FISH(1) | fish-shell | FISH(1) |
fish - the friendly interactive shell
fish [OPTIONS] [FILE [ARG ...]] fish [OPTIONS] [-c COMMAND [ARG ...]]
fish is a command-line shell written mainly with interactive use in mind. This page briefly describes the options for invoking fish. The full manual is available in HTML by using the help command from inside fish, and in the fish-doc(1) man page. The tutorial is available as HTML via help tutorial or in man fish-tutorial.
The following options are available:
The fish exit status is generally the exit status of the last foreground command.
While fish provides extensive support for debugging fish scripts, it is also possible to debug and instrument its internals. Debugging can be enabled by passing the --debug option. For example, the following command turns on debugging for background IO thread events, in addition to the default categories, i.e. debug, error, warning, and warning-path:
> fish --debug=iothread
Available categories are listed by fish --print-debug-categories. The --debug option accepts a comma-separated list of categories, and supports glob syntax. The following command turns on debugging for complete, history, history-file, and profile-history, as well as the default categories:
> fish --debug='complete,*history*'
Debug messages output to stderr by default. Note that if fish_trace is set, execution tracing also outputs to stderr by default. You can output to a file using the --debug-output option:
> fish --debug='complete,*history*' --debug-output=/tmp/fish.log --init-command='set fish_trace on'
These options can also be changed via the FISH_DEBUG and FISH_DEBUG_OUTPUT variables. The categories enabled via --debug are added to the ones enabled by $FISH_DEBUG, so they can be disabled by prefixing them with - (reader-*,-ast* enables reader debugging and disables ast debugging).
The file given in --debug-output takes precedence over the file in FISH_DEBUG_OUTPUT.
2023, fish-shell developers
December 21, 2023 | 3.6 |