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The user-friendly command line shell.
e322d3addc
Some background: fish has some files which should be updated atomically: specifically the history file and the universal variables file. If two fish processes modified these in-place at the same time, then that could result in interleaved writes and corrupted files. To prevent this, fish uses the write-to-adjacent-file-then-rename to atomically swap in a new file (history is slightly more complicated than this, for performance, but this remains true). This avoids corruption. However if two fish processes attempt this at the same time, then one process will win the race and the data from the other process will be lost. To prevent this, fish attempts to take an (advisory) lock on the target file before beginning this process. This prevents data loss because only one fish instance can replace the target file at once. (fish checks to ensure it's locked the right file). However some filesystems, particularly remote file systems, may have locks which hang for a long time, preventing the user from using their shell. This is far more serious than data loss, which is not catastrophic: losing a history item or variable is not a major deal. So fish just attempts to skip locks on remote filesystems. Unfortunately Linux does not have a good API for checking if a filesystem is remote: the best you can do is check the file system's magic number against a hard-coded list. Today, the list is NFS_SUPER_MAGIC, SMB_SUPER_MAGIC, SMB2_MAGIC_NUMBER, and CIFS_MAGIC_NUMBER. Expand it to AFS_SUPER_MAGIC, CODA_SUPER_MAGIC, NCP_SUPER_MAGIC, NFS_SUPER_MAGIC, OCFS2_SUPER_MAGIC, SMB_SUPER_MAGIC, SMB2_MAGIC_NUMBER, CIFS_MAGIC_NUMBER, V9FS_MAGIC which is believed to be exhaustive. ALSO include FUSE_SUPER_MAGIC: if the user's home directory is some FUSE filesystem, that's kind of sus and the fewer tricks we try to pull, the better. |
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.builds | ||
.github | ||
benchmarks | ||
build_tools | ||
cmake | ||
debian | ||
doc_internal | ||
doc_src | ||
docker | ||
etc | ||
osx | ||
po | ||
printf | ||
share | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
.cirrus.yml | ||
.clang-format | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
BSDmakefile | ||
build.rs | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
CHANGELOG.rst | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.rst | ||
COPYING | ||
Dockerfile | ||
fish.desktop | ||
fish.pc.in | ||
fish.png | ||
fish.spec.in | ||
GNUmakefile | ||
README.rst |
.. |Cirrus CI| image:: https://api.cirrus-ci.com/github/fish-shell/fish-shell.svg?branch=master
:target: https://cirrus-ci.com/github/fish-shell/fish-shell
:alt: Cirrus CI Build Status
`fish <https://fishshell.com/>`__ - the friendly interactive shell |Build Status| |Cirrus CI|
=============================================================================================
fish is a smart and user-friendly command line shell for macOS, Linux,
and the rest of the family. fish includes features like syntax
highlighting, autosuggest-as-you-type, and fancy tab completions that
just work, with no configuration required.
For downloads, screenshots and more, go to https://fishshell.com/.
Quick Start
-----------
fish generally works like other shells, like bash or zsh. A few
important differences can be found at
https://fishshell.com/docs/current/tutorial.html by searching for the
magic phrase “unlike other shells”.
Detailed user documentation is available by running ``help`` within
fish, and also at https://fishshell.com/docs/current/index.html
Getting fish
------------
macOS
~~~~~
fish can be installed:
- using `Homebrew <http://brew.sh/>`__: ``brew install fish``
- using `MacPorts <https://www.macports.org/>`__:
``sudo port install fish``
- using the `installer from fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com/>`__
- as a `standalone app from fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com/>`__
Note: The minimum supported macOS version is 10.10 "Yosemite".
Packages for Linux
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Packages for Debian, Fedora, openSUSE, and Red Hat Enterprise
Linux/CentOS are available from the `openSUSE Build
Service <https://software.opensuse.org/download.html?project=shells%3Afish&package=fish>`__.
Packages for Ubuntu are available from the `fish
PPA <https://launchpad.net/~fish-shell/+archive/ubuntu/release-3>`__,
and can be installed using the following commands:
::
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:fish-shell/release-3
sudo apt update
sudo apt install fish
Instructions for other distributions may be found at
`fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com>`__.
Windows
~~~~~~~
- On Windows 10/11, fish can be installed under the WSL Windows Subsystem
for Linux with the instructions for the appropriate distribution
listed above under “Packages for Linux”, or from source with the
instructions below.
- Fish can also be installed on all versions of Windows using
`Cygwin <https://cygwin.com/>`__ (from the **Shells** category).
Building from source
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If packages are not available for your platform, GPG-signed tarballs are
available from `fishshell.com <https://fishshell.com/>`__ and
`fish-shell on
GitHub <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/releases>`__. See the
`Building <#building>`__ section for instructions.
Running fish
------------
Once installed, run ``fish`` from your current shell to try fish out!
Dependencies
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Running fish requires:
- A terminfo database, typically from curses or ncurses (preinstalled on most \*nix systems) - this needs to be the directory tree format, not the "hashed" database.
If this is unavailable, fish uses an included xterm-256color definition.
- some common \*nix system utilities (currently ``mktemp``), in
addition to the basic POSIX utilities (``cat``, ``cut``, ``dirname``,
``file``, ``ls``, ``mkdir``, ``mkfifo``, ``rm``, ``sort``, ``tee``, ``tr``,
``uname`` and ``sed`` at least, but the full coreutils plus ``find`` and
``awk`` is preferred)
- The gettext library, if compiled with
translation support
The following optional features also have specific requirements:
- builtin commands that have the ``--help`` option or print usage
messages require ``nroff`` or ``mandoc`` for
display
- automated completion generation from manual pages requires Python 3.5+
- the ``fish_config`` web configuration tool requires Python 3.5+ and a web browser
- system clipboard integration (with the default Ctrl-V and Ctrl-X
bindings) require either the ``xsel``, ``xclip``,
``wl-copy``/``wl-paste`` or ``pbcopy``/``pbpaste`` utilities
- full completions for ``yarn`` and ``npm`` require the
``all-the-package-names`` NPM module
- ``colorls`` is used, if installed, to add color when running ``ls`` on platforms
that do not have color support (such as OpenBSD)
Building
--------
.. _dependencies-1:
Dependencies
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Compiling fish from a tarball requires:
- a C++11 compiler (g++ 4.8 or later, or clang 3.3 or later)
- CMake (version 3.5 or later)
- PCRE2 (headers and libraries) - optional, this will be downloaded if missing
- gettext (headers and libraries) - optional, for translation support
Sphinx is also optionally required to build the documentation from a
cloned git repository.
Additionally, running the test suite requires Python 3.5+ and the pexpect package.
Dependencies, git master
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Building from git master currently requires:
- Rust (version 1.70 or later)
- CMake (version 3.19 or later)
- a C compiler (for system feature detection and the test helper binary)
- PCRE2 (headers and libraries) - optional, this will be downloaded if missing
- gettext (headers and libraries) - optional, for translation support
- an Internet connection, as other dependencies will be downloaded automatically
Building from source (all platforms) - Makefile generator
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To install into ``/usr/local``, run:
.. code:: bash
mkdir build; cd build
cmake ..
make
sudo make install
The install directory can be changed using the
``-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX`` parameter for ``cmake``.
Build options
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In addition to the normal CMake build options (like ``CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX``), fish has some other options available to customize it.
- BUILD_DOCS=ON|OFF - whether to build the documentation. This is automatically set to OFF when Sphinx isn't installed.
- INSTALL_DOCS=ON|OFF - whether to install the docs. This is automatically set to on when BUILD_DOCS is or prebuilt documentation is available (like when building in-tree from a tarball).
- FISH_USE_SYSTEM_PCRE2=ON|OFF - whether to use an installed pcre2. This is normally autodetected.
- MAC_CODESIGN_ID=String|OFF - the codesign ID to use on Mac, or "OFF" to disable codesigning.
- WITH_GETTEXT=ON|OFF - whether to build with gettext support for translations.
Note that fish does *not* support static linking and will attempt to error out if it detects it.
Help, it didn’t build!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On Debian or Ubuntu you want these packages:
::
sudo apt install build-essential cmake libpcre2-dev gettext
On RedHat, CentOS, or Amazon EC2 everything should be preinstalled.
Contributing Changes to the Code
--------------------------------
See the `Guide for Developers <CONTRIBUTING.rst>`__.
Contact Us
----------
Questions, comments, rants and raves can be posted to the official fish
mailing list at https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fish-users
or join us on our `matrix
channel <https://matrix.to/#/#fish-shell:matrix.org>`__. Or use the `fish tag
on Unix & Linux Stackexchange <https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/fish>`__.
There is also a fish tag on Stackoverflow, but it is typically a poor fit.
Found a bug? Have an awesome idea? Please `open an
issue <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/new>`__.
.. |Build Status| image:: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/workflows/make%20test/badge.svg
:target: https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/actions