. FILENAMEfish < FILENAME) since the commands will be evaluated by the current shell, which means that changes in environment variables, etc., will remain.. ~/.fishcauses fish to reread its initialization file.
COMMAND1; and COMMAND2and builtin is used to execute a command if the current exit status (as set by the last previous command) is zeromake command to build a program, and if it succeeds, it runs make install, which installs the program. make; and make install
begin; [COMMAND;...] end begin builtin is used to create a new block of code. The block is unconditionally executed. Begin is equivalent to if true. The begin command is used to group any number of commands into a block. The reason for this is usually either to introduce a new variable scope or to redirect the input to output of this set of commands as a group.
begin set -x PIRATE Yarrr ... end # This will not output anything, since PIRATE went out of scope at the end of # the block and was killed echo $PIRATE
bg [PID...]The PID of the desired process is usually found by using process globbing.
bg %0 will put the job with job id 0 in the background.bind [OPTIONS] [BINDINGS...]
The bind builtin causes fish to add the readline style bindings specified by BINDINGS to the list of key bindings. For more information on specifying keyboard bindings, use man readline to access the readline documentation.
-M MODE or --set-mode=MODE sets the current input mode to MODE.bind -M vi changes to the vi input mode
bind '"\M-j": jobs' Binds the jobs command to the Alt-j keyboard shortcut
block [OPTIONS...]-l or --local Release the block at the end of the currently innermost block scope-g or --global Never automatically release the lock-e or --erase Release global blockblock -g #Do something that should not be interrupted block -e
LOOP_CONSTRUCT; [COMMANDS...] break; [COMMANDS...] endbreak builtin is used to halt a currently running loop, such as a for loop or a while loop. It is usually added inside of a conditional block such as an if statement or a switch statement.
for i in *.c;
if grep smurf $i;
echo Smurfs are present in $i;
break;
end;
end;
builtin BUILTINNAME [OPTIONS...]-n or --names List the names of all defined builtinsPrefixing a command with the word 'builtin' forces fish to ignore any aliases with the same name.
builtin jobscauses fish to execute the jobs builtin, even if a function named jobs exists.
switch VALUE; [case [WILDCARD...]; [COMMANDS...];...] endswitch statement is used to perform one of several blocks of commands depending on whether a specified value equals one of several wildcarded values. The case statement is used together with the switch statement in order to determine which block should be performed.
switch $animal
case cat
echo evil
case wolf dog human moose dolphin whale
echo mammal
case duck goose albatross
echo bird
case shark trout stingray
echo fish
end
If the above code was run with $animal set to whale, the output would be mammal.
cd [DIRECTORY]DIRECTORY is supplied it will become the new directory. If DIRECTORY is a relative path, the paths found in the CDPATH environment variable array will be tried as prefixes for the specified path. If CDPATH is not set, it is assumed to be '.'. If DIRECTORY is not specified, $HOME will be the new directory. command COMMANDNAME [OPTIONS...]command lscauses fish to execute the ls program, even if there exists a 'ls' alias.
commandline [OPTIONS] [CMD]CMD is the new value of the commandline. If unspecified, the current value of the commandline is written to standard output.
The following switches change the way commandline updates the commandline
-a or --append do not remove the current commandline, append the specified string at the end of it-i or --insert do not remove the current commandline, insert the specified string at the current cursor position-r or --replace remove the current commandline and replace it with the specified string (default)The following switches change what part of the commandline is printed or updated
-b or --current-buffer select the entire buffer (default)-j or --current-job select the current job-p or --current-process select the current process-t or --current_token select the current token.
The following switch changes the way commandline prints the current commandline
-c or --cut-at-cursor only print selection up until the current cursor position-o or --tokenize tokenize the selection and print one string-type token per lineOther switches
-f or --function inject readline functions into the reader. This option can not be combined with any other option. It will cause any additional arguments to be interpreted as readline functions, and these functions will be injected into the reader, so that they will be returned to the reader before any additional actual keypresses are read.
If commandline is called during a call to complete a given string using complete -C STRING, commandline will consider the specified string to be the current contents of the commandline.
commandline -j $history[3]replaces the job under the cursor with the third item from the commandline history.
complete (-c|--command|-p|--path) COMMAND [(-s|--short-option) SHORT_OPTION] [(-l|--long-option|-o|--old-option) LONG_OPTION [(-a||--arguments) OPTION_ARGUMENTS] [(-d|--description) DESCRIPTION]
COMMAND is the name of the command for which to add a completionSHORT_OPTION is a one character option for the commandLONG_OPTION is a multi character option for the commandOPTION_ARGUMENTS is parameter containing a space-separated list of possible option-arguments, which may contain subshellsDESCRIPTION is a description of what the option and/or option arguments do-C STRING or --do-complete=STRING makes complete try to find all possible completions for the specified string-e or --erase implies that the specified completion should be deleted-f or --no-files specifies that the option specified by this completion may not be followed by a filename-n or --condition specifies a shell command that must return 0 if the completion is to be used. This makes it possible to specify completions that should only be used in some cases.-o or --old-option implies that the command uses old long style options with only one dash-p or --path implies that the string COMMAND is the full path of the command-r or --require-parameter specifies that the option specified by this completion always must have an option argument, i.e. may not be followed by another option-u or --unauthorative implies that there may be more options than the ones specified, and that fish should not assume that options not listed are spelling errors-x or --exclusive implies both -r and -f
Command specific tab-completions in fish are based on the notion of options and arguments. An option is a parameter which begins with a hyphen, such as '-h', '-help' or '--help'. Arguments are parameters that do not begin with a hyphen. Fish recognizes three styles of options, the same styles as the GNU version of the getopt library. These styles are:
The options for specifying command name, command path, or command switches may all be used multiple times to specify multiple commands which have the same completion or multiple switches accepted by a command.
When erasing completions, it is possible to either erase all completions for a specific command by specifying complete -e -c COMMAND, or by specifying a specific completion option to delete by specifying either a long, short or old style option.
-o for the gcc command requires that a file follows it. This can be done using writing complete -c gcc -s o -r.
The short style option -d for the grep command requires that one of the strings 'read', 'skip' or 'recurse' is used. This can be specified writing complete -c grep -s d -x -a "read skip recurse".
The su command takes any username as an argument. Usernames are given as the first colon-separated field in the file /etc/passwd. This can be specified as: complete -x -c su -d "Username" -a "(cat /etc/passwd|cut -d : -f 1)" .
The rpm command has several different modes. If the -e or --erase flag has been specified, rpm should delete one or more packages, in which case several switches related to deleting packages are valid, like the nodeps switch.
This can be written as:
complete -c rpm -n "__fish_contains_opt -s e erase" -l nodeps -d "Don't check dependencies"
where __fish_contains_opt is a function that checks the commandline buffer for the presence of a specified set of options.
LOOP_CONSTRUCT; [COMMANDS...] continue; [COMMANDS...] endcontinue builtin is used to skip the current lap of the innermost currently running loop, such as a for loop or a while loop. It is usually added inside of a conditional block such as an if statement or a switch statement.
for i in *.tmp;
if grep smurf $i;
continue;
end;
rm $i;
end;
if CONDITION; COMMAND_TRUE [else; COMMAND_FALSE] end;if will execute the command CONDITION. If the commands exit status is zero, the command COMMAND_TRUE will execute. If it is not zero and COMMAND_FALSE is specified, COMMAND_FALSE will be executed.if test -f foo.txt; echo foo.txt exists; else; echo foo.txt does not exist; end will print foo.txt exists if the file foo.txt exists and is a regular file, otherwise it will print foo.txt does not exist. for VARNAME in [VALUES...]; COMMANDS; end if CONDITION; COMMAND_TRUE [else; COMMAND_FALSE] end while CONDITION; COMMANDS; end switch VALUE; [case [WILDCARD...]; [COMMANDS...];...] end
end ends a block of commands. For more information, read the documentation for the block constructs, such as if, for and \ while. eval [COMMANDS...]eval builtin causes fish to evaluate the specified parameters as a command. If more than one parameter is specified, all parameters will be joined using a space character as a separator.set cmd ls eval $cmd
will call the ls command.
exec COMMAND [OPTIONS...]exec builtin is used to replace the currently running shells process image with a new command. On successful completion, exec never returns. exec can not be used inside a pipeline.exec emacs starts up the emacs text editor. When emacs exits, the session will terminate. exit [STATUS]exit builtin causes fish to exit. If STATUS is supplied, it will be converted to an integer and used as the exit code. Otherwise the exit code will be 0.If exit is called while sourcing a file (using the . builtin) the rest of the file will be skipped, but the shell will not exit.
fg [PID]The PID of the desired process is usually found by using process globbing.
fg %0 will put the job with job id 0 in the foreground.for VARNAME in [VALUES...]; [COMMANDS...]; endfor is a loop construct. It will perform the commands specified by COMMANDS multiple times. Each time the environment variable specified by VARNAME is assigned a new value from VALUES.
for i in foo bar baz; echo $i; end
would output:
foo bar baz
function [OPTIONS] NAME; BODY; end -b or --key-binding specifies that the function is a key biding. Key binding functions work exactly like regular functions except that they can not be tab-completed, and may contain the '-' character.-d DESCRIPTION or --description=DESCRIPTION is a description of what the function does, suitable as a completion description-j PID or --on-job-exit PID tells fish to run this function when the job with group id PID exits-p PID or --on-process-exit PID tells fish to run this function when the fish child process with process id PID exits-s or --on-signal SIGSPEC tells fish to run this function when the signal SIGSPEC is delivered. SIGSPEC can be a signal number, or the signal name, such as SIGHUP (or just HUP)-v or --on-variable VARIABLE_NAME tells fish to run this function when the variable VARIABLE_NAME changes valueThis builtin command is used to create a new function. A Function is a list of commands that will be executed when the name of the function is entered. The function
function hi echo hello end
will write hello whenever the user enters hi.
If the user enters any additional arguments after the function, they are inserted into the environment variable array argv.
function ll ls -l $argv end
will run the ls command, using the -l option, while passing on any additional files and switches to ls.
function mkdir -d "Create a directory and set CWD" mkdir $argv if test $status = 0 switch $argv[(count $argv)] case '-*'
case '*' cd $argv[(count $argv)] return end end end
will run the mkdir command, and if it is successful, change the current working directory to the one just created.
functions [-e] FUNCTIONS...
-e or --erase causes the specified functions to be erased.-n or --names List only the names of all defined functions
If functions is called with no arguments, the names and definition of all functions are printed, otherwise, the specified function definitions will be printed.
if CONDITION; COMMAND_TRUE [else; COMMAND_FALSE] end;if will execute the command CONDITION. If the commands exit status is zero, the command COMMAND_TRUE will execute. If it is not zero and COMMAND_FALSE is specified, COMMAND_FALSE will be executed.if test -f foo.txt echo foo.txt exists else echo foo.txt does not exist endwill print
foo.txt exists if the file foo.txt exists and is a regular file, otherwise it will print foo.txt does not exist. jobs [OPTIONS] [PID]jobs builtin causes fish to print a list of the currently running jobs and their status.jobs accepts the following switches:
-c or --command print the command name for each process in jobs-g or --group only print the group id of each job-l or --last only the last job to be started is printed-p or --process print the process id for each process in all jobsOn systems that supports this feature, jobs will print the CPU usage of each job since the last command was executed. The CPU usage is expressed as a percentage of full CPU activity. Note that on multiprocessor systems, the total activity may be more than 100%.
not COMMAND [OPTIONS...]not builtin is used to negate the exit status of another command.if not test -f spoon echo There is no spoon exit 1 end
COMMAND1; or COMMAND2or builtin is used to execute a command if the current exit status (as set by the last previous command) is non-zeromake command to build a program, or if it fails, it runs make clean, which removes the files created by the build process make; or make clean
random [SEED]random command is used to generate a random number in the interval 0<=N<32767. If an argument is given, it is used to seed the random number generator. This can be useful for debugging purposes, where it can be desirable to get the same random number sequence multiple times. If the random number generator is called without first seeding it, the current time will be used as the seed.
for i in (seq (random) -1 1) echo $i sleep end
function NAME; [COMMANDS...] break [STATUS]; [COMMANDS...] end
STATUS is the return status of the function. If unspecified, the status is set to 0.
function false return 1 end
read [OPTIONS] [VARIABLES...]read builtin causes fish to read one line from standard input and store the result in one or more environment variables.
-e or --export specifies that the variables will be exported to subshells.-g or --global specifies that the variables will be made global.-pPROMPT_CMD or --prompt=PROMPT_CMD specifies that the output of the shell command PROMPT_CMD should be used as the prompt for the interactive mode prompt. The default prompt command is set_color green; echo read; set_color normal; echo "> ".-cCMD or --command=CMD specifies that the initial string in the interactive mode command buffer should be CMD.
Read starts by reading a single line of input from stdin, the line is then tokenized using the IFS environment variable. Each variable specified in VARIABLES is then assigned one tokenized string element. If there are more tokens than variables, the complete remainder is assigned to the last variable.
echo hello|read fooWill cause the variable $foo to be assigned the value hello.
set [OPTIONS] [VARIABLE_NAME [VALUES...]]
The set builtin causes fish to assign the variable VARIABLE_NAME the values VALUES....
-e or --erase causes the specified environment variable to be erased-g or --global causes the specified environment variable to be made global. If this option is not supplied, the specified variable will disappear when the current block ends-l or --local forces the specified environment variable to be made local to the current block, even if the variable already exists and is non-local-n or --names List only the names of all defined variables-q or --query test if the specified variable names are defined. Does not output anything, but the builtins exit status is the number of variables specified that were not defined.-u or --unexport causes the specified environment not to be exported to child processes-U or --universal causes the specified environment variable to be made universal. If this option is supplied, the variable will be shared between all the current users fish instances on the current computer, and will be preserved across restarts of the shell.-x or --export causes the specified environment variable to be exported to child processesIf set is called with no arguments, the names and values of all environment variables are printed. If some of the scope or export flags have been given, only the variables matching the specified scope are printed.
If the -e or --erase option is specified, the variable specified by the following arguments will be erased
If a variable is set to more than one value, the variable will be an array with the specified elements. If a variable is set to zero elements, it will become an array with zero elements.
If the variable name is one or more array elements, such as PATH[1 3 7], only those array elements specified will be changed.
The set command requires all switch arguments to come before any non-switch arguments. For example, set flags -l will have the effect of setting the value of the variable flags to '-l', not making the variable local.
set -xg will print all global, exported variables.
set foo hi sets the value of the variable foo to be hi.
set -e smurf removes the variable smurf.
set PATH[4] ~/bin changes the fourth element of the PATH array to ~/bin
status [OPTION]-c or --is-command-substitution returns 0 if fish is currently executing a command substitution-b or --is-block returns 0 if fish is currently executing a block of code-i or --is-interactive returns 0 if fish is interactive, i.e.connected to a keyboard-l or --is-login returns 0 if fish is a login shell, i.e. if fish should perform login tasks such as setting up the PATH.switch VALUE; [case [WILDCARD...]; [COMMANDS...];...] endswitch statement is used to perform one of several blocks of commands depending on whether a specified value equals one of several wildcarded values.
switch $animal
case cat
echo evil
case wolf dog human moose dolphin whale
echo mammal
case duck goose albatross
echo bird
case shark trout stingray
echo fish
end
If the above code was run with $animal set to whale, the output would be mammal.
ulimit [OPTIONS] [LIMIT]
-a or --all Set or get all current limits-c or --core-size The maximum size of core files created-d or --data-size The maximum size of a process’s data segment-f or --file-size The maximum size of files created by the shell-l or --lock-size The maximum size that may be locked into memory-m or --resident-set-size The maximum resident set size-n or --file-descriptor-count The maximum number of open file descriptors (most systems do not allow this value to be set)-s or --stack-size The maximum stack size-t or --cpu-time The maximum amount of cpu time in seconds-u or --process-count The maximum number of processes available to a single user-v or --virtual-memory-size The maximum amount of virtual memory available to the shell. If supported by OS.If limit is given, it is the new value of the specified resource. If no option is given, then -f is assumed. Values are in kilobytes, except for -t, which is in seconds and -n and -u, which are unscaled values. The return status is 0 unless an invalid option or argument is supplied, or an error occurs while setting a new limit.
The fish implementation of ulimit should behave identically to the implementation in bash, except for these differences:
ulimit -Hs 64would set the hard stack size limit to 64 kB:
while CONDITION; COMMANDS; endwhile builtin causes fish to continually execute the command COMMANDS while the command CONDITION returns with status 0.while test -f foo.txt; echo file exists; sleep 10; endcauses fish to print the line 'file exists' at 10 second intervals as long as the file foo.txt exists.
1.4.6