8.1 KiB
How to Contribute
We would love to accept your patches and contributions to this project.
Before you begin
Sign our Contributor License Agreement
Contributions to this project must be accompanied by a Contributor License Agreement (CLA). You (or your employer) retain the copyright to your contribution; this simply gives us permission to use and redistribute your contributions as part of the project.
If you or your current employer have already signed the Google CLA (even if it was for a different project), you probably don't need to do it again.
Visit https://cla.developers.google.com/ to see your current agreements or to sign a new one.
Review our Community Guidelines
This project follows Google's Open Source Community Guidelines.
Contribution Process
Code Reviews
All submissions, including submissions by project members, require review. We use GitHub pull requests for this purpose.
Development Setup and Workflow
This section guides contributors on how to build, modify, and understand the development setup of this project.
Setting Up the Development Environment
Prerequisites:
- Install Node 18+
- Git
Build Process
To clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli.git # Or your fork's URL
cd gemini-cli
To install dependencies defined in package.json
as well as root dependencies:
npm install
To build the entire project (all packages):
npm run build
This command typically compiles TypeScript to JavaScript, bundles assets, and prepares the packages for execution. Refer to scripts/build.sh
and package.json
scripts for more details on what happens during the build.
Enabling Sandboxing
Container-based sandboxing is highly recommended and requires, at a minimum, setting GEMINI_SANDBOX=true
in your ~/.env
and ensuring a container engine (e.g. docker
or podmand
) is available. See Sandboxing for details.
To build both the gemini
CLI utility and the sandbox container, run build:all
from the root directory:
npm run build:all
To skip building the sandbox container, you can use npm run build
instead.
Running
To start the Gemini CLI from the source code (after building), run the following command from the root directory:
npm start
If you’d like to run the source build outside of the gemini-cli folder you can utilize npm link path/to/gemini-cli/packages/cli
(see: docs) or alias gemini="node path/to/gemini-cli/packages/cli"
to run with gemini
Running Tests
To execute the test suite for the project:
npm run test
This will run tests located in the packages/core
and packages/cli
directories. Ensure tests pass before submitting any changes.
Linting and Preflight Checks
To ensure code quality, formatting consistency, and run final checks before committing:
npm run preflight
This command usually runs ESLint, Prettier, and potentially other checks as defined in the project's package.json
.
Formatting
To separately format the code in this project by running the following command from the root directory:
npm run format
This command uses Prettier to format the code according to the project's style guidelines.
Linting
To separately lint the code in this project, run the following command fro the root directory:
npm run lint
Coding Conventions
- Please adhere to the coding style, patterns, and conventions used throughout the existing codebase.
- Consult GEMINI.md (typically found in the project root) for specific instructions related to AI-assisted development, including conventions for React, comments, and Git usage.
- Imports: Pay special attention to import paths. The project uses
eslint-rules/no-relative-cross-package-imports.js
to enforce restrictions on relative imports between packages.
Project Structure
packages/
: Contains the individual sub-packages of the project.cli/
: The command-line interface.server/
: The backend server that the CLI interacts with.
docs/
: Contains all project documentation.scripts/
: Utility scripts for building, testing, and development tasks.
For more detailed architecture, see docs/architecture.md
.
Debugging
VS Code:
- Start the CLI in debug mode from the root directory:
This command runsnpm run debug
node --inspect-brk dist/gemini.js
within thepackages/cli
directory, pausing execution until a debugger attaches. You can then openchrome://inspect
in your Chrome browser to connect to the debugger. - In VS Code, use the "Attach" launch configuration (found in
.vscode/launch.json
).
Alternatively, you can use the "Launch Program" configuration in VS Code if you prefer to launch the currently open file directly, but the "Attach" method is generally recommended for debugging the main CLI entry point.
To hit a breakpoint inside the sandbox container run:
DEBUG=1 gemini
React DevTools
To debug the CLI's React-based UI, you can use React DevTools. Ink, the library used for the CLI's interface, is compatible with React DevTools version 4.x.
-
Start the Gemini CLI in development mode:
DEV=true npm start
-
Install and run React DevTools version 4.28.5 (or the latest compatible 4.x version):
You can either install it globally:
npm install -g react-devtools@4.28.5 react-devtools
Or run it directly using npx:
npx react-devtools@4.28.5
Your running CLI application should then connect to React DevTools.
Sandboxing
MacOS Seatbelt
On MacOS, gemini
uses Seatbelt (sandbox-exec
) under a minimal
profile (see packages/cli/src/utils/sandbox-macos-minimal.sb
) that restricts writes to the project folder but otherwise allows all other operations by default. You can switch to a strict
profile (see .../sandbox-macos-strict.sb
) that declines operations by default by setting SEATBELT_PROFILE=strict
in your environment or .env
file. You can also switch to a custom profile SEATBELT_PROFILE=<profile>
if you also create a file .gemini/sandbox-macos-<profile>.sb
under your project settings directory .gemini
.
Container-based Sandboxing (All Platforms)
For stronger container-based sandboxing on MacOS or other platforms, you can set GEMINI_SANDBOX=true|docker|podman|<command>
in your environment or .env
file. The specified command (or if true
then either docker
or podman
) must be installed on the host machine. Once enabled, npm run build:all
will build a minimal container ("sandbox") image and npm start
will launch inside a fresh instance of that container. The first build can take 20-30s (mostly due to downloading of the base image) but after that both build and start overhead should be minimal. Default builds (npm run build
) will not rebuild the sandbox.
Container-based sandboxing mounts the project directory (and system temp directory) with read-write access and is started/stopped/removed automatically as you start/stop Gemini CLI. Files created within the sandbox should be automatically mapped to your user/group on host machine. You can easily specify additional mounts, ports, or environment variables by setting SANDBOX_{MOUNTS,PORTS,ENV}
as needed. You can also fully customize the sandbox for your projects by creating the files .gemini/sandbox.Dockerfile
and/or .gemini/sandbox.bashrc
under your project settings directory (.gemini
) and running gemini
with BUILD_SANDBOX=1
to trigger building of your custom sandbox.
Manual Publish
We publish an artifact for each commit to our internal registry. But if you need to manually cut a local build, then run the following commands:
npm run clean
npm install
npm run auth
npm run prerelease:dev
npm publish --workspaces