paperclip/server/src/services/plugin-environment-driver.ts

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Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
import type { Db } from "@paperclipai/db";
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
import type {
EnvironmentProbeResult,
PluginEnvironmentConfig,
PluginEnvironmentDriverDeclaration,
} from "@paperclipai/shared";
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
import type {
PluginEnvironmentExecuteParams,
PluginEnvironmentExecuteResult,
PluginEnvironmentLease,
PluginEnvironmentRealizeWorkspaceParams,
PluginEnvironmentRealizeWorkspaceResult,
} from "@paperclipai/plugin-sdk";
import { unprocessable } from "../errors.js";
import { pluginRegistryService } from "./plugin-registry.js";
import type { PluginWorkerManager } from "./plugin-worker-manager.js";
export function pluginDriverProviderKey(config: Pick<PluginEnvironmentConfig, "pluginKey" | "driverKey">): string {
return `${config.pluginKey}:${config.driverKey}`;
}
export async function resolvePluginEnvironmentDriver(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
config: PluginEnvironmentConfig;
}) {
const pluginRegistry = pluginRegistryService(input.db);
const plugin = await pluginRegistry.getByKey(input.config.pluginKey);
if (!plugin || plugin.status !== "ready") {
throw new Error(`Plugin environment driver "${pluginDriverProviderKey(input.config)}" is not ready.`);
}
const driver = plugin.manifestJson.environmentDrivers?.find(
(candidate) => candidate.driverKey === input.config.driverKey,
);
if (!driver) {
throw new Error(`Plugin "${input.config.pluginKey}" does not declare environment driver "${input.config.driverKey}".`);
}
if (!input.workerManager.isRunning(plugin.id)) {
throw new Error(`Plugin environment driver "${pluginDriverProviderKey(input.config)}" has no running worker.`);
}
return { plugin, driver };
}
export async function resolvePluginEnvironmentDriverByKey(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
driverKey: string;
}) {
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
return await resolvePluginSandboxProviderDriverByKey({
db: input.db,
driverKey: input.driverKey,
workerManager: input.workerManager,
requireRunning: true,
});
}
export async function resolvePluginSandboxProviderDriverByKey(input: {
db: Db;
driverKey: string;
workerManager?: PluginWorkerManager;
requireRunning?: boolean;
}): Promise<{ plugin: Awaited<ReturnType<ReturnType<typeof pluginRegistryService>["list"]>>[number]; driver: PluginEnvironmentDriverDeclaration } | null> {
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
const pluginRegistry = pluginRegistryService(input.db);
const plugins = await pluginRegistry.list();
for (const plugin of plugins) {
const driver = plugin.manifestJson.environmentDrivers?.find(
(candidate) => candidate.driverKey === input.driverKey && candidate.kind === "sandbox_provider",
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
) as PluginEnvironmentDriverDeclaration | undefined;
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
if (!driver) continue;
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
if (input.requireRunning) {
if (plugin.status !== "ready") continue;
if (!input.workerManager?.isRunning(plugin.id)) continue;
}
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
return { plugin, driver };
}
return null;
}
export async function listReadyPluginEnvironmentDrivers(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager?: PluginWorkerManager;
}) {
if (!input.workerManager) return [];
const pluginRegistry = pluginRegistryService(input.db);
const plugins = await pluginRegistry.list();
return plugins.flatMap((plugin) => {
if (plugin.status !== "ready" || !input.workerManager?.isRunning(plugin.id)) return [];
return (plugin.manifestJson.environmentDrivers ?? [])
.filter((driver) => driver.kind === "sandbox_provider")
.map((driver) => ({
pluginId: plugin.id,
pluginKey: plugin.pluginKey,
driverKey: driver.driverKey,
displayName: driver.displayName,
description: driver.description,
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
configSchema: driver.configSchema,
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
}));
});
}
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
export async function validatePluginSandboxProviderConfig(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
provider: string;
config: Record<string, unknown>;
}): Promise<{
normalizedConfig: Record<string, unknown>;
pluginId: string;
pluginKey: string;
driver: PluginEnvironmentDriverDeclaration;
}> {
const resolved = await resolvePluginSandboxProviderDriverByKey({
db: input.db,
driverKey: input.provider,
workerManager: input.workerManager,
requireRunning: true,
});
if (!resolved) {
throw unprocessable(`Sandbox provider "${input.provider}" is not installed or its plugin worker is not running.`);
}
const result = await input.workerManager.call(resolved.plugin.id, "environmentValidateConfig", {
driverKey: input.provider,
config: input.config,
});
if (!result.ok) {
throw unprocessable(
result.errors?.[0] ?? `Sandbox provider "${input.provider}" rejected its config.`,
{
errors: result.errors ?? [],
warnings: result.warnings ?? [],
},
);
}
return {
normalizedConfig: result.normalizedConfig ?? input.config,
pluginId: resolved.plugin.id,
pluginKey: resolved.plugin.pluginKey,
driver: resolved.driver,
};
}
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
export async function validatePluginEnvironmentDriverConfig(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
config: PluginEnvironmentConfig;
}): Promise<PluginEnvironmentConfig> {
const { plugin } = await resolvePluginEnvironmentDriver(input);
const result = await input.workerManager.call(plugin.id, "environmentValidateConfig", {
driverKey: input.config.driverKey,
config: input.config.driverConfig,
});
if (!result.ok) {
throw unprocessable(
result.errors?.[0] ?? `Plugin environment driver "${pluginDriverProviderKey(input.config)}" rejected its config.`,
{
errors: result.errors ?? [],
warnings: result.warnings ?? [],
},
);
}
return {
...input.config,
driverConfig: result.normalizedConfig ?? input.config.driverConfig,
};
}
export async function probePluginEnvironmentDriver(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
companyId: string;
environmentId: string;
config: PluginEnvironmentConfig;
}): Promise<EnvironmentProbeResult> {
const { plugin } = await resolvePluginEnvironmentDriver(input);
const result = await input.workerManager.call(plugin.id, "environmentProbe", {
driverKey: input.config.driverKey,
companyId: input.companyId,
environmentId: input.environmentId,
config: input.config.driverConfig,
});
return {
ok: result.ok,
driver: "plugin",
summary: result.summary ?? `Plugin environment driver "${pluginDriverProviderKey(input.config)}" probe ${result.ok ? "passed" : "failed"}.`,
details: {
pluginKey: input.config.pluginKey,
driverKey: input.config.driverKey,
diagnostics: result.diagnostics ?? [],
metadata: result.metadata ?? {},
},
};
}
export async function probePluginSandboxProviderDriver(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
companyId: string;
environmentId: string;
provider: string;
config: Record<string, unknown>;
}): Promise<EnvironmentProbeResult> {
const resolved = await resolvePluginEnvironmentDriverByKey({
db: input.db,
workerManager: input.workerManager,
driverKey: input.provider,
});
if (!resolved) {
return {
ok: false,
driver: "sandbox",
summary: `Sandbox provider "${input.provider}" is not installed or its plugin worker is not running.`,
details: {
provider: input.provider,
},
};
}
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
const { provider: _provider, ...driverConfig } = input.config;
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
const result = await input.workerManager.call(resolved.plugin.id, "environmentProbe", {
driverKey: input.provider,
companyId: input.companyId,
environmentId: input.environmentId,
Generalize sandbox provider core for plugin-only providers (#4449) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip is a control plane, so optional execution providers should sit at the plugin edge instead of hardcoding provider-specific behavior into core shared/server/ui layers. > - Sandbox environments are already first-class, and the fake provider proves the built-in path; the remaining gap was that real providers still leaked provider-specific config and runtime assumptions into core. > - That coupling showed up in config normalization, secret persistence, capabilities reporting, lease reconstruction, and the board UI form fields. > - As long as core knew about those provider-shaped details, shipping a provider as a pure third-party plugin meant every new provider would still require host changes. > - This pull request generalizes the sandbox provider seam around schema-driven plugin metadata and generic secret-ref handling. > - The runtime and UI now consume provider metadata generically, so core only special-cases the built-in fake provider while third-party providers can live entirely in plugins. ## What Changed - Added generic sandbox-provider capability metadata so plugin-backed providers can expose `configSchema` through shared environment support and the environments capabilities API. - Reworked sandbox config normalization/persistence/runtime resolution to handle schema-declared secret-ref fields generically, storing them as Paperclip secrets and resolving them for probe/execute/release flows. - Generalized plugin sandbox runtime handling so provider validation, reusable-lease matching, lease reconstruction, and plugin worker calls all operate on provider-agnostic config instead of provider-shaped branches. - Replaced hardcoded sandbox provider form fields in Company Settings with schema-driven rendering and blocked agent environment selection from the built-in fake provider. - Added regression coverage for the generic seam across shared support helpers plus environment config, probe, routes, runtime, and sandbox-provider runtime tests. ## Verification - `pnpm vitest --run packages/shared/src/environment-support.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-config.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-probe.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-routes.test.ts server/src/__tests__/environment-runtime.test.ts server/src/__tests__/sandbox-provider-runtime.test.ts` - `pnpm -r typecheck` ## Risks - Plugin sandbox providers now depend more heavily on accurate `configSchema` declarations; incorrect schemas can misclassify secret-bearing fields or omit required config. - Reusable lease matching is now metadata-driven for plugin-backed providers, so providers that fail to persist stable metadata may reprovision instead of resuming an existing lease. - The UI form is now fully schema-driven for plugin-backed sandbox providers; provider manifests without good defaults or descriptions may produce a rougher operator experience. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex via `codex_local` - Model ID: `gpt-5.4` - Reasoning effort: `high` - Context window observed in runtime session metadata: `258400` tokens - Capabilities used: terminal tool execution, git, and local code/test inspection ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 18:03:41 -07:00
config: driverConfig,
Add sandbox environment support (#4415) ## Thinking Path > - Paperclip orchestrates AI agents for zero-human companies. > - The environment/runtime layer decides where agent work executes and how the control plane reaches those runtimes. > - Today Paperclip can run locally and over SSH, but sandboxed execution needs a first-class environment model instead of one-off adapter behavior. > - We also want sandbox providers to be pluggable so the core does not hardcode every provider implementation. > - This branch adds the Sandbox environment path, the provider contract, and a deterministic fake provider plugin. > - That required synchronized changes across shared contracts, plugin SDK surfaces, server runtime orchestration, and the UI environment/workspace flows. > - The result is that sandbox execution becomes a core control-plane capability while keeping provider implementations extensible and testable. ## What Changed - Added sandbox runtime support to the environment execution path, including runtime URL discovery, sandbox execution targeting, orchestration, and heartbeat integration. - Added plugin-provider support for sandbox environments so providers can be supplied via plugins instead of hardcoded server logic. - Added the fake sandbox provider plugin with deterministic behavior suitable for local and automated testing. - Updated shared types, validators, plugin protocol definitions, and SDK helpers to carry sandbox provider and workspace-runtime contracts across package boundaries. - Updated server routes and services so companies can create sandbox environments, select them for work, and execute work through the sandbox runtime path. - Updated the UI environment and workspace surfaces to expose sandbox environment configuration and selection. - Added test coverage for sandbox runtime behavior, provider seams, environment route guards, orchestration, and the fake provider plugin. ## Verification - Ran locally before the final fixture-only scrub: - `pnpm -r typecheck` - `pnpm test:run` - `pnpm build` - Ran locally after the final scrub amend: - `pnpm vitest run server/src/__tests__/runtime-api.test.ts` - Reviewer spot checks: - create a sandbox environment backed by the fake provider plugin - run work through that environment - confirm sandbox provider execution does not inherit host secrets implicitly ## Risks - This touches shared contracts, plugin SDK plumbing, server runtime orchestration, and UI environment/workspace flows, so regressions would likely show up as cross-layer mismatches rather than isolated type errors. - Runtime URL discovery and sandbox callback selection are sensitive to host/bind configuration; if that logic is wrong, sandbox-backed callbacks may fail even when execution succeeds. - The fake provider plugin is intentionally deterministic and test-oriented; future providers may expose capability gaps that this branch does not yet cover. ## Model Used - OpenAI Codex coding agent on a GPT-5-class backend in the Paperclip/Codex harness. Exact backend model ID is not exposed in-session. Tool-assisted workflow with shell execution, file editing, git history inspection, and local test execution. ## Checklist - [x] I have included a thinking path that traces from project context to this change - [x] I have specified the model used (with version and capability details) - [x] I have checked ROADMAP.md and confirmed this PR does not duplicate planned core work - [x] I have run tests locally and they pass - [x] I have added or updated tests where applicable - [ ] If this change affects the UI, I have included before/after screenshots - [x] I have updated relevant documentation to reflect my changes - [x] I have considered and documented any risks above - [x] I will address all Greptile and reviewer comments before requesting merge
2026-04-24 12:15:53 -07:00
});
return {
ok: result.ok,
driver: "sandbox",
summary: result.summary ?? `Sandbox provider "${input.provider}" probe ${result.ok ? "passed" : "failed"}.`,
details: {
provider: input.provider,
pluginKey: resolved.plugin.pluginKey,
diagnostics: result.diagnostics ?? [],
metadata: result.metadata ?? {},
},
};
}
export async function resumePluginEnvironmentLease(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
companyId: string;
environmentId: string;
config: PluginEnvironmentConfig;
providerLeaseId: string;
leaseMetadata?: Record<string, unknown>;
}): Promise<PluginEnvironmentLease> {
const { plugin } = await resolvePluginEnvironmentDriver(input);
return await input.workerManager.call(plugin.id, "environmentResumeLease", {
driverKey: input.config.driverKey,
companyId: input.companyId,
environmentId: input.environmentId,
config: input.config.driverConfig,
providerLeaseId: input.providerLeaseId,
leaseMetadata: input.leaseMetadata,
});
}
export async function destroyPluginEnvironmentLease(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
companyId: string;
environmentId: string;
config: PluginEnvironmentConfig;
providerLeaseId: string | null;
leaseMetadata?: Record<string, unknown>;
}): Promise<void> {
const { plugin } = await resolvePluginEnvironmentDriver(input);
await input.workerManager.call(plugin.id, "environmentDestroyLease", {
driverKey: input.config.driverKey,
companyId: input.companyId,
environmentId: input.environmentId,
config: input.config.driverConfig,
providerLeaseId: input.providerLeaseId,
leaseMetadata: input.leaseMetadata,
});
}
export async function realizePluginEnvironmentWorkspace(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
pluginId?: string | null;
params: PluginEnvironmentRealizeWorkspaceParams;
config: PluginEnvironmentConfig;
}): Promise<PluginEnvironmentRealizeWorkspaceResult> {
const { plugin } = input.pluginId
? { plugin: { id: input.pluginId } }
: await resolvePluginEnvironmentDriver({
db: input.db,
workerManager: input.workerManager,
config: input.config,
});
return await input.workerManager.call(plugin.id, "environmentRealizeWorkspace", input.params);
}
export async function executePluginEnvironmentCommand(input: {
db: Db;
workerManager: PluginWorkerManager;
pluginId?: string | null;
params: PluginEnvironmentExecuteParams;
config: PluginEnvironmentConfig;
}): Promise<PluginEnvironmentExecuteResult> {
const { plugin } = input.pluginId
? { plugin: { id: input.pluginId } }
: await resolvePluginEnvironmentDriver({
db: input.db,
workerManager: input.workerManager,
config: input.config,
});
return await input.workerManager.call(plugin.id, "environmentExecute", input.params);
}