# find command The **find** command queries {{chisel_releases_repo}} for matching slices. Globs (`*` and `?`) are allowed in the query. By default it fetches the slices for the same Ubuntu version as the current host, unless the `--release` option is used. ## Options - `--release` is a {{chisel_releases_repo}} branch or local directory (e.g. ubuntu-22.04). ## Example Run the following command to search python3.10 slices in `ubuntu-22.04` release: ```{terminal} :input: chisel find --release ubuntu-22.04 python3.10 2024/11/26 13:11:08 Consulting release repository... 2024/11/26 13:11:10 Fetching current ubuntu-22.04 release... 2024/11/26 13:11:10 Processing ubuntu-22.04 release... Slice Summary python3.10_copyright - python3.10_core - python3.10_standard - python3.10_utils - python3.11_copyright - python3.11_core - python3.11_standard - python3.11_utils - ``` ```{note} Notice that there are some python3.11 slices in the output as well. This is because the find command finds partially-matched slices. ``` The first three lines are logs, which you can ignore with: ```{terminal} :input: chisel find --release ubuntu-22.04 python3.10 2>/dev/null Slice Summary python3.10_copyright - python3.10_core - python3.10_standard - python3.10_utils - python3.11_copyright - python3.11_core - python3.11_standard - python3.11_utils - ```