Related to https://b.corp.google.com/issues/423605555 - I figured this might be a simpler solution to start with, while still also being useful on its own even if we do implement that.
Similar to ctrl+c, ctrl+d can now be used to exit the program. To avoid accidental exit, ctrl+d must be pressed twice in relatively quick succession (same as ctrl+c).
Following common UX pattern, ctrl+d will be ignored when the input prompt is non-empty. This behavior is similar to how most shell (bash/zsh) behaves. To support this, I had to refactor so that text buffer is initialized outside of the InputPrompt component and instead do it on the main App component to allow input controller to have access to check the content of the text buffer.
Changes:
- Ensure proper shutdown in non-interactive mode
- Ensures the initial user prompt is logged in non-interactive mode
- Improve telemetry for streaming - handle chunks and input token count is now alongside other token counts in response
To test:
- Follow instructions in https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli/blob/main/docs/core/telemetry.md#google-cloud
- Run CLI in non-interactive mode and observe logs/metrics in GCP Logs Explorer and Metrics Explorer
#750
Add the user's decision (accept, reject, modify) to tool call telemetry to better understand user intent. The decision provides crucial context to the `success` metric, as a user can reject a call that would have succeeded or accept one that fails.
Also prettify the arguments json.
Example:

#750
This commit refactors the telemetry system to pass a object to various logging and metrics functions. This change centralizes configuration management within the telemetry system, making it more modular and easier to maintain.
The constructor and various tool execution functions have been updated to accept the object, which is then passed down to the telemetry functions. This eliminates the need to pass individual configuration values, such as , through multiple layers of the application.
Adds a test case to `settings.test.ts` to specifically verify
the correct resolution of multiple environment variables concatenated
within a single string value (e.g., ${HOST}:${PORT} ).
Refactors the `resolveEnvVarsInObject` function in settings to
explicitly handle primitive types (null, undefined, boolean, number)
at the beginning of the function. This clarifies the logic for
subsequent string, array, and object processing.
This commit introduces the ability to use system environment variables
within the settings files (e.g., `settings.json`). Users can now
reference environment variables using the `${VAR_NAME}` syntax.
This enhancement improves security and flexibility, particularly
for configurations like MCP server settings, which often require
sensitive tokens.
Previously, to configure an MCP server, a token might be directly
embedded:
```json
"mcpServers": {
"github": {
"env": {
"GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN": "pat_abc123"
}
// ...
}
}
```
With this change, the same configuration can securely reference an
environment variable:
```json
"mcpServers": {
"github": {
"env": {
"GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN": "${GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN}"
}
// ...
}
}
```
This allows users to avoid storing secrets directly in configuration files.
Address multiple possible memory leaks found bystatic analysis of the codebase. The primary source of the leaks was event listeners on child processes and global objects that were not being properly removed, potentially causing their closures to be retained in memory indefinitely particularly for processes that did not exit.
There are two commits. A larger one made by gemini CLI and a smaller one by me to make sure we always disconnect child processes as part of the cleanup methods. These changes may not actually fix any leaks but do look like reasonable defensive coding to avoid leaking event listeners or child processes.
The following files were fixed:
This is Gemini's somewhat overconfident description of what it did.
packages/core/src/tools/shell.ts: Fixed a leak where an abortSignal listener was not being reliably removed.
packages/cli/src/utils/readStdin.ts: Fixed a significant leak where listeners on process.stdin were never removed.
packages/cli/src/utils/sandbox.ts: Fixed leaks in the imageExists and pullImage helper functions where listeners on spawned child processes were not being removed.
packages/core/src/tools/grep.ts: Fixed three separate leaks in the isCommandAvailable check and the git grep and system grep strategies due to un-removed listeners on child processes.
packages/core/src/tools/tool-registry.ts: Corrected a leak in the execute method of the DiscoveredTool class where listeners on the spawned tool process were not being removed.
# Add .gitignore-Aware File Filtering to gemini-cli
This pull request introduces .gitignore-based file filtering to the gemini-cli, ensuring that git-ignored files are automatically excluded from file-related operations and suggestions throughout the CLI. The update enhances usability, reduces noise from build artifacts and dependencies, and provides new configuration options for fine-tuning file discovery.
Key Improvements
.gitignore File Filtering
All @ (at) commands, file completions, and core discovery tools now honor .gitignore patterns by default.
Git-ignored files (such as node_modules/, dist/, .env, and .git) are excluded from results unless explicitly overridden.
The behavior can be customized via a new fileFiltering section in settings.json, including options for:
Turning .gitignore respect on/off.
Adding custom ignore patterns.
Allowing or excluding build artifacts.
Configuration & Documentation Updates
settings.json schema extended with fileFiltering options.
Documentation updated to explain new filtering controls and usage patterns.
Testing
New and updated integration/unit tests for file filtering logic, configuration merging, and edge cases.
Test coverage ensures .gitignore filtering works as intended across different workflows.
Internal Refactoring
Core file discovery logic refactored for maintainability and extensibility.
Underlying tools (ls, glob, read-many-files) now support git-aware filtering out of the box.
Co-authored-by: N. Taylor Mullen <ntaylormullen@google.com>
- Introduces a suite of tests for the hook, covering various scenarios including:
- Successful tool execution
- Tool not found errors
- Errors during
- Errors during tool execution
- Tool confirmation (approved and cancelled) - (currently skipped)
- Live output updates - (currently skipped)
- Cancellation of tool calls (before execution and during approval) - (currently skipped)
- Execution of multiple tool calls
- Preventing scheduling while other calls are running - (currently skipped)
- Includes tests for the utility function to ensure correct mapping of tool call states to display objects.
- Mocks dependencies like , , and individual instances.
- Uses fake timers to control asynchronous operations.
Note: Some tests involving complex asynchronous interactions (confirmations, live output, cancellations) are currently skipped due to challenges in reliably testing these scenarios with the current setup. These will be addressed in future work.
This change introduces a small delay after the first Ctrl+C press, prompting the user to press Ctrl+C again to exit. This helps prevent accidental termination of the application.
- Added `exitOnCtrlC={false}` to the Ink render options in `gemini.tsx` to enable custom Ctrl+C handling.
- Implemented logic in `App.tsx` to:
- Display "Press Ctrl+C again to exit." for 2 seconds after the first Ctrl+C.
- Exit the application if Ctrl+C is pressed again during this period.
- Revert to normal operation if the second Ctrl+C is not pressed within the timeout.
- Defined a constant `CTRL_C_PROMPT_DURATION_MS` for the timeout duration.
This change detects the most recent git commit short hash and writes it to the `GIT_COMMIT_INFO` constant in `packages/cli/src/generated/git-commit.sh`, optionally appending the string "(local modifications)" if additional local changes after that commit are detected.
If set, this string is displayed in the `/about` dialog as well as passed into the `/bug` template.
Example:
```
> /about
╭───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╮
│ │
│ About Gemini CLI │
│ │
│ CLI Version development │
│ Git Commit 43370ab (local modifications) │
│ Model gemini-2.5-pro-preview-05-06 │
│ Sandbox sandbox-exec (minimal) │
│ OS darwin v23.11.0 │
│ │
╰───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╯
```
Additionally, this change updates `.gitignore` to ignore the generated files, `scripts/clean.sh` to remove them, and adds a `npm run generate` stage for this and any other generators we need to write.
- Implements cancellation for Gemini requests while they are actively being processed by the model.
- Extends cancellation support to the logic within tools. This allows users to cancel operations during the phase where the system is determining if a tool execution requires user confirmation, which can include potentially long-running pre-flight checks or LLM-based corrections.
- Underlying LLM calls for edit corrections (within and ) and next speaker checks can now also be cancelled.
- Previously, cancellation of the main request was not possible until text started streaming, and pre-execution checks were not cancellable.
- This change leverages the updated SDK's ability to accept an abort token and threads s throughout the request, tool execution, and pre-execution check lifecycle.
Fixes https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli/issues/531
- Copied the `Chat` class from `@google/genai` into `packages/server/src/core/geminiChat.ts`.
- This change is in preparation for future modifications to the chat handling logic.
- Updated relevant files to use the new `GeminiChat` class.
Part of https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli/issues/551
- Introduced a 'validating' state for tool calls to prevent the input box from reappearing while waiting for a tool's `shouldConfirmExecute` method to complete.
- When a tool call is initiated, it's now immediately set to a 'validating' status. This ensures the UI remains in a busy/responding state.
- `useGeminiStream` now considers the 'validating' state as part of `StreamingState.Responding`.
- `useToolScheduler` has been updated to:
- Set the initial status of new tool calls to 'validating'.
- Asynchronously perform the `shouldConfirmExecute` check.
- Transition to 'awaiting_approval' or 'scheduled' based on the check's outcome.
- This resolves an issue where a slow `shouldConfirmExecute` could lead to the input prompt becoming active again before the tool call lifecycle was fully determined. While 'validating' is currently treated similarly to 'executing' in the UI, this new state provides a foundation for more customized user experiences during this phase in the future.
Fixes https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli/issues/527
Increases the threshold for rendering diff separators in the CLI's diff display. Previously, a separator was shown for gaps of more than one context line, leading to excessive separators in diffs with many small changes close together (Issue #534).
By increasing `MAX_CONTEXT_LINES_WITHOUT_GAP` to 5, we allow for more context lines before a separator is added, significantly reducing visual clutter in such diffs.
Added a test case to `DiffRenderer.test.tsx` to verify that separators are not rendered for small gaps within the new threshold.
No intentional different behavior aside for tweaks suggested from the code review of #506 Refactor: Extract console message logic to custom hook
This commit refactors the console message handling from App.tsx into a new custom hook useConsoleMessages.
This change improves the testability of the console message logic and declutters the main App component.
Created useConsoleMessages.ts to encapsulate console message state and update logic.
Updated App.tsx to utilize the new useConsoleMessages hook.
Added unit tests for useConsoleMessages.ts to ensure its functionality.
I deleted and started over on LoadingIndicator.test.tsx as I spent way too much time trying to fix it before just regenerating the tests as the code was easier to write tests for from scratch and the existing tests were not that good (I added them in the previous pull request).