Gemini CLI Extensions
Gemini CLI supports extensions that can be used to configure and extend its functionality.
How it works
On startup, Gemini CLI looks for extensions in two locations:
<workspace>/.gemini/extensions<home>/.gemini/extensions
Gemini CLI loads all extensions from both locations. If an extension with the same name exists in both locations, the extension in the workspace directory takes precedence.
Within each location, individual extensions exist as a directory that contains a gemini-extension.json file. For example:
<workspace>/.gemini/extensions/my-extension/gemini-extension.json
gemini-extension.json
The gemini-extension.json file contains the configuration for the extension. The file has the following structure:
{
"name": "my-extension",
"version": "1.0.0",
"mcpServers": {
"my-server": {
"command": "node my-server.js"
}
},
"contextFileName": "GEMINI.md",
"excludeTools": ["run_shell_command"]
}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.version: The version of the extension.mcpServers: A map of MCP servers to configure. 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 configured in asettings.jsonfile. If both an extension and asettings.jsonfile configure an MCP server with the same name, the server defined in thesettings.jsonfile takes precedence.contextFileName: The name of the file that contains the context for the extension. This will be used to load the context from the workspace. If this property is not used but aGEMINI.mdfile 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 therun_shell_commandtool. For example,"excludeTools": ["run_shell_command(rm -rf)"]will block therm -rfcommand.
When Gemini CLI starts, it loads all the extensions and merges their configurations. If there are any conflicts, the workspace configuration takes precedence.
Extension Commands
Extensions can provide custom commands by placing TOML files in a commands/ subdirectory within the extension directory. These commands follow the same format as user and project custom commands and use standard naming conventions.
Example
An extension named gcp with the following structure:
.gemini/extensions/gcp/
├── gemini-extension.json
└── commands/
├── deploy.toml
└── gcs/
└── sync.tomlWould provide these commands:
/deploy- Shows as[gcp] Custom command from deploy.tomlin help/gcs:sync- Shows as[gcp] Custom command from sync.tomlin help
Conflict Resolution
Extension commands have the lowest precedence. When a conflict occurs with user or project commands:
- No conflict: Extension command uses its natural name (e.g.,
/deploy) - With conflict: Extension command is renamed with the extension prefix (e.g.,
/gcp.deploy)
For example, if both a user and the gcp extension define a deploy command:
/deploy- Executes the user's deploy command/gcp.deploy- Executes the extension's deploy command (marked with[gcp]tag)