Provided by: fish-common_3.3.1+ds-3_all bug

NAME

       fish - the friendly interactive shell

SYNOPSIS

          fish [OPTIONS] [-c command] [FILE] [ARGUMENTS...]

DESCRIPTION

       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 fish-tutorial(1).

       The following options are available:

       • -c or --command=COMMANDS evaluate the specified commands instead  of  reading  from  the
         commandline,  passing  any  additional positional arguments via $argv. Note that, unlike
         other shells, the first argument is not the name of the program  ($0),  but  simply  the
         first normal argument.

       • -C  or  --init-command=COMMANDS  evaluate  the  specified  commands  after  reading  the
         configuration, before running the command specified by -c or reading interactive input

       • -d or --debug=DEBUG_CATEGORIES enable debug output and specify a  pattern  for  matching
         debug categories. See Debugging below for details.

       • -o  or  --debug-output=DEBUG_FILE  specify  a  file  path  to  receive the debug output,
         including categories and fish_trace. The default is stderr.

       • -i or --interactive specify that fish is to run in interactive mode

       • -l or --login specify that fish is to run as a login shell

       • -n or --no-execute do not execute any commands, only perform syntax checking

       • -p or --profile=PROFILE_FILE when fish exits, output timing information on all  executed
         commands  to  the  specified  file. This excludes time spent starting up and reading the
         configuration.

       • --profile-startup=PROFILE_FILE will write timing information for fish's startup  to  the
         specified file. This is useful to profile your configuration.

       • -P or --private enables private mode, so fish will not access old or store new history.

       • --print-rusage-self when fish exits, output stats from getrusage

       • --print-debug-categories outputs the list of debug categories, and then exits.

       • -v or --version display version and exit

       • -f  or  --features=FEATURES  enables  one  or more feature flags (separated by a comma).
         These are how fish stages changes that might break scripts.

       The fish exit status is generally the exit status of the last foreground command.

DEBUGGING

       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.

COPYRIGHT

       2022, fish-shell developers