history - show and manipulate command history

Synopsis

history [search] [--show-time] [--case-sensitive]
                 [--exact | --prefix | --contains] [--max N] [--null] [--reverse]
                 [SEARCH_STRING ...]
history delete [--case-sensitive]
               [--exact | --prefix | --contains] SEARCH_STRING ...
history merge
history save
history clear
history clear-session

Description

history is used to search, delete, and otherwise manipulate the history of interactive commands.

The following operations (sub-commands) are available:

search

Returns history items matching the search string. If no search string is provided it returns all history items. This is the default operation if no other operation is specified. You only have to explicitly say history search if you wish to search for one of the subcommands. The --contains search option will be used if you don’t specify a different search option. Entries are ordered newest to oldest unless you use the --reverse flag. If stdout is attached to a tty the output will be piped through your pager by the history function. The history builtin simply writes the results to stdout.

delete

Deletes history items. The --contains search option will be used if you don’t specify a different search option. If you don’t specify --exact a prompt will be displayed before any items are deleted asking you which entries are to be deleted. You can enter the word “all” to delete all matching entries. You can enter a single ID (the number in square brackets) to delete just that single entry. You can enter more than one ID, or an ID range separated by a space to delete multiple entries. Just press [enter] to not delete anything. Note that the interactive delete behavior is a feature of the history function. The history builtin only supports --exact --case-sensitive deletion.

merge

Immediately incorporates history changes from other sessions. Ordinarily fish ignores history changes from sessions started after the current one. This command applies those changes immediately.

save

Immediately writes all changes to the history file. The shell automatically saves the history file; this option is provided for internal use and should not normally need to be used by the user.

clear

Clears the history file. A prompt is displayed before the history is erased asking you to confirm you really want to clear all history unless builtin history is used.

clear-session

Clears the history file from all activity of the current session. Note: If history merge or builtin history merge is run in a session, only the history after this will be erased.

The following options are available:

These flags can appear before or immediately after one of the sub-commands listed above.

-C or --case-sensitive

Does a case-sensitive search. The default is case-insensitive. Note that prior to fish 2.4.0 the default was case-sensitive.

-c or --contains

Searches items in the history that contain the specified text string. This is the default for the --search flag. This is not currently supported by the delete subcommand.

-e or --exact

Searches or deletes items in the history that exactly match the specified text string. This is the default for the delete subcommand. Note that the match is case-insensitive by default. If you really want an exact match, including letter case, you must use the -C or --case-sensitive flag.

-p or --prefix

Searches items in the history that begin with the specified text string. This is not currently supported by the delete subcommand.

-t or --show-time

Prepends each history entry with the date and time the entry was recorded. By default it uses the strftime format # %c%n. You can specify another format; e.g., --show-time="%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S " or --show-time="%a%I%p". The short option, -t, doesn’t accept a strftime format string; it only uses the default format. Any strftime format is allowed, including %s to get the raw UNIX seconds since the epoch.

-z or --null

Causes history entries written by the search operations to be terminated by a NUL character rather than a newline. This allows the output to be processed by read -z to correctly handle multiline history entries.

-*NUMBER* -n NUMBER or --max NUMBER

Limits the matched history items to the first NUMBER matching entries. This is only valid for history search.

-R or --reverse

Causes the history search results to be ordered oldest to newest. Which is the order used by most shells. The default is newest to oldest.

-h or --help

Displays help for this command.

Example

history clear
# Deletes all history items

history search --contains "foo"
# Outputs a list of all previous commands containing the string "foo".

history delete --prefix "foo"
# Interactively deletes commands which start with "foo" from the history.
# You can select more than one entry by entering their IDs separated by a space.

Customizing the name of the history file

By default interactive commands are logged to $XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/fish_history (typically ~/.local/share/fish/fish_history).

You can set the fish_history variable to another name for the current shell session. The default value (when the variable is unset) is fish which corresponds to $XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/fish_history. If you set it to e.g. fun, the history would be written to $XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/fun_history. An empty string means history will not be stored at all. This is similar to the private session features in web browsers.

You can change fish_history at any time (by using set -x fish_history "session_name") and it will take effect right away. If you set it to "default", it will use the default session name (which is "fish").

Other shells such as bash and zsh use a variable named HISTFILE for a similar purpose. Fish uses a different name to avoid conflicts and signal that the behavior is different (session name instead of a file path). Also, if you set the var to anything other than fish or default it will inhibit importing the bash history. That’s because the most common use case for this feature is to avoid leaking private or sensitive history when giving a presentation.

Notes

If you specify both --prefix and --contains the last flag seen is used.

Note that for backwards compatibility each subcommand can also be specified as a long option. For example, rather than history search you can type history --search. Those long options are deprecated and will be removed in a future release.