Describe the bug
A resumed session contained malformed JSONL records that prevented it from being resumed again.
Three physical lines each contained an incomplete event prefix immediately followed by a complete JSON event without a newline or separator:
{"type":"assistant.message", ... <truncated content>{"type":"assistant.message", ...}
Parsing failed with:
Expecting ',' delimiter
Affected configuration
- GitHub Copilot CLI 1.0.71-0
- Linux
- Model: GPT-5.6 Sol (
gpt-5.6-sol)
- Context window: 1.1M
- Reasoning effort: high
- Session resumed with
copilot --resume=<session-id>
The model configuration may not be directly relevant to JSONL persistence, but it is included to make the report reproducible.
Observed behavior
The affected events.jsonl contained three malformed physical lines:
- One truncated
tool.execution_complete prefix followed by a complete event.
- Two truncated
assistant.message prefixes followed by complete events.
- The complete suffixes retained the same tool-call or message identifiers as their truncated prefixes.
The complete JSON object began before the preceding incomplete object had been closed or terminated with a newline. The session could not be resumed because the event log was not valid JSONL.
Expected behavior
Session event writes should be atomic and serialized.
When resuming, the CLI should detect and recover from an incomplete trailing record rather than appending another event directly after it. Concurrent processes should also be prevented from writing to the same session without locking.
Workaround
After backing up the session, I discarded each unrecoverable prefix and retained its complete JSON-event suffix. Once every physical line contained exactly one valid JSON object, the session resumed normally.
Possible cause and related issue
Potential causes include:
- Resuming a session while another process still has it open.
- A process being interrupted during an event write.
- Missing locking or recovery around large or chunked JSONL writes.
The same session contained a 72 MB persisted apply_patch event reported in #4097. That unusually large write may have widened the failure window, but there is not enough evidence to claim both issues share the same root cause.
I have not attached events.jsonl because it contains conversation and tool history.
Investigated and filed with assistance from GitHub Copilot CLI.
Describe the bug
A resumed session contained malformed JSONL records that prevented it from being resumed again.
Three physical lines each contained an incomplete event prefix immediately followed by a complete JSON event without a newline or separator:
Parsing failed with:
Affected configuration
gpt-5.6-sol)copilot --resume=<session-id>The model configuration may not be directly relevant to JSONL persistence, but it is included to make the report reproducible.
Observed behavior
The affected
events.jsonlcontained three malformed physical lines:tool.execution_completeprefix followed by a complete event.assistant.messageprefixes followed by complete events.The complete JSON object began before the preceding incomplete object had been closed or terminated with a newline. The session could not be resumed because the event log was not valid JSONL.
Expected behavior
Session event writes should be atomic and serialized.
When resuming, the CLI should detect and recover from an incomplete trailing record rather than appending another event directly after it. Concurrent processes should also be prevented from writing to the same session without locking.
Workaround
After backing up the session, I discarded each unrecoverable prefix and retained its complete JSON-event suffix. Once every physical line contained exactly one valid JSON object, the session resumed normally.
Possible cause and related issue
Potential causes include:
The same session contained a 72 MB persisted
apply_patchevent reported in #4097. That unusually large write may have widened the failure window, but there is not enough evidence to claim both issues share the same root cause.I have not attached
events.jsonlbecause it contains conversation and tool history.Investigated and filed with assistance from GitHub Copilot CLI.