom types had is that our generated types implemented `JsonSchema` and `ts_rs::TS`, whereas the types in `rmcp` do not. As such, part of the work of this PR is leveraging the adapters between `rmcp` types and the serializable types that are API for us (app server and MCP) introduced in #10356. Note this PR results in a number of changes to `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/schema`, which merit special attention during review. We must ensure that these changes are still backwards-compatible, which is possible because we have: ```diff - export type CallToolResult = { content: Array<ContentBlock>, isError?: boolean, structuredContent?: JsonValue, }; + export type CallToolResult = { content: Array<JsonValue>, structuredContent?: JsonValue, isError?: boolean, _meta?: JsonValue, }; ``` so `ContentBlock` has been replaced with the more general `JsonValue`. Note that `ContentBlock` was defined as: ```typescript export type ContentBlock = TextContent | ImageContent | AudioContent | ResourceLink | EmbeddedResource; ``` so the deletion of those individual variants should not be a cause of great concern. Similarly, we have the following change in `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/schema/typescript/Tool.ts`: ``` - export type Tool = { annotations?: ToolAnnotations, description?: string, inputSchema: ToolInputSchema, name: string, outputSchema?: ToolOutputSchema, title?: string, }; + export type Tool = { name: string, title?: string, description?: string, inputSchema: JsonValue, outputSchema?: JsonValue, annotations?: JsonValue, icons?: Array<JsonValue>, _meta?: JsonValue, }; ``` so: - `annotations?: ToolAnnotations` ➡️ `JsonValue` - `inputSchema: ToolInputSchema` ➡️ `JsonValue` - `outputSchema?: ToolOutputSchema` ➡️ `JsonValue` and two new fields: `icons?: Array<JsonValue>, _meta?: JsonValue` --- [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER) Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/10349). * #10357 * __->__ #10349 * #10356
2026-02-02 17:41:55 -08:00
use rmcp::model::JsonRpcResponse;
use serde::de::DeserializeOwned;
feat: replace custom mcp-types crate with equivalents from rmcp (#10349) We started working with MCP in Codex before https://crates.io/crates/rmcp was mature, so we had our own crate for MCP types that was generated from the MCP schema: https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/8b95d3e082376f4cb23e92641705a22afb28a9da/codex-rs/mcp-types/README.md Now that `rmcp` is more mature, it makes more sense to use their MCP types in Rust, as they handle details (like the `_meta` field) that our custom version ignored. Though one advantage that our custom types had is that our generated types implemented `JsonSchema` and `ts_rs::TS`, whereas the types in `rmcp` do not. As such, part of the work of this PR is leveraging the adapters between `rmcp` types and the serializable types that are API for us (app server and MCP) introduced in #10356. Note this PR results in a number of changes to `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/schema`, which merit special attention during review. We must ensure that these changes are still backwards-compatible, which is possible because we have: ```diff - export type CallToolResult = { content: Array<ContentBlock>, isError?: boolean, structuredContent?: JsonValue, }; + export type CallToolResult = { content: Array<JsonValue>, structuredContent?: JsonValue, isError?: boolean, _meta?: JsonValue, }; ``` so `ContentBlock` has been replaced with the more general `JsonValue`. Note that `ContentBlock` was defined as: ```typescript export type ContentBlock = TextContent | ImageContent | AudioContent | ResourceLink | EmbeddedResource; ``` so the deletion of those individual variants should not be a cause of great concern. Similarly, we have the following change in `codex-rs/app-server-protocol/schema/typescript/Tool.ts`: ``` - export type Tool = { annotations?: ToolAnnotations, description?: string, inputSchema: ToolInputSchema, name: string, outputSchema?: ToolOutputSchema, title?: string, }; + export type Tool = { name: string, title?: string, description?: string, inputSchema: JsonValue, outputSchema?: JsonValue, annotations?: JsonValue, icons?: Array<JsonValue>, _meta?: JsonValue, }; ``` so: - `annotations?: ToolAnnotations` ➡️ `JsonValue` - `inputSchema: ToolInputSchema` ➡️ `JsonValue` - `outputSchema?: ToolOutputSchema` ➡️ `JsonValue` and two new fields: `icons?: Array<JsonValue>, _meta?: JsonValue` --- [//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER) Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/openai/codex/pull/10349). * #10357 * __->__ #10349 * #10356
2026-02-02 17:41:55 -08:00
pub fn to_response<T: DeserializeOwned>(
response: JsonRpcResponse<serde_json::Value>,
) -> anyhow::Result<T> {
let value = serde_json::to_value(response.result)?;
let codex_response = serde_json::from_value(value)?;
Ok(codex_response)
}