New Feture Request in Codex

Feature request: Shareable Codex session links and cross-device history

I use the Codex desktop app on my work computer, but I often want to review the session history from another computer so I can prepare follow-up prompts, questions, and tasks.

It would be helpful if Codex supported something similar to ChatGPT shared links, such as:

  • Shareable Codex session/task links
  • Cross-device Codex history for the same account/workspace
  • Exportable session summaries
  • Optional collaboration access for teammates
  • Clear separation between local-only sessions and cloud-shareable tasks

This would help users review prior Codex work, collaborate with teammates, and prepare better follow-up prompts without needing access to the original machine.

Welcome to the forum!

Your feature request appears to cover several different ideas, and some of them are already quite popular and regularly requested.

Below this post, you should see Related Topics , which may help you find similar discussions and see what others are thinking.

Another good place to search and submit Codex feature requests — and the official place where they are tracked — is the OpenAI Codex GitHub Issues page using the enhancement label:

Appreciate you laying this out so clearly, @sburks92131. A lot of folks using Codex across work/personal machines have been asking for similar things, especially around continuity and collaboration between sessions.

And thanks @EricGT as well for pointing toward the related discussions and GitHub enhancement tracker. That context is genuinely helpful for people discovering these requests later.

The split between:

  • local-only sessions
  • cloud/shareable tasks
  • cross-device history
  • teammate collaboration

is especially interesting because those workflows don’t fit neatly into the current setup today.

We’re forwarding this feedback to the team so it can be logged alongside the broader requests around Codex history, sharing, and collaboration workflows. Exportable summaries and shared task links in particular seem to come up quite a bit.

-Mark G.