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| ## Using Gemini CLI for Large Codebase Analysis | |
| When analyzing large codebases or multiple files that might exceed context limits, use the Gemini CLI with its massive | |
| context window. Use `gemini -p` to leverage Google Gemini's large context capacity. | |
| ### File and Directory Inclusion Syntax | |
| Use the `@` syntax to include files and directories in your Gemini prompts. The paths should be relative to WHERE you run the | |
| gemini command: | |
| #### Examples: | |
| **Single file analysis:** | |
| gemini -p "@src/main.py Explain this file's purpose and structure" | |
| Multiple files: | |
| gemini -p "@package.json @src/index.js Analyze the dependencies used in the code" | |
| Entire directory: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ Summarize the architecture of this codebase" | |
| Multiple directories: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ @tests/ Analyze test coverage for the source code" | |
| Current directory and subdirectories: | |
| gemini -p "@./ Give me an overview of this entire project" | |
| ## Or use --all_files flag: | |
| gemini --all_files -p "Analyze the project structure and dependencies" | |
| Implementation Verification Examples | |
| Check if a feature is implemented: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ @lib/ Has dark mode been implemented in this codebase? Show me the relevant files and functions" | |
| Verify authentication implementation: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ @middleware/ Is JWT authentication implemented? List all auth-related endpoints and middleware" | |
| Check for specific patterns: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ Are there any React hooks that handle WebSocket connections? List them with file paths" | |
| Verify error handling: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ @api/ Is proper error handling implemented for all API endpoints? Show examples of try-catch blocks" | |
| Check for rate limiting: | |
| gemini -p "@backend/ @middleware/ Is rate limiting implemented for the API? Show the implementation details" | |
| Verify caching strategy: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ @lib/ @services/ Is Redis caching implemented? List all cache-related functions and their usage" | |
| Check for specific security measures: | |
| gemini -p "@src/ @api/ Are SQL injection protections implemented? Show how user inputs are sanitized" | |
| Verify test coverage for features: | |
| gemini -p "@src/payment/ @tests/ Is the payment processing module fully tested? List all test cases" | |
| When to Use Gemini CLI | |
| Use gemini -p when: | |
| - Analyzing entire codebases or large directories | |
| - Comparing multiple large files | |
| - Need to understand project-wide patterns or architecture | |
| - Current context window is insufficient for the task | |
| - Working with files totaling more than 100KB | |
| - Verifying if specific features, patterns, or security measures are implemented | |
| - Checking for the presence of certain coding patterns across the entire codebase | |
| Important Notes | |
| - Paths in @ syntax are relative to your current working directory when invoking gemini | |
| - The CLI will include file contents directly in the context | |
| - No need for --yolo flag for read-only analysis | |
| - Gemini's context window can handle entire codebases that would overflow Claude's context | |
| - When checking implementations, be specific about what you're looking for to get accurate results |
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