Skip to content

sums001/Windows-Copilot-API

Repository files navigation

Windows Copilot API: a free LLM API powered by Microsoft Copilot

Windows Copilot API β€” a free, OpenAI-compatible API for your Microsoft Copilot account

Using your own Microsoft Copilot account. No API key, no credits, no paid plan: it turns the free chat at copilot.microsoft.com into an API you can call from code.

You can use it in two ways:

  • 🐍 As a Python library: just call client.chat("Hi"). Supports streaming and multi-turn conversations.
  • πŸ”Œ As a local OpenAI-compatible API: runs a server at http://localhost:8000/v1 that speaks the OpenAI format, so the official openai SDK (and any OpenAI-compatible app) works as a drop-in, with localhost in place of OpenAI.

You sign in once in a browser with your Microsoft or Google account; your session is saved and refreshed automatically after that.

Unofficial project. Not affiliated with or endorsed by Microsoft. It automates the consumer Copilot web experience for personal use, so use it responsibly and within Microsoft's terms.


Table of contents


Why use this?

  • Free: uses your normal signed-in Copilot, no API billing.
  • Drop-in OpenAI replacement: point any OpenAI client at localhost and it just works.
  • Works everywhere you're signed in: the signed-in path works even in regions where anonymous Copilot is blocked (e.g. India).
  • Streaming + conversations: token-by-token output and multi-turn threads addressed by conversation_id.

Requirements

  • Python 3.9+
  • A Microsoft account (the free one you use for Copilot is fine)
  • Works on Windows, macOS, and Linux

Setup (2 minutes)

# 1. Clone the project
git clone <your-repo-url>
cd Windows-Copilot-API

2. Create and activate a virtual environment

On macOS / Linux:

python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate

On Windows (PowerShell):

python -m venv venv
venv\Scripts\Activate.ps1

On Windows you may need to allow script execution once: Set-ExecutionPolicy -Scope CurrentUser RemoteSigned. In cmd.exe activate with venv\Scripts\activate.bat instead.

3. Install dependencies and sign in

# Install dependencies
pip install -r requirements.txt

# Install the browser Playwright needs (one-time)
playwright install chromium

# Sign in once: a browser opens, log into your Microsoft or Google account
python -m copilot login

The browser closes by itself once sign-in is detected β€” you don't need to press Enter or close it manually. After sign-in it sends one short warm-up message that mints the chat token and passes Cloudflare's "verify you're human" check in the same step (a brief "finishing setup…" appears, and a tiny throwaway chat lands in your history). If a checkbox shows up, click it in that login window. The steps are logged to session/login.log if anything goes wrong. That's it: your session is saved under session/ (git-ignored, never shared) and reused on every run β€” so your first request works right away.

πŸ› οΈ Run into trouble during setup or your first run? Head to the Troubleshooting section, the bundled diagnostic both fixes common issues (captcha/clearance) and logs a shareable report.


Run with Docker (optional)

Prefer a container? You can run the OpenAI-compatible server in Docker once you've signed in.

Sign in on the host first. The login step above opens a visible browser, which can't run inside the headless container β€” so run python -m copilot login on your host to populate session/. The container mounts that folder and reuses the Cloudflare clearance earned on the host. It refreshes the chat token headlessly, but it can't earn fresh clearance without a visible browser, so when clearance expires (~30 min) it returns a 503 β€” re-run python -m copilot login on the host to refresh session/.

docker compose up --build
# -> Copilot OpenAI-compatible API on http://localhost:8000

The docker-compose.yml maps port 8000 and bind-mounts your session/ so the login persists across restarts. Tune RATE_LIMIT_RPM / RATE_LIMIT_BURST there. To run without Compose, build and pass the same bindings by hand:

docker build -t windows-copilot-api .
docker run --rm -p 8000:8000 -v "$(pwd)/session:/app/session" windows-copilot-api

Usage 1: In Python (no server)

The simplest way if your code is already Python.

from copilot import CopilotClient

client = CopilotClient()                 # loads your signed-in session

# Get a full reply
reply = client.chat("Say hello in one short sentence.")
print(reply.text)

# Continue the SAME conversation β€” pass the id back
reply2 = client.chat("And now in French?", reply.conversation_id)
print(reply2.text)

# Stream the answer as it's typed
for chunk in client.stream("Tell me a short joke"):
    print(chunk, end="", flush=True)

chat() returns the full text plus a conversation_id; pass that id back to keep the thread going, or omit it to start fresh. stream() yields the reply piece by piece.

πŸ‘‰ More: examples/01_direct_chat.py, 02_direct_conversation.py, 03_direct_stream.py


Usage 2: As an OpenAI-compatible server

Start a local server that speaks the OpenAI API, so existing OpenAI tools and SDKs work unchanged.

python app.py
# -> Copilot OpenAI-compatible API on http://127.0.0.1:8000

Then point any OpenAI client at it (the API key is required by the SDK but ignored):

from openai import OpenAI

client = OpenAI(base_url="http://localhost:8000/v1", api_key="unused")

resp = client.chat.completions.create(
    model="copilot",
    messages=[{"role": "user", "content": "Hello!"}],
)
print(resp.choices[0].message.content)

Or call it with plain HTTP / curl:

curl http://localhost:8000/v1/chat/completions \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"messages": [{"role": "user", "content": "Hello!"}]}'

Endpoints

Method Path Description
POST /v1/chat/completions Chat (supports "stream": true and an optional "conversation_id")
GET /v1/models Lists the single copilot model

Change the address with env vars: HOST=0.0.0.0 PORT=8080 python app.py, or run uvicorn server.api:app --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8080.

πŸ‘‰ More: examples/04_server_http.py, 05_server_stream.py, 06_server_openai_sdk.py


Command line

python -m copilot login          # sign in and save the session
python -m copilot ask "Hello!"   # quick one-shot question

Cloudflare clearance (automatic)

Copilot's chat sits behind Cloudflare. Access needs a cf_clearance cookie, earned by passing a "verify you're human" check in a real browser, and it lasts about half an hour. The bridge handles this for you:

  • At sign-in: python -m copilot login earns clearance as part of the same warm-up that mints your token, so your first request works immediately. If Cloudflare shows a checkbox, click it in the login window.
  • When it expires: if a later request hits the gate, the bridge opens a browser, passes the check (the checkbox is clicked automatically, or you click it if one appears), and retries the request for you. You'll see a short [copilot] clearance: … progress log, then the answer.

On a trusted connection the check often passes invisibly with no window at all. A datacenter/VPN IP is stricter and more likely to show the checkbox; a residential connection clears most reliably.

The server never opens a window: when clearance expires it returns a 503 (type: "clearance_required"). Re-clear out of band with python -m copilot login, then retry.


Concurrency & stress test

The server bridges a single signed-in Copilot account, and Copilot's chat socket doesn't tolerate concurrent conversations from one process. So the server serializes upstream calls: parallel HTTP requests queue behind a lock and run one at a time (see server/api.py). This is intentional, and it means throughput is sequential, not parallel.

You can measure where it breaks with the included stress test, which fires a batch of simultaneous requests and doubles the batch size every successful round until the first error:

# Start the server in one terminal
python app.py

# Ramp concurrency in another (1 β†’ 2 β†’ 4 β†’ 8 β†’ …)
python tests/stress.py
python tests/stress.py --max 64 --timeout 120 --url http://localhost:8000

Sample run (one signed-in account):

Concurrency Result Wall time Latency (min / median / max)
1 βœ“ all ok 3.7s 3.7 / 3.7 / 3.7s
2 βœ“ all ok 4.6s 3.4 / 4.6 / 4.6s
4 βœ“ all ok 8.3s 3.7 / 6.7 / 8.3s
8 βœ— 1 failed (HTTP 502) 13.3s 3.5 / 9.7 / 13.3s

Highest fully-successful concurrency: 4. Wall time roughly doubles each round while minimum latency stays flat (~3.5s) β€” the signature of a serialized queue: one request runs immediately, the rest wait their turn. The failure at 8 is an upstream 502 (Copilot rejecting requests under load), not a server crash or timeout β€” so the exact break point is flaky and may vary between runs.

Takeaway: keep concurrent in-flight requests low (β‰ˆ 1–4). This is a personal bridge, not a high-throughput gateway β€” and please don't hammer your account.


Rate limiting

Concurrency (above) is how many at once; the rate limit is how many per minute, sustained. Microsoft publishes none for consumer Copilot, so the bridge enforces a self-imposed one with a token bucket: it caps accepted requests per minute and returns a standard 429 + Retry-After when you exceed it. Two env vars tune it:

Env var Default Meaning
RATE_LIMIT_RPM 12 Requests/minute the bridge accepts. 0 disables the limit.
RATE_LIMIT_BURST 4 How many requests may go back-to-back before pacing kicks in.
RATE_LIMIT_RPM=20 RATE_LIMIT_BURST=5 python app.py   # raise it; 0 to disable

The default 12 rpm sits safely below the ~15 rpm where a single account starts seeing upstream 502s. To find your ceiling, run the server with the limiter off (RATE_LIMIT_RPM=0) and push the probe until failures appear:

python tests/ratelimit.py --rpm 20 --minutes 3

On the client side, use exponential backoff. Both 429 (bridge limit) and the occasional 502 (Copilot upstream hiccup) are transient β€” retry with growing delays (e.g. 1s, 2s, 4s) and they almost always clear. The official openai SDK does this automatically and honours Retry-After; with plain HTTP, add a few retries yourself.


Project layout

Path What it does
copilot/ The core library: CopilotClient, auth, browser sign-in, HTTP driver
server/ The FastAPI OpenAI-compatible server
examples/ Runnable examples for every feature (examples/README.md)
tests/ Test scripts: the concurrency stress test (tests/stress.py) and the diagnostic & report tool (tests/diagnostic.py)
app.py Starts the server

Notes & limitations

  • Sign in once, then reuse. The cached token refreshes automatically; you only re-sign-in if the session fully expires.
  • No daily limit, but be reasonable. Microsoft doesn't impose a daily chat cap, but please use it in moderation, and don't spam or hammer it with automated bulk requests.
  • One model. Copilot has no model picker, so the server advertises a single model named copilot.
  • Roughly GPT-4 class. On GPQA Diamond (198 graduate-level questions, closed-book) it scores 40.9%, which puts it in the GPT-4 family rather than the reasoning tier (o1/o3). Measured with tests/gpqa_bench.py.
  • Your session is private. Everything in session/ (cookies + token) stays on your machine and is git-ignored.

Troubleshooting

Cloudflare clearance is handled automatically (see above), so most "verify you're human" issues clear themselves. If a request still fails, run the diagnostic β€” it refreshes the session and writes a shareable report.

python tests/diagnostic.py                # browser capture + report
python tests/diagnostic.py --report-only  # headless/VPS: report only, no browser

The default run opens your signed-in browser and asks you to send one short message. That single action:

  • Refreshes clearance: it drives a real browser on the same session/profile/ the bridge uses, so passing any "verify you're human" check earns a fresh cf_clearance cookie, then snapshots the session (cookies + token) into session/token.json for the pure-HTTP driver to adopt.
  • Captures the protocol to session/ws_capture.log. A clean turn goes setOptions β†’ send β†’ appendText… β†’ done; a {"event":"challenge", "method":"cloudflare",…} frame means Cloudflare gated the turn.

It also writes session/diagnostic_report.txt β€” environment, the shape of your session (cookie names + token length, never the values), a live chat probe, and redacted log tails. Both files are safe to share: access tokens, cookies, OAuth codes, and emails are redacted before anything is written. Attach diagnostic_report.txt to a GitHub issue (skim it first) and the cause is usually obvious.

On a headless server/VPS you can't open a browser, so clearance can't be earned there β€” pass --report-only, and do the clearance step on a machine with a display (or route traffic through a residential connection, e.g. a home-PC exit node), since datacenter IPs are where Cloudflare is strictest.


Collaboration & support

Need a hand getting this running? Open a GitHub issue for bugs (for setup/auth problems, attach the redacted diagnostic_report.txt from python tests/diagnostic.py), start a discussion to share ideas, or send a pull request.

And if you're working on something interesting, or looking for someone to build it, I'm always open to a chat. Feel free to reach out:


License

Released under the MIT License. As this is an unofficial project, you remain responsible for complying with Microsoft's terms of service.


Star History

Star History Chart

About

Reverse engineered Windows Copilot into an OpenAI-compatible API. Access GPT-4 and GPT-5 models through a simple REST interface without API keys or billing.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

 
 
 

Contributors