A conversational AI CLI tool powered by Grok with intelligent text editor capabilities and tool usage.

- 🤖 Conversational AI: Natural language interface powered by Grok-3
- 📝 Smart File Operations: AI automatically uses tools to view, create, and edit files
- ⚡ Bash Integration: Execute shell commands through natural conversation
- đź”§ Automatic Tool Selection: AI intelligently chooses the right tools for your requests
- 🚀 Morph Fast Apply: Optional high-speed code editing at 4,500+ tokens/sec with 98% accuracy
- 🔌 MCP Tools: Extend capabilities with Model Context Protocol servers (Linear, GitHub, etc.)
- đź’¬ Interactive UI: Beautiful terminal interface built with Ink
- 🌍 Global Installation: Install and use anywhere with
npm i -g @vibe-kit/grok-cli
- Node.js 16+
- Grok API key from X.AI
- (Optional, Recommended) Morph API key for Fast Apply editing
npm install -g @vibe-kit/grok-cli
git clone <repository>
cd grok-cli
npm install
npm run build
npm link
-
Get your Grok API key from X.AI
-
Set up your API key (choose one method):
Method 1: Environment Variable
export GROK_API_KEY=your_api_key_here
Method 2: .env File
cp .env.example .env
# Edit .env and add your API key
Method 3: Command Line Flag
grok --api-key your_api_key_here
Method 4: User Settings File
Create ~/.grok/user-settings.json
:
{
"apiKey": "your_api_key_here"
}
-
(Optional, Recommended) Get your Morph API key from Morph Dashboard
-
Set up your Morph API key for Fast Apply editing (choose one method):
Method 1: Environment Variable
export MORPH_API_KEY=your_morph_api_key_here
Method 2: .env File
# Add to your .env file
MORPH_API_KEY=your_morph_api_key_here
By default, the CLI uses https://api.x.ai/v1
as the Grok API endpoint. You can configure a custom endpoint if needed (choose one method):
Method 1: Environment Variable
export GROK_BASE_URL=https://your-custom-endpoint.com/v1
Method 2: Command Line Flag
grok --api-key your_api_key_here --base-url https://your-custom-endpoint.com/v1
Method 3: User Settings File
Add to ~/.grok/user-settings.json
:
{
"apiKey": "your_api_key_here",
"baseURL": "https://your-custom-endpoint.com/v1"
}
Grok CLI uses two types of configuration files to manage settings:
This file stores global settings that apply across all projects. These settings rarely change and include:
- API Key: Your Grok API key
- Base URL: Custom API endpoint (if needed)
- Default Model: Your preferred model (e.g.,
grok-4-latest
) - Available Models: List of models you can use
Example:
{
"apiKey": "your_api_key_here",
"baseURL": "https://api.x.ai/v1",
"defaultModel": "grok-4-latest",
"models": [
"grok-4-latest",
"grok-3-latest",
"grok-3-fast",
"grok-3-mini-fast"
]
}
This file stores project-specific settings in your current working directory. It includes:
- Current Model: The model currently in use for this project
- MCP Servers: Model Context Protocol server configurations
Example:
{
"model": "grok-3-fast",
"mcpServers": {
"linear": {
"name": "linear",
"transport": "stdio",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["@linear/mcp-server"]
}
}
}
- Global Defaults: User-level settings provide your default preferences
- Project Override: Project-level settings override defaults for specific projects
- Directory-Specific: When you change directories, project settings are loaded automatically
- Fallback Logic: Project model → User default model → System default (
grok-4-latest
)
This means you can have different models for different projects while maintaining consistent global settings like your API key.
Important: Grok CLI uses OpenAI-compatible APIs. You can use any provider that implements the OpenAI chat completions standard.
Popular Providers:
- X.AI (Grok):
https://api.x.ai/v1
(default) - OpenAI:
https://api.openai.com/v1
- OpenRouter:
https://openrouter.ai/api/v1
- Groq:
https://api.groq.com/openai/v1
Example with OpenRouter:
{
"apiKey": "your_openrouter_key",
"baseURL": "https://openrouter.ai/api/v1",
"defaultModel": "anthropic/claude-3.5-sonnet",
"models": [
"anthropic/claude-3.5-sonnet",
"openai/gpt-4o",
"meta-llama/llama-3.1-70b-instruct"
]
}
Start the conversational AI assistant:
grok
Or specify a working directory:
grok -d /path/to/project
Process a single prompt and exit (useful for scripting and automation):
grok --prompt "show me the package.json file"
grok -p "create a new file called example.js with a hello world function"
grok --prompt "run npm test and show me the results" --directory /path/to/project
grok --prompt "complex task" --max-tool-rounds 50 # Limit tool usage for faster execution
This mode is particularly useful for:
- CI/CD pipelines: Automate code analysis and file operations
- Scripting: Integrate AI assistance into shell scripts
- Terminal benchmarks: Perfect for tools like Terminal Bench that need non-interactive execution
- Batch processing: Process multiple prompts programmatically
By default, Grok CLI allows up to 400 tool execution rounds to handle complex multi-step tasks. You can control this behavior:
# Limit tool rounds for faster execution on simple tasks
grok --max-tool-rounds 10 --prompt "show me the current directory"
# Increase limit for very complex tasks (use with caution)
grok --max-tool-rounds 1000 --prompt "comprehensive code refactoring"
# Works with all modes
grok --max-tool-rounds 20 # Interactive mode
grok git commit-and-push --max-tool-rounds 30 # Git commands
Use Cases:
- Fast responses: Lower limits (10-50) for simple queries
- Complex automation: Higher limits (500+) for comprehensive tasks
- Resource control: Prevent runaway executions in automated environments
You can specify which AI model to use with the --model
parameter or GROK_MODEL
environment variable:
Method 1: Command Line Flag
# Use Grok models
grok --model grok-4-latest
grok --model grok-3-latest
grok --model grok-3-fast
# Use other models (with appropriate API endpoint)
grok --model gemini-2.5-pro --base-url https://api-endpoint.com/v1
grok --model claude-sonnet-4-20250514 --base-url https://api-endpoint.com/v1
Method 2: Environment Variable
export GROK_MODEL=grok-4-latest
grok
Method 3: User Settings File
Add to ~/.grok/user-settings.json
:
{
"apiKey": "your_api_key_here",
"defaultModel": "grok-4-latest"
}
Model Priority: --model
flag > GROK_MODEL
environment variable > user default model > system default (grok-4-latest)
grok [options]
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-d, --directory <dir> set working directory
-k, --api-key <key> Grok API key (or set GROK_API_KEY env var)
-u, --base-url <url> Grok API base URL (or set GROK_BASE_URL env var)
-m, --model <model> AI model to use (e.g., grok-4-latest, grok-3-latest) (or set GROK_MODEL env var)
-p, --prompt <prompt> process a single prompt and exit (headless mode)
--max-tool-rounds <rounds> maximum number of tool execution rounds (default: 400)
-h, --help display help for command
You can provide custom instructions to tailor Grok's behavior to your project by creating a .grok/GROK.md
file in your project directory:
mkdir .grok
Create .grok/GROK.md
with your custom instructions:
# Custom Instructions for Grok CLI
Always use TypeScript for any new code files.
When creating React components, use functional components with hooks.
Prefer const assertions and explicit typing over inference where it improves clarity.
Always add JSDoc comments for public functions and interfaces.
Follow the existing code style and patterns in this project.
Grok will automatically load and follow these instructions when working in your project directory. The custom instructions are added to Grok's system prompt and take priority over default behavior.
Grok CLI supports Morph's Fast Apply model for high-speed code editing at 4,500+ tokens/sec with 98% accuracy. This is an optional feature that provides lightning-fast file editing capabilities.
Setup: Configure your Morph API key following the setup instructions above.
When MORPH_API_KEY
is configured:
edit_file
tool becomes available alongside the standardstr_replace_editor
- Optimized for complex edits: Use for multi-line changes, refactoring, and large modifications
- Intelligent editing: Uses abbreviated edit format with
// ... existing code ...
comments - Fallback support: Standard tools remain available if Morph is unavailable
When to use each tool:
edit_file
(Morph): Complex edits, refactoring, multi-line changesstr_replace_editor
: Simple text replacements, single-line edits
With Morph Fast Apply configured, you can request complex code changes:
grok --prompt "refactor this function to use async/await and add error handling"
grok -p "convert this class to TypeScript and add proper type annotations"
The AI will automatically choose between edit_file
(Morph) for complex changes or str_replace_editor
for simple replacements.
Grok CLI supports MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers, allowing you to extend the AI assistant with additional tools and capabilities.
# Add an stdio-based MCP server
grok mcp add my-server --transport stdio --command "node" --args server.js
# Add an HTTP-based MCP server
grok mcp add my-server --transport http --url "http://localhost:3000"
# Add with environment variables
grok mcp add my-server --transport stdio --command "python" --args "-m" "my_mcp_server" --env "API_KEY=your_key"
grok mcp add-json my-server '{"command": "node", "args": ["server.js"], "env": {"API_KEY": "your_key"}}'
To add Linear MCP tools for project management:
# Add Linear MCP server
grok mcp add linear --transport sse --url "https://mcp.linear.app/sse"
This enables Linear tools like:
- Create and manage Linear issues
- Search and filter issues
- Update issue status and assignees
- Access team and project information
# List all configured servers
grok mcp list
# Test server connection
grok mcp test server-name
# Remove a server
grok mcp remove server-name
- stdio: Run MCP server as a subprocess (most common)
- http: Connect to HTTP-based MCP server
- sse: Connect via Server-Sent Events
# Install dependencies
npm install
# Development mode
npm run dev
# Build project
npm run build
# Run linter
npm run lint
# Type check
npm run typecheck
- Agent: Core command processing and execution logic
- Tools: Text editor and bash tool implementations
- UI: Ink-based terminal interface components
- Types: TypeScript definitions for the entire system
MIT