- Gemini Cli obtains a Github Actions version with complete integration into your reprimand
- He is an agent and an autonomous collaborator in a
- There are free levels with many requests
Only a few weeks after the launch of Google Gemini Cli, its Open Source AI agent to integrate Gemini into the user’s terminal, the company has teamed up with GitHub belonging to Microsoft to launch Gemini Cli Github actions.
The company has described the actions of Gemini Cli GitHub as a free teammate of beta scene who lives in a github deposit, capable of acting as an autonomous and collaborator on demand.
Gemini cli github actions can automatically label, prioritize and filter new problems, provide instant comments on quality, style and accuracy, and collaborate on demand with @ gemini-cli command to write tests, implement fixes, think and more.
Github is associated with Google to bring gemini clies to users
Speaking of the way the tool was built, the main software engineer Jerop Kipruto and the main director Ryan J. Salva explained: “When the members of the community noticed our new workflows, they asked us to share what we have built.”
“Triggered by events such as new problems or traction requests, it works asynchronously in the background, using the full context of your project to automatically manage tasks,” said software workers in a blog article.
Google has also noted its commitment to business quality security, noting that users of Vertex AI and Gemini Code Standard / Enterprise can use the Google Cloud workload (WIF) federation to eliminate the need for long -term API keys, tightening safety by reducing the risk of compromise.
The GitHub actions version of Gemini Cli is available to try in beta today – Gemini Code Assist Free level users obtain 60 requests per minute and 1000 requests per day, but other types of account have different quotas.
In a separate article before GitHub’s involvement, Google praised the Gemini command line interface tool (CLI) gives developers the “most direct path of your prompt to [its] model.”