This is PR 3 of the app-server tracing rollout. PRs https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/13285 and https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/13368 gave us inbound request spans in app-server and propagated trace context through Submission. This change finishes the next piece in core: when a request actually starts a turn, we now create a core-owned long-lived span that stays open for the real lifetime of the turn. What changed: - `Session::spawn_task` can now optionally create a long-lived turn span and run the spawned task inside it - `turn/start` uses that path, so normal turn execution stays under a single core-owned span after the async handoff - `review/start` uses the same pattern - added a unit test that verifies the spawned turn task inherits the submission dispatch trace ancestry **Why** The app-server request span is intentionally short-lived. Once work crosses into core, we still want one span that covers the actual execution window until completion or interruption. This keeps that ownership where it belongs: in the layer that owns the runtime lifecycle. |
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npm i -g @openai/codex
or brew install --cask codex
Codex CLI is a coding agent from OpenAI that runs locally on your computer.
If you want Codex in your code editor (VS Code, Cursor, Windsurf), install in your IDE.
If you want the desktop app experience, run
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Quickstart
Installing and running Codex CLI
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# Install using npm
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