Currently fish doesn't recognize toor as special. However, it's likely
that on BSD systems, fish shell will be used on toor, not on root (toor
is an intentionally existing account to use more advanced shell on, like
shell).
When you chroot in Debian, bash shows the chroot environment in the prompt:
```bash
...
if [ -z "${debian_chroot:-}" ] && [ -r /etc/debian_chroot ]; then
debian_chroot=$(cat /etc/debian_chroot)
fi
PS1='${debian_chroot:+($debian_chroot)}\u@\h:\w\$ '
...
```
This is the effect:
```
(chroot_env) user@host:~#
```
It is useful when chrooting, since usually the hostname remains the same and thus you can't distinguish where you are.