/copilot-explorer

Hacky repo to see what the Copilot extension sends to the server

Primary LanguageJavaScript

Copilot-Explorer

This is a tool meant for exploring the codebase of Github Copilot (the client side, not the model itself).

It's work in progress. See the Journal for details on what's been done so far and my observations.

Screenshots

Screenshot 1

Just show me the tool

You can access a version of the tool here.

This explores version 1.57.7193 of the VSCode extension of Copilot.

The webpage shows 3 panels:

  • Left most shows the module-level dependency graph of the extension. The edges are based on imports.
  • Middle panel shows the prettified code of the selected module. By default the main module is selected.
  • Right panel shows some information about the model (specifically, the module id, exports, imports and modules that import this module).

Module Names: I've also named modules -- some of them manually, while most of them were automatically named using codex in a few-shot manner. Some names are not unique, and I've not dealt with that. IDs of every module are unique though.

Module Categories: I've similarly also categorized modules automatically (again using codex and a bit of manual labeling). The categories are not perfect, but they serve as a very good guideline for segregating modules.

Manual annotations: Some of the modules were quite interesting, so I manually annotated them (added comments and renamed variables) to make them easier to understand. These are now directly viewable in the middle panel. Links below.

If you want to start browsing, here are some interesting starting points:

Interesting modules

Some interesting modules I've found so far (most interesting at the bottom):

How to run locally

If you want to play with the code (different transformations, different visualizations, etc.), you can run the tool locally and modify the code.

  1. Clone the repo
  2. Run npm install
  3. Run node index.js -- this processes the copilot extension code and produces modules by doing some automatic reverse engineering.

Steps 2 and 3 are optional. They're only needed if you modify the extension code or the transformation code. The repo already contains the processed modules.

  1. Run python3 code-viz/app.py to start the app.
  2. Head to localhost:5000 in your browser.

Support and Warranty

lmao

But seriously, this is all on a best-effort basis, I might've misunderstood a few things and so the conclusions might be slightly off. If you find something, do raise an issue or a PR.