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a0d0e21e LW |
1 | =head1 NAME |
2 | ||
3 | perldiag - various Perl diagnostics | |
4 | ||
5 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | |
6 | ||
7 | These messages are classified as follows (listed in increasing order of | |
8 | desperation): | |
9 | ||
10 | (W) A warning (optional). | |
11 | (D) A deprecation (optional). | |
12 | (S) A severe warning (mandatory). | |
13 | (F) A fatal error (trappable). | |
14 | (P) An internal error you should never see (trappable). | |
54310121 | 15 | (X) A very fatal error (nontrappable). |
cb1a09d0 | 16 | (A) An alien error message (not generated by Perl). |
a0d0e21e | 17 | |
748a9306 | 18 | Optional warnings are enabled by using the B<-w> switch. Warnings may |
68dc0745 | 19 | be captured by setting C<$SIG{__WARN__}> to a reference to a routine that |
20 | will be called on each warning instead of printing it. See L<perlvar>. | |
748a9306 LW |
21 | Trappable errors may be trapped using the eval operator. See |
22 | L<perlfunc/eval>. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
23 | |
24 | Some of these messages are generic. Spots that vary are denoted with a %s, | |
2ba9eb46 | 25 | just as in a printf format. Note that some messages start with a %s! |
702d120d | 26 | The symbols C<"%(-?@> sort before the letters, while C<[> and C<\> sort after. |
a0d0e21e LW |
27 | |
28 | =over 4 | |
29 | ||
30 | =item "my" variable %s can't be in a package | |
31 | ||
32 | (F) Lexically scoped variables aren't in a package, so it doesn't make sense | |
33 | to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the front. Use local() | |
34 | if you want to localize a package variable. | |
35 | ||
2ba9eb46 | 36 | =item "my" variable %s masks earlier declaration in same scope |
37 | ||
38 | (S) A lexical variable has been redeclared in the same scope, effectively | |
39 | eliminating all access to the previous instance. This is almost always | |
8b1a09fc | 40 | a typographical error. Note that the earlier variable will still exist |
2ba9eb46 | 41 | until the end of the scope or until all closure referents to it are |
42 | destroyed. | |
43 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
44 | =item "no" not allowed in expression |
45 | ||
46 | (F) The "no" keyword is recognized and executed at compile time, and returns | |
47 | no useful value. See L<perlmod>. | |
48 | ||
49 | =item "use" not allowed in expression | |
50 | ||
51 | (F) The "use" keyword is recognized and executed at compile time, and returns | |
52 | no useful value. See L<perlmod>. | |
53 | ||
54 | =item % may only be used in unpack | |
55 | ||
5f05dabc | 56 | (F) You can't pack a string by supplying a checksum, because the |
a0d0e21e LW |
57 | checksumming process loses information, and you can't go the other |
58 | way. See L<perlfunc/unpack>. | |
59 | ||
60 | =item %s (...) interpreted as function | |
61 | ||
62 | (W) You've run afoul of the rule that says that any list operator followed | |
8b1a09fc | 63 | by parentheses turns into a function, with all the list operators arguments |
5f05dabc | 64 | found inside the parentheses. See L<perlop/Terms and List Operators (Leftward)>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
65 | |
66 | =item %s argument is not a HASH element | |
67 | ||
5f05dabc | 68 | (F) The argument to exists() must be a hash element, such as |
a0d0e21e LW |
69 | |
70 | $foo{$bar} | |
71 | $ref->[12]->{"susie"} | |
72 | ||
5f05dabc | 73 | =item %s argument is not a HASH element or slice |
74 | ||
75 | (F) The argument to delete() must be either a hash element, such as | |
76 | ||
77 | $foo{$bar} | |
78 | $ref->[12]->{"susie"} | |
79 | ||
80 | or a hash slice, such as | |
81 | ||
82 | @foo{$bar, $baz, $xyzzy} | |
83 | @{$ref->[12]}{"susie", "queue"} | |
84 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
85 | =item %s did not return a true value |
86 | ||
87 | (F) A required (or used) file must return a true value to indicate that | |
88 | it compiled correctly and ran its initialization code correctly. It's | |
89 | traditional to end such a file with a "1;", though any true value would | |
90 | do. See L<perlfunc/require>. | |
91 | ||
92 | =item %s found where operator expected | |
93 | ||
94 | (S) The Perl lexer knows whether to expect a term or an operator. If it | |
95 | sees what it knows to be a term when it was expecting to see an operator, | |
96 | it gives you this warning. Usually it indicates that an operator or | |
97 | delimiter was omitted, such as a semicolon. | |
98 | ||
f86702cc | 99 | =item %s had compilation errors |
a0d0e21e LW |
100 | |
101 | (F) The final summary message when a C<perl -c> fails. | |
102 | ||
f86702cc | 103 | =item %s has too many errors |
a0d0e21e LW |
104 | |
105 | (F) The parser has given up trying to parse the program after 10 errors. | |
106 | Further error messages would likely be uninformative. | |
107 | ||
108 | =item %s matches null string many times | |
109 | ||
110 | (W) The pattern you've specified would be an infinite loop if the | |
111 | regular expression engine didn't specifically check for that. See L<perlre>. | |
112 | ||
113 | =item %s never introduced | |
114 | ||
115 | (S) The symbol in question was declared but somehow went out of scope | |
116 | before it could possibly have been used. | |
117 | ||
118 | =item %s syntax OK | |
119 | ||
120 | (F) The final summary message when a C<perl -c> succeeds. | |
121 | ||
f86702cc | 122 | =item %s: Command not found |
cb1a09d0 AD |
123 | |
124 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead | |
3a52c276 CS |
125 | of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into |
126 | Perl yourself. | |
cb1a09d0 | 127 | |
f86702cc | 128 | =item %s: Expression syntax |
cb1a09d0 AD |
129 | |
130 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead | |
3a52c276 CS |
131 | of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into |
132 | Perl yourself. | |
cb1a09d0 | 133 | |
f86702cc | 134 | =item %s: Undefined variable |
cb1a09d0 AD |
135 | |
136 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead | |
3a52c276 CS |
137 | of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into |
138 | Perl yourself. | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
139 | |
140 | =item %s: not found | |
141 | ||
8b1a09fc | 142 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through the Bourne shell |
3a52c276 | 143 | instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script |
cb1a09d0 AD |
144 | into Perl yourself. |
145 | ||
702d120d MG |
146 | =item (Missing semicolon on previous line?) |
147 | ||
148 | (S) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message "%s | |
149 | found where operator expected". Don't automatically put a semicolon on | |
150 | the previous line just because you saw this message. | |
151 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
152 | =item B<-P> not allowed for setuid/setgid script |
153 | ||
154 | (F) The script would have to be opened by the C preprocessor by name, | |
155 | which provides a race condition that breaks security. | |
156 | ||
157 | =item C<-T> and C<-B> not implemented on filehandles | |
158 | ||
159 | (F) Perl can't peek at the stdio buffer of filehandles when it doesn't | |
160 | know about your kind of stdio. You'll have to use a filename instead. | |
161 | ||
08e9d68e DD |
162 | =item C<-p> destination: %s |
163 | ||
164 | (F) An error occurred during the implicit output invoked by the C<-p> | |
165 | command-line switch. (This output goes to STDOUT unless you've | |
166 | redirected it with select().) | |
167 | ||
a5f75d66 AD |
168 | =item 500 Server error |
169 | ||
170 | See Server error. | |
171 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
172 | =item ?+* follows nothing in regexp |
173 | ||
174 | (F) You started a regular expression with a quantifier. Backslash it | |
175 | if you meant it literally. See L<perlre>. | |
176 | ||
177 | =item @ outside of string | |
178 | ||
2ba9eb46 | 179 | (F) You had a pack template that specified an absolute position outside |
a0d0e21e LW |
180 | the string being unpacked. See L<perlfunc/pack>. |
181 | ||
182 | =item accept() on closed fd | |
183 | ||
184 | (W) You tried to do an accept on a closed socket. Did you forget to check | |
185 | the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/accept>. | |
186 | ||
187 | =item Allocation too large: %lx | |
188 | ||
54310121 | 189 | (X) You can't allocate more than 64K on an MS-DOS machine. |
55497cff | 190 | |
191 | =item Allocation too large | |
192 | ||
193 | (F) You can't allocate more than 2^31+"small amount" bytes. | |
a0d0e21e | 194 | |
2ae324a7 | 195 | =item Applying %s to %s will act on scalar(%s) |
196 | ||
197 | (W) The pattern match (//), substitution (s///), and translation (tr///) | |
198 | operators work on scalar values. If you apply one of them to an array | |
199 | or a hash, it will convert the array or hash to a scalar value -- the | |
200 | length of an array, or the population info of a hash -- and then work on | |
201 | that scalar value. This is probably not what you meant to do. See | |
202 | L<perlfunc/grep> and L<perlfunc/map> for alternatives. | |
203 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
204 | =item Arg too short for msgsnd |
205 | ||
206 | (F) msgsnd() requires a string at least as long as sizeof(long). | |
207 | ||
748a9306 LW |
208 | =item Ambiguous use of %s resolved as %s |
209 | ||
210 | (W)(S) You said something that may not be interpreted the way | |
211 | you thought. Normally it's pretty easy to disambiguate it by supplying | |
5f05dabc | 212 | a missing quote, operator, parenthesis pair or declaration. |
748a9306 | 213 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
214 | =item Args must match #! line |
215 | ||
216 | (F) The setuid emulator requires that the arguments Perl was invoked | |
3a52c276 CS |
217 | with match the arguments specified on the #! line. Since some systems |
218 | impose a one-argument limit on the #! line, try combining switches; | |
219 | for example, turn C<-w -U> into C<-wU>. | |
a0d0e21e | 220 | |
f86702cc | 221 | =item Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s |
a0d0e21e LW |
222 | |
223 | (W) The indicated string was fed as an argument to an operator that | |
224 | expected a numeric value instead. If you're fortunate the message | |
225 | will identify which operator was so unfortunate. | |
226 | ||
227 | =item Array @%s missing the @ in argument %d of %s() | |
228 | ||
229 | (D) Really old Perl let you omit the @ on array names in some spots. This | |
230 | is now heavily deprecated. | |
231 | ||
232 | =item assertion botched: %s | |
233 | ||
234 | (P) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal failure. | |
235 | ||
236 | =item Assertion failed: file "%s" | |
237 | ||
238 | (P) A general assertion failed. The file in question must be examined. | |
239 | ||
240 | =item Assignment to both a list and a scalar | |
241 | ||
242 | (F) If you assign to a conditional operator, the 2nd and 3rd arguments | |
243 | must either both be scalars or both be lists. Otherwise Perl won't | |
244 | know which context to supply to the right side. | |
245 | ||
246 | =item Attempt to free non-arena SV: 0x%lx | |
247 | ||
248 | (P) All SV objects are supposed to be allocated from arenas that will | |
249 | be garbage collected on exit. An SV was discovered to be outside any | |
250 | of those arenas. | |
251 | ||
54310121 | 252 | =item Attempt to free nonexistent shared string |
bbce6d69 | 253 | |
254 | (P) Perl maintains a reference counted internal table of strings to | |
255 | optimize the storage and access of hash keys and other strings. This | |
256 | indicates someone tried to decrement the reference count of a string | |
257 | that can no longer be found in the table. | |
258 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
259 | =item Attempt to free temp prematurely |
260 | ||
261 | (W) Mortalized values are supposed to be freed by the free_tmps() | |
262 | routine. This indicates that something else is freeing the SV before | |
263 | the free_tmps() routine gets a chance, which means that the free_tmps() | |
264 | routine will be freeing an unreferenced scalar when it does try to free | |
265 | it. | |
266 | ||
267 | =item Attempt to free unreferenced glob pointers | |
268 | ||
269 | (P) The reference counts got screwed up on symbol aliases. | |
270 | ||
271 | =item Attempt to free unreferenced scalar | |
272 | ||
273 | (W) Perl went to decrement the reference count of a scalar to see if it | |
274 | would go to 0, and discovered that it had already gone to 0 earlier, | |
275 | and should have been freed, and in fact, probably was freed. This | |
276 | could indicate that SvREFCNT_dec() was called too many times, or that | |
277 | SvREFCNT_inc() was called too few times, or that the SV was mortalized | |
278 | when it shouldn't have been, or that memory has been corrupted. | |
279 | ||
84902520 TB |
280 | =item Attempt to pack pointer to temporary value |
281 | ||
282 | (W) You tried to pass a temporary value (like the result of a | |
283 | function, or a computed expression) to the "p" pack() template. This | |
284 | means the result contains a pointer to a location that could become | |
285 | invalid anytime, even before the end of the current statement. Use | |
286 | literals or global values as arguments to the "p" pack() template to | |
287 | avoid this warning. | |
288 | ||
b7a902f4 | 289 | =item Attempt to use reference as lvalue in substr |
290 | ||
291 | (W) You supplied a reference as the first argument to substr() used | |
8b1a09fc | 292 | as an lvalue, which is pretty strange. Perhaps you forgot to |
b7a902f4 | 293 | dereference it first. See L<perlfunc/substr>. |
294 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
295 | =item Bad arg length for %s, is %d, should be %d |
296 | ||
297 | (F) You passed a buffer of the wrong size to one of msgctl(), semctl() or | |
2ba9eb46 | 298 | shmctl(). In C parlance, the correct sizes are, respectively, |
5f05dabc | 299 | S<sizeof(struct msqid_ds *)>, S<sizeof(struct semid_ds *)>, and |
a0d0e21e LW |
300 | S<sizeof(struct shmid_ds *)>. |
301 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
302 | =item Bad filehandle: %s |
303 | ||
304 | (F) A symbol was passed to something wanting a filehandle, but the symbol | |
305 | has no filehandle associated with it. Perhaps you didn't do an open(), or | |
306 | did it in another package. | |
307 | ||
308 | =item Bad free() ignored | |
309 | ||
310 | (S) An internal routine called free() on something that had never been | |
33c8a3fe IZ |
311 | malloc()ed in the first place. Mandatory, but can be disabled by |
312 | setting environment variable C<PERL_BADFREE> to 1. | |
313 | ||
314 | This message can be quite often seen with DB_File on systems with | |
315 | "hard" dynamic linking, like C<AIX> and C<OS/2>. It is a bug of | |
316 | C<Berkeley DB> which is left unnoticed if C<DB> uses I<forgiving> | |
317 | system malloc(). | |
a0d0e21e | 318 | |
aa689395 | 319 | =item Bad hash |
320 | ||
321 | (P) One of the internal hash routines was passed a null HV pointer. | |
322 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
323 | =item Bad name after %s:: |
324 | ||
325 | (F) You started to name a symbol by using a package prefix, and then didn't | |
326 | finish the symbol. In particular, you can't interpolate outside of quotes, | |
327 | so | |
328 | ||
329 | $var = 'myvar'; | |
330 | $sym = mypack::$var; | |
331 | ||
332 | is not the same as | |
333 | ||
334 | $var = 'myvar'; | |
335 | $sym = "mypack::$var"; | |
336 | ||
337 | =item Bad symbol for array | |
338 | ||
339 | (P) An internal request asked to add an array entry to something that | |
340 | wasn't a symbol table entry. | |
341 | ||
342 | =item Bad symbol for filehandle | |
343 | ||
344 | (P) An internal request asked to add a filehandle entry to something that | |
345 | wasn't a symbol table entry. | |
346 | ||
347 | =item Bad symbol for hash | |
348 | ||
349 | (P) An internal request asked to add a hash entry to something that | |
350 | wasn't a symbol table entry. | |
351 | ||
8b1a09fc | 352 | =item Badly placed ()'s |
cb1a09d0 AD |
353 | |
354 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead | |
3a52c276 CS |
355 | of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into |
356 | Perl yourself. | |
cb1a09d0 | 357 | |
3fe9a6f1 | 358 | =item Bareword "%s" not allowed while "strict subs" in use |
359 | ||
360 | (F) With "strict subs" in use, a bareword is only allowed as a | |
361 | subroutine identifier, in curly braces or to the left of the "=>" symbol. | |
54310121 | 362 | Perhaps you need to predeclare a subroutine? |
3fe9a6f1 | 363 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
364 | =item BEGIN failed--compilation aborted |
365 | ||
366 | (F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing a BEGIN subroutine. | |
367 | Compilation stops immediately and the interpreter is exited. | |
368 | ||
68dc0745 | 369 | =item BEGIN not safe after errors--compilation aborted |
370 | ||
371 | (F) Perl found a C<BEGIN {}> subroutine (or a C<use> directive, which | |
372 | implies a C<BEGIN {}>) after one or more compilation errors had | |
373 | already occurred. Since the intended environment for the C<BEGIN {}> | |
374 | could not be guaranteed (due to the errors), and since subsequent code | |
375 | likely depends on its correct operation, Perl just gave up. | |
376 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
377 | =item bind() on closed fd |
378 | ||
379 | (W) You tried to do a bind on a closed socket. Did you forget to check | |
380 | the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/bind>. | |
381 | ||
4633a7c4 LW |
382 | =item Bizarre copy of %s in %s |
383 | ||
384 | (P) Perl detected an attempt to copy an internal value that is not copiable. | |
385 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
386 | =item Callback called exit |
387 | ||
388 | (F) A subroutine invoked from an external package via perl_call_sv() | |
389 | exited by calling exit. | |
390 | ||
0a753a76 | 391 | =item Can't "goto" outside a block |
392 | ||
393 | (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump out of what might look | |
394 | like a block, except that it isn't a proper block. This usually | |
395 | occurs if you tried to jump out of a sort() block or subroutine, which | |
396 | is a no-no. See L<perlfunc/goto>. | |
397 | ||
84902520 TB |
398 | =item Can't "goto" into the middle of a foreach loop |
399 | ||
400 | (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into the middle of a | |
401 | foreach loop. You can't get there from here. See L<perlfunc/goto>. | |
402 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
403 | =item Can't "last" outside a block |
404 | ||
405 | (F) A "last" statement was executed to break out of the current block, | |
406 | except that there's this itty bitty problem called there isn't a | |
407 | current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't count as a | |
0a753a76 | 408 | "loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(). You can usually double |
409 | the curlies to get the same effect though, because the inner curlies | |
410 | will be considered a block that loops once. See L<perlfunc/last>. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
411 | |
412 | =item Can't "next" outside a block | |
413 | ||
414 | (F) A "next" statement was executed to reiterate the current block, but | |
415 | there isn't a current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't | |
0a753a76 | 416 | count as a "loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(). You can |
417 | usually double the curlies to get the same effect though, because the inner | |
54310121 | 418 | curlies will be considered a block that loops once. See L<perlfunc/next>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
419 | |
420 | =item Can't "redo" outside a block | |
421 | ||
422 | (F) A "redo" statement was executed to restart the current block, but | |
423 | there isn't a current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't | |
0a753a76 | 424 | count as a "loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(). You can |
425 | usually double the curlies to get the same effect though, because the inner | |
54310121 | 426 | curlies will be considered a block that loops once. See L<perlfunc/redo>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
427 | |
428 | =item Can't bless non-reference value | |
429 | ||
430 | (F) Only hard references may be blessed. This is how Perl "enforces" | |
431 | encapsulation of objects. See L<perlobj>. | |
432 | ||
433 | =item Can't break at that line | |
434 | ||
54310121 | 435 | (S) A warning intended to only be printed while running within the debugger, indicating |
a0d0e21e LW |
436 | the line number specified wasn't the location of a statement that could |
437 | be stopped at. | |
438 | ||
439 | =item Can't call method "%s" in empty package "%s" | |
440 | ||
441 | (F) You called a method correctly, and it correctly indicated a package | |
442 | functioning as a class, but that package doesn't have ANYTHING defined | |
443 | in it, let alone methods. See L<perlobj>. | |
444 | ||
445 | =item Can't call method "%s" on unblessed reference | |
446 | ||
54310121 | 447 | (F) A method call must know in what package it's supposed to run. It |
a0d0e21e LW |
448 | ordinarily finds this out from the object reference you supply, but |
449 | you didn't supply an object reference in this case. A reference isn't | |
450 | an object reference until it has been blessed. See L<perlobj>. | |
451 | ||
452 | =item Can't call method "%s" without a package or object reference | |
453 | ||
454 | (F) You used the syntax of a method call, but the slot filled by the | |
455 | object reference or package name contains an expression that returns | |
456 | neither an object reference nor a package name. (Perhaps it's null?) | |
457 | Something like this will reproduce the error: | |
458 | ||
459 | $BADREF = undef; | |
460 | process $BADREF 1,2,3; | |
461 | $BADREF->process(1,2,3); | |
462 | ||
463 | =item Can't chdir to %s | |
464 | ||
465 | (F) You called C<perl -x/foo/bar>, but C</foo/bar> is not a directory | |
466 | that you can chdir to, possibly because it doesn't exist. | |
467 | ||
468 | =item Can't coerce %s to integer in %s | |
469 | ||
470 | (F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table entries | |
55497cff | 471 | (typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are. So you can't |
a0d0e21e LW |
472 | say things like: |
473 | ||
474 | *foo += 1; | |
475 | ||
476 | You CAN say | |
477 | ||
478 | $foo = *foo; | |
479 | $foo += 1; | |
480 | ||
481 | but then $foo no longer contains a glob. | |
482 | ||
483 | =item Can't coerce %s to number in %s | |
484 | ||
485 | (F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table entries | |
55497cff | 486 | (typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are. |
a0d0e21e LW |
487 | |
488 | =item Can't coerce %s to string in %s | |
489 | ||
490 | (F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table entries | |
55497cff | 491 | (typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are. |
a0d0e21e LW |
492 | |
493 | =item Can't create pipe mailbox | |
494 | ||
748a9306 LW |
495 | (P) An error peculiar to VMS. The process is suffering from exhausted quotas |
496 | or other plumbing problems. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
497 | |
498 | =item Can't declare %s in my | |
499 | ||
5f05dabc | 500 | (F) Only scalar, array, and hash variables may be declared as lexical variables. |
a0d0e21e LW |
501 | They must have ordinary identifiers as names. |
502 | ||
503 | =item Can't do inplace edit on %s: %s | |
504 | ||
505 | (S) The creation of the new file failed for the indicated reason. | |
506 | ||
54310121 | 507 | =item Can't do inplace edit without backup |
a0d0e21e | 508 | |
54310121 | 509 | (F) You're on a system such as MS-DOS that gets confused if you try reading |
3fe9a6f1 | 510 | from a deleted (but still opened) file. You have to say C<-i.bak>, or some |
a0d0e21e LW |
511 | such. |
512 | ||
8b1a09fc | 513 | =item Can't do inplace edit: %s E<gt> 14 characters |
a0d0e21e LW |
514 | |
515 | (S) There isn't enough room in the filename to make a backup name for the file. | |
516 | ||
517 | =item Can't do inplace edit: %s is not a regular file | |
518 | ||
519 | (S) You tried to use the B<-i> switch on a special file, such as a file in | |
520 | /dev, or a FIFO. The file was ignored. | |
521 | ||
522 | =item Can't do setegid! | |
523 | ||
524 | (P) The setegid() call failed for some reason in the setuid emulator | |
525 | of suidperl. | |
526 | ||
527 | =item Can't do seteuid! | |
528 | ||
529 | (P) The setuid emulator of suidperl failed for some reason. | |
530 | ||
531 | =item Can't do setuid | |
532 | ||
533 | (F) This typically means that ordinary perl tried to exec suidperl to | |
534 | do setuid emulation, but couldn't exec it. It looks for a name of the | |
535 | form sperl5.000 in the same directory that the perl executable resides | |
536 | under the name perl5.000, typically /usr/local/bin on Unix machines. | |
537 | If the file is there, check the execute permissions. If it isn't, ask | |
538 | your sysadmin why he and/or she removed it. | |
539 | ||
540 | =item Can't do waitpid with flags | |
541 | ||
542 | (F) This machine doesn't have either waitpid() or wait4(), so only waitpid() | |
543 | without flags is emulated. | |
544 | ||
8b1a09fc | 545 | =item Can't do {n,m} with n E<gt> m |
a0d0e21e LW |
546 | |
547 | (F) Minima must be less than or equal to maxima. If you really want | |
548 | your regexp to match something 0 times, just put {0}. See L<perlre>. | |
549 | ||
550 | =item Can't emulate -%s on #! line | |
551 | ||
552 | (F) The #! line specifies a switch that doesn't make sense at this point. | |
553 | For example, it'd be kind of silly to put a B<-x> on the #! line. | |
554 | ||
555 | =item Can't exec "%s": %s | |
556 | ||
5f05dabc | 557 | (W) An system(), exec(), or piped open call could not execute the named |
a0d0e21e LW |
558 | program for the indicated reason. Typical reasons include: the permissions |
559 | were wrong on the file, the file wasn't found in C<$ENV{PATH}>, the | |
560 | executable in question was compiled for another architecture, or the | |
561 | #! line in a script points to an interpreter that can't be run for | |
562 | similar reasons. (Or maybe your system doesn't support #! at all.) | |
563 | ||
564 | =item Can't exec %s | |
565 | ||
566 | (F) Perl was trying to execute the indicated program for you because that's | |
567 | what the #! line said. If that's not what you wanted, you may need to | |
568 | mention "perl" on the #! line somewhere. | |
569 | ||
570 | =item Can't execute %s | |
571 | ||
2a92aaa0 GS |
572 | (F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the copies of the script to execute found |
573 | in the PATH did not have correct permissions. | |
574 | ||
575 | =item Can't find %s on PATH, '.' not in PATH | |
576 | ||
577 | (F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the script to execute could not be found | |
578 | in the PATH, or at least not with the correct permissions. The script | |
579 | exists in the current directory, but PATH prohibits running it. | |
580 | ||
581 | =item Can't find %s on PATH | |
582 | ||
a0d0e21e | 583 | (F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the script to execute could not be found |
2a92aaa0 | 584 | in the PATH. |
a0d0e21e LW |
585 | |
586 | =item Can't find label %s | |
587 | ||
588 | (F) You said to goto a label that isn't mentioned anywhere that it's possible | |
589 | for us to go to. See L<perlfunc/goto>. | |
590 | ||
591 | =item Can't find string terminator %s anywhere before EOF | |
592 | ||
593 | (F) Perl strings can stretch over multiple lines. This message means that | |
5f05dabc | 594 | the closing delimiter was omitted. Because bracketed quotes count nesting |
a0d0e21e LW |
595 | levels, the following is missing its final parenthesis: |
596 | ||
597 | print q(The character '(' starts a side comment.) | |
598 | ||
599 | =item Can't fork | |
600 | ||
601 | (F) A fatal error occurred while trying to fork while opening a pipeline. | |
602 | ||
748a9306 LW |
603 | =item Can't get filespec - stale stat buffer? |
604 | ||
605 | (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. This arises because of the difference between | |
606 | access checks under VMS and under the Unix model Perl assumes. Under VMS, | |
607 | access checks are done by filename, rather than by bits in the stat buffer, so | |
608 | that ACLs and other protections can be taken into account. Unfortunately, Perl | |
609 | assumes that the stat buffer contains all the necessary information, and passes | |
610 | it, instead of the filespec, to the access checking routine. It will try to | |
611 | retrieve the filespec using the device name and FID present in the stat buffer, | |
612 | but this works only if you haven't made a subsequent call to the CRTL stat() | |
5f05dabc | 613 | routine, because the device name is overwritten with each call. If this warning |
748a9306 LW |
614 | appears, the name lookup failed, and the access checking routine gave up and |
615 | returned FALSE, just to be conservative. (Note: The access checking routine | |
616 | knows about the Perl C<stat> operator and file tests, so you shouldn't ever | |
617 | see this warning in response to a Perl command; it arises only if some internal | |
618 | code takes stat buffers lightly.) | |
619 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
620 | =item Can't get pipe mailbox device name |
621 | ||
748a9306 LW |
622 | (P) An error peculiar to VMS. After creating a mailbox to act as a pipe, Perl |
623 | can't retrieve its name for later use. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
624 | |
625 | =item Can't get SYSGEN parameter value for MAXBUF | |
626 | ||
748a9306 LW |
627 | (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl asked $GETSYI how big you want your |
628 | mailbox buffers to be, and didn't get an answer. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
629 | |
630 | =item Can't goto subroutine outside a subroutine | |
631 | ||
632 | (F) The deeply magical "goto subroutine" call can only replace one subroutine | |
633 | call for another. It can't manufacture one out of whole cloth. In general | |
5f05dabc | 634 | you should be calling it out of only an AUTOLOAD routine anyway. See |
a0d0e21e LW |
635 | L<perlfunc/goto>. |
636 | ||
706a304b | 637 | =item Can't localize through a reference |
4633a7c4 | 638 | |
706a304b SM |
639 | (F) You said something like C<local $$ref>, which Perl can't currently |
640 | handle, because when it goes to restore the old value of whatever $ref | |
641 | pointed to after the scope of the local() is finished, it can't be | |
642 | sure that $ref will still be a reference. | |
4633a7c4 | 643 | |
748a9306 LW |
644 | =item Can't localize lexical variable %s |
645 | ||
2ba9eb46 | 646 | (F) You used local on a variable name that was previously declared as a |
748a9306 LW |
647 | lexical variable using "my". This is not allowed. If you want to |
648 | localize a package variable of the same name, qualify it with the | |
649 | package name. | |
650 | ||
4727527e IZ |
651 | =item Can't locate auto/%s.al in @INC |
652 | ||
653 | (F) A function (or method) was called in a package which allows autoload, | |
654 | but there is no function to autoload. Most probable causes are a misprint | |
655 | in a function/method name or a failure to C<AutoSplit> the file, say, by | |
656 | doing C<make install>. | |
657 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
658 | =item Can't locate %s in @INC |
659 | ||
7a2e2cd6 | 660 | (F) You said to do (or require, or use) a file that couldn't be found |
54310121 | 661 | in any of the libraries mentioned in @INC. Perhaps you need to set the |
662 | PERL5LIB or PERL5OPT environment variable to say where the extra library | |
663 | is, or maybe the script needs to add the library name to @INC. Or maybe | |
a0d0e21e LW |
664 | you just misspelled the name of the file. See L<perlfunc/require>. |
665 | ||
666 | =item Can't locate object method "%s" via package "%s" | |
667 | ||
668 | (F) You called a method correctly, and it correctly indicated a package | |
669 | functioning as a class, but that package doesn't define that particular | |
2ba9eb46 | 670 | method, nor does any of its base classes. See L<perlobj>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
671 | |
672 | =item Can't locate package %s for @%s::ISA | |
673 | ||
674 | (W) The @ISA array contained the name of another package that doesn't seem | |
675 | to exist. | |
676 | ||
3e3baf6d TB |
677 | =item Can't make list assignment to \%ENV on this system |
678 | ||
679 | (F) List assignment to %ENV is not supported on some systems, notably VMS. | |
680 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
681 | =item Can't mktemp() |
682 | ||
683 | (F) The mktemp() routine failed for some reason while trying to process | |
684 | a B<-e> switch. Maybe your /tmp partition is full, or clobbered. | |
685 | ||
686 | =item Can't modify %s in %s | |
687 | ||
688 | (F) You aren't allowed to assign to the item indicated, or otherwise try to | |
5f05dabc | 689 | change it, such as with an auto-increment. |
a0d0e21e | 690 | |
54310121 | 691 | =item Can't modify nonexistent substring |
a0d0e21e LW |
692 | |
693 | (P) The internal routine that does assignment to a substr() was handed | |
694 | a NULL. | |
695 | ||
5f05dabc | 696 | =item Can't msgrcv to read-only var |
a0d0e21e | 697 | |
5f05dabc | 698 | (F) The target of a msgrcv must be modifiable to be used as a receive |
a0d0e21e LW |
699 | buffer. |
700 | ||
701 | =item Can't open %s: %s | |
702 | ||
08e9d68e DD |
703 | (S) The implicit opening of a file through use of the C<E<lt>E<gt>> |
704 | filehandle, either implicitly under the C<-n> or C<-p> command-line | |
705 | switches, or explicitly, failed for the indicated reason. Usually this | |
706 | is because you don't have read permission for a file which you named | |
707 | on the command line. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
708 | |
709 | =item Can't open bidirectional pipe | |
710 | ||
711 | (W) You tried to say C<open(CMD, "|cmd|")>, which is not supported. You can | |
712 | try any of several modules in the Perl library to do this, such as | |
7e1af8bc | 713 | IPC::Open2. Alternately, direct the pipe's output to a file using "E<gt>", |
a0d0e21e LW |
714 | and then read it in under a different file handle. |
715 | ||
748a9306 LW |
716 | =item Can't open error file %s as stderr |
717 | ||
718 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and | |
8b1a09fc | 719 | couldn't open the file specified after '2E<gt>' or '2E<gt>E<gt>' on the |
720 | command line for writing. | |
748a9306 LW |
721 | |
722 | =item Can't open input file %s as stdin | |
723 | ||
724 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and | |
8b1a09fc | 725 | couldn't open the file specified after 'E<lt>' on the command line for reading. |
748a9306 LW |
726 | |
727 | =item Can't open output file %s as stdout | |
728 | ||
729 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and | |
8b1a09fc | 730 | couldn't open the file specified after 'E<gt>' or 'E<gt>E<gt>' on the command |
731 | line for writing. | |
748a9306 LW |
732 | |
733 | =item Can't open output pipe (name: %s) | |
734 | ||
735 | (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and | |
736 | couldn't open the pipe into which to send data destined for stdout. | |
737 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
738 | =item Can't open perl script "%s": %s |
739 | ||
740 | (F) The script you specified can't be opened for the indicated reason. | |
741 | ||
7bac28a0 | 742 | =item Can't redefine active sort subroutine %s |
743 | ||
744 | (F) Perl optimizes the internal handling of sort subroutines and keeps | |
745 | pointers into them. You tried to redefine one such sort subroutine when it | |
746 | was currently active, which is not allowed. If you really want to do | |
747 | this, you should write C<sort { &func } @x> instead of C<sort func @x>. | |
748 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
749 | =item Can't rename %s to %s: %s, skipping file |
750 | ||
751 | (S) The rename done by the B<-i> switch failed for some reason, probably because | |
752 | you don't have write permission to the directory. | |
753 | ||
748a9306 LW |
754 | =item Can't reopen input pipe (name: %s) in binary mode |
755 | ||
756 | (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl thought stdin was a pipe, and tried to | |
757 | reopen it to accept binary data. Alas, it failed. | |
758 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
759 | =item Can't reswap uid and euid |
760 | ||
761 | (P) The setreuid() call failed for some reason in the setuid emulator | |
762 | of suidperl. | |
763 | ||
764 | =item Can't return outside a subroutine | |
765 | ||
766 | (F) The return statement was executed in mainline code, that is, where | |
767 | there was no subroutine call to return out of. See L<perlsub>. | |
768 | ||
769 | =item Can't stat script "%s" | |
770 | ||
771 | (P) For some reason you can't fstat() the script even though you have | |
772 | it open already. Bizarre. | |
773 | ||
774 | =item Can't swap uid and euid | |
775 | ||
776 | (P) The setreuid() call failed for some reason in the setuid emulator | |
777 | of suidperl. | |
778 | ||
779 | =item Can't take log of %g | |
780 | ||
5f05dabc | 781 | (F) Logarithms are defined on only positive real numbers. |
a0d0e21e LW |
782 | |
783 | =item Can't take sqrt of %g | |
784 | ||
785 | (F) For ordinary real numbers, you can't take the square root of a | |
786 | negative number. There's a Complex package available for Perl, though, | |
787 | if you really want to do that. | |
788 | ||
789 | =item Can't undef active subroutine | |
790 | ||
791 | (F) You can't undefine a routine that's currently running. You can, | |
792 | however, redefine it while it's running, and you can even undef the | |
793 | redefined subroutine while the old routine is running. Go figure. | |
794 | ||
795 | =item Can't unshift | |
796 | ||
797 | (F) You tried to unshift an "unreal" array that can't be unshifted, such | |
798 | as the main Perl stack. | |
799 | ||
800 | =item Can't upgrade that kind of scalar | |
801 | ||
802 | (P) The internal sv_upgrade routine adds "members" to an SV, making | |
803 | it into a more specialized kind of SV. The top several SV types are | |
804 | so specialized, however, that they cannot be interconverted. This | |
805 | message indicates that such a conversion was attempted. | |
806 | ||
807 | =item Can't upgrade to undef | |
808 | ||
809 | (P) The undefined SV is the bottom of the totem pole, in the scheme | |
810 | of upgradability. Upgrading to undef indicates an error in the | |
811 | code calling sv_upgrade. | |
812 | ||
c07a80fd | 813 | =item Can't use "my %s" in sort comparison |
814 | ||
815 | (F) The global variables $a and $b are reserved for sort comparisons. | |
8b1a09fc | 816 | You mentioned $a or $b in the same line as the E<lt>=E<gt> or cmp operator, |
c07a80fd | 817 | and the variable had earlier been declared as a lexical variable. |
818 | Either qualify the sort variable with the package name, or rename the | |
819 | lexical variable. | |
820 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
821 | =item Can't use %s for loop variable |
822 | ||
823 | (F) Only a simple scalar variable may be used as a loop variable on a foreach. | |
824 | ||
825 | =item Can't use %s ref as %s ref | |
826 | ||
827 | (F) You've mixed up your reference types. You have to dereference a | |
828 | reference of the type needed. You can use the ref() function to | |
829 | test the type of the reference, if need be. | |
830 | ||
748a9306 LW |
831 | =item Can't use \1 to mean $1 in expression |
832 | ||
833 | (W) In an ordinary expression, backslash is a unary operator that creates | |
834 | a reference to its argument. The use of backslash to indicate a backreference | |
5f05dabc | 835 | to a matched substring is valid only as part of a regular expression pattern. |
748a9306 LW |
836 | Trying to do this in ordinary Perl code produces a value that prints |
837 | out looking like SCALAR(0xdecaf). Use the $1 form instead. | |
838 | ||
44a8e56a | 839 | =item Can't use bareword ("%s") as %s ref while \"strict refs\" in use |
840 | ||
841 | (F) Only hard references are allowed by "strict refs". Symbolic references | |
842 | are disallowed. See L<perlref>. | |
843 | ||
748a9306 | 844 | =item Can't use string ("%s") as %s ref while "strict refs" in use |
a0d0e21e LW |
845 | |
846 | (F) Only hard references are allowed by "strict refs". Symbolic references | |
847 | are disallowed. See L<perlref>. | |
848 | ||
849 | =item Can't use an undefined value as %s reference | |
850 | ||
851 | (F) A value used as either a hard reference or a symbolic reference must | |
54310121 | 852 | be a defined value. This helps to delurk some insidious errors. |
a0d0e21e | 853 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
854 | =item Can't use global %s in "my" |
855 | ||
856 | (F) You tried to declare a magical variable as a lexical variable. This is | |
5f05dabc | 857 | not allowed, because the magic can be tied to only one location (namely |
a0d0e21e LW |
858 | the global variable) and it would be incredibly confusing to have |
859 | variables in your program that looked like magical variables but | |
860 | weren't. | |
861 | ||
748a9306 LW |
862 | =item Can't use subscript on %s |
863 | ||
864 | (F) The compiler tried to interpret a bracketed expression as a | |
865 | subscript. But to the left of the brackets was an expression that | |
866 | didn't look like an array reference, or anything else subscriptable. | |
867 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
868 | =item Can't write to temp file for B<-e>: %s |
869 | ||
870 | (F) The write routine failed for some reason while trying to process | |
871 | a B<-e> switch. Maybe your /tmp partition is full, or clobbered. | |
872 | ||
5f05dabc | 873 | =item Can't x= to read-only value |
a0d0e21e LW |
874 | |
875 | (F) You tried to repeat a constant value (often the undefined value) with | |
876 | an assignment operator, which implies modifying the value itself. | |
877 | Perhaps you need to copy the value to a temporary, and repeat that. | |
878 | ||
879 | =item Cannot open temporary file | |
880 | ||
8b1a09fc | 881 | (F) The create routine failed for some reason while trying to process |
a0d0e21e LW |
882 | a B<-e> switch. Maybe your /tmp partition is full, or clobbered. |
883 | ||
e7ea3e70 IZ |
884 | =item Cannot resolve method `%s' overloading `%s' in package `%s' |
885 | ||
886 | (F|P) Error resolving overloading specified by a method name (as | |
887 | opposed to a subroutine reference): no such method callable via the | |
888 | package. If method name is C<???>, this is an internal error. | |
889 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
890 | =item chmod: mode argument is missing initial 0 |
891 | ||
892 | (W) A novice will sometimes say | |
893 | ||
894 | chmod 777, $filename | |
895 | ||
896 | not realizing that 777 will be interpreted as a decimal number, equivalent | |
897 | to 01411. Octal constants are introduced with a leading 0 in Perl, as in C. | |
898 | ||
8b1a09fc | 899 | =item Close on unopened file E<lt>%sE<gt> |
a0d0e21e LW |
900 | |
901 | (W) You tried to close a filehandle that was never opened. | |
902 | ||
7a2e2cd6 | 903 | =item Compilation failed in require |
904 | ||
905 | (F) Perl could not compile a file specified in a C<require> statement. | |
906 | Perl uses this generic message when none of the errors that it encountered | |
907 | were severe enough to halt compilation immediately. | |
908 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
909 | =item connect() on closed fd |
910 | ||
911 | (W) You tried to do a connect on a closed socket. Did you forget to check | |
912 | the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/connect>. | |
913 | ||
4cee8e80 CS |
914 | =item Constant subroutine %s redefined |
915 | ||
916 | (S) You redefined a subroutine which had previously been eligible for | |
917 | inlining. See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> for commentary and | |
918 | workarounds. | |
919 | ||
9607fc9c | 920 | =item Constant subroutine %s undefined |
921 | ||
922 | (S) You undefined a subroutine which had previously been eligible for | |
923 | inlining. See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> for commentary and | |
924 | workarounds. | |
925 | ||
e7ea3e70 IZ |
926 | =item Copy method did not return a reference |
927 | ||
928 | (F) The method which overloads "=" is buggy. See L<overload/Copy Constructor>. | |
929 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
930 | =item Corrupt malloc ptr 0x%lx at 0x%lx |
931 | ||
932 | (P) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal failure. | |
933 | ||
934 | =item corrupted regexp pointers | |
935 | ||
936 | (P) The regular expression engine got confused by what the regular | |
937 | expression compiler gave it. | |
938 | ||
939 | =item corrupted regexp program | |
940 | ||
941 | (P) The regular expression engine got passed a regexp program without | |
942 | a valid magic number. | |
943 | ||
944 | =item Deep recursion on subroutine "%s" | |
945 | ||
946 | (W) This subroutine has called itself (directly or indirectly) 100 | |
3e3baf6d | 947 | times more than it has returned. This probably indicates an infinite |
a0d0e21e LW |
948 | recursion, unless you're writing strange benchmark programs, in which |
949 | case it indicates something else. | |
950 | ||
fc36a67e | 951 | =item Delimiter for here document is too long |
952 | ||
953 | (F) In a here document construct like C<E<lt>E<lt>FOO>, the label | |
954 | C<FOO> is too long for Perl to handle. You have to be seriously | |
955 | twisted to write code that triggers this error. | |
956 | ||
4633a7c4 LW |
957 | =item Did you mean &%s instead? |
958 | ||
959 | (W) You probably referred to an imported subroutine &FOO as $FOO or some such. | |
960 | ||
748a9306 | 961 | =item Did you mean $ or @ instead of %? |
a0d0e21e | 962 | |
748a9306 LW |
963 | (W) You probably said %hash{$key} when you meant $hash{$key} or @hash{@keys}. |
964 | On the other hand, maybe you just meant %hash and got carried away. | |
965 | ||
7e1af8bc | 966 | =item Died |
5f05dabc | 967 | |
968 | (F) You passed die() an empty string (the equivalent of C<die "">) or | |
969 | you called it with no args and both C<$@> and C<$_> were empty. | |
970 | ||
54310121 | 971 | =item Do you need to predeclare %s? |
748a9306 LW |
972 | |
973 | (S) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message "%s | |
974 | found where operator expected". It often means a subroutine or module | |
975 | name is being referenced that hasn't been declared yet. This may be | |
976 | because of ordering problems in your file, or because of a missing | |
977 | "sub", "package", "require", or "use" statement. If you're | |
978 | referencing something that isn't defined yet, you don't actually have | |
979 | to define the subroutine or package before the current location. You | |
980 | can use an empty "sub foo;" or "package FOO;" to enter a "forward" | |
981 | declaration. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
982 | |
983 | =item Don't know how to handle magic of type '%s' | |
984 | ||
985 | (P) The internal handling of magical variables has been cursed. | |
986 | ||
987 | =item do_study: out of memory | |
988 | ||
989 | (P) This should have been caught by safemalloc() instead. | |
990 | ||
991 | =item Duplicate free() ignored | |
992 | ||
993 | (S) An internal routine called free() on something that had already | |
994 | been freed. | |
995 | ||
4633a7c4 LW |
996 | =item elseif should be elsif |
997 | ||
998 | (S) There is no keyword "elseif" in Perl because Larry thinks it's | |
999 | ugly. Your code will be interpreted as an attempt to call a method | |
1000 | named "elseif" for the class returned by the following block. This is | |
1001 | unlikely to be what you want. | |
1002 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1003 | =item END failed--cleanup aborted |
1004 | ||
1005 | (F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing an END subroutine. | |
1006 | The interpreter is immediately exited. | |
1007 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1008 | =item Error converting file specification %s |
1009 | ||
5f05dabc | 1010 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Because Perl may have to deal with file |
748a9306 LW |
1011 | specifications in either VMS or Unix syntax, it converts them to a |
1012 | single form when it must operate on them directly. Either you've | |
1013 | passed an invalid file specification to Perl, or you've found a | |
1014 | case the conversion routines don't handle. Drat. | |
1015 | ||
fc36a67e | 1016 | =item Excessively long <> operator |
1017 | ||
1018 | (F) The contents of a <> operator may not exceed the maximum size of a | |
1019 | Perl identifier. If you're just trying to glob a long list of | |
1020 | filenames, try using the glob() operator, or put the filenames into a | |
1021 | variable and glob that. | |
1022 | ||
f86702cc | 1023 | =item Execution of %s aborted due to compilation errors |
a0d0e21e LW |
1024 | |
1025 | (F) The final summary message when a Perl compilation fails. | |
1026 | ||
1027 | =item Exiting eval via %s | |
1028 | ||
8b1a09fc | 1029 | (W) You are exiting an eval by unconventional means, such as |
a0d0e21e LW |
1030 | a goto, or a loop control statement. |
1031 | ||
0a753a76 | 1032 | =item Exiting pseudo-block via %s |
1033 | ||
1034 | (W) You are exiting a rather special block construct (like a sort block or | |
1035 | subroutine) by unconventional means, such as a goto, or a loop control | |
1036 | statement. See L<perlfunc/sort>. | |
1037 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1038 | =item Exiting subroutine via %s |
1039 | ||
8b1a09fc | 1040 | (W) You are exiting a subroutine by unconventional means, such as |
a0d0e21e LW |
1041 | a goto, or a loop control statement. |
1042 | ||
1043 | =item Exiting substitution via %s | |
1044 | ||
8b1a09fc | 1045 | (W) You are exiting a substitution by unconventional means, such as |
a0d0e21e LW |
1046 | a return, a goto, or a loop control statement. |
1047 | ||
748a9306 | 1048 | =item Fatal VMS error at %s, line %d |
a0d0e21e | 1049 | |
748a9306 LW |
1050 | (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Something untoward happened in a VMS system |
1051 | service or RTL routine; Perl's exit status should provide more details. The | |
1052 | filename in "at %s" and the line number in "line %d" tell you which section of | |
1053 | the Perl source code is distressed. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1054 | |
1055 | =item fcntl is not implemented | |
1056 | ||
1057 | (F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement fcntl(). What is this, a | |
1058 | PDP-11 or something? | |
1059 | ||
1060 | =item Filehandle %s never opened | |
1061 | ||
1062 | (W) An I/O operation was attempted on a filehandle that was never initialized. | |
1063 | You need to do an open() or a socket() call, or call a constructor from | |
1064 | the FileHandle package. | |
1065 | ||
5f05dabc | 1066 | =item Filehandle %s opened for only input |
a0d0e21e LW |
1067 | |
1068 | (W) You tried to write on a read-only filehandle. If you | |
1069 | intended it to be a read-write filehandle, you needed to open it with | |
8b1a09fc | 1070 | "+E<lt>" or "+E<gt>" or "+E<gt>E<gt>" instead of with "E<lt>" or nothing. If |
5f05dabc | 1071 | you intended only to write the file, use "E<gt>" or "E<gt>E<gt>". See |
8b1a09fc | 1072 | L<perlfunc/open>. |
a0d0e21e | 1073 | |
5f05dabc | 1074 | =item Filehandle opened for only input |
a0d0e21e LW |
1075 | |
1076 | (W) You tried to write on a read-only filehandle. If you | |
1077 | intended it to be a read-write filehandle, you needed to open it with | |
8b1a09fc | 1078 | "+E<lt>" or "+E<gt>" or "+E<gt>E<gt>" instead of with "E<lt>" or nothing. If |
5f05dabc | 1079 | you intended only to write the file, use "E<gt>" or "E<gt>E<gt>". See |
8b1a09fc | 1080 | L<perlfunc/open>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1081 | |
1082 | =item Final $ should be \$ or $name | |
1083 | ||
1084 | (F) You must now decide whether the final $ in a string was meant to be | |
1085 | a literal dollar sign, or was meant to introduce a variable name | |
1086 | that happens to be missing. So you have to put either the backslash or | |
1087 | the name. | |
1088 | ||
1089 | =item Final @ should be \@ or @name | |
1090 | ||
1091 | (F) You must now decide whether the final @ in a string was meant to be | |
1092 | a literal "at" sign, or was meant to introduce a variable name | |
1093 | that happens to be missing. So you have to put either the backslash or | |
1094 | the name. | |
1095 | ||
1096 | =item Format %s redefined | |
1097 | ||
1098 | (W) You redefined a format. To suppress this warning, say | |
1099 | ||
1100 | { | |
1101 | local $^W = 0; | |
1102 | eval "format NAME =..."; | |
1103 | } | |
1104 | ||
1105 | =item Format not terminated | |
1106 | ||
1107 | (F) A format must be terminated by a line with a solitary dot. Perl got | |
1108 | to the end of your file without finding such a line. | |
1109 | ||
1110 | =item Found = in conditional, should be == | |
1111 | ||
1112 | (W) You said | |
1113 | ||
1114 | if ($foo = 123) | |
1115 | ||
1116 | when you meant | |
1117 | ||
1118 | if ($foo == 123) | |
1119 | ||
1120 | (or something like that). | |
1121 | ||
1122 | =item gdbm store returned %d, errno %d, key "%s" | |
1123 | ||
1124 | (S) A warning from the GDBM_File extension that a store failed. | |
1125 | ||
1126 | =item gethostent not implemented | |
1127 | ||
1128 | (F) Your C library apparently doesn't implement gethostent(), probably | |
1129 | because if it did, it'd feel morally obligated to return every hostname | |
1130 | on the Internet. | |
1131 | ||
1132 | =item get{sock,peer}name() on closed fd | |
1133 | ||
1134 | (W) You tried to get a socket or peer socket name on a closed socket. | |
1135 | Did you forget to check the return value of your socket() call? | |
1136 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1137 | =item getpwnam returned invalid UIC %#o for user "%s" |
1138 | ||
1139 | (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. The call to C<sys$getuai> underlying the | |
1140 | C<getpwnam> operator returned an invalid UIC. | |
1141 | ||
1142 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1143 | =item Glob not terminated |
1144 | ||
1145 | (F) The lexer saw a left angle bracket in a place where it was expecting | |
1146 | a term, so it's looking for the corresponding right angle bracket, and not | |
1147 | finding it. Chances are you left some needed parentheses out earlier in | |
1148 | the line, and you really meant a "less than". | |
1149 | ||
1150 | =item Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name | |
1151 | ||
68dc0745 | 1152 | (F) You've said "use strict vars", which indicates that all variables |
1153 | must either be lexically scoped (using "my"), or explicitly qualified to | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1154 | say which package the global variable is in (using "::"). |
1155 | ||
1156 | =item goto must have label | |
1157 | ||
1158 | (F) Unlike with "next" or "last", you're not allowed to goto an | |
1159 | unspecified destination. See L<perlfunc/goto>. | |
1160 | ||
1161 | =item Had to create %s unexpectedly | |
1162 | ||
1163 | (S) A routine asked for a symbol from a symbol table that ought to have | |
1164 | existed already, but for some reason it didn't, and had to be created on | |
1165 | an emergency basis to prevent a core dump. | |
1166 | ||
1167 | =item Hash %%s missing the % in argument %d of %s() | |
1168 | ||
1169 | (D) Really old Perl let you omit the % on hash names in some spots. This | |
1170 | is now heavily deprecated. | |
1171 | ||
8903cb82 | 1172 | =item Identifier too long |
1173 | ||
1174 | (F) Perl limits identifiers (names for variables, functions, etc.) to | |
fc36a67e | 1175 | about 250 characters for simple names, and somewhat more for compound |
1176 | names (like C<$A::B>). You've exceeded Perl's limits. Future | |
1177 | versions of Perl are likely to eliminate these arbitrary limitations. | |
8903cb82 | 1178 | |
8b1a09fc | 1179 | =item Ill-formed logical name |%s| in prime_env_iter |
a0d0e21e | 1180 | |
8b1a09fc | 1181 | (W) A warning peculiar to VMS. A logical name was encountered when preparing |
1182 | to iterate over %ENV which violates the syntactic rules governing logical | |
5f05dabc | 1183 | names. Because it cannot be translated normally, it is skipped, and will not |
1184 | appear in %ENV. This may be a benign occurrence, as some software packages | |
54310121 | 1185 | might directly modify logical name tables and introduce nonstandard names, |
8b1a09fc | 1186 | or it may indicate that a logical name table has been corrupted. |
a0d0e21e | 1187 | |
4fdae800 | 1188 | =item Illegal character %s (carriage return) |
1189 | ||
1190 | (F) A carriage return character was found in the input. This is an | |
1191 | error, and not a warning, because carriage return characters can break | |
54310121 | 1192 | multi-line strings, including here documents (e.g., C<print E<lt>E<lt>EOF;>). |
1193 | ||
1194 | Under Unix, this error is usually caused by executing Perl code -- | |
68dc0745 | 1195 | either the main program, a module, or an eval'd string -- that was |
54310121 | 1196 | transferred over a network connection from a non-Unix system without |
68dc0745 | 1197 | properly converting the text file format. |
1198 | ||
1199 | Under systems that use something other than '\n' to delimit lines of | |
1200 | text, this error can also be caused by reading Perl code from a file | |
1201 | handle that is in binary mode (as set by the C<binmode> operator). | |
1202 | ||
1203 | In either case, the Perl code in question will probably need to be | |
1204 | converted with something like C<s/\x0D\x0A?/\n/g> before it can be | |
1205 | executed. | |
4fdae800 | 1206 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1207 | =item Illegal division by zero |
1208 | ||
1209 | (F) You tried to divide a number by 0. Either something was wrong in your | |
1210 | logic, or you need to put a conditional in to guard against meaningless input. | |
1211 | ||
1212 | =item Illegal modulus zero | |
1213 | ||
1214 | (F) You tried to divide a number by 0 to get the remainder. Most numbers | |
1215 | don't take to this kindly. | |
1216 | ||
1217 | =item Illegal octal digit | |
1218 | ||
1219 | (F) You used an 8 or 9 in a octal number. | |
1220 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1221 | =item Illegal octal digit ignored |
1222 | ||
1223 | (W) You may have tried to use an 8 or 9 in a octal number. Interpretation | |
1224 | of the octal number stopped before the 8 or 9. | |
1225 | ||
54310121 | 1226 | =item Illegal switch in PERL5OPT: %s |
1227 | ||
1228 | (X) The PERL5OPT environment variable may only be used to set the | |
1229 | following switches: B<-[DIMUdmw]>. | |
1230 | ||
9607fc9c | 1231 | =item In string, @%s now must be written as \@%s |
1232 | ||
1233 | (F) It used to be that Perl would try to guess whether you wanted an | |
1234 | array interpolated or a literal @. It did this when the string was first | |
1235 | used at runtime. Now strings are parsed at compile time, and ambiguous | |
1236 | instances of @ must be disambiguated, either by prepending a backslash to | |
1237 | indicate a literal, or by declaring (or using) the array within the | |
1238 | program before the string (lexically). (Someday it will simply assume | |
1239 | that an unbackslashed @ interpolates an array.) | |
1240 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1241 | =item Insecure dependency in %s |
1242 | ||
8b1a09fc | 1243 | (F) You tried to do something that the tainting mechanism didn't like. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1244 | The tainting mechanism is turned on when you're running setuid or setgid, |
1245 | or when you specify B<-T> to turn it on explicitly. The tainting mechanism | |
1246 | labels all data that's derived directly or indirectly from the user, | |
1247 | who is considered to be unworthy of your trust. If any such data is | |
1248 | used in a "dangerous" operation, you get this error. See L<perlsec> | |
1249 | for more information. | |
1250 | ||
1251 | =item Insecure directory in %s | |
1252 | ||
1253 | (F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a piped open in a setuid or setgid | |
8b1a09fc | 1254 | script if C<$ENV{PATH}> contains a directory that is writable by the world. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1255 | See L<perlsec>. |
1256 | ||
1257 | =item Insecure PATH | |
1258 | ||
1259 | (F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a piped open in a setuid or | |
8b1a09fc | 1260 | setgid script if C<$ENV{PATH}> is derived from data supplied (or |
a0d0e21e LW |
1261 | potentially supplied) by the user. The script must set the path to a |
1262 | known value, using trustworthy data. See L<perlsec>. | |
1263 | ||
bbce6d69 | 1264 | =item Integer overflow in hex number |
1265 | ||
1266 | (S) The literal hex number you have specified is too big for your | |
1267 | architecture. On a 32-bit architecture the largest hex literal is | |
1268 | 0xFFFFFFFF. | |
1269 | ||
1270 | =item Integer overflow in octal number | |
1271 | ||
1272 | (S) The literal octal number you have specified is too big for your | |
1273 | architecture. On a 32-bit architecture the largest octal literal is | |
1274 | 037777777777. | |
1275 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1276 | =item Internal inconsistency in tracking vforks |
1277 | ||
1278 | (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl keeps track of the number | |
5f05dabc | 1279 | of times you've called C<fork> and C<exec>, to determine |
2ba9eb46 | 1280 | whether the current call to C<exec> should affect the current |
748a9306 LW |
1281 | script or a subprocess (see L<perlvms/exec>). Somehow, this count |
1282 | has become scrambled, so Perl is making a guess and treating | |
1283 | this C<exec> as a request to terminate the Perl script | |
1284 | and execute the specified command. | |
1285 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1286 | =item internal disaster in regexp |
1287 | ||
1288 | (P) Something went badly wrong in the regular expression parser. | |
1289 | ||
5cd24f17 | 1290 | =item internal error: glob failed |
1291 | ||
1292 | (P) Something went wrong with the external program(s) used for C<glob> | |
1293 | and C<E<lt>*.cE<gt>>. This may mean that your csh (C shell) is | |
1294 | broken. If so, you should change all of the csh-related variables in | |
1295 | config.sh: If you have tcsh, make the variables refer to it as if it | |
1296 | were csh (e.g. C<full_csh='/usr/bin/tcsh'>); otherwise, make them all | |
1297 | empty (except that C<d_csh> should be C<'undef'>) so that Perl will | |
1298 | think csh is missing. In either case, after editing config.sh, run | |
1299 | C<./Configure -S> and rebuild Perl. | |
1300 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1301 | =item internal urp in regexp at /%s/ |
1302 | ||
1303 | (P) Something went badly awry in the regular expression parser. | |
1304 | ||
1305 | =item invalid [] range in regexp | |
1306 | ||
1307 | (F) The range specified in a character class had a minimum character | |
1308 | greater than the maximum character. See L<perlre>. | |
1309 | ||
c635e13b | 1310 | =item Invalid conversion in %s: "%s" |
1311 | ||
878e08df | 1312 | (W) Perl does not understand the given format conversion. |
c635e13b | 1313 | See L<perlfunc/sprintf>. |
1314 | ||
96e4d5b1 | 1315 | =item Invalid type in pack: '%s' |
1316 | ||
8903cb82 | 1317 | (F) The given character is not a valid pack type. See L<perlfunc/pack>. |
96e4d5b1 | 1318 | |
1319 | =item Invalid type in unpack: '%s' | |
1320 | ||
8903cb82 | 1321 | (F) The given character is not a valid unpack type. See L<perlfunc/unpack>. |
96e4d5b1 | 1322 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1323 | =item ioctl is not implemented |
1324 | ||
1325 | (F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement ioctl(), which is pretty | |
1326 | strange for a machine that supports C. | |
1327 | ||
1328 | =item junk on end of regexp | |
1329 | ||
1330 | (P) The regular expression parser is confused. | |
1331 | ||
1332 | =item Label not found for "last %s" | |
1333 | ||
1334 | (F) You named a loop to break out of, but you're not currently in a | |
1335 | loop of that name, not even if you count where you were called from. | |
1336 | See L<perlfunc/last>. | |
1337 | ||
1338 | =item Label not found for "next %s" | |
1339 | ||
1340 | (F) You named a loop to continue, but you're not currently in a loop of | |
1341 | that name, not even if you count where you were called from. See | |
1342 | L<perlfunc/last>. | |
1343 | ||
1344 | =item Label not found for "redo %s" | |
1345 | ||
1346 | (F) You named a loop to restart, but you're not currently in a loop of | |
1347 | that name, not even if you count where you were called from. See | |
1348 | L<perlfunc/last>. | |
1349 | ||
1350 | =item listen() on closed fd | |
1351 | ||
1352 | (W) You tried to do a listen on a closed socket. Did you forget to check | |
1353 | the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/listen>. | |
1354 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1355 | =item Method for operation %s not found in package %s during blessing |
1356 | ||
1357 | (F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an overloading table that | |
e7ea3e70 | 1358 | doesn't resolve to a valid subroutine. See L<overload>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1359 | |
1360 | =item Might be a runaway multi-line %s string starting on line %d | |
1361 | ||
1362 | (S) An advisory indicating that the previous error may have been caused | |
1363 | by a missing delimiter on a string or pattern, because it eventually | |
1364 | ended earlier on the current line. | |
1365 | ||
1366 | =item Misplaced _ in number | |
1367 | ||
1368 | (W) An underline in a decimal constant wasn't on a 3-digit boundary. | |
1369 | ||
1370 | =item Missing $ on loop variable | |
1371 | ||
8b1a09fc | 1372 | (F) Apparently you've been programming in B<csh> too much. Variables are always |
1373 | mentioned with the $ in Perl, unlike in the shells, where it can vary from | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1374 | one line to the next. |
1375 | ||
1376 | =item Missing comma after first argument to %s function | |
1377 | ||
1378 | (F) While certain functions allow you to specify a filehandle or an | |
1379 | "indirect object" before the argument list, this ain't one of them. | |
1380 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1381 | =item Missing operator before %s? |
1382 | ||
1383 | (S) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message "%s | |
1384 | found where operator expected". Often the missing operator is a comma. | |
1385 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1386 | =item Missing right bracket |
1387 | ||
1388 | (F) The lexer counted more opening curly brackets (braces) than closing ones. | |
1389 | As a general rule, you'll find it's missing near the place you were last | |
1390 | editing. | |
1391 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1392 | =item Modification of a read-only value attempted |
1393 | ||
1394 | (F) You tried, directly or indirectly, to change the value of a | |
5f05dabc | 1395 | constant. You didn't, of course, try "2 = 1", because the compiler |
a0d0e21e LW |
1396 | catches that. But an easy way to do the same thing is: |
1397 | ||
1398 | sub mod { $_[0] = 1 } | |
1399 | mod(2); | |
1400 | ||
1401 | Another way is to assign to a substr() that's off the end of the string. | |
1402 | ||
54310121 | 1403 | =item Modification of noncreatable array value attempted, subscript %d |
a0d0e21e LW |
1404 | |
1405 | (F) You tried to make an array value spring into existence, and the | |
1406 | subscript was probably negative, even counting from end of the array | |
1407 | backwards. | |
1408 | ||
54310121 | 1409 | =item Modification of noncreatable hash value attempted, subscript "%s" |
a0d0e21e LW |
1410 | |
1411 | (F) You tried to make a hash value spring into existence, and it couldn't | |
1412 | be created for some peculiar reason. | |
1413 | ||
1414 | =item Module name must be constant | |
1415 | ||
1416 | (F) Only a bare module name is allowed as the first argument to a "use". | |
1417 | ||
1418 | =item msg%s not implemented | |
1419 | ||
1420 | (F) You don't have System V message IPC on your system. | |
1421 | ||
1422 | =item Multidimensional syntax %s not supported | |
1423 | ||
8b1a09fc | 1424 | (W) Multidimensional arrays aren't written like C<$foo[1,2,3]>. They're written |
1425 | like C<$foo[1][2][3]>, as in C. | |
1426 | ||
1427 | =item Name "%s::%s" used only once: possible typo | |
1428 | ||
68dc0745 | 1429 | (W) Typographical errors often show up as unique variable names. |
1430 | If you had a good reason for having a unique name, then just mention | |
1431 | it again somehow to suppress the message. The C<use vars> pragma is | |
1432 | provided for just this purpose. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1433 | |
1434 | =item Negative length | |
1435 | ||
1436 | (F) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv operation with a buffer length | |
1437 | that is less than 0. This is difficult to imagine. | |
1438 | ||
1439 | =item nested *?+ in regexp | |
1440 | ||
5f05dabc | 1441 | (F) You can't quantify a quantifier without intervening parentheses. So |
a0d0e21e LW |
1442 | things like ** or +* or ?* are illegal. |
1443 | ||
5f05dabc | 1444 | Note, however, that the minimal matching quantifiers, C<*?>, C<+?>, and C<??> appear |
a0d0e21e LW |
1445 | to be nested quantifiers, but aren't. See L<perlre>. |
1446 | ||
1447 | =item No #! line | |
1448 | ||
1449 | (F) The setuid emulator requires that scripts have a well-formed #! line | |
1450 | even on machines that don't support the #! construct. | |
1451 | ||
1452 | =item No %s allowed while running setuid | |
1453 | ||
1454 | (F) Certain operations are deemed to be too insecure for a setuid or setgid | |
1455 | script to even be allowed to attempt. Generally speaking there will be | |
1456 | another way to do what you want that is, if not secure, at least securable. | |
1457 | See L<perlsec>. | |
1458 | ||
1459 | =item No B<-e> allowed in setuid scripts | |
1460 | ||
1461 | (F) A setuid script can't be specified by the user. | |
1462 | ||
1463 | =item No comma allowed after %s | |
1464 | ||
1465 | (F) A list operator that has a filehandle or "indirect object" is not | |
1466 | allowed to have a comma between that and the following arguments. | |
1467 | Otherwise it'd be just another one of the arguments. | |
1468 | ||
0a753a76 | 1469 | One possible cause for this is that you expected to have imported a |
1470 | constant to your name space with B<use> or B<import> while no such | |
1471 | importing took place, it may for example be that your operating system | |
1472 | does not support that particular constant. Hopefully you did use an | |
1473 | explicit import list for the constants you expect to see, please see | |
1474 | L<perlfunc/use> and L<perlfunc/import>. While an explicit import list | |
1475 | would probably have caught this error earlier it naturally does not | |
1476 | remedy the fact that your operating system still does not support that | |
1477 | constant. Maybe you have a typo in the constants of the symbol import | |
1478 | list of B<use> or B<import> or in the constant name at the line where | |
1479 | this error was triggered? | |
1480 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1481 | =item No command into which to pipe on command line |
1482 | ||
1483 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection, | |
54310121 | 1484 | and found a '|' at the end of the command line, so it doesn't know where you |
748a9306 LW |
1485 | want to pipe the output from this command. |
1486 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1487 | =item No DB::DB routine defined |
1488 | ||
1489 | (F) The currently executing code was compiled with the B<-d> switch, | |
1490 | but for some reason the perl5db.pl file (or some facsimile thereof) | |
1491 | didn't define a routine to be called at the beginning of each | |
1492 | statement. Which is odd, because the file should have been required | |
1493 | automatically, and should have blown up the require if it didn't parse | |
1494 | right. | |
1495 | ||
1496 | =item No dbm on this machine | |
1497 | ||
1498 | (P) This is counted as an internal error, because every machine should | |
5f05dabc | 1499 | supply dbm nowadays, because Perl comes with SDBM. See L<SDBM_File>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1500 | |
1501 | =item No DBsub routine | |
1502 | ||
1503 | (F) The currently executing code was compiled with the B<-d> switch, | |
1504 | but for some reason the perl5db.pl file (or some facsimile thereof) | |
1505 | didn't define a DB::sub routine to be called at the beginning of each | |
1506 | ordinary subroutine call. | |
1507 | ||
8b1a09fc | 1508 | =item No error file after 2E<gt> or 2E<gt>E<gt> on command line |
748a9306 LW |
1509 | |
1510 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection, | |
8b1a09fc | 1511 | and found a '2E<gt>' or a '2E<gt>E<gt>' on the command line, but can't find |
1512 | the name of the file to which to write data destined for stderr. | |
748a9306 | 1513 | |
8b1a09fc | 1514 | =item No input file after E<lt> on command line |
748a9306 LW |
1515 | |
1516 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection, | |
8b1a09fc | 1517 | and found a 'E<lt>' on the command line, but can't find the name of the file |
1518 | from which to read data for stdin. | |
748a9306 | 1519 | |
8b1a09fc | 1520 | =item No output file after E<gt> on command line |
748a9306 LW |
1521 | |
1522 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection, | |
8b1a09fc | 1523 | and found a lone 'E<gt>' at the end of the command line, so it doesn't know |
54310121 | 1524 | where you wanted to redirect stdout. |
748a9306 | 1525 | |
8b1a09fc | 1526 | =item No output file after E<gt> or E<gt>E<gt> on command line |
748a9306 LW |
1527 | |
1528 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection, | |
8b1a09fc | 1529 | and found a 'E<gt>' or a 'E<gt>E<gt>' on the command line, but can't find the |
1530 | name of the file to which to write data destined for stdout. | |
748a9306 | 1531 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1532 | =item No Perl script found in input |
1533 | ||
1534 | (F) You called C<perl -x>, but no line was found in the file beginning | |
1535 | with #! and containing the word "perl". | |
1536 | ||
1537 | =item No setregid available | |
1538 | ||
1539 | (F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the setregid() call for | |
1540 | your system. | |
1541 | ||
1542 | =item No setreuid available | |
1543 | ||
1544 | (F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the setreuid() call for | |
1545 | your system. | |
1546 | ||
1547 | =item No space allowed after B<-I> | |
1548 | ||
1549 | (F) The argument to B<-I> must follow the B<-I> immediately with no | |
1550 | intervening space. | |
1551 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1552 | =item No such pipe open |
1553 | ||
1554 | (P) An error peculiar to VMS. The internal routine my_pclose() tried to | |
1555 | close a pipe which hadn't been opened. This should have been caught earlier as | |
1556 | an attempt to close an unopened filehandle. | |
1557 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1558 | =item No such signal: SIG%s |
1559 | ||
1560 | (W) You specified a signal name as a subscript to %SIG that was not recognized. | |
1561 | Say C<kill -l> in your shell to see the valid signal names on your system. | |
1562 | ||
1563 | =item Not a CODE reference | |
1564 | ||
1565 | (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value (that is, a | |
1566 | subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead. You can | |
1567 | use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. | |
1568 | See also L<perlref>. | |
1569 | ||
1570 | =item Not a format reference | |
1571 | ||
1572 | (F) I'm not sure how you managed to generate a reference to an anonymous | |
1573 | format, but this indicates you did, and that it didn't exist. | |
1574 | ||
1575 | =item Not a GLOB reference | |
1576 | ||
55497cff | 1577 | (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a "typeglob" (that is, |
a0d0e21e LW |
1578 | a symbol table entry that looks like C<*foo>), but found a reference to |
1579 | something else instead. You can use the ref() function to find out | |
1580 | what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>. | |
1581 | ||
1582 | =item Not a HASH reference | |
1583 | ||
1584 | (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a hash value, but | |
1585 | found a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref() | |
1586 | function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>. | |
1587 | ||
1588 | =item Not a perl script | |
1589 | ||
1590 | (F) The setuid emulator requires that scripts have a well-formed #! line | |
1591 | even on machines that don't support the #! construct. The line must | |
1592 | mention perl. | |
1593 | ||
1594 | =item Not a SCALAR reference | |
1595 | ||
1596 | (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a scalar value, but | |
1597 | found a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref() | |
1598 | function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>. | |
1599 | ||
1600 | =item Not a subroutine reference | |
1601 | ||
1602 | (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value (that is, a | |
1603 | subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead. You can | |
1604 | use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. | |
1605 | See also L<perlref>. | |
1606 | ||
e7ea3e70 | 1607 | =item Not a subroutine reference in overload table |
a0d0e21e LW |
1608 | |
1609 | (F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an overloading table that | |
8b1a09fc | 1610 | doesn't somehow point to a valid subroutine. See L<overload>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1611 | |
1612 | =item Not an ARRAY reference | |
1613 | ||
1614 | (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to an array value, but | |
1615 | found a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref() | |
1616 | function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>. | |
1617 | ||
1618 | =item Not enough arguments for %s | |
1619 | ||
1620 | (F) The function requires more arguments than you specified. | |
1621 | ||
1622 | =item Not enough format arguments | |
1623 | ||
1624 | (W) A format specified more picture fields than the next line supplied. | |
1625 | See L<perlform>. | |
1626 | ||
1627 | =item Null filename used | |
1628 | ||
5f05dabc | 1629 | (F) You can't require the null filename, especially because on many machines |
a0d0e21e LW |
1630 | that means the current directory! See L<perlfunc/require>. |
1631 | ||
55497cff | 1632 | =item Null picture in formline |
1633 | ||
1634 | (F) The first argument to formline must be a valid format picture | |
1635 | specification. It was found to be empty, which probably means you | |
1636 | supplied it an uninitialized value. See L<perlform>. | |
1637 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1638 | =item NULL OP IN RUN |
1639 | ||
1640 | (P) Some internal routine called run() with a null opcode pointer. | |
1641 | ||
1642 | =item Null realloc | |
1643 | ||
1644 | (P) An attempt was made to realloc NULL. | |
1645 | ||
1646 | =item NULL regexp argument | |
1647 | ||
5f05dabc | 1648 | (P) The internal pattern matching routines blew it big time. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1649 | |
1650 | =item NULL regexp parameter | |
1651 | ||
1652 | (P) The internal pattern matching routines are out of their gourd. | |
1653 | ||
fc36a67e | 1654 | =item Number too long |
1655 | ||
1656 | (F) Perl limits the representation of decimal numbers in programs to about | |
1657 | about 250 characters. You've exceeded that length. Future versions of | |
1658 | Perl are likely to eliminate this arbitrary limitation. In the meantime, | |
1659 | try using scientific notation (e.g. "1e6" instead of "1_000_000"). | |
1660 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1661 | =item Odd number of elements in hash list |
1662 | ||
1663 | (S) You specified an odd number of elements to a hash list, which is odd, | |
5f05dabc | 1664 | because hash lists come in key/value pairs. |
a0d0e21e | 1665 | |
bbce6d69 | 1666 | =item Offset outside string |
1667 | ||
1668 | (F) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv operation with an offset | |
1669 | pointing outside the buffer. This is difficult to imagine. | |
1670 | The sole exception to this is that C<sysread()>ing past the buffer | |
1671 | will extend the buffer and zero pad the new area. | |
1672 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1673 | =item oops: oopsAV |
1674 | ||
1675 | (S) An internal warning that the grammar is screwed up. | |
1676 | ||
1677 | =item oops: oopsHV | |
1678 | ||
1679 | (S) An internal warning that the grammar is screwed up. | |
1680 | ||
e7ea3e70 | 1681 | =item Operation `%s': no method found,%s |
44a8e56a | 1682 | |
e7ea3e70 IZ |
1683 | (F) An attempt was made to perform an overloaded operation for which |
1684 | no handler was defined. While some handlers can be autogenerated in | |
1685 | terms of other handlers, there is no default handler for any | |
1686 | operation, unless C<fallback> overloading key is specified to be | |
1687 | true. See L<overload>. | |
44a8e56a | 1688 | |
748a9306 LW |
1689 | =item Operator or semicolon missing before %s |
1690 | ||
1691 | (S) You used a variable or subroutine call where the parser was | |
1692 | expecting an operator. The parser has assumed you really meant | |
1693 | to use an operator, but this is highly likely to be incorrect. | |
1694 | For example, if you say "*foo *foo" it will be interpreted as | |
1695 | if you said "*foo * 'foo'". | |
1696 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1697 | =item Out of memory for yacc stack |
1698 | ||
1699 | (F) The yacc parser wanted to grow its stack so it could continue parsing, | |
1700 | but realloc() wouldn't give it more memory, virtual or otherwise. | |
1701 | ||
1702 | =item Out of memory! | |
1703 | ||
55497cff | 1704 | (X|F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient |
54310121 | 1705 | remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request. |
eff9c6e2 CS |
1706 | |
1707 | The request was judged to be small, so the possibility to trap it | |
1708 | depends on the way perl was compiled. By default it is not trappable. | |
1709 | However, if compiled for this, Perl may use the contents of C<$^M> as | |
1710 | an emergency pool after die()ing with this message. In this case the | |
55497cff | 1711 | error is trappable I<once>. |
1712 | ||
1713 | =item Out of memory during request for %s | |
1714 | ||
1715 | (F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient | |
1716 | remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request. However, | |
1717 | the request was judged large enough (compile-time default is 64K), so | |
1718 | a possibility to shut down by trapping this error is granted. | |
1719 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1720 | =item page overflow |
1721 | ||
1722 | (W) A single call to write() produced more lines than can fit on a page. | |
1723 | See L<perlform>. | |
1724 | ||
1725 | =item panic: ck_grep | |
1726 | ||
1727 | (P) Failed an internal consistency check trying to compile a grep. | |
1728 | ||
1729 | =item panic: ck_split | |
1730 | ||
1731 | (P) Failed an internal consistency check trying to compile a split. | |
1732 | ||
1733 | =item panic: corrupt saved stack index | |
1734 | ||
1735 | (P) The savestack was requested to restore more localized values than there | |
1736 | are in the savestack. | |
1737 | ||
1738 | =item panic: die %s | |
1739 | ||
1740 | (P) We popped the context stack to an eval context, and then discovered | |
1741 | it wasn't an eval context. | |
1742 | ||
1743 | =item panic: do_match | |
1744 | ||
1745 | (P) The internal pp_match() routine was called with invalid operational data. | |
1746 | ||
1747 | =item panic: do_split | |
1748 | ||
1749 | (P) Something terrible went wrong in setting up for the split. | |
1750 | ||
1751 | =item panic: do_subst | |
1752 | ||
1753 | (P) The internal pp_subst() routine was called with invalid operational data. | |
1754 | ||
1755 | =item panic: do_trans | |
1756 | ||
1757 | (P) The internal do_trans() routine was called with invalid operational data. | |
1758 | ||
c635e13b | 1759 | =item panic: frexp |
1760 | ||
1761 | (P) The library function frexp() failed, making printf("%f") impossible. | |
1762 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1763 | =item panic: goto |
1764 | ||
1765 | (P) We popped the context stack to a context with the specified label, | |
1766 | and then discovered it wasn't a context we know how to do a goto in. | |
1767 | ||
1768 | =item panic: INTERPCASEMOD | |
1769 | ||
1770 | (P) The lexer got into a bad state at a case modifier. | |
1771 | ||
1772 | =item panic: INTERPCONCAT | |
1773 | ||
1774 | (P) The lexer got into a bad state parsing a string with brackets. | |
1775 | ||
1776 | =item panic: last | |
1777 | ||
1778 | (P) We popped the context stack to a block context, and then discovered | |
1779 | it wasn't a block context. | |
1780 | ||
1781 | =item panic: leave_scope clearsv | |
1782 | ||
5f05dabc | 1783 | (P) A writable lexical variable became read-only somehow within the scope. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1784 | |
1785 | =item panic: leave_scope inconsistency | |
1786 | ||
1787 | (P) The savestack probably got out of sync. At least, there was an | |
1788 | invalid enum on the top of it. | |
1789 | ||
1790 | =item panic: malloc | |
1791 | ||
1792 | (P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of malloc. | |
1793 | ||
1794 | =item panic: mapstart | |
1795 | ||
1796 | (P) The compiler is screwed up with respect to the map() function. | |
1797 | ||
1798 | =item panic: null array | |
1799 | ||
1800 | (P) One of the internal array routines was passed a null AV pointer. | |
1801 | ||
1802 | =item panic: pad_alloc | |
1803 | ||
1804 | (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating | |
1805 | and freeing temporaries and lexicals from. | |
1806 | ||
1807 | =item panic: pad_free curpad | |
1808 | ||
1809 | (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating | |
1810 | and freeing temporaries and lexicals from. | |
1811 | ||
1812 | =item panic: pad_free po | |
1813 | ||
1814 | (P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected internally. | |
1815 | ||
1816 | =item panic: pad_reset curpad | |
1817 | ||
1818 | (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating | |
1819 | and freeing temporaries and lexicals from. | |
1820 | ||
1821 | =item panic: pad_sv po | |
1822 | ||
1823 | (P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected internally. | |
1824 | ||
1825 | =item panic: pad_swipe curpad | |
1826 | ||
1827 | (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating | |
1828 | and freeing temporaries and lexicals from. | |
1829 | ||
1830 | =item panic: pad_swipe po | |
1831 | ||
1832 | (P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected internally. | |
1833 | ||
1834 | =item panic: pp_iter | |
1835 | ||
1836 | (P) The foreach iterator got called in a non-loop context frame. | |
1837 | ||
1838 | =item panic: realloc | |
1839 | ||
1840 | (P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of realloc. | |
1841 | ||
1842 | =item panic: restartop | |
1843 | ||
1844 | (P) Some internal routine requested a goto (or something like it), and | |
1845 | didn't supply the destination. | |
1846 | ||
1847 | =item panic: return | |
1848 | ||
1849 | (P) We popped the context stack to a subroutine or eval context, and | |
1850 | then discovered it wasn't a subroutine or eval context. | |
1851 | ||
1852 | =item panic: scan_num | |
1853 | ||
1854 | (P) scan_num() got called on something that wasn't a number. | |
1855 | ||
1856 | =item panic: sv_insert | |
1857 | ||
1858 | (P) The sv_insert() routine was told to remove more string than there | |
1859 | was string. | |
1860 | ||
1861 | =item panic: top_env | |
1862 | ||
1863 | (P) The compiler attempted to do a goto, or something weird like that. | |
1864 | ||
1865 | =item panic: yylex | |
1866 | ||
1867 | (P) The lexer got into a bad state while processing a case modifier. | |
1868 | ||
5f05dabc | 1869 | =item Pareneses missing around "%s" list |
a0d0e21e LW |
1870 | |
1871 | (W) You said something like | |
1872 | ||
1873 | my $foo, $bar = @_; | |
1874 | ||
1875 | when you meant | |
1876 | ||
1877 | my ($foo, $bar) = @_; | |
1878 | ||
1879 | Remember that "my" and "local" bind closer than comma. | |
1880 | ||
1881 | =item Perl %3.3f required--this is only version %s, stopped | |
1882 | ||
1883 | (F) The module in question uses features of a version of Perl more recent | |
1884 | than the currently running version. How long has it been since you upgraded, | |
1885 | anyway? See L<perlfunc/require>. | |
1886 | ||
1887 | =item Permission denied | |
1888 | ||
1889 | (F) The setuid emulator in suidperl decided you were up to no good. | |
1890 | ||
748a9306 LW |
1891 | =item pid %d not a child |
1892 | ||
1893 | (W) A warning peculiar to VMS. Waitpid() was asked to wait for a process which | |
1894 | isn't a subprocess of the current process. While this is fine from VMS' | |
1895 | perspective, it's probably not what you intended. | |
1896 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1897 | =item POSIX getpgrp can't take an argument |
1898 | ||
1899 | (F) Your C compiler uses POSIX getpgrp(), which takes no argument, unlike | |
1900 | the BSD version, which takes a pid. | |
1901 | ||
bbce6d69 | 1902 | =item Possible attempt to put comments in qw() list |
1903 | ||
774d564b | 1904 | (W) qw() lists contain items separated by whitespace; as with literal |
1905 | strings, comment characters are not ignored, but are instead treated | |
1906 | as literal data. (You may have used different delimiters than the | |
1907 | exclamation marks parentheses shown here; braces are also frequently | |
1908 | used.) | |
bbce6d69 | 1909 | |
774d564b | 1910 | You probably wrote something like this: |
1911 | ||
54310121 | 1912 | @list = qw( |
774d564b | 1913 | a # a comment |
bbce6d69 | 1914 | b # another comment |
774d564b | 1915 | ); |
bbce6d69 | 1916 | |
1917 | when you should have written this: | |
1918 | ||
774d564b | 1919 | @list = qw( |
54310121 | 1920 | a |
1921 | b | |
774d564b | 1922 | ); |
1923 | ||
1924 | If you really want comments, build your list the | |
1925 | old-fashioned way, with quotes and commas: | |
1926 | ||
1927 | @list = ( | |
1928 | 'a', # a comment | |
1929 | 'b', # another comment | |
1930 | ); | |
bbce6d69 | 1931 | |
1932 | =item Possible attempt to separate words with commas | |
1933 | ||
774d564b | 1934 | (W) qw() lists contain items separated by whitespace; therefore commas |
68dc0745 | 1935 | aren't needed to separate the items. (You may have used different |
774d564b | 1936 | delimiters than the parentheses shown here; braces are also frequently |
1937 | used.) | |
bbce6d69 | 1938 | |
54310121 | 1939 | You probably wrote something like this: |
bbce6d69 | 1940 | |
774d564b | 1941 | qw! a, b, c !; |
1942 | ||
1943 | which puts literal commas into some of the list items. Write it without | |
1944 | commas if you don't want them to appear in your data: | |
bbce6d69 | 1945 | |
774d564b | 1946 | qw! a b c !; |
bbce6d69 | 1947 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1948 | =item Possible memory corruption: %s overflowed 3rd argument |
1949 | ||
1950 | (F) An ioctl() or fcntl() returned more than Perl was bargaining for. | |
1951 | Perl guesses a reasonable buffer size, but puts a sentinel byte at the | |
1952 | end of the buffer just in case. This sentinel byte got clobbered, and | |
1953 | Perl assumes that memory is now corrupted. See L<perlfunc/ioctl>. | |
1954 | ||
1955 | =item Precedence problem: open %s should be open(%s) | |
1956 | ||
1957 | (S) The old irregular construct | |
cb1a09d0 | 1958 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1959 | open FOO || die; |
1960 | ||
1961 | is now misinterpreted as | |
1962 | ||
1963 | open(FOO || die); | |
1964 | ||
68dc0745 | 1965 | because of the strict regularization of Perl 5's grammar into unary |
1966 | and list operators. (The old open was a little of both.) You must | |
1967 | put parentheses around the filehandle, or use the new "or" operator | |
1968 | instead of "||". | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1969 | |
1970 | =item print on closed filehandle %s | |
1971 | ||
1972 | (W) The filehandle you're printing on got itself closed sometime before now. | |
1973 | Check your logic flow. | |
1974 | ||
1975 | =item printf on closed filehandle %s | |
1976 | ||
1977 | (W) The filehandle you're writing to got itself closed sometime before now. | |
1978 | Check your logic flow. | |
1979 | ||
1980 | =item Probable precedence problem on %s | |
1981 | ||
54310121 | 1982 | (W) The compiler found a bareword where it expected a conditional, |
a0d0e21e LW |
1983 | which often indicates that an || or && was parsed as part of the |
1984 | last argument of the previous construct, for example: | |
1985 | ||
1986 | open FOO || die; | |
1987 | ||
3fe9a6f1 | 1988 | =item Prototype mismatch: %s vs %s |
4633a7c4 | 1989 | |
3fe9a6f1 | 1990 | (S) The subroutine being declared or defined had previously been declared |
1991 | or defined with a different function prototype. | |
4633a7c4 | 1992 | |
8b1a09fc | 1993 | =item Read on closed filehandle E<lt>%sE<gt> |
a0d0e21e LW |
1994 | |
1995 | (W) The filehandle you're reading from got itself closed sometime before now. | |
1996 | Check your logic flow. | |
1997 | ||
1998 | =item Reallocation too large: %lx | |
1999 | ||
54310121 | 2000 | (F) You can't allocate more than 64K on an MS-DOS machine. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2001 | |
2002 | =item Recompile perl with B<-D>DEBUGGING to use B<-D> switch | |
2003 | ||
2004 | (F) You can't use the B<-D> option unless the code to produce the | |
2005 | desired output is compiled into Perl, which entails some overhead, | |
2006 | which is why it's currently left out of your copy. | |
2007 | ||
2008 | =item Recursive inheritance detected | |
2009 | ||
2010 | (F) More than 100 levels of inheritance were used. Probably indicates | |
2011 | an unintended loop in your inheritance hierarchy. | |
2012 | ||
2013 | =item Reference miscount in sv_replace() | |
2014 | ||
2015 | (W) The internal sv_replace() function was handed a new SV with a | |
2016 | reference count of other than 1. | |
2017 | ||
2018 | =item regexp memory corruption | |
2019 | ||
2020 | (P) The regular expression engine got confused by what the regular | |
2021 | expression compiler gave it. | |
2022 | ||
2023 | =item regexp out of space | |
2024 | ||
2025 | (P) A "can't happen" error, because safemalloc() should have caught it earlier. | |
2026 | ||
2027 | =item regexp too big | |
2028 | ||
2ba9eb46 | 2029 | (F) The current implementation of regular expressions uses shorts as |
a0d0e21e LW |
2030 | address offsets within a string. Unfortunately this means that if |
2031 | the regular expression compiles to longer than 32767, it'll blow up. | |
2032 | Usually when you want a regular expression this big, there is a better | |
2033 | way to do it with multiple statements. See L<perlre>. | |
2034 | ||
2035 | =item Reversed %s= operator | |
2036 | ||
2037 | (W) You wrote your assignment operator backwards. The = must always | |
2038 | comes last, to avoid ambiguity with subsequent unary operators. | |
2039 | ||
2040 | =item Runaway format | |
2041 | ||
2042 | (F) Your format contained the ~~ repeat-until-blank sequence, but it | |
2043 | produced 200 lines at once, and the 200th line looked exactly like the | |
2044 | 199th line. Apparently you didn't arrange for the arguments to exhaust | |
2045 | themselves, either by using ^ instead of @ (for scalar variables), or by | |
2046 | shifting or popping (for array variables). See L<perlform>. | |
2047 | ||
2048 | =item Scalar value @%s[%s] better written as $%s[%s] | |
2049 | ||
a6006777 | 2050 | (W) You've used an array slice (indicated by @) to select a single element of |
a0d0e21e | 2051 | an array. Generally it's better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $). |
8b1a09fc | 2052 | The difference is that C<$foo[&bar]> always behaves like a scalar, both when |
2053 | assigning to it and when evaluating its argument, while C<@foo[&bar]> behaves | |
a0d0e21e | 2054 | like a list when you assign to it, and provides a list context to its |
5f05dabc | 2055 | subscript, which can do weird things if you're expecting only one subscript. |
a0d0e21e | 2056 | |
748a9306 | 2057 | On the other hand, if you were actually hoping to treat the array |
5f05dabc | 2058 | element as a list, you need to look into how references work, because |
748a9306 LW |
2059 | Perl will not magically convert between scalars and lists for you. See |
2060 | L<perlref>. | |
2061 | ||
a6006777 | 2062 | =item Scalar value @%s{%s} better written as $%s{%s} |
2063 | ||
2064 | (W) You've used a hash slice (indicated by @) to select a single element of | |
2065 | a hash. Generally it's better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $). | |
2066 | The difference is that C<$foo{&bar}> always behaves like a scalar, both when | |
2067 | assigning to it and when evaluating its argument, while C<@foo{&bar}> behaves | |
2068 | like a list when you assign to it, and provides a list context to its | |
2069 | subscript, which can do weird things if you're expecting only one subscript. | |
2070 | ||
2071 | On the other hand, if you were actually hoping to treat the hash | |
2072 | element as a list, you need to look into how references work, because | |
2073 | Perl will not magically convert between scalars and lists for you. See | |
2074 | L<perlref>. | |
2075 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2076 | =item Script is not setuid/setgid in suidperl |
2077 | ||
54310121 | 2078 | (F) Oddly, the suidperl program was invoked on a script without a setuid |
2079 | or setgid bit set. This doesn't make much sense. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2080 | |
2081 | =item Search pattern not terminated | |
2082 | ||
2083 | (F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a // or m{} | |
2084 | construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting level. | |
2085 | ||
96e4d5b1 | 2086 | =item %sseek() on unopened file |
a0d0e21e | 2087 | |
96e4d5b1 | 2088 | (W) You tried to use the seek() or sysseek() function on a filehandle that |
2089 | was either never opened or has since been closed. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2090 | |
2091 | =item select not implemented | |
2092 | ||
2093 | (F) This machine doesn't implement the select() system call. | |
2094 | ||
2095 | =item sem%s not implemented | |
2096 | ||
2097 | (F) You don't have System V semaphore IPC on your system. | |
2098 | ||
2099 | =item semi-panic: attempt to dup freed string | |
2100 | ||
2101 | (S) The internal newSVsv() routine was called to duplicate a scalar | |
2102 | that had previously been marked as free. | |
2103 | ||
2104 | =item Semicolon seems to be missing | |
2105 | ||
2106 | (W) A nearby syntax error was probably caused by a missing semicolon, | |
2107 | or possibly some other missing operator, such as a comma. | |
2108 | ||
2109 | =item Send on closed socket | |
2110 | ||
2111 | (W) The filehandle you're sending to got itself closed sometime before now. | |
2112 | Check your logic flow. | |
2113 | ||
1b1626e4 MG |
2114 | =item Sequence (? incomplete |
2115 | (F) A regular expression ended with an incomplete extension (?. | |
2116 | See L<perlre>. | |
2117 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2118 | =item Sequence (?#... not terminated |
2119 | ||
2120 | (F) A regular expression comment must be terminated by a closing | |
5f05dabc | 2121 | parenthesis. Embedded parentheses aren't allowed. See L<perlre>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2122 | |
2123 | =item Sequence (?%s...) not implemented | |
2124 | ||
2125 | (F) A proposed regular expression extension has the character reserved | |
2126 | but has not yet been written. See L<perlre>. | |
2127 | ||
2128 | =item Sequence (?%s...) not recognized | |
2129 | ||
2130 | (F) You used a regular expression extension that doesn't make sense. | |
2131 | See L<perlre>. | |
2132 | ||
a5f75d66 AD |
2133 | =item Server error |
2134 | ||
9607fc9c | 2135 | Also known as "500 Server error". |
2136 | ||
2137 | B<This is a CGI error, not a Perl error>. | |
2138 | ||
2139 | You need to make sure your script is executable, is accessible by the user | |
2140 | CGI is running the script under (which is probably not the user account you | |
2141 | tested it under), does not rely on any environment variables (like PATH) | |
2142 | from the user it isn't running under, and isn't in a location where the CGI | |
2143 | server can't find it, basically, more or less. Please see the following | |
2144 | for more information: | |
2145 | ||
2146 | http://www.perl.com/perl/faq/idiots-guide.html | |
2147 | http://www.perl.com/perl/faq/perl-cgi-faq.html | |
2148 | ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/www/cgi-faq | |
2149 | http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/interface.html | |
2150 | http://www-genome.wi.mit.edu/WWW/faqs/www-security-faq.html | |
a5f75d66 | 2151 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2152 | =item setegid() not implemented |
2153 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2154 | (F) You tried to assign to C<$)>, and your operating system doesn't support |
a0d0e21e LW |
2155 | the setegid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't |
2156 | think so. | |
2157 | ||
2158 | =item seteuid() not implemented | |
2159 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2160 | (F) You tried to assign to C<$E<gt>>, and your operating system doesn't support |
a0d0e21e LW |
2161 | the seteuid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't |
2162 | think so. | |
2163 | ||
2164 | =item setrgid() not implemented | |
2165 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2166 | (F) You tried to assign to C<$(>, and your operating system doesn't support |
a0d0e21e LW |
2167 | the setrgid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't |
2168 | think so. | |
2169 | ||
2170 | =item setruid() not implemented | |
2171 | ||
1f8d2005 | 2172 | (F) You tried to assign to C<$E<lt>>, and your operating system doesn't support |
a0d0e21e LW |
2173 | the setruid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't |
2174 | think so. | |
2175 | ||
2176 | =item Setuid/gid script is writable by world | |
2177 | ||
2178 | (F) The setuid emulator won't run a script that is writable by the world, | |
2179 | because the world might have written on it already. | |
2180 | ||
2181 | =item shm%s not implemented | |
2182 | ||
2183 | (F) You don't have System V shared memory IPC on your system. | |
2184 | ||
2185 | =item shutdown() on closed fd | |
2186 | ||
2187 | (W) You tried to do a shutdown on a closed socket. Seems a bit superfluous. | |
2188 | ||
f86702cc | 2189 | =item SIG%s handler "%s" not defined |
a0d0e21e LW |
2190 | |
2191 | (W) The signal handler named in %SIG doesn't, in fact, exist. Perhaps you | |
2192 | put it into the wrong package? | |
2193 | ||
2194 | =item sort is now a reserved word | |
2195 | ||
2196 | (F) An ancient error message that almost nobody ever runs into anymore. | |
2197 | But before sort was a keyword, people sometimes used it as a filehandle. | |
2198 | ||
2199 | =item Sort subroutine didn't return a numeric value | |
2200 | ||
2201 | (F) A sort comparison routine must return a number. You probably blew | |
4633a7c4 | 2202 | it by not using C<E<lt>=E<gt>> or C<cmp>, or by not using them correctly. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2203 | See L<perlfunc/sort>. |
2204 | ||
2205 | =item Sort subroutine didn't return single value | |
2206 | ||
2207 | (F) A sort comparison subroutine may not return a list value with more | |
2208 | or less than one element. See L<perlfunc/sort>. | |
2209 | ||
2210 | =item Split loop | |
2211 | ||
2212 | (P) The split was looping infinitely. (Obviously, a split shouldn't iterate | |
2213 | more times than there are characters of input, which is what happened.) | |
2214 | See L<perlfunc/split>. | |
2215 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2216 | =item Stat on unopened file E<lt>%sE<gt> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2217 | |
2218 | (W) You tried to use the stat() function (or an equivalent file test) | |
54310121 | 2219 | on a filehandle that was either never opened or has since been closed. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2220 | |
2221 | =item Statement unlikely to be reached | |
2222 | ||
2223 | (W) You did an exec() with some statement after it other than a die(). | |
2224 | This is almost always an error, because exec() never returns unless | |
2225 | there was a failure. You probably wanted to use system() instead, | |
2226 | which does return. To suppress this warning, put the exec() in a block | |
2227 | by itself. | |
2228 | ||
e7ea3e70 IZ |
2229 | =item Stub found while resolving method `%s' overloading `%s' in package `%s' |
2230 | ||
2231 | (P) Overloading resolution over @ISA tree may be broken by importation stubs. | |
2232 | Stubs should never be implicitely created, but explicit calls to C<can> | |
2233 | may break this. | |
2234 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2235 | =item Subroutine %s redefined |
2236 | ||
2237 | (W) You redefined a subroutine. To suppress this warning, say | |
2238 | ||
2239 | { | |
2240 | local $^W = 0; | |
2241 | eval "sub name { ... }"; | |
2242 | } | |
2243 | ||
2244 | =item Substitution loop | |
2245 | ||
2246 | (P) The substitution was looping infinitely. (Obviously, a | |
2247 | substitution shouldn't iterate more times than there are characters of | |
68dc0745 | 2248 | input, which is what happened.) See the discussion of substitution in |
5f05dabc | 2249 | L<perlop/"Quote and Quote-like Operators">. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2250 | |
2251 | =item Substitution pattern not terminated | |
2252 | ||
2253 | (F) The lexer couldn't find the interior delimiter of a s/// or s{}{} | |
2254 | construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting level. | |
2255 | ||
2256 | =item Substitution replacement not terminated | |
2257 | ||
2258 | (F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a s/// or s{}{} | |
2259 | construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting level. | |
2260 | ||
2261 | =item substr outside of string | |
2262 | ||
3e3baf6d TB |
2263 | (S),(W) You tried to reference a substr() that pointed outside of a |
2264 | string. That is, the absolute value of the offset was larger than the | |
2265 | length of the string. See L<perlfunc/substr>. This warning is | |
2266 | mandatory if substr is used in an lvalue context (as the left hand side | |
2267 | of an assignment or as a subroutine argument for example). | |
a0d0e21e | 2268 | |
f86702cc | 2269 | =item suidperl is no longer needed since %s |
a0d0e21e LW |
2270 | |
2271 | (F) Your Perl was compiled with B<-D>SETUID_SCRIPTS_ARE_SECURE_NOW, but a | |
2272 | version of the setuid emulator somehow got run anyway. | |
2273 | ||
2274 | =item syntax error | |
2275 | ||
2276 | (F) Probably means you had a syntax error. Common reasons include: | |
2277 | ||
2278 | A keyword is misspelled. | |
2279 | A semicolon is missing. | |
2280 | A comma is missing. | |
2281 | An opening or closing parenthesis is missing. | |
2282 | An opening or closing brace is missing. | |
2283 | A closing quote is missing. | |
2284 | ||
2285 | Often there will be another error message associated with the syntax | |
2286 | error giving more information. (Sometimes it helps to turn on B<-w>.) | |
2287 | The error message itself often tells you where it was in the line when | |
2288 | it decided to give up. Sometimes the actual error is several tokens | |
5f05dabc | 2289 | before this, because Perl is good at understanding random input. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2290 | Occasionally the line number may be misleading, and once in a blue moon |
2291 | the only way to figure out what's triggering the error is to call | |
2292 | C<perl -c> repeatedly, chopping away half the program each time to see | |
2293 | if the error went away. Sort of the cybernetic version of S<20 questions>. | |
2294 | ||
cb1a09d0 AD |
2295 | =item syntax error at line %d: `%s' unexpected |
2296 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2297 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through the Bourne shell |
3a52c276 | 2298 | instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script |
cb1a09d0 AD |
2299 | into Perl yourself. |
2300 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2301 | =item System V IPC is not implemented on this machine |
2302 | ||
5f05dabc | 2303 | (F) You tried to do something with a function beginning with "sem", "shm", |
a0d0e21e LW |
2304 | or "msg". See L<perlfunc/semctl>, for example. |
2305 | ||
2306 | =item Syswrite on closed filehandle | |
2307 | ||
2308 | (W) The filehandle you're writing to got itself closed sometime before now. | |
2309 | Check your logic flow. | |
2310 | ||
fc36a67e | 2311 | =item Target of goto is too deeply nested |
2312 | ||
2313 | (F) You tried to use C<goto> to reach a label that was too deeply | |
2314 | nested for Perl to reach. Perl is doing you a favor by refusing. | |
2315 | ||
8903cb82 | 2316 | =item tell() on unopened file |
a0d0e21e | 2317 | |
8903cb82 | 2318 | (W) You tried to use the tell() function on a filehandle that was either |
2319 | never opened or has since been closed. | |
a0d0e21e | 2320 | |
8b1a09fc | 2321 | =item Test on unopened file E<lt>%sE<gt> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2322 | |
2323 | (W) You tried to invoke a file test operator on a filehandle that isn't | |
2324 | open. Check your logic. See also L<perlfunc/-X>. | |
2325 | ||
2326 | =item That use of $[ is unsupported | |
2327 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2328 | (F) Assignment to C<$[> is now strictly circumscribed, and interpreted as |
5f05dabc | 2329 | a compiler directive. You may say only one of |
a0d0e21e LW |
2330 | |
2331 | $[ = 0; | |
2332 | $[ = 1; | |
2333 | ... | |
2334 | local $[ = 0; | |
2335 | local $[ = 1; | |
2336 | ... | |
2337 | ||
2338 | This is to prevent the problem of one module changing the array base | |
2339 | out from under another module inadvertently. See L<perlvar/$[>. | |
2340 | ||
2341 | =item The %s function is unimplemented | |
2342 | ||
2343 | The function indicated isn't implemented on this architecture, according | |
2344 | to the probings of Configure. | |
2345 | ||
f86702cc | 2346 | =item The crypt() function is unimplemented due to excessive paranoia |
a0d0e21e LW |
2347 | |
2348 | (F) Configure couldn't find the crypt() function on your machine, | |
2349 | probably because your vendor didn't supply it, probably because they | |
8b1a09fc | 2350 | think the U.S. Government thinks it's a secret, or at least that they |
a0d0e21e LW |
2351 | will continue to pretend that it is. And if you quote me on that, I |
2352 | will deny it. | |
2353 | ||
2354 | =item The stat preceding C<-l _> wasn't an lstat | |
2355 | ||
2356 | (F) It makes no sense to test the current stat buffer for symbolic linkhood | |
2357 | if the last stat that wrote to the stat buffer already went past | |
2358 | the symlink to get to the real file. Use an actual filename instead. | |
2359 | ||
2360 | =item times not implemented | |
2361 | ||
2362 | (F) Your version of the C library apparently doesn't do times(). I suspect | |
2363 | you're not running on Unix. | |
2364 | ||
2365 | =item Too few args to syscall | |
2366 | ||
2367 | (F) There has to be at least one argument to syscall() to specify the | |
2368 | system call to call, silly dilly. | |
2369 | ||
9607fc9c | 2370 | =item Too late for "B<-T>" option |
2371 | ||
2372 | (X) The #! line (or local equivalent) in a Perl script contains the | |
8cc95fdb | 2373 | B<-T> option, but Perl was not invoked with B<-T> in its command line. |
2374 | This is an error because, by the time Perl discovers a B<-T> in a | |
2375 | script, it's too late to properly taint everything from the environment. | |
2376 | So Perl gives up. | |
f86702cc | 2377 | |
9607fc9c | 2378 | If the Perl script is being executed as a command using the #! |
2379 | mechanism (or its local equivalent), this error can usually be fixed | |
2380 | by editing the #! line so that the B<-T> option is a part of Perl's | |
2381 | first argument: e.g. change C<perl -n -T> to C<perl -T -n>. | |
f86702cc | 2382 | |
9607fc9c | 2383 | If the Perl script is being executed as C<perl scriptname>, then the |
2384 | B<-T> option must appear on the command line: C<perl -T scriptname>. | |
f86702cc | 2385 | |
8cc95fdb | 2386 | =item Too late for "-%s" option |
2387 | ||
2388 | (X) The #! line (or local equivalent) in a Perl script contains the | |
2389 | B<-M> or B<-m> option. This is an error because B<-M> and B<-m> options | |
2390 | are not intended for use inside scripts. Use the C<use> pragma instead. | |
2391 | ||
cb1a09d0 AD |
2392 | =item Too many ('s |
2393 | ||
2394 | =item Too many )'s | |
2395 | ||
2396 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead | |
3a52c276 CS |
2397 | of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into |
2398 | Perl yourself. | |
cb1a09d0 | 2399 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2400 | =item Too many args to syscall |
2401 | ||
5f05dabc | 2402 | (F) Perl supports a maximum of only 14 args to syscall(). |
a0d0e21e LW |
2403 | |
2404 | =item Too many arguments for %s | |
2405 | ||
2406 | (F) The function requires fewer arguments than you specified. | |
2407 | ||
2408 | =item trailing \ in regexp | |
2409 | ||
2410 | (F) The regular expression ends with an unbackslashed backslash. Backslash | |
2411 | it. See L<perlre>. | |
2412 | ||
2413 | =item Translation pattern not terminated | |
2414 | ||
2415 | (F) The lexer couldn't find the interior delimiter of a tr/// or tr[][] | |
2416 | construct. | |
2417 | ||
2418 | =item Translation replacement not terminated | |
2419 | ||
2420 | (F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a tr/// or tr[][] | |
2421 | construct. | |
2422 | ||
2423 | =item truncate not implemented | |
2424 | ||
2425 | (F) Your machine doesn't implement a file truncation mechanism that | |
2426 | Configure knows about. | |
2427 | ||
2428 | =item Type of arg %d to %s must be %s (not %s) | |
2429 | ||
2430 | (F) This function requires the argument in that position to be of a | |
8b1a09fc | 2431 | certain type. Arrays must be @NAME or C<@{EXPR}>. Hashes must be |
2432 | %NAME or C<%{EXPR}>. No implicit dereferencing is allowed--use the | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2433 | {EXPR} forms as an explicit dereference. See L<perlref>. |
2434 | ||
2435 | =item umask: argument is missing initial 0 | |
2436 | ||
5f05dabc | 2437 | (W) A umask of 222 is incorrect. It should be 0222, because octal literals |
a0d0e21e LW |
2438 | always start with 0 in Perl, as in C. |
2439 | ||
4633a7c4 LW |
2440 | =item Unable to create sub named "%s" |
2441 | ||
2442 | (F) You attempted to create or access a subroutine with an illegal name. | |
2443 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2444 | =item Unbalanced context: %d more PUSHes than POPs |
2445 | ||
2446 | (W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many execution | |
2447 | contexts were entered and left. | |
2448 | ||
2449 | =item Unbalanced saves: %d more saves than restores | |
2450 | ||
2451 | (W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many | |
2452 | values were temporarily localized. | |
2453 | ||
2454 | =item Unbalanced scopes: %d more ENTERs than LEAVEs | |
2455 | ||
2456 | (W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many blocks | |
2457 | were entered and left. | |
2458 | ||
2459 | =item Unbalanced tmps: %d more allocs than frees | |
2460 | ||
2461 | (W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many mortal | |
2462 | scalars were allocated and freed. | |
2463 | ||
2464 | =item Undefined format "%s" called | |
2465 | ||
2466 | (F) The format indicated doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps it's really in | |
2467 | another package? See L<perlform>. | |
2468 | ||
2469 | =item Undefined sort subroutine "%s" called | |
2470 | ||
2471 | (F) The sort comparison routine specified doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps | |
2472 | it's in a different package? See L<perlfunc/sort>. | |
2473 | ||
2474 | =item Undefined subroutine &%s called | |
2475 | ||
2476 | (F) The subroutine indicated hasn't been defined, or if it was, it | |
2477 | has since been undefined. | |
2478 | ||
2479 | =item Undefined subroutine called | |
2480 | ||
2481 | (F) The anonymous subroutine you're trying to call hasn't been defined, | |
2482 | or if it was, it has since been undefined. | |
2483 | ||
2484 | =item Undefined subroutine in sort | |
2485 | ||
2486 | (F) The sort comparison routine specified is declared but doesn't seem to | |
2487 | have been defined yet. See L<perlfunc/sort>. | |
2488 | ||
4633a7c4 LW |
2489 | =item Undefined top format "%s" called |
2490 | ||
2491 | (F) The format indicated doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps it's really in | |
2492 | another package? See L<perlform>. | |
2493 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2494 | =item unexec of %s into %s failed! |
2495 | ||
2496 | (F) The unexec() routine failed for some reason. See your local FSF | |
2497 | representative, who probably put it there in the first place. | |
2498 | ||
2499 | =item Unknown BYTEORDER | |
2500 | ||
5f05dabc | 2501 | (F) There are no byte-swapping functions for a machine with this byte order. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2502 | |
2503 | =item unmatched () in regexp | |
2504 | ||
2505 | (F) Unbackslashed parentheses must always be balanced in regular | |
2506 | expressions. If you're a vi user, the % key is valuable for finding | |
5f05dabc | 2507 | the matching parenthesis. See L<perlre>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2508 | |
2509 | =item Unmatched right bracket | |
2510 | ||
2511 | (F) The lexer counted more closing curly brackets (braces) than opening | |
2512 | ones, so you're probably missing an opening bracket. As a general | |
2513 | rule, you'll find the missing one (so to speak) near the place you were | |
2514 | last editing. | |
2515 | ||
2516 | =item unmatched [] in regexp | |
2517 | ||
2518 | (F) The brackets around a character class must match. If you wish to | |
2519 | include a closing bracket in a character class, backslash it or put it first. | |
2520 | See L<perlre>. | |
2521 | ||
2522 | =item Unquoted string "%s" may clash with future reserved word | |
2523 | ||
54310121 | 2524 | (W) You used a bareword that might someday be claimed as a reserved word. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2525 | It's best to put such a word in quotes, or capitalize it somehow, or insert |
2526 | an underbar into it. You might also declare it as a subroutine. | |
2527 | ||
54310121 | 2528 | =item Unrecognized character %s |
a0d0e21e | 2529 | |
54310121 | 2530 | (F) The Perl parser has no idea what to do with the specified character |
2531 | in your Perl script (or eval). Perhaps you tried to run a compressed | |
2532 | script, a binary program, or a directory as a Perl program. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2533 | |
2534 | =item Unrecognized signal name "%s" | |
2535 | ||
2536 | (F) You specified a signal name to the kill() function that was not recognized. | |
2537 | Say C<kill -l> in your shell to see the valid signal names on your system. | |
2538 | ||
90248788 | 2539 | =item Unrecognized switch: -%s (-h will show valid options) |
a0d0e21e LW |
2540 | |
2541 | (F) You specified an illegal option to Perl. Don't do that. | |
2542 | (If you think you didn't do that, check the #! line to see if it's | |
2543 | supplying the bad switch on your behalf.) | |
2544 | ||
2545 | =item Unsuccessful %s on filename containing newline | |
2546 | ||
2547 | (W) A file operation was attempted on a filename, and that operation | |
2548 | failed, PROBABLY because the filename contained a newline, PROBABLY | |
54310121 | 2549 | because you forgot to chop() or chomp() it off. See L<perlfunc/chomp>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2550 | |
2551 | =item Unsupported directory function "%s" called | |
2552 | ||
2553 | (F) Your machine doesn't support opendir() and readdir(). | |
2554 | ||
54310121 | 2555 | =item Unsupported function fork |
2556 | ||
2557 | (F) Your version of executable does not support forking. | |
2558 | ||
2559 | Note that under some systems, like OS/2, there may be different flavors of | |
2560 | Perl executables, some of which may support fork, some not. Try changing | |
2561 | the name you call Perl by to C<perl_>, C<perl__>, and so on. | |
2562 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2563 | =item Unsupported function %s |
2564 | ||
2565 | (F) This machines doesn't implement the indicated function, apparently. | |
2566 | At least, Configure doesn't think so. | |
2567 | ||
2568 | =item Unsupported socket function "%s" called | |
2569 | ||
2570 | (F) Your machine doesn't support the Berkeley socket mechanism, or at | |
2571 | least that's what Configure thought. | |
2572 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2573 | =item Unterminated E<lt>E<gt> operator |
a0d0e21e LW |
2574 | |
2575 | (F) The lexer saw a left angle bracket in a place where it was expecting | |
2576 | a term, so it's looking for the corresponding right angle bracket, and not | |
2577 | finding it. Chances are you left some needed parentheses out earlier in | |
2578 | the line, and you really meant a "less than". | |
2579 | ||
5cd24f17 | 2580 | =item Use of "$$<digit>" to mean "${$}<digit>" is deprecated |
2581 | ||
2582 | (D) Perl versions before 5.004 misinterpreted any type marker followed | |
2583 | by "$" and a digit. For example, "$$0" was incorrectly taken to mean | |
2584 | "${$}0" instead of "${$0}". This bug is (mostly) fixed in Perl 5.004. | |
2585 | ||
2586 | However, the developers of Perl 5.004 could not fix this bug completely, | |
2587 | because at least two widely-used modules depend on the old meaning of | |
2588 | "$$0" in a string. So Perl 5.004 still interprets "$$<digit>" in the | |
2589 | old (broken) way inside strings; but it generates this message as a | |
2590 | warning. And in Perl 5.005, this special treatment will cease. | |
2591 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2592 | =item Use of $# is deprecated |
2593 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2594 | (D) This was an ill-advised attempt to emulate a poorly defined B<awk> feature. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2595 | Use an explicit printf() or sprintf() instead. |
2596 | ||
2597 | =item Use of $* is deprecated | |
2598 | ||
4a6725af | 2599 | (D) This variable magically turned on multi-line pattern matching, both for |
a0d0e21e LW |
2600 | you and for any luckless subroutine that you happen to call. You should |
2601 | use the new C<//m> and C<//s> modifiers now to do that without the dangerous | |
2602 | action-at-a-distance effects of C<$*>. | |
2603 | ||
748a9306 LW |
2604 | =item Use of %s in printf format not supported |
2605 | ||
5f05dabc | 2606 | (F) You attempted to use a feature of printf that is accessible from |
2607 | only C. This usually means there's a better way to do it in Perl. | |
748a9306 | 2608 | |
8b1a09fc | 2609 | =item Use of bare E<lt>E<lt> to mean E<lt>E<lt>"" is deprecated |
4633a7c4 LW |
2610 | |
2611 | (D) You are now encouraged to use the explicitly quoted form if you | |
3fe9a6f1 | 2612 | wish to use an empty line as the terminator of the here-document. |
4633a7c4 | 2613 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2614 | =item Use of implicit split to @_ is deprecated |
2615 | ||
2616 | (D) It makes a lot of work for the compiler when you clobber a | |
2617 | subroutine's argument list, so it's better if you assign the results of | |
2618 | a split() explicitly to an array (or list). | |
2619 | ||
dc848c6f | 2620 | =item Use of inherited AUTOLOAD for non-method %s() is deprecated |
2621 | ||
5cd24f17 | 2622 | (D) As an (ahem) accidental feature, C<AUTOLOAD> subroutines are looked |
2623 | up as methods (using the C<@ISA> hierarchy) even when the subroutines to | |
2624 | be autoloaded were called as plain functions (e.g. C<Foo::bar()>), not | |
2625 | as methods (e.g. C<Foo->bar()> or C<$obj->bar()>). | |
dc848c6f | 2626 | |
2627 | This bug will be rectified in Perl 5.005, which will use method lookup | |
2628 | only for methods' C<AUTOLOAD>s. However, there is a significant base | |
2629 | of existing code that may be using the old behavior. So, as an | |
2630 | interim step, Perl 5.004 issues an optional warning when non-methods | |
2631 | use inherited C<AUTOLOAD>s. | |
2632 | ||
2633 | The simple rule is: Inheritance will not work when autoloading | |
2634 | non-methods. The simple fix for old code is: In any module that used to | |
2635 | depend on inheriting C<AUTOLOAD> for non-methods from a base class named | |
2636 | C<BaseClass>, execute C<*AUTOLOAD = \&BaseClass::AUTOLOAD> during startup. | |
2637 | ||
2638 | =item Use of %s is deprecated | |
2639 | ||
2640 | (D) The construct indicated is no longer recommended for use, generally | |
2641 | because there's a better way to do it, and also because the old way has | |
2642 | bad side effects. | |
2643 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2644 | =item Use of uninitialized value |
2645 | ||
2646 | (W) An undefined value was used as if it were already defined. It was | |
2647 | interpreted as a "" or a 0, but maybe it was a mistake. To suppress this | |
2648 | warning assign an initial value to your variables. | |
2649 | ||
2650 | =item Useless use of %s in void context | |
2651 | ||
2652 | (W) You did something without a side effect in a context that does nothing | |
2653 | with the return value, such as a statement that doesn't return a value | |
2654 | from a block, or the left side of a scalar comma operator. Very often | |
2655 | this points not to stupidity on your part, but a failure of Perl to parse | |
2656 | your program the way you thought it would. For example, you'd get this | |
2657 | if you mixed up your C precedence with Python precedence and said | |
2658 | ||
2659 | $one, $two = 1, 2; | |
2660 | ||
2661 | when you meant to say | |
2662 | ||
2663 | ($one, $two) = (1, 2); | |
2664 | ||
748a9306 LW |
2665 | Another common error is to use ordinary parentheses to construct a list |
2666 | reference when you should be using square or curly brackets, for | |
2667 | example, if you say | |
2668 | ||
2669 | $array = (1,2); | |
2670 | ||
2671 | when you should have said | |
2672 | ||
2673 | $array = [1,2]; | |
2674 | ||
2675 | The square brackets explicitly turn a list value into a scalar value, | |
2676 | while parentheses do not. So when a parenthesized list is evaluated in | |
2677 | a scalar context, the comma is treated like C's comma operator, which | |
2678 | throws away the left argument, which is not what you want. See | |
2679 | L<perlref> for more on this. | |
2680 | ||
55497cff | 2681 | =item untie attempted while %d inner references still exist |
2682 | ||
2683 | (W) A copy of the object returned from C<tie> (or C<tied>) was still | |
2684 | valid when C<untie> was called. | |
2685 | ||
68dc0745 | 2686 | =item Value of %s can be "0"; test with defined() |
a6006777 | 2687 | |
68dc0745 | 2688 | (W) In a conditional expression, you used <HANDLE>, <*> (glob), C<each()>, |
2689 | or C<readdir()> as a boolean value. Each of these constructs can return a | |
2690 | value of "0"; that would make the conditional expression false, which is | |
2691 | probably not what you intended. When using these constructs in conditional | |
2692 | expressions, test their values with the C<defined> operator. | |
a6006777 | 2693 | |
9607fc9c | 2694 | =item Variable "%s" is not imported%s |
4633a7c4 LW |
2695 | |
2696 | (F) While "use strict" in effect, you referred to a global variable | |
2697 | that you apparently thought was imported from another module, because | |
2698 | something else of the same name (usually a subroutine) is exported | |
2699 | by that module. It usually means you put the wrong funny character | |
2700 | on the front of your variable. | |
2701 | ||
44a8e56a | 2702 | =item Variable "%s" may be unavailable |
2703 | ||
2704 | (W) An inner (nested) I<anonymous> subroutine is inside a I<named> | |
2705 | subroutine, and outside that is another subroutine; and the anonymous | |
2706 | (innermost) subroutine is referencing a lexical variable defined in | |
2707 | the outermost subroutine. For example: | |
2708 | ||
2709 | sub outermost { my $a; sub middle { sub { $a } } } | |
2710 | ||
2711 | If the anonymous subroutine is called or referenced (directly or | |
2712 | indirectly) from the outermost subroutine, it will share the variable | |
2713 | as you would expect. But if the anonymous subroutine is called or | |
2714 | referenced when the outermost subroutine is not active, it will see | |
2715 | the value of the shared variable as it was before and during the | |
2716 | *first* call to the outermost subroutine, which is probably not what | |
2717 | you want. | |
2718 | ||
2719 | In these circumstances, it is usually best to make the middle | |
2720 | subroutine anonymous, using the C<sub {}> syntax. Perl has specific | |
2721 | support for shared variables in nested anonymous subroutines; a named | |
2722 | subroutine in between interferes with this feature. | |
2723 | ||
2724 | =item Variable "%s" will not stay shared | |
2725 | ||
2726 | (W) An inner (nested) I<named> subroutine is referencing a lexical | |
2727 | variable defined in an outer subroutine. | |
2728 | ||
2729 | When the inner subroutine is called, it will probably see the value of | |
2730 | the outer subroutine's variable as it was before and during the | |
2731 | *first* call to the outer subroutine; in this case, after the first | |
2732 | call to the outer subroutine is complete, the inner and outer | |
2733 | subroutines will no longer share a common value for the variable. In | |
2734 | other words, the variable will no longer be shared. | |
2735 | ||
2736 | Furthermore, if the outer subroutine is anonymous and references a | |
2737 | lexical variable outside itself, then the outer and inner subroutines | |
2738 | will I<never> share the given variable. | |
2739 | ||
2740 | This problem can usually be solved by making the inner subroutine | |
2741 | anonymous, using the C<sub {}> syntax. When inner anonymous subs that | |
2742 | reference variables in outer subroutines are called or referenced, | |
54310121 | 2743 | they are automatically rebound to the current values of such |
44a8e56a | 2744 | variables. |
2745 | ||
f86702cc | 2746 | =item Variable syntax |
cb1a09d0 AD |
2747 | |
2748 | (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead | |
3a52c276 CS |
2749 | of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into |
2750 | Perl yourself. | |
cb1a09d0 | 2751 | |
7e1af8bc | 2752 | =item Warning: something's wrong |
5f05dabc | 2753 | |
2754 | (W) You passed warn() an empty string (the equivalent of C<warn "">) or | |
2755 | you called it with no args and C<$_> was empty. | |
2756 | ||
f86702cc | 2757 | =item Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly |
a0d0e21e | 2758 | |
8b1a09fc | 2759 | (S) The implicit close() done by an open() got an error indication on the |
5f05dabc | 2760 | close(). This usually indicates your file system ran out of disk space. |
a0d0e21e | 2761 | |
5f05dabc | 2762 | =item Warning: Use of "%s" without parentheses is ambiguous |
a0d0e21e LW |
2763 | |
2764 | (S) You wrote a unary operator followed by something that looks like a | |
2765 | binary operator that could also have been interpreted as a term or | |
2766 | unary operator. For instance, if you know that the rand function | |
2767 | has a default argument of 1.0, and you write | |
2768 | ||
2769 | rand + 5; | |
2770 | ||
2771 | you may THINK you wrote the same thing as | |
2772 | ||
2773 | rand() + 5; | |
2774 | ||
2775 | but in actual fact, you got | |
2776 | ||
2777 | rand(+5); | |
2778 | ||
5f05dabc | 2779 | So put in parentheses to say what you really mean. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2780 | |
2781 | =item Write on closed filehandle | |
2782 | ||
2783 | (W) The filehandle you're writing to got itself closed sometime before now. | |
2784 | Check your logic flow. | |
2785 | ||
2786 | =item X outside of string | |
2787 | ||
2788 | (F) You had a pack template that specified a relative position before | |
2789 | the beginning of the string being unpacked. See L<perlfunc/pack>. | |
2790 | ||
2791 | =item x outside of string | |
2792 | ||
2793 | (F) You had a pack template that specified a relative position after | |
2794 | the end of the string being unpacked. See L<perlfunc/pack>. | |
2795 | ||
2796 | =item Xsub "%s" called in sort | |
2797 | ||
2798 | (F) The use of an external subroutine as a sort comparison is not yet supported. | |
2799 | ||
2800 | =item Xsub called in sort | |
2801 | ||
2802 | (F) The use of an external subroutine as a sort comparison is not yet supported. | |
2803 | ||
2804 | =item You can't use C<-l> on a filehandle | |
2805 | ||
2806 | (F) A filehandle represents an opened file, and when you opened the file it | |
2807 | already went past any symlink you are presumably trying to look for. | |
2808 | Use a filename instead. | |
2809 | ||
2810 | =item YOU HAVEN'T DISABLED SET-ID SCRIPTS IN THE KERNEL YET! | |
2811 | ||
5f05dabc | 2812 | (F) And you probably never will, because you probably don't have the |
a0d0e21e LW |
2813 | sources to your kernel, and your vendor probably doesn't give a rip |
2814 | about what you want. Your best bet is to use the wrapsuid script in | |
2815 | the eg directory to put a setuid C wrapper around your script. | |
2816 | ||
2817 | =item You need to quote "%s" | |
2818 | ||
2819 | (W) You assigned a bareword as a signal handler name. Unfortunately, you | |
2820 | already have a subroutine of that name declared, which means that Perl 5 | |
2821 | will try to call the subroutine when the assignment is executed, which is | |
2822 | probably not what you want. (If it IS what you want, put an & in front.) | |
2823 | ||
2824 | =item [gs]etsockopt() on closed fd | |
2825 | ||
2826 | (W) You tried to get or set a socket option on a closed socket. | |
2827 | Did you forget to check the return value of your socket() call? | |
2828 | See L<perlfunc/getsockopt>. | |
2829 | ||
2830 | =item \1 better written as $1 | |
2831 | ||
2832 | (W) Outside of patterns, backreferences live on as variables. The use | |
5f05dabc | 2833 | of backslashes is grandfathered on the right-hand side of a |
a0d0e21e LW |
2834 | substitution, but stylistically it's better to use the variable form |
2835 | because other Perl programmers will expect it, and it works better | |
2836 | if there are more than 9 backreferences. | |
2837 | ||
8b1a09fc | 2838 | =item '|' and 'E<lt>' may not both be specified on command line |
748a9306 LW |
2839 | |
2840 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and | |
2841 | found that STDIN was a pipe, and that you also tried to redirect STDIN using | |
8b1a09fc | 2842 | 'E<lt>'. Only one STDIN stream to a customer, please. |
748a9306 | 2843 | |
8b1a09fc | 2844 | =item '|' and 'E<gt>' may not both be specified on command line |
748a9306 LW |
2845 | |
2846 | (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and | |
2847 | thinks you tried to redirect stdout both to a file and into a pipe to another | |
2848 | command. You need to choose one or the other, though nothing's stopping you | |
2849 | from piping into a program or Perl script which 'splits' output into two | |
2850 | streams, such as | |
2851 | ||
2852 | open(OUT,">$ARGV[0]") or die "Can't write to $ARGV[0]: $!"; | |
2853 | while (<STDIN>) { | |
2854 | print; | |
2855 | print OUT; | |
2856 | } | |
2857 | close OUT; | |
2858 | ||
774d564b | 2859 | =item Got an error from DosAllocMem |
33c8a3fe | 2860 | |
774d564b | 2861 | (P) An error peculiar to OS/2. Most probably you're using an obsolete |
2862 | version of Perl, and this should not happen anyway. | |
33c8a3fe IZ |
2863 | |
2864 | =item Malformed PERLLIB_PREFIX | |
2865 | ||
dc848c6f | 2866 | (F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERLLIB_PREFIX should be of the form |
33c8a3fe IZ |
2867 | |
2868 | prefix1;prefix2 | |
2869 | ||
2870 | or | |
2871 | ||
2872 | prefix1 prefix2 | |
2873 | ||
dc848c6f | 2874 | with nonempty prefix1 and prefix2. If C<prefix1> is indeed a prefix |
2875 | of a builtin library search path, prefix2 is substituted. The error | |
2876 | may appear if components are not found, or are too long. See | |
2877 | "PERLLIB_PREFIX" in F<README.os2>. | |
33c8a3fe IZ |
2878 | |
2879 | =item PERL_SH_DIR too long | |
2880 | ||
54310121 | 2881 | (F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERL_SH_DIR is the directory to find the |
dc848c6f | 2882 | C<sh>-shell in. See "PERL_SH_DIR" in F<README.os2>. |
33c8a3fe IZ |
2883 | |
2884 | =item Process terminated by SIG%s | |
2885 | ||
2886 | (W) This is a standard message issued by OS/2 applications, while *nix | |
dc848c6f | 2887 | applications die in silence. It is considered a feature of the OS/2 |
2888 | port. One can easily disable this by appropriate sighandlers, see | |
2889 | L<perlipc/"Signals">. See also "Process terminated by SIGTERM/SIGINT" | |
2890 | in F<README.os2>. | |
33c8a3fe | 2891 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2892 | =back |
2893 |