Gemini CLI Core
Gemini CLI’s core package (packages/core) is the backend portion of Gemini
CLI, handling communication with the Gemini API, managing tools, and processing
requests sent from packages/cli. For a general overview of Gemini CLI, see the
main documentation page.
Navigating this section
Section titled “Navigating this section”- Core tools API: Information on how tools are defined, registered, and used by the core.
- Memory Import Processor: Documentation for the modular GEMINI.md import feature using @file.md syntax.
- Policy Engine: Use the Policy Engine for fine-grained control over tool execution.
Role of the core
Section titled “Role of the core”While the packages/cli portion of Gemini CLI provides the user interface,
packages/core is responsible for:
- Gemini API interaction: Securely communicating with the Google Gemini API, sending user prompts, and receiving model responses.
- Prompt engineering: Constructing effective prompts for the Gemini model,
potentially incorporating conversation history, tool definitions, and
instructional context from
GEMINI.mdfiles. - Tool management & orchestration:
- Registering available tools (e.g., file system tools, shell command execution).
- Interpreting tool use requests from the Gemini model.
- Executing the requested tools with the provided arguments.
- Returning tool execution results to the Gemini model for further processing.
- Session and state management: Keeping track of the conversation state, including history and any relevant context required for coherent interactions.
- Configuration: Managing core-specific configurations, such as API key access, model selection, and tool settings.
Security considerations
Section titled “Security considerations”The core plays a vital role in security:
- API key management: It handles the
GEMINI_API_KEYand ensures it’s used securely when communicating with the Gemini API. - Tool execution: When tools interact with the local system (e.g.,
run_shell_command), the core (and its underlying tool implementations) must do so with appropriate caution, often involving sandboxing mechanisms to prevent unintended modifications.
Chat history compression
Section titled “Chat history compression”To ensure that long conversations don’t exceed the token limits of the Gemini model, the core includes a chat history compression feature.
When a conversation approaches the token limit for the configured model, the core automatically compresses the conversation history before sending it to the model. This compression is designed to be lossless in terms of the information conveyed, but it reduces the overall number of tokens used.
You can find the token limits for each model in the Google AI documentation.
Model fallback
Section titled “Model fallback”Gemini CLI includes a model fallback mechanism to ensure that you can continue to use the CLI even if the default “pro” model is rate-limited.
If you are using the default “pro” model and the CLI detects that you are being rate-limited, it automatically switches to the “flash” model for the current session. This allows you to continue working without interruption.
File discovery service
Section titled “File discovery service”The file discovery service is responsible for finding files in the project that
are relevant to the current context. It is used by the @ command and other
tools that need to access files.
Memory discovery service
Section titled “Memory discovery service”The memory discovery service is responsible for finding and loading the
GEMINI.md files that provide context to the model. It searches for these files
in a hierarchical manner, starting from the current working directory and moving
up to the project root and the user’s home directory. It also searches in
subdirectories.
This allows you to have global, project-level, and component-level context files, which are all combined to provide the model with the most relevant information.
You can use the /memory command to show, add, and
refresh the content of loaded GEMINI.md files.
Citations
Section titled “Citations”When Gemini finds it is reciting text from a source it appends the citation to the output. It is enabled by default but can be disabled with the ui.showCitations setting.
- When proposing an edit the citations display before giving the user the option to accept.
- Citations are always shown at the end of the model’s turn.
- We deduplicate citations and display them in alphabetical order.