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gemini-cli/.gemini/commands/strict-development-rules.md
2026-02-18 23:16:33 +00:00

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Gemini CLI Strict Development Rules

These rules apply strictly to all code modifications and additions within the Gemini CLI project.

Testing Guidelines

  • Async/Await: Always use waitFor from packages/cli/src/test-utils/async.ts instead of vi.waitFor for all waitFor calls within packages/cli. NEVER use fixed waits (e.g., await delay(100)). Always use waitFor with a predicate to ensure tests are stable and fast. Using the wrong waitFor can result in flaky tests and act warnings.
  • React Testing: Use act to wrap all blocks in tests that change component state. Use render or renderWithProviders from packages/cli/src/test-utils/render.tsx instead of render from ink-testing-library directly. This prevents spurious act warnings. If test cases specify providers directly, consider whether the existing renderWithProviders should be modified.
  • Snapshots: Use toMatchSnapshot to verify that rendering works as expected rather than matching against the raw content of the output. When modifying snapshots, verify the changes are intentional and do not hide underlying bugs.
  • Parameterized Tests: Use parameterized tests where it reduces duplicated lines. Give the parameters explicit types to ensure the tests are type-safe.
  • Mocks Management:
    • Mock critical dependencies (fs, os, child_process) ONLY at the top of the file. Ideally, avoid mocking these dependencies altogether.
    • Reuse existing mocks and fakes rather than creating new ones.
    • Avoid mocking the file system whenever possible. If using the real file system is too difficult, consider writing an integration test instead.
    • Always call vi.restoreAllMocks() in afterEach to prevent test pollution.
    • Use vi.useFakeTimers() for tests involving time-based logic to avoid flakiness.
  • Typing in Tests: Avoid using any in tests; prefer proper types or unknown with narrowing.

React Guidelines (packages/cli)

  • setState and Side Effects: NEVER trigger side effects from within the body of a setState callback. Use a reducer or useRef if necessary. These cases have historically introduced multiple bugs; typically, they should be resolved using a reducer.
  • Rendering: Do not introduce infinite rendering loops. Avoid synchronous file I/O in React components as it will hang the UI. Do not implement new logic for custom string measurement or string truncation. Use Ink layout instead, leveraging ResizeObserver as needed.
  • Keyboard Handling: Keyboard handling MUST go through useKeyPress.ts from the Gemini CLI package rather than the standard ink library. This library supports reporting multiple keyboard events sequentially in the same React frame (critical for slow terminals). Handling this correctly often requires reducers to ensure multiple state updates are handled gracefully without overriding values. Refer to text-buffer.ts for a canonical example.
  • Logging: Do not leave console.log, console.warn, or console.error in the code.
  • State & Effects: Ensure state initialization is explicit (e.g., use undefined rather than true as a default if the state is truly unknown). Carefully manage useEffect dependencies. Prefer a reducer whenever practical. NEVER disable react-hooks/exhaustive-deps; fix the code to correctly declare dependencies instead.
  • Context & Props: Avoid excessive property drilling. Leverage existing providers, extend them, or propose a new one if necessary. Only use providers for properties that are consistent across the entire application.
  • Code Structure: Avoid complex if statements where switch statements could be used. Keep AppContainer minimal; refactor complex logic into React hooks. Evaluate whether business logic should be added to hookSystem.ts or integrated into packages/core rather than packages/cli.

Core Guidelines (packages/core)

  • Services: Implement services as classes with clear lifecycle management (e.g., initialize() methods). Services should be stateless where possible, or use the centralized Storage service for persistence.
  • Cross-Service Communication: Prefer using the coreEvents bus (from packages/core/src/utils/events.ts) for asynchronous communication between services or to notify the UI of state changes. Avoid tight coupling between services.
  • Utilities: Use debugLogger from packages/core/src/utils/debugLogger.ts for internal logging instead of console. Ensure all shell operations use spawnAsync from packages/core/src/utils/shell-utils.ts for consistent error handling and promise management. Handle filesystem errors gracefully using isNodeError from packages/core/src/utils/errors.ts.
  • Exports & Tooling: Add new tools to packages/core/src/tools/ and register them in packages/core/src/tools/tool-registry.ts. Export all new public services, utilities, and types from packages/core/src/index.ts.

Architectural Audit (Package Boundaries)

  • Logic Placement: Non-UI logic (e.g., model orchestration, tool implementation, git/filesystem operations) MUST reside in packages/core. packages/cli should ONLY contain UI/Ink components, command-line argument parsing, and user interaction logic.
  • Environment Isolation: Core logic must not assume a TUI environment. Use the ConfirmationBus or Output abstractions for communicating with the user from Core.
  • Decoupling: Actively look for opportunities to decouple services using coreEvents. If a service imports another just to notify it of a change, use an event instead.

General Gemini CLI Design Principles

  • Settings: Use settings for user-configurable options rather than adding new command line arguments. Add new settings to packages/cli/src/config/settingsSchema.ts. If a setting has showInDialog: true, it MUST be documented in docs/get-started/configuration.md. Ensure requiresRestart is correctly set.
  • Logging: Use debugLogger for rethrown errors to avoid duplicate logging.
  • Keyboard Shortcuts: Define all new keyboard shortcuts in packages/cli/src/config/keyBindings.ts and document them in docs/cli/keyboard-shortcuts.md. Be careful of keybindings that require the Meta key, as only certain meta key shortcuts are supported on Mac. Avoid function keys and shortcuts commonly bound in VSCode.

TypeScript Best Practices

  • Use checkExhaustive in the default clause of switch statements to ensure all cases are handled.
  • Avoid using the non-null assertion operator (!) unless absolutely necessary.
  • STRICT TYPING: Strictly forbid any and unknown in both CLI and Core packages. unknown is only allowed if it is immediately narrowed using type guards or Zod validation.
  • NEVER disable @typescript-eslint/no-floating-promises.
  • Avoid making types nullable unless strictly necessary, as it hurts readability.

TUI Best Practices

  • Terminal Compatibility: Consider how changes might behave differently across terminals (e.g., VSCode terminal, SSH, Kitty, default Mac terminal, iTerm2, Windows terminal). If modifying keyboard handling, integrate deeply with existing files like KeypressContext.tsx and terminalCapabilityManager.ts.
  • iTerm: Be aware that ITERM_SESSION_ID may be present when users run VSCode from within iTerm, even if the terminal is not iTerm.

Code Cleanup

  • Refactoring: Actively clean up code duplication, technical debt, and boilerplate ("AI Slop") when working in the codebase.
  • Prompts: Be aware that changes can impact the prompts sent to Gemini CLI and affect overall quality.