--- summary: "Configure native Codex plugins for Codex-mode OpenClaw agents" title: "Native Codex plugins" read_when: - You want Codex-mode OpenClaw agents to use native Codex plugins - You are migrating source-installed openai-curated Codex plugins - You are configuring an existing workspace-directory Codex plugin - You are troubleshooting codexPlugins, app inventory, destructive actions, or plugin app diagnostics --- Native Codex plugin support lets a Codex-mode OpenClaw agent use Codex app-server's own app and plugin capabilities inside the same Codex thread that handles the OpenClaw turn. Plugin calls stay in the native Codex transcript; Codex app-server owns app-backed MCP execution. OpenClaw does not translate Codex plugins into synthetic `codex_plugin_*` OpenClaw dynamic tools. Use this page after the base [Codex harness](/plugins/codex-harness) is working. ## Requirements - The agent runtime must be the native Codex harness. - `plugins.entries.codex.enabled` is `true`. - `plugins.entries.codex.config.codexPlugins.enabled` is `true`. - The target Codex app-server can see the expected marketplace, plugin, and app inventory. - Migration supports only `openai-curated` plugins that it observed as source-installed in the source Codex home. - Manually configured `workspace-directory` plugins require a Codex app-server whose `plugin/list` accepts `marketplaceKinds` and whose pathless workspace summaries include `remotePluginId`. The plugin must already be installed and enabled, and its owned apps must be accessible in `app/list`. `codexPlugins` has no effect on OpenClaw-provider runs, ACP conversation bindings, or other harnesses, because those paths never create Codex app-server threads with native `apps` config. OpenAI-side Codex account, app availability, and workspace app/plugin controls come from the signed-in Codex account. See [Using Codex with your ChatGPT plan](https://help.openai.com/en/articles/11369540-using-codex-with-your-chatgpt-plan) for the OpenAI account and admin model. ## Quickstart Preview migration from the source Codex home: ```bash openclaw migrate codex --dry-run ``` Add `--verify-plugin-apps` to make migration call source `app/list` and require every owned app to be present, enabled, and accessible before planning native activation: ```bash openclaw migrate codex --dry-run --verify-plugin-apps ``` Apply the migration when the plan looks right: ```bash openclaw migrate apply codex --yes ``` Migration writes explicit `codexPlugins` entries for eligible plugins and calls Codex app-server `plugin/install` for selected plugins. A migrated config looks like this: ```json5 { plugins: { entries: { codex: { enabled: true, config: { codexPlugins: { enabled: true, allow_destructive_actions: true, plugins: { "google-calendar": { enabled: true, marketplaceName: "openai-curated", pluginName: "google-calendar", }, }, }, }, }, }, }, } ``` Migration remains limited to `openai-curated`. To use an existing `workspace-directory` plugin, add it manually with the exact marketplace-qualified `summary.id` returned by `plugin/list`. For example, if Codex returns `example-plugin@workspace-directory`, configure that complete value instead of its display name: ```json5 { plugins: { entries: { codex: { enabled: true, config: { codexPlugins: { enabled: true, plugins: { "example-plugin": { enabled: true, marketplaceName: "workspace-directory", pluginName: "example-plugin@workspace-directory", }, }, }, }, }, }, }, } ``` OpenClaw does not call `plugin/install` or start authentication for a `workspace-directory` plugin. Install, enable, and authenticate it in Codex before adding or enabling the OpenClaw policy. OpenClaw keeps apps hidden when the response omits the exact marketplace, plugin ID, detail ID, or app-readiness evidence. If Codex rejects the explicit workspace `plugin/list` request, OpenClaw reports `marketplace_missing` for each enabled workspace plugin and keeps any independently discovered curated plugins available. After a `codexPlugins` change, new Codex conversations pick up the updated app set automatically. Run `/new` or `/reset` to refresh the current conversation. A gateway restart is not required for plugin enable/disable changes. ## Manage plugins from chat `/codex plugins` inspects or changes configured native Codex plugins from the same chat where you operate the Codex harness: ```text /codex plugins /codex plugins list /codex plugins disable google-calendar /codex plugins enable google-calendar ``` `/codex plugins` is an alias for `/codex plugins list`. The list shows each configured plugin's key, on/off state, Codex plugin name, and marketplace from `plugins.entries.codex.config.codexPlugins.plugins`. `enable`/`disable` write only to `~/.openclaw/openclaw.json`; they never edit `~/.codex/config.toml` or install new Codex plugins. Only the owner or a gateway client with the `operator.admin` scope can run them. Enabling a configured plugin also turns on the global `codexPlugins.enabled` switch. If a curated plugin was written disabled because migration returned `auth_required`, reauthorize the app in Codex before enabling it in OpenClaw. For a `workspace-directory` entry, enabling it here changes only OpenClaw policy; the plugin and app must already be active in Codex. ## How native plugin setup works The integration tracks three states: | State | Meaning | | ---------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Installed | Codex has the plugin bundle in the target app-server runtime. | | Enabled | Codex reports the plugin enabled, and OpenClaw config allows it for Codex harness turns. | | Accessible | Codex app-server confirms the plugin's app entries are available for the active account and map to the configured plugin identity. | For `openai-curated` plugins, migration is the durable install/eligibility step: - During planning, OpenClaw reads source Codex `plugin/read` details and checks that the source Codex app-server account is a ChatGPT subscription account. A non-ChatGPT or missing account response skips app-backed plugins with `codex_subscription_required`. - By default, migration skips the source `app/list` call: app-backed source plugins that pass the account gate are planned without source app accessibility verification, and account-lookup transport failures skip with `codex_account_unavailable`. - With `--verify-plugin-apps`, migration takes a fresh source `app/list` snapshot and requires every owned app to be present, enabled, and accessible before planning native activation. Account-lookup transport failures then fall through to the source app-inventory gate instead of skipping outright. For `workspace-directory` plugins, setup happens outside OpenClaw. OpenClaw queries that marketplace only when at least one enabled workspace entry is configured, resolves each plugin by exact `summary.id`, and reuses the existing `plugin/read` ownership and `app/list` readiness checks. An uninstalled, disabled, inaccessible, or unauthenticated plugin exposes no apps; OpenClaw does not attempt installation or authentication. Runtime app inventory is the target-session accessibility check for both migrated curated plugins and manually configured workspace plugins. Codex harness session setup computes a restrictive thread app config from the enabled and accessible plugin apps; it is not recomputed on every turn, so `/codex plugins enable`/`disable` only affect new Codex conversations. Use `/new` or `/reset` to pick up the change in the current conversation. ## V1 support boundary - Only `openai-curated` plugins already installed in the source Codex app-server inventory are migration-eligible. - Runtime also supports explicit `workspace-directory` entries on app-server builds whose `plugin/list` implements `marketplaceKinds` and returns `remotePluginId` for pathless workspace summaries. These entries must use their exact marketplace-qualified `summary.id` and must already be installed, enabled, and app-accessible. A rejected workspace list request produces the existing per-plugin `marketplace_missing` diagnostic; missing marketplace, plugin, detail, or app evidence exposes no workspace app. Curated inventory from the default list request remains usable. - App-backed source plugins must pass the migration-time subscription gate. `--verify-plugin-apps` adds the source app-inventory gate. Subscription-gated accounts, and in verification mode inaccessible/disabled/missing source apps or app-inventory refresh failures, are reported as skipped manual items instead of enabled config entries. Unreadable plugin details are skipped before the app-inventory gate. - Migration writes explicit plugin identities (`marketplaceName` and `pluginName`); it does not write local `marketplacePath` cache paths. - `codexPlugins.enabled` is the only global enablement switch; there is no `plugins["*"]` wildcard or config key that grants arbitrary install authority. - Non-curated marketplaces, cached plugin bundles, hooks, and Codex config files are preserved in the migration report for manual review, not activated automatically. Runtime accepts manually configured `workspace-directory` entries; other marketplaces remain unsupported. ## App inventory and ownership OpenClaw reads Codex app inventory through app-server `app/list`, caches it in memory for one hour, and refreshes stale or missing entries asynchronously. The cache is process-local; restarting the CLI or gateway drops it, and OpenClaw rebuilds it from the next `app/list` read. Migration and runtime use separate cache keys: - Source migration verification uses the source Codex home and start options. It runs only with `--verify-plugin-apps` and forces a fresh source `app/list` traversal for that planning run. - Target runtime setup uses the target agent's Codex app-server identity when building the thread app config. Curated plugin activation invalidates that target cache key, then force-refreshes it after `plugin/install`. `workspace-directory` setup never runs this activation path. A plugin app is exposed only when OpenClaw can map it back to the configured plugin through stable ownership: an exact app id from plugin detail, a known MCP server name, or unique stable metadata. Display-name-only or ambiguous ownership is excluded until the next inventory refresh proves ownership. ## Connected account apps Owner-operated agents can opt into every app already connected to their Codex account without requiring a matching plugin package: ```json5 { plugins: { entries: { codex: { enabled: true, config: { codexPlugins: { enabled: true, allow_all_plugins: true, allow_destructive_actions: "auto", }, }, }, }, }, } ``` `allow_all_plugins: true` takes a complete `app/list` snapshot when a new native Codex thread is established and admits only apps marked accessible for that account. It does not install, authenticate, or enable apps globally. Existing threads keep their persisted app set; use `/new`, `/reset`, or restart the gateway to pick up newly connected or revoked apps. Account apps inherit the global `codexPlugins.allow_destructive_actions` value, which accepts `true`, `false`, `"auto"`, or `"ask"`. Explicit per-plugin policy overrides the global policy for overlapping app ids. Inventory failures fail closed instead of falling back to an unrestricted default. ## Thread app config OpenClaw injects a restrictive `config.apps` patch for the Codex thread: `_default` is disabled, and only apps owned by enabled configured plugins or accessible account apps admitted by `allow_all_plugins` are enabled. `destructive_enabled` on each app comes from the effective global or per-plugin `allow_destructive_actions` policy; `true`, `"auto"`, and `"ask"` all set `destructive_enabled: true`, and `false` sets it `false`. Codex still enforces destructive tool metadata from its native app tool annotations. `_default` is disabled with `open_world_enabled: false`; enabled plugin apps get `open_world_enabled: true`. OpenClaw does not expose a separate plugin-level open-world policy knob and does not maintain per-plugin destructive tool-name deny lists. Tool approval mode defaults to automatic for admitted apps, so non-destructive read tools run without a same-thread approval prompt. Destructive tools stay controlled by each app's `destructive_enabled` policy. ## Destructive action policy Destructive plugin elicitations are allowed by default for configured Codex plugins, while unsafe schemas and ambiguous ownership fail closed: - Global `allow_destructive_actions` defaults to `true`. - Per-plugin `allow_destructive_actions` overrides the global policy for that plugin. - `false`: OpenClaw returns a deterministic decline. - `true`: OpenClaw auto-accepts only safe schemas it can map to an approval response, such as a boolean approve field. - `"auto"`: OpenClaw exposes destructive plugin actions to Codex, then turns ownership-proven MCP approval elicitations into OpenClaw plugin approvals before returning the Codex approval response. - `"ask"`: OpenClaw uses the same Codex write/destructive gating as `"auto"`, clears durable Codex per-tool approval overrides for the app before the thread starts, and offers only one-shot approval or denial so durable approvals cannot suppress later write-action prompts. For each admitted app using `"ask"`, OpenClaw selects Codex's human approvals reviewer for that app so Codex sends its approval elicitations to OpenClaw; other apps and non-app thread approvals keep their configured reviewer and policy. - Missing plugin identity, ambiguous ownership, a missing or mismatched turn id, or an unsafe elicitation schema declines instead of prompting. ## Troubleshooting | Code | Meaning | Fix | | ------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `auth_required` | Migration installed the plugin, but one of its apps still needs authentication. The entry is written disabled until you reauthorize. | Reauthorize the app in Codex, then enable the plugin in OpenClaw. | | `app_inaccessible`, `app_disabled`, `app_missing` | With `--verify-plugin-apps`, the source Codex app inventory did not show all owned apps as present, enabled, and accessible. | Reauthorize or enable the app in Codex, then rerun migration with `--verify-plugin-apps`. | | `app_inventory_unavailable` | Strict source app verification was requested but the source Codex app inventory refresh failed. | Fix source Codex app-server access, or retry without `--verify-plugin-apps` to accept the faster account-gated plan. | | `codex_subscription_required` | The source Codex app-server account was not a ChatGPT subscription account. | Log in to the Codex app with subscription auth, then rerun migration. | | `codex_account_unavailable` | The source Codex app-server account could not be read. | Fix source Codex app-server auth, or rerun with `--verify-plugin-apps` to let source app inventory decide eligibility. | | `marketplace_missing`, `plugin_missing` | Marketplace or exact plugin unavailable; the explicit workspace catalog request may have been rejected; workspace apps fail closed. | Verify the compatible app-server contract and exact ID described below. | | `plugin_detail_unavailable` | OpenClaw could not read plugin ownership details. | Inspect the target app-server's `plugin/list` and `plugin/read` responses. | | `plugin_disabled` | Codex reports the plugin installed but disabled. | Curated activation may repair it; enable a workspace plugin in Codex before retrying. | | `plugin_activation_failed` | Plugin activation did not complete. | Use the attached diagnostic to distinguish marketplace, auth, refresh, or workspace-readiness failures. | | `app_inventory_missing`, `app_inventory_stale` | App readiness came from an empty or stale cache. | OpenClaw schedules an async refresh automatically; plugin apps stay excluded until ownership and readiness are known. | | `app_ownership_ambiguous` | App inventory only matched by display name. | The app stays hidden from the Codex thread until a later refresh proves ownership. | **Workspace plugin is installed but not visible:** confirm the workspace `plugin/list` result reports the exact configured ID as installed and enabled, then confirm `app/list` reports every owned app accessible for the same Codex account. OpenClaw can enable an accessible app for the thread even when the account inventory currently reports that app disabled. If you changed that state after the gateway cached app inventory, wait for the one-hour cache refresh or restart the gateway, then use `/new` or `/reset`. OpenClaw does not repair or authenticate workspace plugins. If the explicit workspace list request is rejected, each enabled workspace entry reports `marketplace_missing`; unrelated curated entries still proceed from the default list response. For `plugin_detail_unavailable`, a pathless workspace summary must include `remotePluginId`; OpenClaw keeps owned apps hidden when that selector or the subsequent `plugin/read` result is unavailable. For `plugin_activation_failed`, curated plugins may report a marketplace, auth, or post-install refresh failure. A workspace plugin reports this code when it is not already active; install, enable, and authenticate it outside OpenClaw. **Config changed but the agent cannot see the plugin:** run `/codex plugins list` to confirm the configured state, then `/new` or `/reset`. Existing Codex thread bindings keep the app config they started with until OpenClaw establishes a new harness session or replaces a stale binding. **Destructive action is declined:** check the global and per-plugin `allow_destructive_actions` values. Even with `true`, `"auto"`, or `"ask"`, unsafe elicitation schemas and ambiguous plugin identity still fail closed. ## Related - [Codex harness](/plugins/codex-harness) - [Codex harness reference](/plugins/codex-harness-reference) - [Codex harness runtime](/plugins/codex-harness-runtime) - [Configuration reference](/gateway/configuration-reference#codex-harness-plugin-config) - [Migrate CLI](/cli/migrate)