No man page for the cd command
cd
is a builtin shell command.
$ type cd
cd is a shell builtin
You can open a help page for cd
on Bash with
$ help cd
Which currently shows (Ubuntu 16.04):
$ help cd
cd: cd [-L|[-P [-e]] [-@]] [dir]
Change the shell working directory.
Change the current directory to DIR. The default DIR is the value of the
HOME shell variable.
The variable CDPATH defines the search path for the directory containing
DIR. Alternative directory names in CDPATH are separated by a colon (:).
A null directory name is the same as the current directory. If DIR begins
with a slash (/), then CDPATH is not used.
If the directory is not found, and the shell option `cdable_vars' is set,
the word is assumed to be a variable name. If that variable has a value,
its value is used for DIR.
Options:
-L force symbolic links to be followed: resolve symbolic links in
DIR after processing instances of `..'
-P use the physical directory structure without following symbolic
links: resolve symbolic links in DIR before processing instances
of `..'
-e if the -P option is supplied, and the current working directory
cannot be determined successfully, exit with a non-zero status
-@ on systems that support it, present a file with extended attributes
as a directory containing the file attributes
The default is to follow symbolic links, as if `-L' were specified.
`..' is processed by removing the immediately previous pathname component
back to a slash or the beginning of DIR.
Exit Status:
Returns 0 if the directory is changed, and if $PWD is set successfully when
-P is used; non-zero otherwise.
Unfortunately, it does not answer your questions. There is documentation that does, however.
You can get to it with
$ man builtins
It opens many pages of help with less
, my default viewer. I can find the help for cd by pressing the /
key, then typing cd
, then Enter
, and pressing n
twice gets me to the third instance of the substring, and the help, which reads:
cd [-L|[-P [-e]] [-@]] [dir]
Change the current directory to dir. if dir is not supplied,
the value of the HOME shell variable is the default. Any addi‐
tional arguments following dir are ignored. The variable CDPATH
defines the search path for the directory containing dir: each
directory name in CDPATH is searched for dir. Alternative
directory names in CDPATH are separated by a colon (:). A null
directory name in CDPATH is the same as the current directory,
i.e., ``.''. If dir begins with a slash (/), then CDPATH is not
used. The -P option causes cd to use the physical directory
structure by resolving symbolic links while traversing dir and
before processing instances of .. in dir (see also the -P option
to the set builtin command); the -L option forces symbolic links
to be followed by resolving the link after processing instances
of .. in dir. If .. appears in dir, it is processed by removing
the immediately previous pathname component from dir, back to a
slash or the beginning of dir. If the -e option is supplied
with -P, and the current working directory cannot be success‐
fully determined after a successful directory change, cd will
return an unsuccessful status. On systems that support it, the
-@ option presents the extended attributes associated with a
file as a directory. An argument of - is converted to $OLDPWD
before the directory change is attempted. If a non-empty direc‐
tory name from CDPATH is used, or if - is the first argument,
and the directory change is successful, the absolute pathname of
the new working directory is written to the standard output.
The return value is true if the directory was successfully
changed; false otherwise.
Look for the -
argument about the seventh line from the end:
An argument of
-
is converted to$OLDPWD
before the directory change is attempted.
Note that there is no --
argument - which seems to mean that it actually ignores it.
cd
is not a command, it's built into your shell. This is necessary because your current working directory is controlled by the PWD
environment variable named after the pwd
or "print working directory" command.
The environment variables of a parent process cannot be changed by a child process. So if your shell ran /bin/cd
which changed PWD
it would only affect /bin/cd
and anything it ran. It would not change the shell's PWD
.
Some systems, like OS X and CentOS, map the cd
man page to builtin
which lists all the shell built ins and lets you know you should look at your shell's man page.
You can check what shell you have with echo $SHELL
, it's probably bash
.