Shell Tool (run_shell_command)
This document describes the run_shell_command tool for the Gemini CLI.
Description
Use run_shell_command to interact with the underlying system, run scripts, or perform command-line operations. run_shell_command executes a given shell command. On Windows, the command will be executed with cmd.exe /c. On other platforms, the command will be executed with bash -c.
Arguments
run_shell_command takes the following arguments:
command(string, required): The exact shell command to execute.description(string, optional): A brief description of the command's purpose, which will be shown to the user.directory(string, optional): The directory (relative to the project root) in which to execute the command. If not provided, the command runs in the project root.
How to use run_shell_command with the Gemini CLI
When using run_shell_command, the command is executed as a subprocess. run_shell_command can start background processes using &. The tool returns detailed information about the execution, including:
Command: The command that was executed.Directory: The directory where the command was run.Stdout: Output from the standard output stream.Stderr: Output from the standard error stream.Error: Any error message reported by the subprocess.Exit Code: The exit code of the command.Signal: The signal number if the command was terminated by a signal.Background PIDs: A list of PIDs for any background processes started.
Usage:
run_shell_command(command="Your commands.", description="Your description of the command.", directory="Your execution directory.")run_shell_command examples
List files in the current directory:
run_shell_command(command="ls -la")Run a script in a specific directory:
run_shell_command(command="./my_script.sh", directory="scripts", description="Run my custom script")Start a background server:
run_shell_command(command="npm run dev &", description="Start development server in background")Important notes
- Security: Be cautious when executing commands, especially those constructed from user input, to prevent security vulnerabilities.
- Interactive commands: Avoid commands that require interactive user input, as this can cause the tool to hang. Use non-interactive flags if available (e.g.,
npm init -y). - Error handling: Check the
Stderr,Error, andExit Codefields to determine if a command executed successfully. - Background processes: When a command is run in the background with
&, the tool will return immediately and the process will continue to run in the background. TheBackground PIDsfield will contain the process ID of the background process.