# Connect GBrain to Codex > New to this? The [Give your coding agent a memory](../tutorials/connect-coding-agent.md) > tutorial walks both paths (local-from-nothing and connect-to-an-existing-brain) > end to end, plus the brain-first protocol that makes it worth it. This page is > the connection reference. Codex CLI (`@openai/codex`, v0.130+) supports remote streamable-HTTP MCP servers with a bearer token read from an environment variable. The token lives in your shell env, not in Codex's config file. ## Fastest path: `gbrain connect` Run anywhere `gbrain` is installed (mint a token on the brain host first): ```bash gbrain auth create "codex" gbrain connect https://YOUR-DOMAIN.ngrok.app/mcp --token gbrain_xxx --agent codex ``` This prints a copy-paste block. Or wire it up directly and smoke-test the token: ```bash gbrain connect https://YOUR-DOMAIN.ngrok.app/mcp --token gbrain_xxx --agent codex --install ``` `--install` runs `codex mcp add` for you, then makes one real call to the brain so a wrong/expired token fails right away. Because Codex reads the token from the env var at runtime, keep `GBRAIN_REMOTE_TOKEN` exported in your shell profile. ## Manual setup ```bash export GBRAIN_REMOTE_TOKEN=gbrain_xxx codex mcp add gbrain --url https://YOUR-DOMAIN.ngrok.app/mcp \ --bearer-token-env-var GBRAIN_REMOTE_TOKEN ``` Codex stores the env-var *name* (`GBRAIN_REMOTE_TOKEN`), not the token itself, and reads the value when it launches the MCP server. Add the `export` line to your `~/.zshrc` / `~/.bashrc` so it's set in every session. ## Verify In Codex, ask it to use the brain: ``` Call get_brain_identity, then search my brain for [topic]. ``` `get_brain_identity` confirms whose brain you're connected to; `list_skills` shows everything it can do. > **`list_skills` empty?** It's gated by `mcp.publish_skills` on the host (default > ON for `gbrain init` brains, OFF for brains upgraded from older releases). Enable > it on the host: `gbrain config set mcp.publish_skills true`. The core tools > (search, query, get_page, put_page, think, find_experts) work regardless. > `capture` is CLI-only, not an MCP tool — write over MCP with `put_page`. ## Remove ```bash codex mcp remove gbrain ``` ## Notes - The token is a long-lived, full-access secret. Keep `GBRAIN_REMOTE_TOKEN` out of version control and prefer a scoped token if your host supports one. - Local stdio also works if you run the brain on the same machine: `codex mcp add gbrain -- gbrain serve`.