OpenAI disclosed this week that it has agreed to acquire Astral, the startup behind widely used open-source Python tools, in a bid to push its Codex system deeper into full-scale, agent-driven software development.
The deal, which has not yet closed, remains subject to regulatory approval and other customary conditions. Financial terms were not disclosed, and both companies will continue operating independently until completion.
Once finalized, Astral’s entire team of more than 30 employees, including founder and CEO Charlie Marsh, will join OpenAI’s Codex division. The move folds a fast-growing developer toolkit directly into OpenAI’s broader push to automate complex coding workflows.
At the center of the acquisition is Codex, OpenAI’s coding-focused AI system, which the company is positioning as more than a code generator. The goal is to evolve it into a system that can plan, execute, and maintain software projects with minimal human intervention.
OpenAI said Codex will increasingly handle tasks such as planning code changes, modifying large repositories, running developer tools, verifying outputs, and maintaining applications over time. In short, the ambition is to turn Codex into a full-fledged collaborator rather than a suggestion engine.
Astral’s tooling stack brings serious weight to that vision. Its flagship products include uv, a fast Python package and project manager; Ruff, a high-speed linter and formatter; and ty, a type checker. All are built in Rust, giving them a reputation for speed and efficiency that developers tend to notice quickly.
The integration is expected to allow AI agents to interact directly with tools developers already use daily, reducing friction between human workflows and machine-driven automation. That’s where things get interesting—and potentially disruptive.
Codex itself is seeing rapid adoption. OpenAI said the platform has recorded threefold user growth and a fivefold increase in usage since the start of 2026, reaching more than 2 million weekly active users. Those numbers suggest developers are not just experimenting—they are sticking around.
Astral’s tools are hardly niche. The company reports hundreds of millions of downloads per month across its suite, with Ruff alone logging roughly 179 million monthly downloads, uv about 126 million, and ty around 19 million as of March.
Marsh, who founded Astral in 2023, framed the deal as a way to expand impact at a moment when AI is reshaping how software gets built. “Astral has always focused on building tools that transform how developers work with Python—helping them ship better software, faster,” he said. “As part of Codex, we’ll continue evolving our open source tools to push the frontier of software development.”
OpenAI echoed that sentiment. Thibaut Sottiaux, Codex lead, said Astral’s tools are already used by millions of developers and will help accelerate Codex’s ability to operate across the full software lifecycle. The emphasis is less about writing code line by line and more about orchestrating entire systems.
Both companies made clear that open source is not going anywhere. OpenAI said it plans to continue supporting Astral’s projects after the deal closes, while Marsh emphasized that development will remain open and community-driven. The tools will stay freely available on platforms like Github, with ongoing contributions expected.
That assurance matters. While early reactions across developer communities have been largely positive, some users have raised familiar concerns about long-term governance and whether tighter integration could eventually require OpenAI accounts. For now, those worries appear contained.
The acquisition also lands in the middle of a broader race to dominate AI-assisted coding. OpenAI’s move is widely seen as a direct response to competitors like Anthropic, which has been expanding its Claude Code ecosystem and adding persistent, always-on agent capabilities. Anthropic’s acquisition of the JavaScript runtime Bun in late 2025 signaled a similar strategy.
OpenAI has not been sitting still. Earlier this month, the company also acquired Promptfoo, an open-source tool focused on large language model security testing, further reinforcing its push to build a comprehensive developer ecosystem around Codex.
The Astral deal suggests OpenAI is betting that the future of programming will hinge less on writing syntax and more on managing intelligent systems that can do the heavy lifting. Developers may still be in charge, but the tools are starting to look a lot more like teammates.