fish-shell/doc_src/source.txt
Fabian Homborg 1d5e715008 source: Return error instead of implicitly reading from tty
For things like

    source $undefined

or
    source (nooutput)

it was quite annoying that it read from tty.

Instead we now require a "-" as the filename to read from the tty.

This does not apply to reading from stdin if it's redirected, so

    something | source

still works.

Fixes #2633.
2018-10-22 21:22:27 +02:00

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\section source source - evaluate contents of file.
\subsection source-synopsis Synopsis
\fish{synopsis}
source FILENAME [ARGUMENTS...]
somecommand | source
\endfish
\subsection source-description Description
`source` evaluates the commands of the specified file in the current shell. This is different from starting a new process to perform the commands (i.e. `fish < FILENAME`) since the commands will be evaluated by the current shell, which means that changes in shell variables will affect the current shell. If additional arguments are specified after the file name, they will be inserted into the `$argv` variable. The `$argv` variable will not include the name of the sourced file.
If no file is specified and stdin is not the terminal, or if the file name '`-`' is used, stdin will be read.
The return status of `source` is the return status of the last job to execute. If something goes wrong while opening or reading the file, `source` exits with a non-zero status.
`.` (a single period) is an alias for the `source` command. The use of `.` is deprecated in favour of `source`, and `.` will be removed in a future version of fish.
\subsection source-example Example
\fish
source ~/.config/fish/config.fish
# Causes fish to re-read its initialization file.
\endfish
\subsection Caveats
In fish versions prior to 2.3.0 the `$argv` variable would have a single element (the name of the sourced file) if no arguments are present. Otherwise it would contain arguments without the name of the sourced file. That behavior was very confusing and unlike other shells such as bash and zsh.