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==Introduction== | ==Introduction== | ||
− | A shell provides a command line interface for interacting with the operating system. A shell receives commands from the input channel and executes them. Many shells provide built in functions to help with everyday tasks such as file management, file globbing, command line editing, command macros, and environment variables. Different shells behave differently. The default shell on GhostBSD is '' | + | A shell provides a command line interface for interacting with the operating system. A shell receives commands from the input channel and executes them. Many shells provide built in functions to help with everyday tasks such as file management, file globbing, command line editing, command macros, and environment variables. Different shells behave differently. The default shell on GhostBSD is ''fish''. When you install a shell from a port or a package, it adds an appropriate entry (full path to the shell) in <code>/etc/shells</code>. |
==Shells on GhostBSD== | ==Shells on GhostBSD== |