# Gemini CLI Architecture Overview This document provides a high-level overview of the Gemini CLI's architecture. Understanding the main components and their interactions can be helpful for both users and developers. ## Core Components The Gemini CLI is primarily composed of two main packages, along with a suite of tools that the system utilizes: 1. **CLI Package (`packages/cli`):** - **Purpose:** This is the user-facing component. It provides the interactive command-line interface (REPL), handles user input, displays output from Gemini, and manages the overall user experience. - **Key Features:** - Input processing (parsing commands, text prompts). - History management. - Display rendering (including Markdown, code highlighting, and tool messages). - Theme and UI customization. - Communication with the Server package. - Manages user configuration settings specific to the CLI. 2. **Server Package (`packages/server`):** - **Purpose:** This acts as the backend for the CLI. It receives requests from the CLI, orchestrates interactions with the Gemini API, and manages the execution of available tools. - **Key Features:** - API client for communicating with the Google Gemini API. - Prompt construction and management. - Tool registration and execution logic. - State management for conversations or sessions. - Manages server-side configuration. 3. **Tools (`packages/server/src/tools/`):** - **Purpose:** These are individual modules that extend the capabilities of the Gemini model, allowing it to interact with the local environment (e.g., file system, shell commands, web fetching). - **Interaction:** The Server package invokes these tools based on requests from the Gemini model. The CLI then displays the results of tool execution. ## Interaction Flow A typical interaction with the Gemini CLI follows this general flow: 1. **User Input:** The user types a prompt or command into the CLI (`packages/cli`). 2. **Request to Server:** The CLI package sends the user's input to the Server package (`packages/server`). 3. **Server Processes Request:** The Server package: - Constructs an appropriate prompt for the Gemini API, possibly including conversation history and available tool definitions. - Sends the prompt to the Gemini API. 4. **Gemini API Response:** The Gemini API processes the prompt and returns a response. This response might be a direct answer or a request to use one of the available tools. 5. **Tool Execution (if applicable):** - If the Gemini API requests a tool, the Server package prepares to execute it. - **User Confirmation for Potentially Impactful Tools:** If the requested tool can modify the file system (e.g., file edits, writes) or execute shell commands, the CLI (`packages/cli`) displays a confirmation prompt to the user. This prompt details the tool and its arguments, and the user must approve the execution. Read-only operations (e.g., reading files, listing directories) may not always require this explicit confirmation step. - If confirmed (or if confirmation is not required for the specific tool), the Server package identifies and executes the relevant tool (e.g., `read_file`, `execute_bash_command`). - The tool performs its action (e.g., reads a file from the disk). - The result of the tool execution is sent back to the Gemini API by the Server. - The Gemini API processes the tool result and generates a final response. 6. **Response to CLI:** The Server package sends the final response (or intermediate tool messages) back to the CLI package. 7. **Display to User:** The CLI package formats and displays the response to the user in the terminal. ## Diagram (Conceptual) ```mermaid graph TD User[User via Terminal] -- Input --> CLI[packages/cli] CLI -- Request --> Server[packages/server] Server -- Prompt/Tool Info --> GeminiAPI[Gemini API] GeminiAPI -- Response/Tool Call --> Server Server -- Tool Details --> CLI CLI -- User Confirms --> Server Server -- Execute Tool --> Tools[Tools e.g., read_file, shell] Tools -- Tool Result --> Server Server -- Final Response --> CLI CLI -- Output --> User ``` ## Key Design Principles - **Modularity:** Separating the CLI (frontend) from the Server (backend) allows for independent development and potential future extensions (e.g., different frontends for the same server). - **Extensibility:** The tool system is designed to be extensible, allowing new capabilities to be added. - **User Experience:** The CLI focuses on providing a rich and interactive terminal experience. This overview should provide a foundational understanding of the Gemini CLI's architecture. For more detailed information, refer to the specific documentation for each package and the development guides.