* refactor(web): migrate icons to unplugin-icons Replace the hand-written gen-icon-data.mjs + @iconify/utils runtime rendering with unplugin-icons build-time imports. The public API (<Icon name>, iconSvg, IconName, SIZE_PX, NAME_TO_REMIX) is unchanged; 127+ call sites are untouched. - add unplugin-icons@^23.0.0 (devDep) + Vite Icons() plugin (compiler: vue3) - rewrite src/lib/icons.ts: static ~icons/ri/* imports (component + ?raw) for 56 distinct Remix icons across 59 IconName entries - Icon.vue renders <component :is> with unknown-name fallback - append ICON_GROUPS export for DesignSystemView catalog - DesignSystemView: v-for catalog, remove legacy-script references - delete gen-icon-data.mjs, gen-icon-catalog.mjs, icon-data.ts, gen:icons script - remove @iconify/vue and @iconify/utils from dependencies; move @iconify-json/ri to devDependencies - drop Icon.vue from check-style ICON_EXEMPT (no hand-written <svg>) * refactor(web): drop unused NAME_TO_REMIX icon mapping NAME_TO_REMIX was a Record<IconName, string> table introduced to map internal icon names to their ri: ids. After the unplugin-icons migration it has no production consumers — only icons.test.ts imported it (for two drift tests) and DesignSystemView mentioned it in descriptive copy. The ICONS table already conveys the same ri: id via each entry's paired component + ?raw imports (e.g. RiFolderOpenLine / RawFolderOpenLine). - remove NAME_TO_REMIX const from src/lib/icons.ts (-63 lines) - remove NAME_TO_REMIX import + describe block from icons.test.ts - update DesignSystemView §02 copy: describe the import-pair idiom and stop claiming ICON_GROUPS is sourced from NAME_TO_REMIX * chore: add changeset for web icon migration * chore(nix): bump pnpmDeps hash for unplugin-icons Adding unplugin-icons changed pnpm-lock.yaml, so the fixed-output pnpmDeps derivation hash is stale. Update to the hash reported by the Nix Build CI run. |
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| .agents/skills | ||
| .changeset | ||
| .github | ||
| apps | ||
| build | ||
| docs | ||
| packages | ||
| plugins | ||
| scripts | ||
| .editorconfig | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .npmrc | ||
| .nvmrc | ||
| .oxfmtrc.json | ||
| .oxlintrc.json | ||
| AGENTS.md | ||
| CLAUDE.md | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| flake.lock | ||
| flake.nix | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| package.json | ||
| pnpm-lock.yaml | ||
| pnpm-workspace.yaml | ||
| README.md | ||
| README.zh-CN.md | ||
| SECURITY.md | ||
| tsconfig.json | ||
| vitest.config.ts | ||
Kimi Code CLI
Documentation · Issues · 中文
What is Kimi Code CLI
Kimi Code CLI is an AI coding agent that runs in your terminal — it can read and edit code, run shell commands, search files, fetch web pages, and choose the next step based on the feedback it receives. It works out of the box with Moonshot AI’s Kimi models and can also be configured to use other compatible providers.
Install
Install with the official script. No Node.js required.
- macOS or Linux:
curl -fsSL https://code.kimi.com/kimi-code/install.sh | bash
- Homebrew (macOS/Linux):
brew install kimi-code
- Windows (PowerShell):
irm https://code.kimi.com/kimi-code/install.ps1 | iex
On Windows, install Git for Windows before first launch because Kimi Code CLI uses the bundled Git Bash as its shell environment. If Git Bash is installed in a custom location, set
KIMI_SHELL_PATHto the absolute path ofbash.exe.
Then, run it with a new shell session:
kimi --version
For npm install, upgrade, uninstall, see Getting Started.
Quick Start
Open a project and start the interactive UI:
cd your-project
kimi
On first launch, run /login inside Kimi Code CLI and choose either Kimi Code OAuth or a Moonshot AI Open Platform API key. After login, try your first task:
Take a look at this project and explain its main directories.
Key Features
- Single-binary distribution. Install with one command: no Node.js setup, PATH gymnastics, or global module conflicts.
- Blazing-fast startup. The TUI is ready in milliseconds, so starting a session never feels heavy.
- Purpose-built TUI. A carefully tuned interface, optimized end to end for long, focused agent sessions.
- Video input. Drop a screen recording or demo clip into the chat and let the agent watch what is hard to describe in words — turn a reference clip into a LUT, a long video into a short, a screen recording into working code, and more.
- AI-native MCP configuration. Add, edit, and authenticate Model Context Protocol servers conversationally with
/mcp-config, without hand-editing JSON. - Rich plugin ecosystem. Install skills, MCP servers, and data sources from the marketplace or any GitHub repo, with each install's trust level surfaced up front.
- Subagents for focused, parallel work. Dispatch built-in
coder,explore, andplansubagents in isolated contexts while keeping the main conversation clean. - Lifecycle hooks. Run local commands at key points to gate risky tool calls, audit decisions, trigger desktop notifications, or connect to your own automation.
- Editor & IDE integration (ACP). Drive a Kimi Code CLI session straight from Zed, JetBrains, or any Agent Client Protocol client with
kimi acp.
Use it in your editor (ACP)
Kimi Code CLI speaks the Agent Client Protocol, so ACP-compatible editors and IDEs (Zed, JetBrains, …) can drive a session over stdio. Log in once, then point your editor at the kimi acp subcommand — no extra login needed.
For Zed, add this to ~/.config/zed/settings.json:
{
"agent_servers": {
"Kimi Code CLI": {
"type": "custom",
"command": "kimi",
"args": ["acp"],
"env": {}
}
}
}
Then open a new conversation in Zed's Agent panel. See Using in IDEs for JetBrains setup and troubleshooting, and the kimi acp reference for the full capability matrix.
Docs
- Getting Started
- Interaction and approvals
- Sessions
- Using in IDEs (ACP)
- Configuration
- Command reference
Develop
Requirements: Node.js ≥ 24.15.0, pnpm 10.33.0.
git clone https://github.com/MoonshotAI/kimi-code.git
cd kimi-code
pnpm install
pnpm dev:cli # run the CLI in dev mode
pnpm test # run tests
pnpm typecheck # TypeScript check
pnpm lint # oxlint
pnpm build # build all packages
See CONTRIBUTING.md for the full contribution guide.
Community
- Issues
- For security vulnerabilities, see SECURITY.md.
Acknowledgements
Our TUI is built on top of pi-tui. We thank the authors of pi-tui for their valuable work.
License
Released under the MIT License.
