# Fisher > A plugin manager for [fish](https://fishshell.com)—the friendly interactive shell. Manage functions, completions, bindings, and snippets from the command line. Extend your shell capabilities, change the look of your prompt and create repeatable configurations across different systems effortlessly. - [Oh My Fish](https://github.com/oh-my-fish/packages-main) plugin support. - Blazingly fast concurrent plugin downloads. - 100% pure fish—easy to contribute to or modify. - Zero configuration out of the box. Need to tweak a thing? [You can do that too](#using-your-fish_plugins-file). Looking for plugins? Browse [git.io/awesome.fish](https://git.io/awesome.fish) or [search](https://github.com/topics/fish-plugins) [on](https://github.com/topics/fish-package) [GitHub](https://github.com/topics/fish-plugin). ## Installation ```console curl -sL git.io/fisher | source && fisher install jorgebucaran/fisher ``` ## Quickstart You can install, update, and remove plugins interactively with Fisher, taking advantage of fish [tab completion](https://fishshell.com/docs/current/index.html#completion) and rich syntax highlighting. ### Installing plugins Install plugins using the `install` command followed by the path to the repository on GitHub. ```console fisher install ilancosman/tide ``` To get a specific version of a plugin add an `@` symbol after the plugin name followed by a tag, branch, or [commit](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitglossary#Documentation/gitglossary.txt-aiddefcommit-ishacommit-ishalsocommittish). ```console fisher install jorgebucaran/nvm.fish@1.1.0 ``` You can install plugins from a local directory too. ```console fisher install ~/path/to/plugin ``` > Fisher expands plugins into your fish configuration directory by default, overwriting existing files. If you wish to change this behavior, set `$fisher_path` to your preferred location and put it in your function path. ### Listing plugins List all the plugins that are currently installed using the `list` command. ```console $ fisher list jorgebucaran/fisher ilancosman/tide jorgebucaran/nvm.fish@1.1.0 /home/jb/path/to/plugin ``` > `jorgebucaran/fisher` is listed because we installed it to start with! The `list` command also accepts a regular expression to filter the output. ```console $ fisher list \^/ /home/jb/path/to/plugin ``` ### Updating plugins The `update` command updates one or more plugins to their latest version. ```console fisher update ilancosman/tide ``` > `fisher update` by itself will update everything, including Fisher. ### Removing plugins Remove installed plugins using the `remove` command. ```console fisher remove jorgebucaran/nvm.fish@1.1.0 ``` Someday you may want to remove everything, including Fisher. ```console fisher list | fisher remove ``` ## Using your `fish_plugins` file Whenever you install or remove a plugin from the command line, Fisher will write down all your installed plugins plugins to `$__fish_config_dir/fish_plugins`. Adding this file to your dotfiles or version control is the easiest way to share your configuration across different systems. You can also edit this file and run `fisher update` to commit changes. Here's an example: ```console nano $__fish_config_dir/fish_plugins ``` ```diff jorgebucaran/fisher ilancosman/tide + jethrokuan/z - jorgebucaran/nvm.fish@1.1.0 /home/jb/path/to/plugin ``` ```console fisher update ``` That will install **jethrokuan/z**, remove **jorgebucaran/nvm.fish**, and update everything else. ## Creating a plugin A plugin consists of one or more files in a `functions`, `conf.d`, and/or `completions` directory. `*.fish` files under `conf.d` are also known as snippets and automatically run on shell startup. These are the files that Fisher looks for when installing a plugin. ``` my-plugin ├── functions │ └── foobar.fish ├── completions │ └── foobar.fish └── conf.d └── foobar.fish ``` While some packages contain every kind of file, some packages contain only functions or configuration snippets. You are not limited to a single file per directory either. There can be as many files as you need or only one as in the next example. ### Event system Fisher leverages [fish events](https://fishshell.com/docs/current/cmds/emit.html) to notify plugins when they are being installed, updated, or removed. > `--on-event` functions must be already loaded when their event is emitted. So put event handlers in your `conf.d` directory. ```fish # Defined in conf.d/foobar.fish function foobar_install --on-event foobar_install # Set global variables, create bindings, and other install logic. end function foobar_update --on-event foobar_update # Migrate resources, print warnings, and other update logic. end function foobar_uninstall --on-event foobar_uninstall # Erase "private" functions, variables, bindings, and other uninstall logic. end ``` ## License [MIT](LICENSE.md)