fish
fish, the friendly interactive shell, is a commandline shell intended to be interactive and user-friendly.
fish is intentionally not fully POSIX compliant, it aims at addressing POSIX inconsistencies (as perceived by the creators) with a simplified or a different syntax. This means that even simple POSIX compliant scripts may require some significant adaptation or even full rewriting to run with fish.
Installation
Install the fish package. For the development version, install the fish-gitAUR package.
Once installed, simply type fish
to drop into the fish shell.
Documentation can be found by typing help
from fish; it will be opened in a web browser. It is recommended to read at least the "Syntax overview" section, since fish's syntax is different from many other shells.
System integration
One must decide whether fish is going to be the default user's shell, which means that the user falls directly in fish at login, or whether it is used in interactive terminal mode as a child process of the current default shell, here we will assume the latter is Bash. To elaborate on these two setups:
- fish used as the default shell: this mode requires some basic understanding of the fish functioning and its scripting language. The user's current initialization scripts and environment variables need to be migrated to the new fish environment. To configure the system in this mode, follow #Setting fish as default shell.
- fish used as an interactive shell only: this is the less disruptive mode, all the Bash initialization scripts are run as usual and fish runs on top of Bash in interactive mode connected to a terminal. To setup fish in this mode, follow #Setting fish as interactive shell only.
Setting fish as default shell
If you decide to set fish as the default user shell, the first step is to set the shell of this particular user to /usr/bin/fish
. This can be done by following the instructions in Command-line shell#Changing your default shell.
The next step is to port the current needed actions and configuration performed in the various Bash initialization scripts, namely /etc/profile
, ~/.bash_profile
, and , into the fish framework.
In particular, the content of the environment variable, once directly logged under fish, should be checked and adjusted to one's need. In fish, is defined as a global environment variable: it has a global scope across all functions, it is lost upon reboot and it is an environment variable which means it is exported to child processes. The recommended way of adding additional locations to the path is by calling the fish_add_path command from . For example:
$ fish_add_path -p /first/path /second/path /third/one
These three locations will be prepended to the path.
Setting fish as interactive shell only
Not setting fish as system wide or user default allows the current Bash scripts to run on startup. It ensures the current user's environment variables are unchanged and are exported to fish which then runs as a Bash child. Below are several ways of running fish in interactive mode without setting it as the default shell.
Modify .bashrc to drop into fish
Keep the default shell as Bash and simply add the line exec fish
to the appropriate Bash#Configuration files, such as .bashrc
. This will allow Bash to properly source /etc/profile
and all files in . Because fish replaces the Bash process, exiting fish will also exit the terminal. Compared to the following options, this is the most universal solution, since it works both on a local machine and on a SSH server.
Use terminal emulator options
Another option is to open your terminal emulator with a command line option that executes fish. For most terminals this is the switch, so for example, to open gnome-terminal using fish, change your shortcut to use:
gnome-terminal -e fish
With terminal emulators that do not support setting the shell, for example , it would look like this:
SHELL=/usr/bin/fish lilyterm
Also, depending on the terminal, you may be able to set fish as the default shell in either the terminal configuration or the terminal profile.
Use terminal multiplexer options
To set fish as the shell started in tmux, put this into your :
set-option -g default-shell "/usr/bin/fish"
Whenever you run tmux, you will be dropped into fish.
Configuration
The configuration file runs at every login and is located at . Adding commands or functions to the file will execute/define them when opening a terminal, similar to .bashrc
. Note that whenever a variable needs to be preserved, it should be set as universal rather than defined in the aforementioned configuration file.
The user's functions are located in the directory under the filenames .
Web interface
The fish terminal colors, prompt, functions, variables, history, bindings and abbreviations can be set with the interactive web interface:
fish_config
It may fail to start if IPv6 has been disabled. See and IPv6#Disable IPv6.
Command completion
fish can generate autocompletions from man pages. Completions are written to and can be generated by calling:
fish_update_completions
You can also define your own completions in ~/.config/fish/completions/
. See /usr/share/fish/completions/
for a few examples.
Context-aware completions for Arch Linux-specific commands like pacman, pacman-key, makepkg, pbget, pacmatic are built into fish, since the policy of the fish development is to include all the existent completions in the upstream tarball. The memory management is clever enough to avoid any negative impact on resources.
Tips and tricks
Command substitution
fish does not implement Bash style history substitution (e.g. ), and the developers recommend in the fish faq to use the interactive history recall interface instead: the arrow recalls whole past lines and (or ) recalls individual arguments, while prepends to the existing line.
However some workarounds are described in the fish wiki: while not providing complete history substitution, some functions replace with the previous command or with the previous last argument.
Disable greeting
By default, fish prints a greeting message at startup. To disable it, run once:
$ set -U fish_greeting
This clears the universal variable, shared with all fish instances and which is preserved upon restart of the shell.
Make su launch fish
If su starts with Bash because Bash is the target user's (root if no username is provided) default shell, one can define a function to redirect it to fish whatever the user's shell:
~/.config/fish/functions/su.fish
function su command su --shell=/usr/bin/fish $argv end
Start X at login
Add the following to the bottom of your .
For those running fish in interactive mode, replace with status is-interactive
in the above code.
Put git status in prompt
If you would like fish to display the branch and dirty status when you are in a git directory, you can define the following function:
However, this is now deprecated, see fish-shell git. Alternatively, the Informative Git Prompt has now been built into fish and can be activated from fish_config if so desired.
Color the hostname in the prompt in SSH
To color the hostname in the prompt dynamically whenever connected through SSH, add the following lines in either the function or the fish configuration file, here using the red color:
Evaluate ssh-agent
In fish, generate errors due to how variables are set. To work around this, use the csh-style option :
$ eval (ssh-agent -c)
The "command not found" hook
Fish includes a "command not found" hook that will automatically search the official repositories, when entering an unrecognized command. This hook will be run using , falling back to pacman -F
if it is not installed.
Since 3.2.2, "command not found" will not fallback to pacman -F
by default due to its bad performance.
If the delay this behavior introduces is undesirable, this hook can be overridden by redefining so that it only prints an error message:
$ function fish_command_not_found __fish_default_command_not_found_handler $argv[1] end
To make this change permanent, the built-in can be used:
$ funcsave fish_command_not_found
Remove a process from the list of jobs
fish terminates any jobs put into the background when fish terminates. To keep a job running after fish terminates, first use the builtin. For example, the following starts in the background and then disowns it:
$ firefox & $ disown
This means firefox will not be closed when the fish process is closed. See disown(1) in fish for more details.
Set a persistent alias
To quickly make a persistent alias, one can simply use the method showed in this example:
$ alias lsl "ls -l" $ funcsave lsl
alias supports the / option since fish version 3.0:
$ alias -s lsl "ls -l"
This will create the function:
function lsl ls -l $argv end
and will set the alias as a persistent shell function. To see all functions and/or edit them, one can simply use and look into the Function tab in the web configuration page.
For more detailed information, see alias - create a function — fish-shell.
Faster filesystem navigation with zoxide
is a smarter cd command that lets you navigate anywhere in just a few keystrokes. It remembers your frequently used directories and uses a scoring mechanism to guess where you want to go.
See also
- https://fishshell.com/ - Home page
- https://fishshell.com/docs/current/ - Documentation
- https://hyperpolyglot.org/unix-shells - Shell grammar correspondence table ("shell rosetta")
- https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell - fish on GitHub