- Did not update details that impact GC execution. Meaning packages are still named gemini-code (for now) and things that import them still import them as gemini-code.
New keybindings in the main input prompt (when auto-suggestions are not active):
- `Ctrl+L`: Clears the entire screen.
- `Ctrl+A`: Moves the cursor to the beginning of the current input line.
- `Ctrl+E`: Moves the cursor to the end of the current input line.
- `Ctrl+P`: Navigates to the previous command in the input history.
- `Ctrl+N`: Navigates to the next command in the input history.
In the multiline text editor (e.g., when editing a previous message):
- `Ctrl+K`: Deletes text from the current cursor position to the end of the line ("kill line right").
- When larger confirmations were shown and then declined you'd typicaly get large chunks of content flickering upon typing or sending a subsequent request. This was primarily due to us leaving the latest confirmation as "updateable" / pending. This changeset addresses that by flushing any pending confirmation to the static container.
Part of https://b.corp.google.com/issues/414196943
This change introduces a User-Agent header to all API requests made by the Gemini CLI.
The User-Agent string includes the CLI version, Node.js version, operating system, and architecture. This will help in tracking usage and identifying potential issues.
Fixes https://b.corp.google.com/issues/416353675
Signed-off-by: Gemini
Implements robust error handling for Gemini API calls, integrating with the centralized error reporting system.
- API errors are now caught and reported to dedicated log files, providing detailed diagnostics without cluttering the user interface.
- A concise error message is surfaced to the user in the UI, indicating an API issue.
- Ensures any pending UI updates are processed before an API error is displayed.
This change improves our ability to diagnose API-related problems by capturing rich error context centrally, while maintaining a clean user experience.
Signed-off-by: Gemini <YourFriendlyNeighborhoodAI@example.com>
- We now solely use the shell tool. This deletes all content around the legacy terminal tool so we can focus on improving the new Shell tool.
- Remove instances from sandboxing, tests, utilities etc.
- Upon decline / cancellation we weren't showing the model the cancellation status or states. Therefore it didn't know why things would or wouldn't happen
Fixes https://b.corp.google.com/issues/416797704
- Plumbed abort signals through to tools
- Updated the shell tool to properly cancel active requests by killing the entire child process tree of the underlying shell process and then report that the shell itself was canceled.
Fixes https://b.corp.google.com/issues/416829935
- We were console.erroring, throwing and early aborting. Instead we now treat cancels like a normal user message and show an indicator in the UI
Fixes https://b.corp.google.com/issues/416515841
- This change addresses and resolves an infinite loop. The patch ensures the loop condition is correctly handled, preventing its recurrence.
- Added tests for markdownUtilities.test.ts
Fixes: https://b.corp.google.com/issues/416795337
Signed-off-by: Gemini <My circuits hummed, and the loop was no more.>
Modify to return a boolean instead of throwing an error when a theme is not found. Update CLI startup and hook to handle the boolean return value for more graceful error handling.
- Removed `build:package` in favor of `npm run build`.
- The regular build does extra work to copy over relevant information into the `dist` dir. Alternatively without this we get a `dist` dir in the `cli` folder that has no seatbelt packaging.
Fixes https://b.corp.google.com/issues/416634356
Previously, if a theme specified in the user's settings was not found, the CLI would crash during startup. This was particularly affecting users upgrading from older versions as the "ANSI colors only" theme was renamed to "ANSI".
This commit adds error handling to catch the theme not found error during initial loading and when setting themes later. Instead of crashing, the application now logs a warning, displays an error message in the UI, and opens the theme selection dialog to allow the user to choose a valid theme.