The Gemini Web API client logic has been relocated from `internal/client/gemini-web` to a new, more specific `internal/provider/gemini-web` package. This refactoring improves code organization and modularity by better isolating provider-specific implementations.
As a result of this move, the `GeminiWebState` struct and its methods have been exported (capitalized) to make them accessible from the executor. All call sites have been updated to use the new package path and the exported identifiers.
This commit simplifies the Gemini web client by removing several complex, stateful features. The previous implementation for auto-refreshing cookies and auto-closing the client involved background goroutines, timers, and file system caching, which made the client's lifecycle difficult to manage.
The following features have been removed:
- The cookie auto-refresh mechanism, including the background goroutine (`rotateCookies`) and related configuration fields.
- The file-based caching for the `__Secure-1PSIDTS` token. The `rotate1PSIDTS` function now fetches a new token on every call.
- The auto-close functionality, which used timers to close the client after a period of inactivity.
- Associated configuration options and methods (`WithAccountLabel`, `WithOnCookiesRefreshed`, `Close`, etc.).
By removing this logic, the client becomes more stateless and predictable. The responsibility for managing the client's lifecycle and handling token expiration is now shifted to the caller, leading to a simpler and more robust integration.
The logic for reading authentication files, which includes retries and a preference for cookie snapshot files, was previously implemented locally within the `watcher` package. This was done to handle potential file locks during writes.
This change moves this functionality into a shared `ReadAuthFileWithRetry` function in the `util` package to promote code reuse and consistency.
The `watcher` package is updated to use this new centralized function. Additionally, the initial token loading in the `run` command now also uses this logic, making it more resilient to file access issues and consistent with the watcher's behavior.
The logic for logging the path where credentials are saved was duplicated across several client implementations.
This commit refactors this behavior by creating a new centralized function, `misc.LogSavingCredentials`, to handle this logging. The `SaveTokenToFile` method in each authentication token storage struct now calls this new function, ensuring consistent logging and reducing code duplication.
The redundant logging statements in the client-level `SaveTokenToFile` methods have been removed.
This commit introduces a generic `cookies.Manager` to centralize the logic for handling cookie snapshots, which was previously duplicated across the Gemini and PaLM clients. This refactoring eliminates code duplication and improves maintainability.
The new `cookies.Manager[T]` in `internal/auth/cookies` orchestrates the lifecycle of cookie data between a temporary snapshot file and the main token file. It provides `Apply`, `Persist`, and `Flush` methods to manage this process.
Key changes:
- A generic `Manager` is created in `internal/auth/cookies`, usable for any token storage type.
- A `Hooks` struct allows for customizable behavior, such as custom merging strategies for different token types.
- Duplicated snapshot handling code has been removed from the `gemini-web` and `palm` persistence packages.
- The `GeminiWebClient` and `PaLMClient` have been updated to use the new `cookies.Manager`.
- The `auth_gemini` and `auth_palm` CLI commands now leverage the client's `Flush` method, simplifying the command logic.
- Cookie snapshot utility functions have been moved from `internal/util/files.go` to a new `internal/util/cookies.go` for better organization.
The logic for managing cookie persistence files was previously implemented directly within the `gemini-web` client's persistence layer. This approach was not reusable and led to duplicated helper functions.
This commit refactors the cookie persistence mechanism by:
- Renaming the concept from "sidecar" to "snapshot" for clarity.
- Extracting file I/O and path manipulation logic into a new, generic `internal/util/cookie_snapshot.go` file.
- Creating reusable utility functions: `WriteCookieSnapshot`, `TryReadCookieSnapshotInto`, and `RemoveCookieSnapshot`.
- Updating the `gemini-web` persistence code to use these new centralized utility functions.
This change improves code organization, reduces duplication, and makes the cookie snapshot functionality easier to maintain and potentially reuse across other clients.
This commit introduces two major enhancements to the Gemini Web client to improve user experience and conversation continuity.
First, it implements a pseudo-streaming mechanism for non-code mode. The Gemini Web API returns the full response at once in this mode, leading to a poor user experience with a long wait for output. This change splits the full response into smaller chunks and sends them with an 80ms delay, simulating a real-time streaming effect.
Second, the conversation context reuse logic is now more robust. A fallback mechanism has been added to reuse conversation metadata when a clear continuation context is detected (e.g., a user replies to an assistant's turn). This improves conversational flow. Metadata lookups have also been improved to check both the canonical model key and its alias for better compatibility.
- replace debounce timing with content-based change detection using SHA256 hashes
- skip client reload when auth file content is unchanged
- handle empty auth files gracefully by ignoring them
- ensure hash cache is updated only on successful client creation
- clean up hash cache when clients are removed
- separate file-based and API key-based clients in watcher
- improve client reloading logic with better locking and error handling
- add dedicated functions for building API key clients and loading file clients
- update combined client map generation to include cached API key clients
- enhance logging and debugging information during client reloads
- fix potential race conditions in client updates and removals