CXC-392 [With 401](https://openai.sentry.io/issues/7333870443/?project=4510195390611458&query=019ce8f8-560c-7f10-a00a-c59553740674&referrer=issue-stream) <img width="1909" height="555" alt="401 auth tags in Sentry" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/412ea950-61c4-4780-9697-15c270971ee3" /> - auth_401_*: preserved facts from the latest unauthorized response snapshot - auth_*: latest auth-related facts from the latest request attempt - auth_recovery_*: unauthorized recovery state and follow-up result Without 401 <img width="1917" height="522" alt="happy-path auth tags in Sentry" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3381ed28-8022-43b0-b6c0-623a630e679f" /> ###### Summary - Add client-visible 401 diagnostics for auth attachment, upstream auth classification, and 401 request id / cf-ray correlation. - Record unauthorized recovery mode, phase, outcome, and retry/follow-up status without changing auth behavior. - Surface the highest-signal auth and recovery fields on uploaded client bug reports so they are usable in Sentry. - Preserve original unauthorized evidence under `auth_401_*` while keeping follow-up result tags separate. ###### Rationale (from spec findings) - The dominant bucket needed proof of whether the client attached auth before send or upstream still classified the request as missing auth. - Client uploads needed to show whether unauthorized recovery ran and what the client tried next. - Request id and cf-ray needed to be preserved on the unauthorized response so server-side correlation is immediate. - The bug-report path needed the same auth evidence as the request telemetry path, otherwise the observability would not be operationally useful. ###### Scope - Add auth 401 and unauthorized-recovery observability in `codex-rs/core`, `codex-rs/codex-api`, and `codex-rs/otel`, including feedback-tag surfacing. - Keep auth semantics, refresh behavior, retry behavior, endpoint classification, and geo-denial follow-up work out of this PR. ###### Trade-offs - This exports only safe auth evidence: header presence/name, upstream auth classification, request ids, and recovery state. It does not export token values or raw upstream bodies. - This keeps websocket connection reuse as a transport clue because it can help distinguish stale reused sessions from fresh reconnects. - Misroute/base-url classification and geo-denial are intentionally deferred to a separate follow-up PR so this review stays focused on the dominant auth 401 bucket. ###### Client follow-up - PR 2 will add misroute/provider and geo-denial observability plus the matching feedback-tag surfacing. - A separate host/app-server PR should log auth-decision inputs so pre-send host auth state can be correlated with client request evidence. - `device_id` remains intentionally separate until there is a safe existing source on the feedback upload path. ###### Testing - `cargo test -p codex-core refresh_available_models_sorts_by_priority` - `cargo test -p codex-core emit_feedback_request_tags_` - `cargo test -p codex-core emit_feedback_auth_recovery_tags_` - `cargo test -p codex-core auth_request_telemetry_context_tracks_attached_auth_and_retry_phase` - `cargo test -p codex-core extract_response_debug_context_decodes_identity_headers` - `cargo test -p codex-core identity_auth_details` - `cargo test -p codex-core telemetry_error_messages_preserve_non_http_details` - `cargo test -p codex-core --all-features --no-run` - `cargo test -p codex-otel otel_export_routing_policy_routes_api_request_auth_observability` - `cargo test -p codex-otel otel_export_routing_policy_routes_websocket_connect_auth_observability` - `cargo test -p codex-otel otel_export_routing_policy_routes_websocket_request_transport_observability` |
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codex-api
Typed clients for Codex/OpenAI APIs built on top of the generic transport in codex-client.
- Hosts the request/response models and request builders for Responses and Compact APIs.
- Owns provider configuration (base URLs, headers, query params), auth header injection, retry tuning, and stream idle settings.
- Parses SSE streams into
ResponseEvent/ResponseStream, including rate-limit snapshots and API-specific error mapping. - Serves as the wire-level layer consumed by
codex-core; higher layers handle auth refresh and business logic.
Core interface
The public interface of this crate is intentionally small and uniform:
-
Responses endpoint
- Input:
ResponsesApiRequestfor the request body (model,instructions,input,tools,parallel_tool_calls, reasoning/text controls).ResponsesOptionsfor transport/header concerns (conversation_id,session_source,extra_headers,compression,turn_state).
- Output: a
ResponseStreamofResponseEvent(both re-exported fromcommon).
- Input:
-
Compaction endpoint
- Input:
CompactionInput<'a>(re-exported ascodex_api::CompactionInput):model: &str.input: &[ResponseItem]– history to compact.instructions: &str– fully-resolved compaction instructions.
- Output:
Vec<ResponseItem>. CompactClient::compact_input(&CompactionInput, extra_headers)wraps the JSON encoding and retry/telemetry wiring.
- Input:
-
Memory summarize endpoint
- Input:
MemorySummarizeInput(re-exported ascodex_api::MemorySummarizeInput):model: String.raw_memories: Vec<RawMemory>(serialized astracesfor wire compatibility).RawMemoryincludesid,metadata.source_path, and normalizeditems.
reasoning: Option<Reasoning>.
- Output:
Vec<MemorySummarizeOutput>. MemoriesClient::summarize_input(&MemorySummarizeInput, extra_headers)wraps JSON encoding and retry/telemetry wiring.
- Input:
All HTTP details (URLs, headers, retry/backoff policies, SSE framing) are encapsulated in codex-api and codex-client. Callers construct prompts/inputs using protocol types and work with typed streams of ResponseEvent or compacted ResponseItem values.