# Extension reference This guide covers the `gemini extensions` commands and the structure of the `gemini-extension.json` configuration file. ## Manage extensions Use the `gemini extensions` command group to manage your extensions from the terminal. Note that commands like `gemini extensions install` are not supported within the CLI's interactive mode. However, you can use the `/extensions list` command to view installed extensions. All management operations, including updates to slash commands, take effect only after you restart the CLI session. ### Install an extension Install an extension by providing its GitHub repository URL or a local file path. Gemini CLI creates a copy of the extension during installation. You must run `gemini extensions update` to pull changes from the source. To install from GitHub, you must have `git` installed on your machine. ```bash gemini extensions install [--ref ] [--auto-update] [--pre-release] [--consent] ``` - ``: The GitHub URL or local path of the extension. - `--ref`: The git ref (branch, tag, or commit) to install. - `--auto-update`: Enable automatic updates for this extension. - `--pre-release`: Enable installation of pre-release versions. - `--consent`: Acknowledge security risks and skip the confirmation prompt. ### Uninstall an extension To uninstall one or more extensions, use the `uninstall` command: ```bash gemini extensions uninstall ``` ### Disable an extension Extensions are enabled globally by default. You can disable an extension entirely or for a specific workspace. ```bash gemini extensions disable [--scope ] ``` - ``: The name of the extension to disable. - `--scope`: The scope to disable the extension in (`user` or `workspace`). ### Enable an extension Re-enable a disabled extension using the `enable` command: ```bash gemini extensions enable [--scope ] ``` - ``: The name of the extension to enable. - `--scope`: The scope to enable the extension in (`user` or `workspace`). ### Update an extension Update an extension to the version specified in its `gemini-extension.json` file. ```bash gemini extensions update ``` To update all installed extensions at once: ```bash gemini extensions update --all ``` ### Create an extension from a template Create a new extension directory using a built-in template. ```bash gemini extensions new [template] ``` - ``: The directory to create. - `[template]`: The template to use (e.g., `mcp-server`, `context`, `custom-commands`). ### Link a local extension Create a symbolic link between your development directory and the Gemini CLI extensions directory. This lets you test changes immediately without reinstalling. ```bash gemini extensions link ``` ## Extension format Gemini CLI loads extensions from `/.gemini/extensions`. Each extension must have a `gemini-extension.json` file in its root directory. ### `gemini-extension.json` The manifest file defines the extension's behavior and configuration. ```json { "name": "my-extension", "version": "1.0.0", "description": "My awesome extension", "mcpServers": { "my-server": { "command": "node", "args": ["${extensionPath}/my-server.js"], "cwd": "${extensionPath}" } }, "contextFileName": "GEMINI.md", "excludeTools": ["run_shell_command"], "migratedTo": "https://github.com/new-owner/new-extension-repo", "plan": { "directory": ".gemini/plans" } } ``` - `name`: The name of the extension. This is used to uniquely identify the extension and for conflict resolution when extension commands have the same name as user or project commands. The name should be lowercase or numbers and use dashes instead of underscores or spaces. This is how users will refer to your extension in the CLI. Note that we expect this name to match the extension directory name. - `version`: The version of the extension. - `description`: A short description of the extension. This will be displayed on [geminicli.com/extensions](https://geminicli.com/extensions). - `migratedTo`: The URL of the new repository source for the extension. If this is set, the CLI will automatically check this new source for updates and migrate the extension's installation to the new source if an update is found. - `mcpServers`: A map of MCP servers to settings. The key is the name of the server, and the value is the server configuration. These servers will be loaded on startup just like MCP servers defined in a [`settings.json` file](../reference/configuration.md). If both an extension and a `settings.json` file define an MCP server with the same name, the server defined in the `settings.json` file takes precedence. - Note that all MCP server configuration options are supported except for `trust`. - For portability, you should use `${extensionPath}` to refer to files within your extension directory. - Separate your executable and its arguments using `command` and `args` instead of putting them both in `command`. - `contextFileName`: The name of the file that contains the context for the extension. This will be used to load the context from the extension directory. If this property is not used but a `GEMINI.md` file is present in your extension directory, then that file will be loaded. - `excludeTools`: An array of tool names to exclude from the model. You can also specify command-specific restrictions for tools that support it, like the `run_shell_command` tool. For example, `"excludeTools": ["run_shell_command(rm -rf)"]` will block the `rm -rf` command. Note that this differs from the MCP server `excludeTools` functionality, which can be listed in the MCP server config. - `plan`: Planning features configuration. - `directory`: The directory where planning artifacts are stored. This serves as a fallback if the user hasn't specified a plan directory in their settings. If not specified by either the extension or the user, the default is `~/.gemini/tmp///plans/`. When Gemini CLI starts, it loads all the extensions and merges their configurations. If there are any conflicts, the workspace configuration takes precedence. ### Extension settings Extensions can define settings that users provide during installation, such as API keys or URLs. These values are stored in a `.env` file within the extension directory. To define settings, add a `settings` array to your manifest: ```json { "name": "my-api-extension", "version": "1.0.0", "settings": [ { "name": "API Key", "description": "Your API key for the service.", "envVar": "MY_API_KEY", "sensitive": true } ] } ``` - `name`: The setting's display name. - `description`: A clear explanation of the setting. - `envVar`: The environment variable name where the value is stored. - `sensitive`: If `true`, the value is stored in the system keychain and obfuscated in the UI. To update an extension's settings: ```bash gemini extensions config [setting] [--scope ] ``` ### Custom commands Provide [custom commands](../cli/custom-commands.md) by placing TOML files in a `commands/` subdirectory. Gemini CLI uses the directory structure to determine the command name. For an extension named `gcp`: - `commands/deploy.toml` becomes `/deploy` - `commands/gcs/sync.toml` becomes `/gcs:sync` (namespaced with a colon) ### Hooks Intercept and customize CLI behavior using [hooks](../hooks/index.md). Define hooks in a `hooks/hooks.json` file within your extension directory. Note that hooks are not defined in the `gemini-extension.json` manifest. ### Agent skills Bundle [agent skills](../cli/skills.md) to provide specialized workflows. Place skill definitions in a `skills/` directory. For example, `skills/security-audit/SKILL.md` exposes a `security-audit` skill. ### Sub-agents > **Note:** Sub-agents are a preview feature currently under active development. Provide [sub-agents](../core/subagents.md) that users can delegate tasks to. Add agent definition files (`.md`) to an `agents/` directory in your extension root. ### Policy Engine Extensions can contribute policy rules and safety checkers to the Gemini CLI [Policy Engine](../reference/policy-engine.md). These rules are defined in `.toml` files and take effect when the extension is activated. To add policies, create a `policies/` directory in your extension's root and place your `.toml` policy files inside it. Gemini CLI automatically loads all `.toml` files from this directory. Rules contributed by extensions run in their own tier (tier 2), alongside workspace-defined policies. This tier has higher priority than the default rules but lower priority than user or admin policies. > **Warning:** For security, Gemini CLI ignores any `allow` decisions or `yolo` > mode configurations in extension policies. This ensures that an extension > cannot automatically approve tool calls or bypass security measures without > your confirmation. **Example `policies.toml`** ```toml [[rule]] mcpName = "my_server" toolName = "dangerous_tool" decision = "ask_user" priority = 100 [[safety_checker]] mcpName = "my_server" toolName = "write_data" priority = 200 [safety_checker.checker] type = "in-process" name = "allowed-path" required_context = ["environment"] ``` ### Themes Extensions can provide custom themes to personalize the CLI UI. Themes are defined in the `themes` array in `gemini-extension.json`. **Example** ```json { "name": "my-green-extension", "version": "1.0.0", "themes": [ { "name": "shades-of-green", "type": "custom", "background": { "primary": "#1a362a" }, "text": { "primary": "#a6e3a1", "secondary": "#6e8e7a", "link": "#89e689" }, "status": { "success": "#76c076", "warning": "#d9e689", "error": "#b34e4e" }, "border": { "default": "#4a6c5a" }, "ui": { "comment": "#6e8e7a" } } ] } ``` Custom themes provided by extensions can be selected using the `/theme` command or by setting the `ui.theme` property in your `settings.json` file. Note that when referring to a theme from an extension, the extension name is appended to the theme name in parentheses, e.g., `shades-of-green (my-green-extension)`. ### Conflict resolution Extension commands have the lowest precedence. If an extension command name conflicts with a user or project command, the extension command is prefixed with the extension name (e.g., `/gcp.deploy`) using a dot separator. ## Variables Gemini CLI supports variable substitution in `gemini-extension.json` and `hooks/hooks.json`. | Variable | Description | | :----------------- | :---------------------------------------------- | | `${extensionPath}` | The absolute path to the extension's directory. | | `${workspacePath}` | The absolute path to the current workspace. | | `${/}` | The platform-specific path separator. |