Codex / concept
Codex subagent
Subagents are suitable for breaking large goals into parallel small tasks, but each subtask should have clear boundaries and unified acceptance criteria.

Why use subagents
Subagents are suitable for breaking down large goals into isolated tasks, such as investigation, review, migration, generation testing, or parallel verification. They can reduce the pressure on the main session context.
Don't let multiple subagents modify the same piece of code without boundaries. The master session should be responsible for division of labor, merging, deconfliction and final validation.
How to split
Split by file, module, validation type or research direction. Each subtask must have independent goals, writing scope, and acceptance criteria.
| Split method | Example |
|---|---|
| by module | One agent fixes auth, and the other fixes tests. |
| Press verify | One agent ran a browser check and the other failed to check CI. |
| by research | An agent reads the official documentation and the main session is implemented. |
Complete usage points
Supplement the core concepts, operation sequences, permission boundaries and verification requirements that are easily compressed and missed in official documents, making it easier for English readers to learn completely by page.
Subagent is suitable for isolation investigation
The value of subagents lies in breaking down large tasks into isolated contexts, especially for work that requires heavy reading, searching, or parallel analysis. The master session is responsible for goals, boundaries, and final integration, and subagents are responsible for independently investigating or implementing candidates.
- Research sub-agent: read official documents, troubleshoot error logs, and sort out complex modules.
- Review subagent: Check the same diff from security, performance, testing, accessibility, etc. perspectives.
- Implementation subagent: Processes a module or set of tests within well-defined boundaries.
When using subagents, avoid stepping on each other's files. The main session should make it clear what each subagent can read, write, and what the output format is. The final merge still requires running tests, checking for conflicts, and reviewing diffs.
Study Checklist
Put the content on this page into real tasks and use the five dimensions of entry, context, permissions, verification and team rules to check whether you have truly mastered it.
Study Checklist
After reading this page, do not just remember the concept name. You should be able to place "Codex subagent" back into a real Codex engineering workflow: where the task starts, what context the system loads, which actions need approval, how the result is verified, and how to roll back when it fails.
If this is a concept page, be specific about how it affects the real task: does it change context, permissions, execution paths, validation methods, or changes the team collaboration process.
- Be able to describe in your own words the specific problem this page solves, rather than just reciting the title.
- Able to write a minimal example task with goals, scope, prohibitions, and acceptance criteria.
- Be able to determine which information should be put into the current prompt and which should be captured as project rules or configurations.
- Be able to explain which long-term rules should go into AGENTS.md, and which runtime behavior should be handled by config.toml, permission profile, skills and MCP.
- Ability to check diffs, command output, test results, screenshots or PR notes after a task is completed instead of just trusting the natural language summary.
If this page is used for team training, ask learners to complete a small task with Codex: read and explain first, submit a plan, make the smallest useful change, and close with real verification commands plus human diff review.
Codex practical notes
Fill in the most overlooked execution details of Codex usage around local environments, privilege escalation, remote entry, automation failures, and rollbacks.
Codex Practical Notes
This page belongs to the core concepts of Codex. When learning, connect concepts to real-world implementation: will it change context, permissions, task splitting, verification paths, or change the way teams collaborate.
When handling tasks related to "Codex subagent", always confirm the current Git status and working directory first. Codex can make changes quickly, but it does not automatically know which uncommitted edits came from the user, which files are off limits, or which commands may affect production.
- Prioritize using low-risk branches or working trees for local tasks, and review them with git diff after completion.
- When it comes to installation dependencies, networking, databases, deployment, push, deletion, and reset, Codex must first be asked to explain the impact before approval.
- Results generated by remote or collaborative portals must also be confirmed back to PR, CI, build logs and test evidence.
- Automated tasks must define failure output and exit conditions in advance to avoid Codex repeatedly trying in the wrong direction.
Think of Codex as an engineering teammate who can execute commands, rather than an assistant who can only write text. The closer you get to a real system, the greater the need for clear boundaries, evidence, and rollbacks.