3 perldiag - various Perl diagnostics
7 These messages are classified as follows (listed in increasing order of
10 (W) A warning (optional).
11 (D) A deprecation (enabled by default).
12 (S) A severe warning (enabled by default).
13 (F) A fatal error (trappable).
14 (P) An internal error you should never see (trappable).
15 (X) A very fatal error (nontrappable).
16 (A) An alien error message (not generated by Perl).
18 The majority of messages from the first three classifications above
19 (W, D & S) can be controlled using the C<warnings> pragma.
21 If a message can be controlled by the C<warnings> pragma, its warning
22 category is included with the classification letter in the description
23 below. E.g. C<(W closed)> means a warning in the C<closed> category.
25 Optional warnings are enabled by using the C<warnings> pragma or the B<-w>
26 and B<-W> switches. Warnings may be captured by setting C<$SIG{__WARN__}>
27 to a reference to a routine that will be called on each warning instead
28 of printing it. See L<perlvar>.
30 Severe warnings are always enabled, unless they are explicitly disabled
31 with the C<warnings> pragma or the B<-X> switch.
33 Trappable errors may be trapped using the eval operator. See
34 L<perlfunc/eval>. In almost all cases, warnings may be selectively
35 disabled or promoted to fatal errors using the C<warnings> pragma.
38 The messages are in alphabetical order, without regard to upper or
39 lower-case. Some of these messages are generic. Spots that vary are
40 denoted with a %s or other printf-style escape. These escapes are
41 ignored by the alphabetical order, as are all characters other than
42 letters. To look up your message, just ignore anything that is not a
47 =item accept() on closed socket %s
49 (W closed) You tried to do an accept on a closed socket. Did you forget
50 to check the return value of your socket() call? See
53 =item Aliasing via reference is experimental
55 (S experimental::refaliasing) This warning is emitted if you use
56 a reference constructor on the left-hand side of an assignment to
57 alias one variable to another. Simply suppress the warning if you
58 want to use the feature, but know that in doing so you are taking
59 the risk of using an experimental feature which may change or be
60 removed in a future Perl version:
62 no warnings "experimental::refaliasing";
63 use feature "refaliasing";
66 =item Allocation too large: %x
68 (X) You can't allocate more than 64K on an MS-DOS machine.
70 =item '%c' allowed only after types %s in %s
72 (F) The modifiers '!', '<' and '>' are allowed in pack() or unpack() only
73 after certain types. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
75 =item alpha->numify() is lossy
77 (W numeric) An alpha version can not be numified without losing
80 =item Ambiguous call resolved as CORE::%s(), qualify as such or use &
82 (W ambiguous) A subroutine you have declared has the same name as a Perl
83 keyword, and you have used the name without qualification for calling
84 one or the other. Perl decided to call the builtin because the
85 subroutine is not imported.
87 To force interpretation as a subroutine call, either put an ampersand
88 before the subroutine name, or qualify the name with its package.
89 Alternatively, you can import the subroutine (or pretend that it's
90 imported with the C<use subs> pragma).
92 To silently interpret it as the Perl operator, use the C<CORE::> prefix
93 on the operator (e.g. C<CORE::log($x)>) or declare the subroutine
94 to be an object method (see L<perlsub/"Subroutine Attributes"> or
97 =item Ambiguous range in transliteration operator
99 (F) You wrote something like C<tr/a-z-0//> which doesn't mean anything at
100 all. To include a C<-> character in a transliteration, put it either
101 first or last. (In the past, C<tr/a-z-0//> was synonymous with
102 C<tr/a-y//>, which was probably not what you would have expected.)
104 =item Ambiguous use of %s resolved as %s
106 (S ambiguous) You said something that may not be interpreted the way
107 you thought. Normally it's pretty easy to disambiguate it by supplying
108 a missing quote, operator, parenthesis pair or declaration.
110 =item Ambiguous use of -%s resolved as -&%s()
112 (S ambiguous) You wrote something like C<-foo>, which might be the
113 string C<"-foo">, or a call to the function C<foo>, negated. If you meant
114 the string, just write C<"-foo">. If you meant the function call,
117 =item Ambiguous use of %c resolved as operator %c
119 (S ambiguous) C<%>, C<&>, and C<*> are both infix operators (modulus,
120 bitwise and, and multiplication) I<and> initial special characters
121 (denoting hashes, subroutines and typeglobs), and you said something
122 like C<*foo * foo> that might be interpreted as either of them. We
123 assumed you meant the infix operator, but please try to make it more
124 clear -- in the example given, you might write C<*foo * foo()> if you
125 really meant to multiply a glob by the result of calling a function.
127 =item Ambiguous use of %c{%s} resolved to %c%s
129 (W ambiguous) You wrote something like C<@{foo}>, which might be
130 asking for the variable C<@foo>, or it might be calling a function
131 named foo, and dereferencing it as an array reference. If you wanted
132 the variable, you can just write C<@foo>. If you wanted to call the
133 function, write C<@{foo()}> ... or you could just not have a variable
134 and a function with the same name, and save yourself a lot of trouble.
136 =item Ambiguous use of %c{%s[...]} resolved to %c%s[...]
138 =item Ambiguous use of %c{%s{...}} resolved to %c%s{...}
140 (W ambiguous) You wrote something like C<${foo[2]}> (where foo represents
141 the name of a Perl keyword), which might be looking for element number
142 2 of the array named C<@foo>, in which case please write C<$foo[2]>, or you
143 might have meant to pass an anonymous arrayref to the function named
144 foo, and then do a scalar deref on the value it returns. If you meant
145 that, write C<${foo([2])}>.
147 In regular expressions, the C<${foo[2]}> syntax is sometimes necessary
148 to disambiguate between array subscripts and character classes.
149 C</$length[2345]/>, for instance, will be interpreted as C<$length> followed
150 by the character class C<[2345]>. If an array subscript is what you
151 want, you can avoid the warning by changing C</${length[2345]}/> to the
152 unsightly C</${\$length[2345]}/>, by renaming your array to something
153 that does not coincide with a built-in keyword, or by simply turning
154 off warnings with C<no warnings 'ambiguous';>.
156 =item '|' and '<' may not both be specified on command line
158 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line
159 redirection, and found that STDIN was a pipe, and that you also tried to
160 redirect STDIN using '<'. Only one STDIN stream to a customer, please.
162 =item '|' and '>' may not both be specified on command line
164 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line
165 redirection, and thinks you tried to redirect stdout both to a file and
166 into a pipe to another command. You need to choose one or the other,
167 though nothing's stopping you from piping into a program or Perl script
168 which 'splits' output into two streams, such as
170 open(OUT,">$ARGV[0]") or die "Can't write to $ARGV[0]: $!";
177 =item Applying %s to %s will act on scalar(%s)
179 (W misc) The pattern match (C<//>), substitution (C<s///>), and
180 transliteration (C<tr///>) operators work on scalar values. If you apply
181 one of them to an array or a hash, it will convert the array or hash to
182 a scalar value (the length of an array, or the population info of a
183 hash) and then work on that scalar value. This is probably not what
184 you meant to do. See L<perlfunc/grep> and L<perlfunc/map> for
187 =item Arg too short for msgsnd
189 (F) msgsnd() requires a string at least as long as sizeof(long).
191 =item Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s
193 (W numeric) The indicated string was fed as an argument to an operator
194 that expected a numeric value instead. If you're fortunate the message
195 will identify which operator was so unfortunate.
197 Note that for the C<Inf> and C<NaN> (infinity and not-a-number) the
198 definition of "numeric" is somewhat unusual: the strings themselves
199 (like "Inf") are considered numeric, and anything following them is
200 considered non-numeric.
202 =item Argument list not closed for PerlIO layer "%s"
204 (W layer) When pushing a layer with arguments onto the Perl I/O
205 system you forgot the ) that closes the argument list. (Layers
206 take care of transforming data between external and internal
207 representations.) Perl stopped parsing the layer list at this
208 point and did not attempt to push this layer. If your program
209 didn't explicitly request the failing operation, it may be the
210 result of the value of the environment variable PERLIO.
212 =item Argument "%s" treated as 0 in increment (++)
214 (W numeric) The indicated string was fed as an argument to the C<++>
215 operator which expects either a number or a string matching
216 C</^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/>. See L<perlop/Auto-increment and
217 Auto-decrement> for details.
219 =item Array passed to stat will be coerced to a scalar%s
221 (W syntax) You called stat() on an array, but the array will be
222 coerced to a scalar - the number of elements in the array.
224 =item A signature parameter must start with '$', '@' or '%'
226 (F) Each subroutine signature parameter declaration must start with a valid
229 sub foo ($a, $, $b = 1, @c) {}
231 =item A slurpy parameter may not have a default value
233 (F) Only scalar subroutine signature parameters may have a default value;
236 sub foo ($a = 1) {} # legal
237 sub foo (@a = (1)) {} # invalid
238 sub foo (%a = (a => b)) {} # invalid
240 =item assertion botched: %s
242 (X) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal failure.
244 =item Assertion %s failed: file "%s", line %d
246 (X) A general assertion failed. The file in question must be examined.
248 =item Assigned value is not a reference
250 (F) You tried to assign something that was not a reference to an lvalue
251 reference (e.g., C<\$x = $y>). If you meant to make $x an alias to $y, use
254 =item Assigned value is not %s reference
256 (F) You tried to assign a reference to a reference constructor, but the
257 two references were not of the same type. You cannot alias a scalar to
258 an array, or an array to a hash; the two types must match.
263 \$x = $y; # error; did you mean \$y?
265 =item Assigning non-zero to $[ is no longer possible
267 (F) When the "array_base" feature is disabled
268 (e.g., and under C<use v5.16;>, and as of Perl 5.30)
269 the special variable C<$[>, which is deprecated, is now a fixed zero value.
271 =item Assignment to both a list and a scalar
273 (F) If you assign to a conditional operator, the 2nd and 3rd arguments
274 must either both be scalars or both be lists. Otherwise Perl won't
275 know which context to supply to the right side.
277 =item Assuming NOT a POSIX class since %s in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
279 (W regexp) You had something like these:
284 They look like they might have been meant to be the POSIX classes
285 C<[:alnum:]> or C<[:digit:]>. If so, they should be written:
290 Since these aren't legal POSIX class specifications, but are legal
291 bracketed character classes, Perl treats them as the latter. In the
292 first example, it matches the characters C<":">, C<"[">, C<"a">, C<"l">,
293 C<"m">, C<"n">, and C<"u">.
295 If these weren't meant to be POSIX classes, this warning message is
296 spurious, and can be suppressed by reordering things, such as
304 =item <> at require-statement should be quotes
306 (F) You wrote C<< require <file> >> when you should have written
309 =item Attempt to access disallowed key '%s' in a restricted hash
311 (F) The failing code has attempted to get or set a key which is not in
312 the current set of allowed keys of a restricted hash.
314 =item Attempt to bless into a freed package
316 (F) You wrote C<bless $foo> with one argument after somehow causing
317 the current package to be freed. Perl cannot figure out what to
318 do, so it throws up its hands in despair.
320 =item Attempt to bless into a reference
322 (F) The CLASSNAME argument to the bless() operator is expected to be
323 the name of the package to bless the resulting object into. You've
324 supplied instead a reference to something: perhaps you wrote
330 bless $self, ref($proto) || $proto;
332 If you actually want to bless into the stringified version
333 of the reference supplied, you need to stringify it yourself, for
336 bless $self, "$proto";
338 =item Attempt to clear deleted array
340 (S debugging) An array was assigned to when it was being freed.
341 Freed values are not supposed to be visible to Perl code. This
342 can also happen if XS code calls C<av_clear> from a custom magic
343 callback on the array.
345 =item Attempt to delete disallowed key '%s' from a restricted hash
347 (F) The failing code attempted to delete from a restricted hash a key
348 which is not in its key set.
350 =item Attempt to delete readonly key '%s' from a restricted hash
352 (F) The failing code attempted to delete a key whose value has been
353 declared readonly from a restricted hash.
355 =item Attempt to free non-arena SV: 0x%x
357 (S internal) All SV objects are supposed to be allocated from arenas
358 that will be garbage collected on exit. An SV was discovered to be
359 outside any of those arenas.
361 =item Attempt to free nonexistent shared string '%s'%s
363 (S internal) Perl maintains a reference-counted internal table of
364 strings to optimize the storage and access of hash keys and other
365 strings. This indicates someone tried to decrement the reference count
366 of a string that can no longer be found in the table.
368 =item Attempt to free temp prematurely: SV 0x%x
370 (S debugging) Mortalized values are supposed to be freed by the
371 free_tmps() routine. This indicates that something else is freeing the
372 SV before the free_tmps() routine gets a chance, which means that the
373 free_tmps() routine will be freeing an unreferenced scalar when it does
376 =item Attempt to free unreferenced glob pointers
378 (S internal) The reference counts got screwed up on symbol aliases.
380 =item Attempt to free unreferenced scalar: SV 0x%x
382 (S internal) Perl went to decrement the reference count of a scalar to
383 see if it would go to 0, and discovered that it had already gone to 0
384 earlier, and should have been freed, and in fact, probably was freed.
385 This could indicate that SvREFCNT_dec() was called too many times, or
386 that SvREFCNT_inc() was called too few times, or that the SV was
387 mortalized when it shouldn't have been, or that memory has been
390 =item Attempt to pack pointer to temporary value
392 (W pack) You tried to pass a temporary value (like the result of a
393 function, or a computed expression) to the "p" pack() template. This
394 means the result contains a pointer to a location that could become
395 invalid anytime, even before the end of the current statement. Use
396 literals or global values as arguments to the "p" pack() template to
399 =item Attempt to reload %s aborted.
401 (F) You tried to load a file with C<use> or C<require> that failed to
402 compile once already. Perl will not try to compile this file again
403 unless you delete its entry from %INC. See L<perlfunc/require> and
406 =item Attempt to set length of freed array
408 (W misc) You tried to set the length of an array which has
409 been freed. You can do this by storing a reference to the
410 scalar representing the last index of an array and later
411 assigning through that reference. For example
413 $r = do {my @a; \$#a};
416 =item Attempt to use reference as lvalue in substr
418 (W substr) You supplied a reference as the first argument to substr()
419 used as an lvalue, which is pretty strange. Perhaps you forgot to
420 dereference it first. See L<perlfunc/substr>.
422 =item Attribute prototype(%s) discards earlier prototype attribute in same sub
424 (W misc) A sub was declared as sub foo : prototype(A) : prototype(B) {}, for
425 example. Since each sub can only have one prototype, the earlier
426 declaration(s) are discarded while the last one is applied.
428 =item av_reify called on tied array
430 (S debugging) This indicates that something went wrong and Perl got I<very>
431 confused about C<@_> or C<@DB::args> being tied.
433 =item Bad arg length for %s, is %u, should be %d
435 (F) You passed a buffer of the wrong size to one of msgctl(), semctl()
436 or shmctl(). In C parlance, the correct sizes are, respectively,
437 S<sizeof(struct msqid_ds *)>, S<sizeof(struct semid_ds *)>, and
438 S<sizeof(struct shmid_ds *)>.
440 =item Bad evalled substitution pattern
442 (F) You've used the C</e> switch to evaluate the replacement for a
443 substitution, but perl found a syntax error in the code to evaluate,
444 most likely an unexpected right brace '}'.
446 =item Bad filehandle: %s
448 (F) A symbol was passed to something wanting a filehandle, but the
449 symbol has no filehandle associated with it. Perhaps you didn't do an
450 open(), or did it in another package.
452 =item Bad free() ignored
454 (S malloc) An internal routine called free() on something that had never
455 been malloc()ed in the first place. Mandatory, but can be disabled by
456 setting environment variable C<PERL_BADFREE> to 0.
458 This message can be seen quite often with DB_File on systems with "hard"
459 dynamic linking, like C<AIX> and C<OS/2>. It is a bug of C<Berkeley DB>
460 which is left unnoticed if C<DB> uses I<forgiving> system malloc().
464 (P) One of the internal hash routines was passed a null HV pointer.
466 =item Badly placed ()'s
468 (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead
469 of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
472 =item Bad name after %s
474 (F) You started to name a symbol by using a package prefix, and then
475 didn't finish the symbol. In particular, you can't interpolate outside
484 $sym = "mypack::$var";
486 =item Bad plugin affecting keyword '%s'
488 (F) An extension using the keyword plugin mechanism violated the
491 =item Bad realloc() ignored
493 (S malloc) An internal routine called realloc() on something that
494 had never been malloc()ed in the first place. Mandatory, but can
495 be disabled by setting the environment variable C<PERL_BADFREE> to 1.
497 =item Bad symbol for array
499 (P) An internal request asked to add an array entry to something that
500 wasn't a symbol table entry.
502 =item Bad symbol for dirhandle
504 (P) An internal request asked to add a dirhandle entry to something
505 that wasn't a symbol table entry.
507 =item Bad symbol for filehandle
509 (P) An internal request asked to add a filehandle entry to something
510 that wasn't a symbol table entry.
512 =item Bad symbol for hash
514 (P) An internal request asked to add a hash entry to something that
515 wasn't a symbol table entry.
517 =item Bad symbol for scalar
519 (P) An internal request asked to add a scalar entry to something that
520 wasn't a symbol table entry.
522 =item Bareword found in conditional
524 (W bareword) The compiler found a bareword where it expected a
525 conditional, which often indicates that an || or && was parsed as part
526 of the last argument of the previous construct, for example:
530 It may also indicate a misspelled constant that has been interpreted as
533 use constant TYPO => 1;
534 if (TYOP) { print "foo" }
536 The C<strict> pragma is useful in avoiding such errors.
538 =item Bareword in require contains "%s"
540 =item Bareword in require maps to disallowed filename "%s"
542 =item Bareword in require maps to empty filename
544 (F) The bareword form of require has been invoked with a filename which could
545 not have been generated by a valid bareword permitted by the parser. You
546 shouldn't be able to get this error from Perl code, but XS code may throw it
547 if it passes an invalid module name to C<Perl_load_module>.
549 =item Bareword in require must not start with a double-colon: "%s"
551 (F) In C<require Bare::Word>, the bareword is not allowed to start with a
552 double-colon. Write C<require ::Foo::Bar> as C<require Foo::Bar> instead.
554 =item Bareword "%s" not allowed while "strict subs" in use
556 (F) With "strict subs" in use, a bareword is only allowed as a
557 subroutine identifier, in curly brackets or to the left of the "=>"
558 symbol. Perhaps you need to predeclare a subroutine?
560 =item Bareword "%s" refers to nonexistent package
562 (W bareword) You used a qualified bareword of the form C<Foo::>, but the
563 compiler saw no other uses of that namespace before that point. Perhaps
564 you need to predeclare a package?
566 =item BEGIN failed--compilation aborted
568 (F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing a BEGIN
569 subroutine. Compilation stops immediately and the interpreter is
572 =item BEGIN not safe after errors--compilation aborted
574 (F) Perl found a C<BEGIN {}> subroutine (or a C<use> directive, which
575 implies a C<BEGIN {}>) after one or more compilation errors had already
576 occurred. Since the intended environment for the C<BEGIN {}> could not
577 be guaranteed (due to the errors), and since subsequent code likely
578 depends on its correct operation, Perl just gave up.
580 =item \%d better written as $%d
582 (W syntax) Outside of patterns, backreferences live on as variables.
583 The use of backslashes is grandfathered on the right-hand side of a
584 substitution, but stylistically it's better to use the variable form
585 because other Perl programmers will expect it, and it works better if
586 there are more than 9 backreferences.
588 =item Binary number > 0b11111111111111111111111111111111 non-portable
590 (W portable) The binary number you specified is larger than 2**32-1
591 (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
592 L<perlport> for more on portability concerns.
594 =item bind() on closed socket %s
596 (W closed) You tried to do a bind on a closed socket. Did you forget to
597 check the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/bind>.
599 =item binmode() on closed filehandle %s
601 (W unopened) You tried binmode() on a filehandle that was never opened.
602 Check your control flow and number of arguments.
604 =item Bit vector size > 32 non-portable
606 (W portable) Using bit vector sizes larger than 32 is non-portable.
608 =item Bizarre copy of %s
610 (P) Perl detected an attempt to copy an internal value that is not
613 =item Bizarre SvTYPE [%d]
615 (P) When starting a new thread or returning values from a thread, Perl
616 encountered an invalid data type.
618 =item Both or neither range ends should be Unicode in regex; marked by
621 (W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>)
623 In a bracketed character class in a regular expression pattern, you
624 had a range which has exactly one end of it specified using C<\N{}>, and
625 the other end is specified using a non-portable mechanism. Perl treats
626 the range as a Unicode range, that is, all the characters in it are
627 considered to be the Unicode characters, and which may be different code
628 points on some platforms Perl runs on. For example, C<[\N{U+06}-\x08]>
629 is treated as if you had instead said C<[\N{U+06}-\N{U+08}]>, that is it
630 matches the characters whose code points in Unicode are 6, 7, and 8.
631 But that C<\x08> might indicate that you meant something different, so
632 the warning gets raised.
634 =item Buffer overflow in prime_env_iter: %s
636 (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. While Perl was preparing to
637 iterate over %ENV, it encountered a logical name or symbol definition
638 which was too long, so it was truncated to the string shown.
640 =item Callback called exit
642 (F) A subroutine invoked from an external package via call_sv()
643 exited by calling exit.
645 =item %s() called too early to check prototype
647 (W prototype) You've called a function that has a prototype before the
648 parser saw a definition or declaration for it, and Perl could not check
649 that the call conforms to the prototype. You need to either add an
650 early prototype declaration for the subroutine in question, or move the
651 subroutine definition ahead of the call to get proper prototype
652 checking. Alternatively, if you are certain that you're calling the
653 function correctly, you may put an ampersand before the name to avoid
654 the warning. See L<perlsub>.
658 (F) You passed an invalid number (like an infinity or not-a-number) to C<chr>.
660 =item Cannot complete in-place edit of %s: %s
662 (F) Your perl script appears to have changed directory while
663 performing an in-place edit of a file specified by a relative path,
664 and your system doesn't include the directory relative POSIX functions
665 needed to handle that.
667 =item Cannot compress %f in pack
669 (F) You tried compressing an infinity or not-a-number as an unsigned
670 integer with BER, which makes no sense.
672 =item Cannot compress integer in pack
674 (F) An argument to pack("w",...) was too large to compress.
675 The BER compressed integer format can only be used with positive
676 integers, and you attempted to compress a very large number (> 1e308).
677 See L<perlfunc/pack>.
679 =item Cannot compress negative numbers in pack
681 (F) An argument to pack("w",...) was negative. The BER compressed integer
682 format can only be used with positive integers. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
684 =item Cannot convert a reference to %s to typeglob
686 (F) You manipulated Perl's symbol table directly, stored a reference
687 in it, then tried to access that symbol via conventional Perl syntax.
688 The access triggers Perl to autovivify that typeglob, but it there is
689 no legal conversion from that type of reference to a typeglob.
691 =item Cannot copy to %s
693 (P) Perl detected an attempt to copy a value to an internal type that cannot
694 be directly assigned to.
696 =item Cannot find encoding "%s"
698 (S io) You tried to apply an encoding that did not exist to a filehandle,
699 either with open() or binmode().
701 =item Cannot open %s as a dirhandle: it is already open as a filehandle
703 (F) You tried to use opendir() to associate a dirhandle to a symbol (glob
704 or scalar) that already holds a filehandle. Since this idiom might render
705 your code confusing, it was deprecated in Perl 5.10. As of Perl 5.28, it
708 =item Cannot open %s as a filehandle: it is already open as a dirhandle
710 (F) You tried to use open() to associate a filehandle to a symbol (glob
711 or scalar) that already holds a dirhandle. Since this idiom might render
712 your code confusing, it was deprecated in Perl 5.10. As of Perl 5.28, it
715 =item Cannot pack %f with '%c'
717 (F) You tried converting an infinity or not-a-number to an integer,
718 which makes no sense.
720 =item Cannot printf %f with '%c'
722 (F) You tried printing an infinity or not-a-number as a character (%c),
723 which makes no sense. Maybe you meant '%s', or just stringifying it?
725 =item Cannot set tied @DB::args
727 (F) C<caller> tried to set C<@DB::args>, but found it tied. Tying C<@DB::args>
728 is not supported. (Before this error was added, it used to crash.)
730 =item Cannot tie unreifiable array
732 (P) You somehow managed to call C<tie> on an array that does not
733 keep a reference count on its arguments and cannot be made to
734 do so. Such arrays are not even supposed to be accessible to
735 Perl code, but are only used internally.
737 =item Cannot yet reorder sv_catpvfn() arguments from va_list
739 (F) Some XS code tried to use C<sv_catpvfn()> or a related function with a
740 format string that specifies explicit indexes for some of the elements, and
741 using a C-style variable-argument list (a C<va_list>). This is not currently
742 supported. XS authors wanting to do this must instead construct a C array
743 of C<SV*> scalars containing the arguments.
745 =item Can only compress unsigned integers in pack
747 (F) An argument to pack("w",...) was not an integer. The BER compressed
748 integer format can only be used with positive integers, and you attempted
749 to compress something else. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
751 =item Can't bless non-reference value
753 (F) Only hard references may be blessed. This is how Perl "enforces"
754 encapsulation of objects. See L<perlobj>.
756 =item Can't "break" in a loop topicalizer
758 (F) You called C<break>, but you're in a C<foreach> block rather than
759 a C<given> block. You probably meant to use C<next> or C<last>.
761 =item Can't "break" outside a given block
763 (F) You called C<break>, but you're not inside a C<given> block.
765 =item Can't call method "%s" on an undefined value
767 (F) You used the syntax of a method call, but the slot filled by the
768 object reference or package name contains an undefined value. Something
769 like this will reproduce the error:
772 process $BADREF 1,2,3;
773 $BADREF->process(1,2,3);
775 =item Can't call method "%s" on unblessed reference
777 (F) A method call must know in what package it's supposed to run. It
778 ordinarily finds this out from the object reference you supply, but you
779 didn't supply an object reference in this case. A reference isn't an
780 object reference until it has been blessed. See L<perlobj>.
782 =item Can't call method "%s" without a package or object reference
784 (F) You used the syntax of a method call, but the slot filled by the
785 object reference or package name contains an expression that returns a
786 defined value which is neither an object reference nor a package name.
787 Something like this will reproduce the error:
790 process $BADREF 1,2,3;
791 $BADREF->process(1,2,3);
793 =item Can't call mro_isa_changed_in() on anonymous symbol table
795 (P) Perl got confused as to whether a hash was a plain hash or a
796 symbol table hash when trying to update @ISA caches.
798 =item Can't call mro_method_changed_in() on anonymous symbol table
800 (F) An XS module tried to call C<mro_method_changed_in> on a hash that was
801 not attached to the symbol table.
803 =item Can't chdir to %s
805 (F) You called C<perl -x/foo/bar>, but F</foo/bar> is not a directory
806 that you can chdir to, possibly because it doesn't exist.
808 =item Can't check filesystem of script "%s" for nosuid
810 (P) For some reason you can't check the filesystem of the script for
813 =item Can't coerce %s to %s in %s
815 (F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table entries
816 (typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are. So you can't
826 but then $foo no longer contains a glob.
828 =item Can't "continue" outside a when block
830 (F) You called C<continue>, but you're not inside a C<when>
833 =item Can't create pipe mailbox
835 (P) An error peculiar to VMS. The process is suffering from exhausted
836 quotas or other plumbing problems.
838 =item Can't declare %s in "%s"
840 (F) Only scalar, array, and hash variables may be declared as "my", "our" or
841 "state" variables. They must have ordinary identifiers as names.
843 =item Can't "default" outside a topicalizer
845 (F) You have used a C<default> block that is neither inside a
846 C<foreach> loop nor a C<given> block. (Note that this error is
847 issued on exit from the C<default> block, so you won't get the
848 error if you use an explicit C<continue>.)
850 =item Can't determine class of operator %s, assuming BASEOP
852 (S) This warning indicates something wrong in the internals of perl.
853 Perl was trying to find the class (e.g. LISTOP) of a particular OP,
854 and was unable to do so. This is likely to be due to a bug in the perl
855 internals, or due to a bug in XS code which manipulates perl optrees.
857 =item Can't do inplace edit: %s is not a regular file
859 (S inplace) You tried to use the B<-i> switch on a special file, such as
860 a file in /dev, a FIFO or an uneditable directory. The file was ignored.
862 =item Can't do inplace edit on %s: %s
864 (S inplace) The creation of the new file failed for the indicated
867 =item Can't do inplace edit without backup
869 (F) You're on a system such as MS-DOS that gets confused if you try
870 reading from a deleted (but still opened) file. You have to say
871 C<-i.bak>, or some such.
873 =item Can't do inplace edit: %s would not be unique
875 (S inplace) Your filesystem does not support filenames longer than 14
876 characters and Perl was unable to create a unique filename during
877 inplace editing with the B<-i> switch. The file was ignored.
879 =item Can't do %s("%s") on non-UTF-8 locale; resolved to "%s".
881 (W locale) You are 1) running under "C<use locale>"; 2) the current
882 locale is not a UTF-8 one; 3) you tried to do the designated case-change
883 operation on the specified Unicode character; and 4) the result of this
884 operation would mix Unicode and locale rules, which likely conflict.
885 Mixing of different rule types is forbidden, so the operation was not
886 done; instead the result is the indicated value, which is the best
887 available that uses entirely Unicode rules. That turns out to almost
888 always be the original character, unchanged.
890 It is generally a bad idea to mix non-UTF-8 locales and Unicode, and
891 this issue is one of the reasons why. This warning is raised when
892 Unicode rules would normally cause the result of this operation to
893 contain a character that is in the range specified by the locale,
894 0..255, and hence is subject to the locale's rules, not Unicode's.
896 If you are using locale purely for its characteristics related to things
897 like its numeric and time formatting (and not C<LC_CTYPE>), consider
898 using a restricted form of the locale pragma (see L<perllocale/The "use
899 locale" pragma>) like "S<C<use locale ':not_characters'>>".
901 Note that failed case-changing operations done as a result of
902 case-insensitive C</i> regular expression matching will show up in this
903 warning as having the C<fc> operation (as that is what the regular
904 expression engine calls behind the scenes.)
906 =item Can't do waitpid with flags
908 (F) This machine doesn't have either waitpid() or wait4(), so only
909 waitpid() without flags is emulated.
911 =item Can't emulate -%s on #! line
913 (F) The #! line specifies a switch that doesn't make sense at this
914 point. For example, it'd be kind of silly to put a B<-x> on the #!
917 =item Can't %s %s-endian %ss on this platform
919 (F) Your platform's byte-order is neither big-endian nor little-endian,
920 or it has a very strange pointer size. Packing and unpacking big- or
921 little-endian floating point values and pointers may not be possible.
922 See L<perlfunc/pack>.
924 =item Can't exec "%s": %s
926 (W exec) A system(), exec(), or piped open call could not execute the
927 named program for the indicated reason. Typical reasons include: the
928 permissions were wrong on the file, the file wasn't found in
929 C<$ENV{PATH}>, the executable in question was compiled for another
930 architecture, or the #! line in a script points to an interpreter that
931 can't be run for similar reasons. (Or maybe your system doesn't support
936 (F) Perl was trying to execute the indicated program for you because
937 that's what the #! line said. If that's not what you wanted, you may
938 need to mention "perl" on the #! line somewhere.
940 =item Can't execute %s
942 (F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the copies of the script to execute
943 found in the PATH did not have correct permissions.
945 =item Can't find an opnumber for "%s"
947 (F) A string of a form C<CORE::word> was given to prototype(), but there
948 is no builtin with the name C<word>.
950 =item Can't find label %s
952 (F) You said to goto a label that isn't mentioned anywhere that it's
953 possible for us to go to. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
955 =item Can't find %s on PATH
957 (F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the script to execute could not be
960 =item Can't find %s on PATH, '.' not in PATH
962 (F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the script to execute could not be
963 found in the PATH, or at least not with the correct permissions. The
964 script exists in the current directory, but PATH prohibits running it.
966 =item Can't find string terminator %s anywhere before EOF
968 (F) Perl strings can stretch over multiple lines. This message means
969 that the closing delimiter was omitted. Because bracketed quotes count
970 nesting levels, the following is missing its final parenthesis:
972 print q(The character '(' starts a side comment.);
974 If you're getting this error from a here-document, you may have
975 included unseen whitespace before or after your closing tag or there
976 may not be a linebreak after it. A good programmer's editor will have
977 a way to help you find these characters (or lack of characters). See
978 L<perlop> for the full details on here-documents.
980 =item Can't find Unicode property definition "%s"
982 =item Can't find Unicode property definition "%s" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
984 (F) The named property which you specified via C<\p> or C<\P> is not one
985 known to Perl. Perhaps you misspelled the name? See
986 L<perluniprops/Properties accessible through \p{} and \P{}>
987 for a complete list of available official
988 properties. If it is a
989 L<user-defined property|perlunicode/User-Defined Character Properties>
990 it must have been defined by the time the regular expression is
993 If you didn't mean to use a Unicode property, escape the C<\p>, either
994 by C<\\p> (just the C<\p>) or by C<\Q\p> (the rest of the string, or
999 (F) A fatal error occurred while trying to fork while opening a
1002 =item Can't fork, trying again in 5 seconds
1004 (W pipe) A fork in a piped open failed with EAGAIN and will be retried
1007 =item Can't get filespec - stale stat buffer?
1009 (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. This arises because of the difference
1010 between access checks under VMS and under the Unix model Perl assumes.
1011 Under VMS, access checks are done by filename, rather than by bits in
1012 the stat buffer, so that ACLs and other protections can be taken into
1013 account. Unfortunately, Perl assumes that the stat buffer contains all
1014 the necessary information, and passes it, instead of the filespec, to
1015 the access-checking routine. It will try to retrieve the filespec using
1016 the device name and FID present in the stat buffer, but this works only
1017 if you haven't made a subsequent call to the CRTL stat() routine,
1018 because the device name is overwritten with each call. If this warning
1019 appears, the name lookup failed, and the access-checking routine gave up
1020 and returned FALSE, just to be conservative. (Note: The access-checking
1021 routine knows about the Perl C<stat> operator and file tests, so you
1022 shouldn't ever see this warning in response to a Perl command; it arises
1023 only if some internal code takes stat buffers lightly.)
1025 =item Can't get pipe mailbox device name
1027 (P) An error peculiar to VMS. After creating a mailbox to act as a
1028 pipe, Perl can't retrieve its name for later use.
1030 =item Can't get SYSGEN parameter value for MAXBUF
1032 (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl asked $GETSYI how big you want your
1033 mailbox buffers to be, and didn't get an answer.
1035 =item Can't "goto" into a binary or list expression
1037 (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into the middle of a binary
1038 or list expression. You can't get there from here. The reason for this
1039 restriction is that the interpreter would get confused as to how many
1040 arguments there are, resulting in stack corruption or crashes. This
1041 error occurs in cases such as these:
1044 print do { F: }; # Can't jump into the arguments to print
1047 $x + do { G: $y }; # How is + supposed to get its first operand?
1049 =item Can't "goto" into a "given" block
1051 (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into the middle of a C<given>
1052 block. You can't get there from here. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
1054 =item Can't "goto" into the middle of a foreach loop
1056 (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into the middle of a foreach
1057 loop. You can't get there from here. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
1059 =item Can't "goto" out of a pseudo block
1061 (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump out of what might look like
1062 a block, except that it isn't a proper block. This usually occurs if
1063 you tried to jump out of a sort() block or subroutine, which is a no-no.
1064 See L<perlfunc/goto>.
1066 =item Can't goto subroutine from an eval-%s
1068 (F) The "goto subroutine" call can't be used to jump out of an eval
1071 =item Can't goto subroutine from a sort sub (or similar callback)
1073 (F) The "goto subroutine" call can't be used to jump out of the
1074 comparison sub for a sort(), or from a similar callback (such
1075 as the reduce() function in List::Util).
1077 =item Can't goto subroutine outside a subroutine
1079 (F) The deeply magical "goto subroutine" call can only replace one
1080 subroutine call for another. It can't manufacture one out of whole
1081 cloth. In general you should be calling it out of only an AUTOLOAD
1082 routine anyway. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
1084 =item Can't ignore signal CHLD, forcing to default
1086 (W signal) Perl has detected that it is being run with the SIGCHLD
1087 signal (sometimes known as SIGCLD) disabled. Since disabling this
1088 signal will interfere with proper determination of exit status of child
1089 processes, Perl has reset the signal to its default value. This
1090 situation typically indicates that the parent program under which Perl
1091 may be running (e.g. cron) is being very careless.
1093 =item Can't kill a non-numeric process ID
1095 (F) Process identifiers must be (signed) integers. It is a fatal error to
1096 attempt to kill() an undefined, empty-string or otherwise non-numeric
1099 =item Can't "last" outside a loop block
1101 (F) A "last" statement was executed to break out of the current block,
1102 except that there's this itty bitty problem called there isn't a current
1103 block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't count as a "loopish"
1104 block, as doesn't a block given to sort(), map() or grep(). You can
1105 usually double the curlies to get the same effect though, because the
1106 inner curlies will be considered a block that loops once. See
1109 =item Can't linearize anonymous symbol table
1111 (F) Perl tried to calculate the method resolution order (MRO) of a
1112 package, but failed because the package stash has no name.
1114 =item Can't load '%s' for module %s
1116 (F) The module you tried to load failed to load a dynamic extension.
1117 This may either mean that you upgraded your version of perl to one
1118 that is incompatible with your old dynamic extensions (which is known
1119 to happen between major versions of perl), or (more likely) that your
1120 dynamic extension was built against an older version of the library
1121 that is installed on your system. You may need to rebuild your old
1124 =item Can't localize lexical variable %s
1126 (F) You used local on a variable name that was previously declared as a
1127 lexical variable using "my" or "state". This is not allowed. If you
1128 want to localize a package variable of the same name, qualify it with
1131 =item Can't localize through a reference
1133 (F) You said something like C<local $$ref>, which Perl can't currently
1134 handle, because when it goes to restore the old value of whatever $ref
1135 pointed to after the scope of the local() is finished, it can't be sure
1136 that $ref will still be a reference.
1138 =item Can't locate %s
1140 (F) You said to C<do> (or C<require>, or C<use>) a file that couldn't be found.
1141 Perl looks for the file in all the locations mentioned in @INC, unless
1142 the file name included the full path to the file. Perhaps you need
1143 to set the PERL5LIB or PERL5OPT environment variable to say where the
1144 extra library is, or maybe the script needs to add the library name
1145 to @INC. Or maybe you just misspelled the name of the file. See
1146 L<perlfunc/require> and L<lib>.
1148 =item Can't locate auto/%s.al in @INC
1150 (F) A function (or method) was called in a package which allows
1151 autoload, but there is no function to autoload. Most probable causes
1152 are a misprint in a function/method name or a failure to C<AutoSplit>
1153 the file, say, by doing C<make install>.
1155 =item Can't locate loadable object for module %s in @INC
1157 (F) The module you loaded is trying to load an external library, like
1158 for example, F<foo.so> or F<bar.dll>, but the L<DynaLoader> module was
1159 unable to locate this library. See L<DynaLoader>.
1161 =item Can't locate object method "%s" via package "%s"
1163 (F) You called a method correctly, and it correctly indicated a package
1164 functioning as a class, but that package doesn't define that particular
1165 method, nor does any of its base classes. See L<perlobj>.
1167 =item Can't locate object method "%s" via package "%s" (perhaps you forgot
1170 (F) You called a method on a class that did not exist, and the method
1171 could not be found in UNIVERSAL. This often means that a method
1172 requires a package that has not been loaded.
1174 =item Can't locate package %s for @%s::ISA
1176 (W syntax) The @ISA array contained the name of another package that
1177 doesn't seem to exist.
1179 =item Can't locate PerlIO%s
1181 (F) You tried to use in open() a PerlIO layer that does not exist,
1182 e.g. open(FH, ">:nosuchlayer", "somefile").
1184 =item Can't make list assignment to %ENV on this system
1186 (F) List assignment to %ENV is not supported on some systems, notably
1189 =item Can't make loaded symbols global on this platform while loading %s
1191 (S) A module passed the flag 0x01 to DynaLoader::dl_load_file() to request
1192 that symbols from the stated file are made available globally within the
1193 process, but that functionality is not available on this platform. Whilst
1194 the module likely will still work, this may prevent the perl interpreter
1195 from loading other XS-based extensions which need to link directly to
1196 functions defined in the C or XS code in the stated file.
1198 =item Can't modify %s in %s
1200 (F) You aren't allowed to assign to the item indicated, or otherwise try
1201 to change it, such as with an auto-increment.
1203 =item Can't modify nonexistent substring
1205 (P) The internal routine that does assignment to a substr() was handed
1208 =item Can't modify non-lvalue subroutine call of &%s
1210 =item Can't modify non-lvalue subroutine call of &%s in %s
1212 (F) Subroutines meant to be used in lvalue context should be declared as
1213 such. See L<perlsub/"Lvalue subroutines">.
1215 =item Can't modify reference to %s in %s assignment
1217 (F) Only a limited number of constructs can be used as the argument to a
1218 reference constructor on the left-hand side of an assignment, and what
1219 you used was not one of them. See L<perlref/Assigning to References>.
1221 =item Can't modify reference to localized parenthesized array in list
1224 (F) Assigning to C<\local(@array)> or C<\(local @array)> is not supported, as
1225 it is not clear exactly what it should do. If you meant to make @array
1226 refer to some other array, use C<\@array = \@other_array>. If you want to
1227 make the elements of @array aliases of the scalars referenced on the
1228 right-hand side, use C<\(@array) = @scalar_refs>.
1230 =item Can't modify reference to parenthesized hash in list assignment
1232 (F) Assigning to C<\(%hash)> is not supported. If you meant to make %hash
1233 refer to some other hash, use C<\%hash = \%other_hash>. If you want to
1234 make the elements of %hash into aliases of the scalars referenced on the
1235 right-hand side, use a hash slice: C<\@hash{@keys} = @those_scalar_refs>.
1237 =item Can't msgrcv to read-only var
1239 (F) The target of a msgrcv must be modifiable to be used as a receive
1242 =item Can't "next" outside a loop block
1244 (F) A "next" statement was executed to reiterate the current block, but
1245 there isn't a current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't
1246 count as a "loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(), map() or
1247 grep(). You can usually double the curlies to get the same effect
1248 though, because the inner curlies will be considered a block that loops
1249 once. See L<perlfunc/next>.
1251 =item Can't open %s: %s
1253 (S inplace) The implicit opening of a file through use of the C<< <> >>
1254 filehandle, either implicitly under the C<-n> or C<-p> command-line
1255 switches, or explicitly, failed for the indicated reason. Usually
1256 this is because you don't have read permission for a file which
1257 you named on the command line.
1259 (F) You tried to call perl with the B<-e> switch, but F</dev/null> (or
1260 your operating system's equivalent) could not be opened.
1262 =item Can't open a reference
1264 (W io) You tried to open a scalar reference for reading or writing,
1265 using the 3-arg open() syntax:
1269 but your version of perl is compiled without perlio, and this form of
1270 open is not supported.
1272 =item Can't open bidirectional pipe
1274 (W pipe) You tried to say C<open(CMD, "|cmd|")>, which is not supported.
1275 You can try any of several modules in the Perl library to do this, such
1276 as IPC::Open2. Alternately, direct the pipe's output to a file using
1277 ">", and then read it in under a different file handle.
1279 =item Can't open error file %s as stderr
1281 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line
1282 redirection, and couldn't open the file specified after '2>' or '2>>' on
1283 the command line for writing.
1285 =item Can't open input file %s as stdin
1287 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line
1288 redirection, and couldn't open the file specified after '<' on the
1289 command line for reading.
1291 =item Can't open output file %s as stdout
1293 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line
1294 redirection, and couldn't open the file specified after '>' or '>>' on
1295 the command line for writing.
1297 =item Can't open output pipe (name: %s)
1299 (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line
1300 redirection, and couldn't open the pipe into which to send data destined
1303 =item Can't open perl script "%s": %s
1305 (F) The script you specified can't be opened for the indicated reason.
1307 If you're debugging a script that uses #!, and normally relies on the
1308 shell's $PATH search, the -S option causes perl to do that search, so
1309 you don't have to type the path or C<`which $scriptname`>.
1311 =item Can't read CRTL environ
1313 (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read an element of %ENV
1314 from the CRTL's internal environment array and discovered the array was
1315 missing. You need to figure out where your CRTL misplaced its environ
1316 or define F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> (see L<perlvms>) so that environ is not
1319 =item Can't redeclare "%s" in "%s"
1321 (F) A "my", "our" or "state" declaration was found within another declaration,
1322 such as C<my ($x, my($y), $z)> or C<our (my $x)>.
1324 =item Can't "redo" outside a loop block
1326 (F) A "redo" statement was executed to restart the current block, but
1327 there isn't a current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't
1328 count as a "loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(), map()
1329 or grep(). You can usually double the curlies to get the same effect
1330 though, because the inner curlies will be considered a block that
1331 loops once. See L<perlfunc/redo>.
1333 =item Can't remove %s: %s, skipping file
1335 (S inplace) You requested an inplace edit without creating a backup
1336 file. Perl was unable to remove the original file to replace it with
1337 the modified file. The file was left unmodified.
1339 =item Can't rename in-place work file '%s' to '%s': %s
1341 (F) When closed implicitly, the temporary file for in-place editing
1342 couldn't be renamed to the original filename.
1344 =item Can't rename %s to %s: %s, skipping file
1346 (F) The rename done by the B<-i> switch failed for some reason,
1347 probably because you don't have write permission to the directory.
1349 =item Can't reopen input pipe (name: %s) in binary mode
1351 (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl thought stdin was a pipe, and tried
1352 to reopen it to accept binary data. Alas, it failed.
1354 =item Can't represent character for Ox%X on this platform
1356 (F) There is a hard limit to how big a character code point can be due
1357 to the fundamental properties of UTF-8, especially on EBCDIC
1358 platforms. The given code point exceeds that. The only work-around is
1359 to not use such a large code point.
1361 =item Can't reset %ENV on this system
1363 (F) You called C<reset('E')> or similar, which tried to reset
1364 all variables in the current package beginning with "E". In
1365 the main package, that includes %ENV. Resetting %ENV is not
1366 supported on some systems, notably VMS.
1368 =item Can't resolve method "%s" overloading "%s" in package "%s"
1370 (F)(P) Error resolving overloading specified by a method name (as
1371 opposed to a subroutine reference): no such method callable via the
1372 package. If the method name is C<???>, this is an internal error.
1374 =item Can't return %s from lvalue subroutine
1376 (F) Perl detected an attempt to return illegal lvalues (such as
1377 temporary or readonly values) from a subroutine used as an lvalue. This
1380 =item Can't return outside a subroutine
1382 (F) The return statement was executed in mainline code, that is, where
1383 there was no subroutine call to return out of. See L<perlsub>.
1385 =item Can't return %s to lvalue scalar context
1387 (F) You tried to return a complete array or hash from an lvalue
1388 subroutine, but you called the subroutine in a way that made Perl
1389 think you meant to return only one value. You probably meant to
1390 write parentheses around the call to the subroutine, which tell
1391 Perl that the call should be in list context.
1393 =item Can't stat script "%s"
1395 (P) For some reason you can't fstat() the script even though you have it
1396 open already. Bizarre.
1398 =item Can't take log of %g
1400 (F) For ordinary real numbers, you can't take the logarithm of a
1401 negative number or zero. There's a Math::Complex package that comes
1402 standard with Perl, though, if you really want to do that for the
1405 =item Can't take sqrt of %g
1407 (F) For ordinary real numbers, you can't take the square root of a
1408 negative number. There's a Math::Complex package that comes standard
1409 with Perl, though, if you really want to do that.
1411 =item Can't undef active subroutine
1413 (F) You can't undefine a routine that's currently running. You can,
1414 however, redefine it while it's running, and you can even undef the
1415 redefined subroutine while the old routine is running. Go figure.
1417 =item Can't unweaken a nonreference
1419 (F) You attempted to unweaken something that was not a reference. Only
1420 references can be unweakened.
1422 =item Can't upgrade %s (%d) to %d
1424 (P) The internal sv_upgrade routine adds "members" to an SV, making it
1425 into a more specialized kind of SV. The top several SV types are so
1426 specialized, however, that they cannot be interconverted. This message
1427 indicates that such a conversion was attempted.
1429 =item Can't use '%c' after -mname
1431 (F) You tried to call perl with the B<-m> switch, but you put something
1432 other than "=" after the module name.
1434 =item Can't use a hash as a reference
1436 (F) You tried to use a hash as a reference, as in
1437 C<< %foo->{"bar"} >> or C<< %$ref->{"hello"} >>. Versions of perl
1438 <= 5.22.0 used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't
1439 have. This was deprecated in perl 5.6.1.
1441 =item Can't use an array as a reference
1443 (F) You tried to use an array as a reference, as in
1444 C<< @foo->[23] >> or C<< @$ref->[99] >>. Versions of perl <= 5.22.0
1445 used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't have. This
1446 was deprecated in perl 5.6.1.
1448 =item Can't use anonymous symbol table for method lookup
1450 (F) The internal routine that does method lookup was handed a symbol
1451 table that doesn't have a name. Symbol tables can become anonymous
1452 for example by undefining stashes: C<undef %Some::Package::>.
1454 =item Can't use an undefined value as %s reference
1456 (F) A value used as either a hard reference or a symbolic reference must
1457 be a defined value. This helps to delurk some insidious errors.
1459 =item Can't use bareword ("%s") as %s ref while "strict refs" in use
1461 (F) Only hard references are allowed by "strict refs". Symbolic
1462 references are disallowed. See L<perlref>.
1464 =item Can't use %! because Errno.pm is not available
1466 (F) The first time the C<%!> hash is used, perl automatically loads the
1467 Errno.pm module. The Errno module is expected to tie the %! hash to
1468 provide symbolic names for C<$!> errno values.
1470 =item Can't use both '<' and '>' after type '%c' in %s
1472 (F) A type cannot be forced to have both big-endian and little-endian
1473 byte-order at the same time, so this combination of modifiers is not
1474 allowed. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
1476 =item Can't use 'defined(@array)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)
1478 (F) defined() is not useful on arrays because it
1479 checks for an undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the
1480 array is empty, just use C<if (@array) { # not empty }> for example.
1482 =item Can't use 'defined(%hash)' (Maybe you should just omit the defined()?)
1484 (F) C<defined()> is not usually right on hashes.
1486 Although C<defined %hash> is false on a plain not-yet-used hash, it
1487 becomes true in several non-obvious circumstances, including iterators,
1488 weak references, stash names, even remaining true after C<undef %hash>.
1489 These things make C<defined %hash> fairly useless in practice, so it now
1490 generates a fatal error.
1492 If a check for non-empty is what you wanted then just put it in boolean
1493 context (see L<perldata/Scalar values>):
1499 If you had C<defined %Foo::Bar::QUUX> to check whether such a package
1500 variable exists then that's never really been reliable, and isn't
1501 a good way to enquire about the features of a package, or whether
1504 =item Can't use %s for loop variable
1506 (P) The parser got confused when trying to parse a C<foreach> loop.
1508 =item Can't use global %s in "%s"
1510 (F) You tried to declare a magical variable as a lexical variable. This
1511 is not allowed, because the magic can be tied to only one location
1512 (namely the global variable) and it would be incredibly confusing to
1513 have variables in your program that looked like magical variables but
1516 =item Can't use '%c' in a group with different byte-order in %s
1518 (F) You attempted to force a different byte-order on a type
1519 that is already inside a group with a byte-order modifier.
1520 For example you cannot force little-endianness on a type that
1521 is inside a big-endian group.
1523 =item Can't use "my %s" in sort comparison
1525 (F) The global variables $a and $b are reserved for sort comparisons.
1526 You mentioned $a or $b in the same line as the <=> or cmp operator,
1527 and the variable had earlier been declared as a lexical variable.
1528 Either qualify the sort variable with the package name, or rename the
1531 =item Can't use %s ref as %s ref
1533 (F) You've mixed up your reference types. You have to dereference a
1534 reference of the type needed. You can use the ref() function to
1535 test the type of the reference, if need be.
1537 =item Can't use string ("%s") as %s ref while "strict refs" in use
1539 =item Can't use string ("%s"...) as %s ref while "strict refs" in use
1541 (F) You've told Perl to dereference a string, something which
1542 C<use strict> blocks to prevent it happening accidentally. See
1543 L<perlref/"Symbolic references">. This can be triggered by an C<@> or C<$>
1544 in a double-quoted string immediately before interpolating a variable,
1545 for example in C<"user @$twitter_id">, which says to treat the contents
1546 of C<$twitter_id> as an array reference; use a C<\> to have a literal C<@>
1547 symbol followed by the contents of C<$twitter_id>: C<"user \@$twitter_id">.
1549 =item Can't use subscript on %s
1551 (F) The compiler tried to interpret a bracketed expression as a
1552 subscript. But to the left of the brackets was an expression that
1553 didn't look like a hash or array reference, or anything else subscriptable.
1555 =item Can't use \%c to mean $%c in expression
1557 (W syntax) In an ordinary expression, backslash is a unary operator that
1558 creates a reference to its argument. The use of backslash to indicate a
1559 backreference to a matched substring is valid only as part of a regular
1560 expression pattern. Trying to do this in ordinary Perl code produces a
1561 value that prints out looking like SCALAR(0xdecaf). Use the $1 form
1564 =item Can't weaken a nonreference
1566 (F) You attempted to weaken something that was not a reference. Only
1567 references can be weakened.
1569 =item Can't "when" outside a topicalizer
1571 (F) You have used a when() block that is neither inside a C<foreach>
1572 loop nor a C<given> block. (Note that this error is issued on exit
1573 from the C<when> block, so you won't get the error if the match fails,
1574 or if you use an explicit C<continue>.)
1576 =item Can't x= to read-only value
1578 (F) You tried to repeat a constant value (often the undefined value)
1579 with an assignment operator, which implies modifying the value itself.
1580 Perhaps you need to copy the value to a temporary, and repeat that.
1582 =item Character following "\c" must be printable ASCII
1584 (F) In C<\cI<X>>, I<X> must be a printable (non-control) ASCII character.
1586 Note that ASCII characters that don't map to control characters are
1587 discouraged, and will generate the warning (when enabled)
1588 L</""\c%c" is more clearly written simply as "%s"">.
1590 =item Character following \%c must be '{' or a single-character Unicode property name in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
1592 (F) (In the above the C<%c> is replaced by either C<p> or C<P>.) You
1593 specified something that isn't a legal Unicode property name. Most
1594 Unicode properties are specified by C<\p{...}>. But if the name is a
1595 single character one, the braces may be omitted.
1597 =item Character in 'C' format wrapped in pack
1603 where $x is either less than 0 or more than 255; the C<"C"> format is
1604 only for encoding native operating system characters (ASCII, EBCDIC,
1605 and so on) and not for Unicode characters, so Perl behaved as if you meant
1609 If you actually want to pack Unicode codepoints, use the C<"U"> format
1612 =item Character in 'c' format wrapped in pack
1618 where $x is either less than -128 or more than 127; the C<"c"> format
1619 is only for encoding native operating system characters (ASCII, EBCDIC,
1620 and so on) and not for Unicode characters, so Perl behaved as if you meant
1622 pack("c", $x & 255);
1624 If you actually want to pack Unicode codepoints, use the C<"U"> format
1627 =item Character in '%c' format wrapped in unpack
1629 (W unpack) You tried something like
1631 unpack("H", "\x{2a1}")
1633 where the format expects to process a byte (a character with a value
1634 below 256), but a higher value was provided instead. Perl uses the
1635 value modulus 256 instead, as if you had provided:
1637 unpack("H", "\x{a1}")
1639 =item Character in 'W' format wrapped in pack
1645 where $x is either less than 0 or more than 255. However, C<U0>-mode
1646 expects all values to fall in the interval [0, 255], so Perl behaved
1649 pack("U0W", $x & 255)
1651 =item Character(s) in '%c' format wrapped in pack
1653 (W pack) You tried something like
1655 pack("u", "\x{1f3}b")
1657 where the format expects to process a sequence of bytes (character with a
1658 value below 256), but some of the characters had a higher value. Perl
1659 uses the character values modulus 256 instead, as if you had provided:
1661 pack("u", "\x{f3}b")
1663 =item Character(s) in '%c' format wrapped in unpack
1665 (W unpack) You tried something like
1667 unpack("s", "\x{1f3}b")
1669 where the format expects to process a sequence of bytes (character with a
1670 value below 256), but some of the characters had a higher value. Perl
1671 uses the character values modulus 256 instead, as if you had provided:
1673 unpack("s", "\x{f3}b")
1675 =item charnames alias definitions may not contain a sequence of multiple
1676 spaces; marked by S<<-- HERE> in %s
1678 (F) You defined a character name which had multiple space characters
1679 in a row. Change them to single spaces. Usually these names are
1680 defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but they
1681 could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>. See
1682 L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
1684 =item charnames alias definitions may not contain trailing white-space;
1685 marked by S<<-- HERE> in %s
1687 (F) You defined a character name which ended in a space
1688 character. Remove the trailing space(s). Usually these names are
1689 defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but they
1690 could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>.
1691 See L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
1693 =item chdir() on unopened filehandle %s
1695 (W unopened) You tried chdir() on a filehandle that was never opened.
1697 =item "\c%c" is more clearly written simply as "%s"
1699 (W syntax) The C<\cI<X>> construct is intended to be a way to specify
1700 non-printable characters. You used it for a printable one, which
1701 is better written as simply itself, perhaps preceded by a backslash
1702 for non-word characters. Doing it the way you did is not portable
1703 between ASCII and EBCDIC platforms.
1705 =item Cloning substitution context is unimplemented
1707 (F) Creating a new thread inside the C<s///> operator is not supported.
1709 =item closedir() attempted on invalid dirhandle %s
1711 (W io) The dirhandle you tried to close is either closed or not really
1712 a dirhandle. Check your control flow.
1714 =item close() on unopened filehandle %s
1716 (W unopened) You tried to close a filehandle that was never opened.
1718 =item Closure prototype called
1720 (F) If a closure has attributes, the subroutine passed to an attribute
1721 handler is the prototype that is cloned when a new closure is created.
1722 This subroutine cannot be called.
1724 =item \C no longer supported in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
1726 (F) The \C character class used to allow a match of single byte
1727 within a multi-byte utf-8 character, but was removed in v5.24 as
1728 it broke encapsulation and its implementation was extremely buggy.
1729 If you really need to process the individual bytes, you probably
1730 want to convert your string to one where each underlying byte is
1731 stored as a character, with utf8::encode().
1733 =item Code missing after '/'
1735 (F) You had a (sub-)template that ends with a '/'. There must be
1736 another template code following the slash. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
1738 =item Code point 0x%X is not Unicode, and not portable
1740 (S non_unicode) You had a code point that has never been in any
1741 standard, so it is likely that languages other than Perl will NOT
1742 understand it. At one time, it was legal in some standards to have code
1743 points up to 0x7FFF_FFFF, but not higher, and this code point is higher.
1745 Acceptance of these code points is a Perl extension, and you should
1746 expect that nothing other than Perl can handle them; Perl itself on
1747 EBCDIC platforms before v5.24 does not handle them.
1749 Code points above 0xFFFF_FFFF require larger than a 32 bit word.
1751 Perl also makes no guarantees that the representation of these code
1752 points won't change at some point in the future, say when machines
1753 become available that have larger than a 64-bit word. At that time,
1754 files written by an older Perl would require conversion before being
1755 readable by a newer Perl.
1757 =item Code point 0x%X is not Unicode, may not be portable
1759 (S non_unicode) You had a code point above the Unicode maximum
1762 Perl allows strings to contain a superset of Unicode code points, but
1763 these may not be accepted by other languages/systems. Further, even if
1764 these languages/systems accept these large code points, they may have
1765 chosen a different representation for them than the UTF-8-like one that
1766 Perl has, which would mean files are not exchangeable between them and
1769 On EBCDIC platforms, code points above 0x3FFF_FFFF have a different
1770 representation in Perl v5.24 than before, so any file containing these
1771 that was written before that version will require conversion before
1772 being readable by a later Perl.
1774 =item %s: Command not found
1776 (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> or another shell
1777 instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
1778 Perl yourself. The #! line at the top of your file could look like
1782 =item %s: command not found
1784 (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<bash> or another shell
1785 instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
1786 Perl yourself. The #! line at the top of your file could look like
1790 =item %s: command not found: %s
1792 (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<zsh> or another shell
1793 instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
1794 Perl yourself. The #! line at the top of your file could look like
1798 =item Compilation failed in require
1800 (F) Perl could not compile a file specified in a C<require> statement.
1801 Perl uses this generic message when none of the errors that it
1802 encountered were severe enough to halt compilation immediately.
1804 =item Complex regular subexpression recursion limit (%d) exceeded
1806 (W regexp) The regular expression engine uses recursion in complex
1807 situations where back-tracking is required. Recursion depth is limited
1808 to 32766, or perhaps less in architectures where the stack cannot grow
1809 arbitrarily. ("Simple" and "medium" situations are handled without
1810 recursion and are not subject to a limit.) Try shortening the string
1811 under examination; looping in Perl code (e.g. with C<while>) rather than
1812 in the regular expression engine; or rewriting the regular expression so
1813 that it is simpler or backtracks less. (See L<perlfaq2> for information
1814 on I<Mastering Regular Expressions>.)
1816 =item connect() on closed socket %s
1818 (W closed) You tried to do a connect on a closed socket. Did you forget
1819 to check the return value of your socket() call? See
1820 L<perlfunc/connect>.
1822 =item Constant(%s): Call to &{$^H{%s}} did not return a defined value
1824 (F) The subroutine registered to handle constant overloading
1825 (see L<overload>) or a custom charnames handler (see
1826 L<charnames/CUSTOM TRANSLATORS>) returned an undefined value.
1828 =item Constant(%s): $^H{%s} is not defined
1830 (F) The parser found inconsistencies while attempting to define an
1831 overloaded constant. Perhaps you forgot to load the corresponding
1834 =item Constant is not %s reference
1836 (F) A constant value (perhaps declared using the C<use constant> pragma)
1837 is being dereferenced, but it amounts to the wrong type of reference.
1838 The message indicates the type of reference that was expected. This
1839 usually indicates a syntax error in dereferencing the constant value.
1840 See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> and L<constant>.
1842 =item Constants from lexical variables potentially modified elsewhere are
1843 deprecated. This will not be allowed in Perl 5.32
1845 (D deprecated) You wrote something like
1848 $sub = sub () { $var };
1850 but $var is referenced elsewhere and could be modified after the C<sub>
1851 expression is evaluated. Either it is explicitly modified elsewhere
1852 (C<$var = 3>) or it is passed to a subroutine or to an operator like
1853 C<printf> or C<map>, which may or may not modify the variable.
1855 Traditionally, Perl has captured the value of the variable at that
1856 point and turned the subroutine into a constant eligible for inlining.
1857 In those cases where the variable can be modified elsewhere, this
1858 breaks the behavior of closures, in which the subroutine captures
1859 the variable itself, rather than its value, so future changes to the
1860 variable are reflected in the subroutine's return value.
1862 This usage is deprecated, and will no longer be allowed in Perl 5.32,
1863 making it possible to change the behavior in the future.
1865 If you intended for the subroutine to be eligible for inlining, then
1866 make sure the variable is not referenced elsewhere, possibly by
1870 $sub = sub () { $var2 };
1872 If you do want this subroutine to be a closure that reflects future
1873 changes to the variable that it closes over, add an explicit C<return>:
1876 $sub = sub () { return $var };
1878 =item Constant subroutine %s redefined
1880 (W redefine)(S) You redefined a subroutine which had previously
1881 been eligible for inlining. See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions">
1882 for commentary and workarounds.
1884 =item Constant subroutine %s undefined
1886 (W misc) You undefined a subroutine which had previously been eligible
1887 for inlining. See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> for commentary and
1890 =item Constant(%s) unknown
1892 (F) The parser found inconsistencies either while attempting
1893 to define an overloaded constant, or when trying to find the
1894 character name specified in the C<\N{...}> escape. Perhaps you
1895 forgot to load the corresponding L<overload> pragma?
1897 =item :const is experimental
1899 (S experimental::const_attr) The "const" attribute is experimental.
1900 If you want to use the feature, disable the warning with C<no warnings
1901 'experimental::const_attr'>, but know that in doing so you are taking
1902 the risk that your code may break in a future Perl version.
1904 =item :const is not permitted on named subroutines
1906 (F) The "const" attribute causes an anonymous subroutine to be run and
1907 its value captured at the time that it is cloned. Named subroutines are
1908 not cloned like this, so the attribute does not make sense on them.
1910 =item Copy method did not return a reference
1912 (F) The method which overloads "=" is buggy. See
1913 L<overload/Copy Constructor>.
1915 =item &CORE::%s cannot be called directly
1917 (F) You tried to call a subroutine in the C<CORE::> namespace
1918 with C<&foo> syntax or through a reference. Some subroutines
1919 in this package cannot yet be called that way, but must be
1920 called as barewords. Something like this will work:
1922 BEGIN { *shove = \&CORE::push; }
1923 shove @array, 1,2,3; # pushes on to @array
1925 =item CORE::%s is not a keyword
1927 (F) The CORE:: namespace is reserved for Perl keywords.
1929 =item Corrupted regexp opcode %d > %d
1931 (P) This is either an error in Perl, or, if you're using
1932 one, your L<custom regular expression engine|perlreapi>. If not the
1933 latter, report the problem through the L<perlbug> utility.
1935 =item corrupted regexp pointers
1937 (P) The regular expression engine got confused by what the regular
1938 expression compiler gave it.
1940 =item corrupted regexp program
1942 (P) The regular expression engine got passed a regexp program without a
1945 =item Corrupt malloc ptr 0x%x at 0x%x
1947 (P) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal failure.
1949 =item Count after length/code in unpack
1951 (F) You had an unpack template indicating a counted-length string, but
1952 you have also specified an explicit size for the string. See
1955 =item Declaring references is experimental
1957 (S experimental::declared_refs) This warning is emitted if you use
1958 a reference constructor on the right-hand side of C<my>, C<state>, C<our>, or
1959 C<local>. Simply suppress the warning if you want to use the feature, but
1960 know that in doing so you are taking the risk of using an experimental
1961 feature which may change or be removed in a future Perl version:
1963 no warnings "experimental::declared_refs";
1964 use feature "declared_refs";
1968 The following are used in lib/diagnostics.t for testing two =items that
1969 share the same description. Changes here need to be propagated to there
1971 =item Deep recursion on anonymous subroutine
1973 =item Deep recursion on subroutine "%s"
1975 (W recursion) This subroutine has called itself (directly or indirectly)
1976 100 times more than it has returned. This probably indicates an
1977 infinite recursion, unless you're writing strange benchmark programs, in
1978 which case it indicates something else.
1980 This threshold can be changed from 100, by recompiling the F<perl> binary,
1981 setting the C pre-processor macro C<PERL_SUB_DEPTH_WARN> to the desired value.
1983 =item (?(DEFINE)....) does not allow branches in regex; marked by
1984 S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
1986 (F) You used something like C<(?(DEFINE)...|..)> which is illegal. The
1987 most likely cause of this error is that you left out a parenthesis inside
1988 of the C<....> part.
1990 The S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was
1993 =item %s defines neither package nor VERSION--version check failed
1995 (F) You said something like "use Module 42" but in the Module file
1996 there are neither package declarations nor a C<$VERSION>.
1998 =item delete argument is not a HASH or ARRAY element or slice
2000 (F) The argument to C<delete> must be either a hash or array element,
2006 or a hash or array slice, such as:
2008 @foo[$bar, $baz, $xyzzy]
2009 @{$ref->[12]}{"susie", "queue"}
2011 or a hash key/value or array index/value slice, such as:
2013 %foo[$bar, $baz, $xyzzy]
2014 %{$ref->[12]}{"susie", "queue"}
2016 =item Delimiter for here document is too long
2018 (F) In a here document construct like C<<<FOO>, the label C<FOO> is too
2019 long for Perl to handle. You have to be seriously twisted to write code
2020 that triggers this error.
2022 =item Deprecated use of my() in false conditional. This will be a fatal error in Perl 5.30
2024 (D deprecated) You used a declaration similar to C<my $x if 0>. There
2025 has been a long-standing bug in Perl that causes a lexical variable
2026 not to be cleared at scope exit when its declaration includes a false
2027 conditional. Some people have exploited this bug to achieve a kind of
2028 static variable. Since we intend to fix this bug, we don't want people
2029 relying on this behavior. You can achieve a similar static effect by
2030 declaring the variable in a separate block outside the function, eg
2032 sub f { my $x if 0; return $x++ }
2036 { my $x; sub f { return $x++ } }
2038 Beginning with perl 5.10.0, you can also use C<state> variables to have
2039 lexicals that are initialized only once (see L<feature>):
2041 sub f { state $x; return $x++ }
2043 This use of C<my()> in a false conditional has been deprecated since
2044 Perl 5.10, and it will become a fatal error in Perl 5.30.
2046 =item DESTROY created new reference to dead object '%s'
2048 (F) A DESTROY() method created a new reference to the object which is
2049 just being DESTROYed. Perl is confused, and prefers to abort rather
2050 than to create a dangling reference.
2052 =item Did not produce a valid header
2054 See L</500 Server error>.
2056 =item %s did not return a true value
2058 (F) A required (or used) file must return a true value to indicate that
2059 it compiled correctly and ran its initialization code correctly. It's
2060 traditional to end such a file with a "1;", though any true value would
2061 do. See L<perlfunc/require>.
2063 =item (Did you mean &%s instead?)
2065 (W misc) You probably referred to an imported subroutine &FOO as $FOO or
2068 =item (Did you mean "local" instead of "our"?)
2070 (W shadow) Remember that "our" does not localize the declared global
2071 variable. You have declared it again in the same lexical scope, which
2074 =item (Did you mean $ or @ instead of %?)
2076 (W) You probably said %hash{$key} when you meant $hash{$key} or
2077 @hash{@keys}. On the other hand, maybe you just meant %hash and got
2082 (F) You passed die() an empty string (the equivalent of C<die "">) or
2083 you called it with no args and C<$@> was empty.
2085 =item Document contains no data
2087 See L</500 Server error>.
2089 =item %s does not define %s::VERSION--version check failed
2091 (F) You said something like "use Module 42" but the Module did not
2092 define a C<$VERSION>.
2094 =item '/' does not take a repeat count
2096 (F) You cannot put a repeat count of any kind right after the '/' code.
2097 See L<perlfunc/pack>.
2099 =item do "%s" failed, '.' is no longer in @INC; did you mean do "./%s"?
2101 (D deprecated) Previously C< do "somefile"; > would search the current
2102 directory for the specified file. Since perl v5.26.0, F<.> has been
2103 removed from C<@INC> by default, so this is no longer true. To search the
2104 current directory (and only the current directory) you can write
2105 C< do "./somefile"; >.
2107 =item Don't know how to get file name
2109 (P) C<PerlIO_getname>, a perl internal I/O function specific to VMS, was
2110 somehow called on another platform. This should not happen.
2112 =item Don't know how to handle magic of type \%o
2114 (P) The internal handling of magical variables has been cursed.
2116 =item do_study: out of memory
2118 (P) This should have been caught by safemalloc() instead.
2120 =item (Do you need to predeclare %s?)
2122 (S syntax) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message
2123 "%s found where operator expected". It often means a subroutine or module
2124 name is being referenced that hasn't been declared yet. This may be
2125 because of ordering problems in your file, or because of a missing
2126 "sub", "package", "require", or "use" statement. If you're referencing
2127 something that isn't defined yet, you don't actually have to define the
2128 subroutine or package before the current location. You can use an empty
2129 "sub foo;" or "package FOO;" to enter a "forward" declaration.
2131 =item dump() must be written as CORE::dump() as of Perl 5.30
2133 (F) You used the obsolete C<dump()> built-in function. That was deprecated in
2134 Perl 5.8.0. As of Perl 5.30 it must be written in fully qualified format:
2137 See L<perlfunc/dump>.
2139 =item dump is not supported
2141 (F) Your machine doesn't support dump/undump.
2143 =item Duplicate free() ignored
2145 (S malloc) An internal routine called free() on something that had
2148 =item Duplicate modifier '%c' after '%c' in %s
2150 (W unpack) You have applied the same modifier more than once after a
2151 type in a pack template. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
2153 =item elseif should be elsif
2155 (S syntax) There is no keyword "elseif" in Perl because Larry thinks
2156 it's ugly. Your code will be interpreted as an attempt to call a method
2157 named "elseif" for the class returned by the following block. This is
2158 unlikely to be what you want.
2160 =item Empty \%c in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2162 =item Empty \%c{} in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2164 (F) C<\p> and C<\P> are used to introduce a named Unicode property, as
2165 described in L<perlunicode> and L<perlre>. You used C<\p> or C<\P> in
2166 a regular expression without specifying the property name.
2168 =item ${^ENCODING} is no longer supported
2170 (F) The special variable C<${^ENCODING}>, formerly used to implement
2171 the C<encoding> pragma, is no longer supported as of Perl 5.26.0.
2173 Setting it to anything other than C<undef> is a fatal error as of Perl
2176 =item entering effective %s failed
2178 (F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, switching the real and
2179 effective uids or gids failed.
2181 =item %ENV is aliased to %s
2183 (F) You're running under taint mode, and the C<%ENV> variable has been
2184 aliased to another hash, so it doesn't reflect anymore the state of the
2185 program's environment. This is potentially insecure.
2187 =item Error converting file specification %s
2189 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Because Perl may have to deal with file
2190 specifications in either VMS or Unix syntax, it converts them to a
2191 single form when it must operate on them directly. Either you've passed
2192 an invalid file specification to Perl, or you've found a case the
2193 conversion routines don't handle. Drat.
2195 =item Eval-group in insecure regular expression
2197 (F) Perl detected tainted data when trying to compile a regular
2198 expression that contains the C<(?{ ... })> zero-width assertion, which
2199 is unsafe. See L<perlre/(?{ code })>, and L<perlsec>.
2201 =item Eval-group not allowed at runtime, use re 'eval' in regex m/%s/
2203 (F) Perl tried to compile a regular expression containing the
2204 C<(?{ ... })> zero-width assertion at run time, as it would when the
2205 pattern contains interpolated values. Since that is a security risk,
2206 it is not allowed. If you insist, you may still do this by using the
2207 C<re 'eval'> pragma or by explicitly building the pattern from an
2208 interpolated string at run time and using that in an eval(). See
2209 L<perlre/(?{ code })>.
2211 =item Eval-group not allowed, use re 'eval' in regex m/%s/
2213 (F) A regular expression contained the C<(?{ ... })> zero-width
2214 assertion, but that construct is only allowed when the C<use re 'eval'>
2215 pragma is in effect. See L<perlre/(?{ code })>.
2217 =item EVAL without pos change exceeded limit in regex; marked by
2218 S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2220 (F) You used a pattern that nested too many EVAL calls without consuming
2221 any text. Restructure the pattern so that text is consumed.
2223 The S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was
2226 =item Excessively long <> operator
2228 (F) The contents of a <> operator may not exceed the maximum size of a
2229 Perl identifier. If you're just trying to glob a long list of
2230 filenames, try using the glob() operator, or put the filenames into a
2231 variable and glob that.
2233 =item exec? I'm not *that* kind of operating system
2235 (F) The C<exec> function is not implemented on some systems, e.g., Symbian
2236 OS. See L<perlport>.
2238 =item %sExecution of %s aborted due to compilation errors.
2240 (F) The final summary message when a Perl compilation fails.
2242 =item exists argument is not a HASH or ARRAY element or a subroutine
2244 (F) The argument to C<exists> must be a hash or array element or a
2245 subroutine with an ampersand, such as:
2251 =item exists argument is not a subroutine name
2253 (F) The argument to C<exists> for C<exists &sub> must be a subroutine name,
2254 and not a subroutine call. C<exists &sub()> will generate this error.
2256 =item Exiting eval via %s
2258 (W exiting) You are exiting an eval by unconventional means, such as a
2259 goto, or a loop control statement.
2261 =item Exiting format via %s
2263 (W exiting) You are exiting a format by unconventional means, such as a
2264 goto, or a loop control statement.
2266 =item Exiting pseudo-block via %s
2268 (W exiting) You are exiting a rather special block construct (like a
2269 sort block or subroutine) by unconventional means, such as a goto, or a
2270 loop control statement. See L<perlfunc/sort>.
2272 =item Exiting subroutine via %s
2274 (W exiting) You are exiting a subroutine by unconventional means, such
2275 as a goto, or a loop control statement.
2277 =item Exiting substitution via %s
2279 (W exiting) You are exiting a substitution by unconventional means, such
2280 as a return, a goto, or a loop control statement.
2282 =item Expecting close bracket in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2284 (F) You wrote something like
2288 to denote a capturing group of the form
2289 L<C<(?I<PARNO>)>|perlre/(?PARNO) (?-PARNO) (?+PARNO) (?R) (?0)>,
2290 but omitted the C<")">.
2292 =item Expecting close paren for nested extended charclass in regex; marked
2293 by <-- HERE in m/%s/
2295 (F) While parsing a nested extended character class like:
2297 (?[ ... (?flags:(?[ ... ])) ... ])
2300 we expected to see a close paren ')' (marked by ^) but did not.
2302 =item Expecting close paren for wrapper for nested extended charclass in
2303 regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
2305 (F) While parsing a nested extended character class like:
2307 (?[ ... (?flags:(?[ ... ])) ... ])
2310 we expected to see a close paren ')' (marked by ^) but did not.
2312 =item Expecting '(?flags:(?[...' in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2314 (F) The C<(?[...])> extended character class regular expression construct
2315 only allows character classes (including character class escapes like
2316 C<\d>), operators, and parentheses. The one exception is C<(?flags:...)>
2317 containing at least one flag and exactly one C<(?[...])> construct.
2318 This allows a regular expression containing just C<(?[...])> to be
2319 interpolated. If you see this error message, then you probably
2320 have some other C<(?...)> construct inside your character class. See
2321 L<perlrecharclass/Extended Bracketed Character Classes>.
2323 =item Experimental aliasing via reference not enabled
2325 (F) To do aliasing via references, you must first enable the feature:
2327 no warnings "experimental::refaliasing";
2328 use feature "refaliasing";
2331 =item Experimental %s on scalar is now forbidden
2333 (F) An experimental feature added in Perl 5.14 allowed C<each>, C<keys>,
2334 C<push>, C<pop>, C<shift>, C<splice>, C<unshift>, and C<values> to be called with a
2335 scalar argument. This experiment is considered unsuccessful, and
2336 has been removed. The C<postderef> feature may meet your needs better.
2338 =item Experimental subroutine signatures not enabled
2340 (F) To use subroutine signatures, you must first enable them:
2342 no warnings "experimental::signatures";
2343 use feature "signatures";
2344 sub foo ($left, $right) { ... }
2346 =item Explicit blessing to '' (assuming package main)
2348 (W misc) You are blessing a reference to a zero length string. This has
2349 the effect of blessing the reference into the package main. This is
2350 usually not what you want. Consider providing a default target package,
2351 e.g. bless($ref, $p || 'MyPackage');
2353 =item %s: Expression syntax
2355 (A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead of Perl.
2356 Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl yourself.
2358 =item %s failed--call queue aborted
2360 (F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing a UNITCHECK,
2361 CHECK, INIT, or END subroutine. Processing of the remainder of the
2362 queue of such routines has been prematurely ended.
2364 =item Failed to close in-place work file %s: %s
2366 (F) Closing an output file from in-place editing, as with the C<-i>
2367 command-line switch, failed.
2369 =item False [] range "%s" in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2371 (W regexp)(F) A character class range must start and end at a literal
2372 character, not another character class like C<\d> or C<[:alpha:]>. The "-"
2373 in your false range is interpreted as a literal "-". In a C<(?[...])>
2374 construct, this is an error, rather than a warning. Consider quoting
2375 the "-", "\-". The S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression
2376 the problem was discovered. See L<perlre>.
2378 =item Fatal VMS error (status=%d) at %s, line %d
2380 (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Something untoward happened in a VMS
2381 system service or RTL routine; Perl's exit status should provide more
2382 details. The filename in "at %s" and the line number in "line %d" tell
2383 you which section of the Perl source code is distressed.
2385 =item fcntl is not implemented
2387 (F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement fcntl(). What is this, a
2388 PDP-11 or something?
2390 =item FETCHSIZE returned a negative value
2392 (F) A tied array claimed to have a negative number of elements, which
2395 =item Field too wide in 'u' format in pack
2397 (W pack) Each line in an uuencoded string starts with a length indicator
2398 which can't encode values above 63. So there is no point in asking for
2399 a line length bigger than that. Perl will behave as if you specified
2400 C<u63> as the format.
2402 =item File::Glob::glob() will disappear in perl 5.30. Use File::Glob::bsd_glob() instead.
2404 (D deprecated) C<< File::Glob >> has a function called C<< glob >>, which
2405 just calls C<< bsd_glob >>. However, its prototype is different from the
2406 prototype of C<< CORE::glob >>, and hence, C<< File::Glob::glob >> should
2409 C<< File::Glob::glob() >> was deprecated in perl 5.8.0. A deprecation
2410 message was issued from perl 5.26.0 onwards, and the function will
2411 disappear in perl 5.30.0.
2413 Code using C<< File::Glob::glob() >> should call
2414 C<< File::Glob::bsd_glob() >> instead.
2416 =item Filehandle %s opened only for input
2418 (W io) You tried to write on a read-only filehandle. If you intended
2419 it to be a read-write filehandle, you needed to open it with "+<" or
2420 "+>" or "+>>" instead of with "<" or nothing. If you intended only to
2421 write the file, use ">" or ">>". See L<perlfunc/open>.
2423 =item Filehandle %s opened only for output
2425 (W io) You tried to read from a filehandle opened only for writing, If
2426 you intended it to be a read/write filehandle, you needed to open it
2427 with "+<" or "+>" or "+>>" instead of with ">". If you intended only to
2428 read from the file, use "<". See L<perlfunc/open>. Another possibility
2429 is that you attempted to open filedescriptor 0 (also known as STDIN) for
2430 output (maybe you closed STDIN earlier?).
2432 =item Filehandle %s reopened as %s only for input
2434 (W io) You opened for reading a filehandle that got the same filehandle id
2435 as STDOUT or STDERR. This occurred because you closed STDOUT or STDERR
2438 =item Filehandle STDIN reopened as %s only for output
2440 (W io) You opened for writing a filehandle that got the same filehandle id
2441 as STDIN. This occurred because you closed STDIN previously.
2443 =item Final $ should be \$ or $name
2445 (F) You must now decide whether the final $ in a string was meant to be
2446 a literal dollar sign, or was meant to introduce a variable name that
2447 happens to be missing. So you have to put either the backslash or the
2450 =item flock() on closed filehandle %s
2452 (W closed) The filehandle you're attempting to flock() got itself closed
2453 some time before now. Check your control flow. flock() operates on
2454 filehandles. Are you attempting to call flock() on a dirhandle by the
2457 =item Format not terminated
2459 (F) A format must be terminated by a line with a solitary dot. Perl got
2460 to the end of your file without finding such a line.
2462 =item Format %s redefined
2464 (W redefine) You redefined a format. To suppress this warning, say
2467 no warnings 'redefine';
2468 eval "format NAME =...";
2471 =item Found = in conditional, should be ==
2481 (or something like that).
2483 =item %s found where operator expected
2485 (S syntax) The Perl lexer knows whether to expect a term or an operator.
2486 If it sees what it knows to be a term when it was expecting to see an
2487 operator, it gives you this warning. Usually it indicates that an
2488 operator or delimiter was omitted, such as a semicolon.
2490 =item gdbm store returned %d, errno %d, key "%s"
2492 (S) A warning from the GDBM_File extension that a store failed.
2494 =item gethostent not implemented
2496 (F) Your C library apparently doesn't implement gethostent(), probably
2497 because if it did, it'd feel morally obligated to return every hostname
2500 =item get%sname() on closed socket %s
2502 (W closed) You tried to get a socket or peer socket name on a closed
2503 socket. Did you forget to check the return value of your socket() call?
2505 =item getpwnam returned invalid UIC %#o for user "%s"
2507 (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. The call to C<sys$getuai> underlying the
2508 C<getpwnam> operator returned an invalid UIC.
2510 =item getsockopt() on closed socket %s
2512 (W closed) You tried to get a socket option on a closed socket. Did you
2513 forget to check the return value of your socket() call? See
2514 L<perlfunc/getsockopt>.
2516 =item given is experimental
2518 (S experimental::smartmatch) C<given> depends on smartmatch, which
2519 is experimental, so its behavior may change or even be removed
2520 in any future release of perl. See the explanation under
2521 L<perlsyn/Experimental Details on given and when>.
2523 =item Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name (did you forget to
2526 (F) You've said "use strict" or "use strict vars", which indicates
2527 that all variables must either be lexically scoped (using "my" or "state"),
2528 declared beforehand using "our", or explicitly qualified to say
2529 which package the global variable is in (using "::").
2531 =item glob failed (%s)
2533 (S glob) Something went wrong with the external program(s) used
2534 for C<glob> and C<< <*.c> >>. Usually, this means that you supplied a C<glob>
2535 pattern that caused the external program to fail and exit with a
2536 nonzero status. If the message indicates that the abnormal exit
2537 resulted in a coredump, this may also mean that your csh (C shell)
2538 is broken. If so, you should change all of the csh-related variables
2539 in config.sh: If you have tcsh, make the variables refer to it as
2540 if it were csh (e.g. C<full_csh='/usr/bin/tcsh'>); otherwise, make them
2541 all empty (except that C<d_csh> should be C<'undef'>) so that Perl will
2542 think csh is missing. In either case, after editing config.sh, run
2543 C<./Configure -S> and rebuild Perl.
2545 =item Glob not terminated
2547 (F) The lexer saw a left angle bracket in a place where it was expecting
2548 a term, so it's looking for the corresponding right angle bracket, and
2549 not finding it. Chances are you left some needed parentheses out
2550 earlier in the line, and you really meant a "less than".
2552 =item gmtime(%f) failed
2554 (W overflow) You called C<gmtime> with a number that it could not handle:
2555 too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value is C<undef>.
2557 =item gmtime(%f) too large
2559 (W overflow) You called C<gmtime> with a number that was larger than
2560 it can reliably handle and C<gmtime> probably returned the wrong
2561 date. This warning is also triggered with NaN (the special
2562 not-a-number value).
2564 =item gmtime(%f) too small
2566 (W overflow) You called C<gmtime> with a number that was smaller than
2567 it can reliably handle and C<gmtime> probably returned the wrong date.
2569 =item Got an error from DosAllocMem
2571 (P) An error peculiar to OS/2. Most probably you're using an obsolete
2572 version of Perl, and this should not happen anyway.
2574 =item goto must have label
2576 (F) Unlike with "next" or "last", you're not allowed to goto an
2577 unspecified destination. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
2579 =item Goto undefined subroutine%s
2581 (F) You tried to call a subroutine with C<goto &sub> syntax, but
2582 the indicated subroutine hasn't been defined, or if it was, it
2583 has since been undefined.
2585 =item Group name must start with a non-digit word character in regex; marked by
2586 S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2588 (F) Group names must follow the rules for perl identifiers, meaning
2589 they must start with a non-digit word character. A common cause of
2590 this error is using (?&0) instead of (?0). See L<perlre>.
2592 =item ()-group starts with a count
2594 (F) A ()-group started with a count. A count is supposed to follow
2595 something: a template character or a ()-group. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
2597 =item %s had compilation errors.
2599 (F) The final summary message when a C<perl -c> fails.
2601 =item Had to create %s unexpectedly
2603 (S internal) A routine asked for a symbol from a symbol table that ought
2604 to have existed already, but for some reason it didn't, and had to be
2605 created on an emergency basis to prevent a core dump.
2607 =item %s has too many errors
2609 (F) The parser has given up trying to parse the program after 10 errors.
2610 Further error messages would likely be uninformative.
2612 =item Hexadecimal float: exponent overflow
2614 (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has a larger exponent
2615 than the floating point supports.
2617 =item Hexadecimal float: exponent underflow
2619 (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has a smaller exponent
2620 than the floating point supports. With the IEEE 754 floating point,
2621 this may also mean that the subnormals (formerly known as denormals)
2622 are being used, which may or may not be an error.
2624 =item Hexadecimal float: internal error (%s)
2626 (F) Something went horribly bad in hexadecimal float handling.
2628 =item Hexadecimal float: mantissa overflow
2630 (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point literal had more bits in
2631 the mantissa (the part between the 0x and the exponent, also known as
2632 the fraction or the significand) than the floating point supports.
2634 =item Hexadecimal float: precision loss
2636 (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point had internally more
2637 digits than could be output. This can be caused by unsupported
2638 long double formats, or by 64-bit integers not being available
2639 (needed to retrieve the digits under some configurations).
2641 =item Hexadecimal float: unsupported long double format
2643 (F) You have configured Perl to use long doubles but
2644 the internals of the long double format are unknown;
2645 therefore the hexadecimal float output is impossible.
2647 =item Hexadecimal number > 0xffffffff non-portable
2649 (W portable) The hexadecimal number you specified is larger than 2**32-1
2650 (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
2651 L<perlport> for more on portability concerns.
2653 =item Identifier too long
2655 (F) Perl limits identifiers (names for variables, functions, etc.) to
2656 about 250 characters for simple names, and somewhat more for compound
2657 names (like C<$A::B>). You've exceeded Perl's limits. Future versions
2658 of Perl are likely to eliminate these arbitrary limitations.
2660 =item Ignoring zero length \N{} in character class in regex; marked by
2661 S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2663 (W regexp) Named Unicode character escapes (C<\N{...}>) may return a
2664 zero-length sequence. When such an escape is used in a character
2665 class its behavior is not well defined. Check that the correct
2666 escape has been used, and the correct charname handler is in scope.
2668 =item Illegal binary digit '%c'
2670 (F) You used a digit other than 0 or 1 in a binary number.
2672 =item Illegal binary digit %s ignored
2674 (W digit) You may have tried to use a digit other than 0 or 1 in a
2675 binary number. Interpretation of the binary number stopped before the
2678 =item Illegal character after '_' in prototype for %s : %s
2680 (W illegalproto) An illegal character was found in a prototype
2681 declaration. The '_' in a prototype must be followed by a ';',
2682 indicating the rest of the parameters are optional, or one of '@'
2683 or '%', since those two will accept 0 or more final parameters.
2685 =item Illegal character \%o (carriage return)
2687 (F) Perl normally treats carriage returns in the program text as
2688 it would any other whitespace, which means you should never see
2689 this error when Perl was built using standard options. For some
2690 reason, your version of Perl appears to have been built without
2691 this support. Talk to your Perl administrator.
2693 =item Illegal character following sigil in a subroutine signature
2695 (F) A parameter in a subroutine signature contained an unexpected character
2696 following the C<$>, C<@> or C<%> sigil character. Normally the sigil
2697 should be followed by the variable name or C<=> etc. Perhaps you are
2698 trying use a prototype while in the scope of C<use feature 'signatures'>?
2701 sub foo ($$) {} # legal - a prototype
2703 use feature 'signatures;
2704 sub foo ($$) {} # illegal - was expecting a signature
2706 :prototype($$) {} # legal
2709 =item Illegal character in prototype for %s : %s
2711 (W illegalproto) An illegal character was found in a prototype declaration.
2712 Legal characters in prototypes are $, @, %, *, ;, [, ], &, \, and +.
2713 Perhaps you were trying to write a subroutine signature but didn't enable
2714 that feature first (C<use feature 'signatures'>), so your signature was
2715 instead interpreted as a bad prototype.
2717 =item Illegal declaration of anonymous subroutine
2719 (F) When using the C<sub> keyword to construct an anonymous subroutine,
2720 you must always specify a block of code. See L<perlsub>.
2722 =item Illegal declaration of subroutine %s
2724 (F) A subroutine was not declared correctly. See L<perlsub>.
2726 =item Illegal division by zero
2728 (F) You tried to divide a number by 0. Either something was wrong in
2729 your logic, or you need to put a conditional in to guard against
2732 =item Illegal hexadecimal digit %s ignored
2734 (W digit) You may have tried to use a character other than 0 - 9 or
2735 A - F, a - f in a hexadecimal number. Interpretation of the hexadecimal
2736 number stopped before the illegal character.
2738 =item Illegal modulus zero
2740 (F) You tried to divide a number by 0 to get the remainder. Most
2741 numbers don't take to this kindly.
2743 =item Illegal number of bits in vec
2745 (F) The number of bits in vec() (the third argument) must be a power of
2746 two from 1 to 32 (or 64, if your platform supports that).
2748 =item Illegal octal digit '%c'
2750 (F) You used an 8 or 9 in an octal number.
2752 =item Illegal octal digit %s ignored
2754 (W digit) You may have tried to use an 8 or 9 in an octal number.
2755 Interpretation of the octal number stopped before the 8 or 9.
2757 =item Illegal operator following parameter in a subroutine signature
2759 (F) A parameter in a subroutine signature, was followed by something
2760 other than C<=> introducing a default, C<,> or C<)>.
2762 use feature 'signatures';
2763 sub foo ($=1) {} # legal
2764 sub foo ($a = 1) {} # legal
2765 sub foo ($a += 1) {} # illegal
2766 sub foo ($a == 1) {} # illegal
2768 =item Illegal pattern in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2770 (F) You wrote something like
2774 The C<"+"> is valid only when followed by digits, indicating a
2775 capturing group. See
2776 L<C<(?I<PARNO>)>|perlre/(?PARNO) (?-PARNO) (?+PARNO) (?R) (?0)>.
2778 =item Illegal suidscript
2780 (F) The script run under suidperl was somehow illegal.
2782 =item Illegal switch in PERL5OPT: -%c
2784 (X) The PERL5OPT environment variable may only be used to set the
2785 following switches: B<-[CDIMUdmtw]>.
2787 =item Illegal user-defined property name
2789 (F) You specified a Unicode-like property name in a regular expression
2790 pattern (using C<\p{}> or C<\P{}>) that Perl knows isn't an official
2791 Unicode property, and was likely meant to be a user-defined property
2792 name, but it can't be one of those, as they must begin with either C<In>
2793 or C<Is>. Check the spelling. See also
2794 L</Can't find Unicode property definition "%s">.
2796 =item Ill-formed CRTL environ value "%s"
2798 (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read the CRTL's
2799 internal environ array, and encountered an element without the C<=>
2800 delimiter used to separate keys from values. The element is ignored.
2802 =item Ill-formed message in prime_env_iter: |%s|
2804 (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read a logical
2805 name or CLI symbol definition when preparing to iterate over %ENV, and
2806 didn't see the expected delimiter between key and value, so the line was
2809 =item (in cleanup) %s
2811 (W misc) This prefix usually indicates that a DESTROY() method raised
2812 the indicated exception. Since destructors are usually called by the
2813 system at arbitrary points during execution, and often a vast number of
2814 times, the warning is issued only once for any number of failures that
2815 would otherwise result in the same message being repeated.
2817 Failure of user callbacks dispatched using the C<G_KEEPERR> flag could
2818 also result in this warning. See L<perlcall/G_KEEPERR>.
2820 =item Incomplete expression within '(?[ ])' in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE>
2823 (F) There was a syntax error within the C<(?[ ])>. This can happen if the
2824 expression inside the construct was completely empty, or if there are
2825 too many or few operands for the number of operators. Perl is not smart
2826 enough to give you a more precise indication as to what is wrong.
2828 =item Inconsistent hierarchy during C3 merge of class '%s': merging failed on
2831 (F) The method resolution order (MRO) of the given class is not
2832 C3-consistent, and you have enabled the C3 MRO for this class. See the C3
2833 documentation in L<mro> for more information.
2835 =item Indentation on line %d of here-doc doesn't match delimiter
2837 (F) You have an indented here-document where one or more of its lines
2838 have whitespace at the beginning that does not match the closing
2841 For example, line 2 below is wrong because it does not have at least
2842 2 spaces, but lines 1 and 3 are fine because they have at least 2:
2852 Note that tabs and spaces are compared strictly, meaning 1 tab will
2855 =item Infinite recursion in regex
2857 (F) You used a pattern that references itself without consuming any input
2858 text. You should check the pattern to ensure that recursive patterns
2859 either consume text or fail.
2861 =item Infinite recursion via empty pattern
2863 (F) You tried to use the empty pattern inside of a regex code block,
2864 for instance C</(?{ s!!! })/>, which resulted in re-executing
2865 the same pattern, which is an infinite loop which is broken by
2866 throwing an exception.
2868 =item Initialization of state variables in list currently forbidden
2870 (F) C<state> only permits initializing a single variable, specified
2871 without parentheses. So C<state $a = 42> and C<state @a = qw(a b c)> are
2872 allowed, but not C<state ($a) = 42> or C<(state $a) = 42>. To initialize
2873 more than one C<state> variable, initialize them one at a time.
2875 =item %%s[%s] in scalar context better written as $%s[%s]
2877 (W syntax) In scalar context, you've used an array index/value slice
2878 (indicated by %) to select a single element of an array. Generally
2879 it's better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $). The difference
2880 is that C<$foo[&bar]> always behaves like a scalar, both in the value it
2881 returns and when evaluating its argument, while C<%foo[&bar]> provides
2882 a list context to its subscript, which can do weird things if you're
2883 expecting only one subscript. When called in list context, it also
2884 returns the index (what C<&bar> returns) in addition to the value.
2886 =item %%s{%s} in scalar context better written as $%s{%s}
2888 (W syntax) In scalar context, you've used a hash key/value slice
2889 (indicated by %) to select a single element of a hash. Generally it's
2890 better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $). The difference
2891 is that C<$foo{&bar}> always behaves like a scalar, both in the value
2892 it returns and when evaluating its argument, while C<@foo{&bar}> and
2893 provides a list context to its subscript, which can do weird things
2894 if you're expecting only one subscript. When called in list context,
2895 it also returns the key in addition to the value.
2897 =item Insecure dependency in %s
2899 (F) You tried to do something that the tainting mechanism didn't like.
2900 The tainting mechanism is turned on when you're running setuid or
2901 setgid, or when you specify B<-T> to turn it on explicitly. The
2902 tainting mechanism labels all data that's derived directly or indirectly
2903 from the user, who is considered to be unworthy of your trust. If any
2904 such data is used in a "dangerous" operation, you get this error. See
2905 L<perlsec> for more information.
2907 =item Insecure directory in %s
2909 (F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a piped open in a setuid or
2910 setgid script if C<$ENV{PATH}> contains a directory that is writable by
2911 the world. Also, the PATH must not contain any relative directory.
2914 =item Insecure $ENV{%s} while running %s
2916 (F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a piped open in a setuid or
2917 setgid script if any of C<$ENV{PATH}>, C<$ENV{IFS}>, C<$ENV{CDPATH}>,
2918 C<$ENV{ENV}>, C<$ENV{BASH_ENV}> or C<$ENV{TERM}> are derived from data
2919 supplied (or potentially supplied) by the user. The script must set
2920 the path to a known value, using trustworthy data. See L<perlsec>.
2922 =item Insecure user-defined property %s
2924 (F) Perl detected tainted data when trying to compile a regular
2925 expression that contains a call to a user-defined character property
2926 function, i.e. C<\p{IsFoo}> or C<\p{InFoo}>.
2927 See L<perlunicode/User-Defined Character Properties> and L<perlsec>.
2929 =item Integer overflow in format string for %s
2931 (F) The indexes and widths specified in the format string of C<printf()>
2932 or C<sprintf()> are too large. The numbers must not overflow the size of
2933 integers for your architecture.
2935 =item Integer overflow in %s number
2937 (S overflow) The hexadecimal, octal or binary number you have specified
2938 either as a literal or as an argument to hex() or oct() is too big for
2939 your architecture, and has been converted to a floating point number.
2940 On a 32-bit architecture the largest hexadecimal, octal or binary number
2941 representable without overflow is 0xFFFFFFFF, 037777777777, or
2942 0b11111111111111111111111111111111 respectively. Note that Perl
2943 transparently promotes all numbers to a floating point representation
2944 internally--subject to loss of precision errors in subsequent
2947 =item Integer overflow in srand
2949 (S overflow) The number you have passed to srand is too big to fit
2950 in your architecture's integer representation. The number has been
2951 replaced with the largest integer supported (0xFFFFFFFF on 32-bit
2952 architectures). This means you may be getting less randomness than
2953 you expect, because different random seeds above the maximum will
2954 return the same sequence of random numbers.
2956 =item Integer overflow in version
2958 =item Integer overflow in version %d
2960 (W overflow) Some portion of a version initialization is too large for
2961 the size of integers for your architecture. This is not a warning
2962 because there is no rational reason for a version to try and use an
2963 element larger than typically 2**32. This is usually caused by trying
2964 to use some odd mathematical operation as a version, like 100/9.
2966 =item Internal disaster in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2968 (P) Something went badly wrong in the regular expression parser.
2969 The S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was
2972 =item Internal inconsistency in tracking vforks
2974 (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl keeps track of the number of times
2975 you've called C<fork> and C<exec>, to determine whether the current call
2976 to C<exec> should affect the current script or a subprocess (see
2977 L<perlvms/"exec LIST">). Somehow, this count has become scrambled, so
2978 Perl is making a guess and treating this C<exec> as a request to
2979 terminate the Perl script and execute the specified command.
2981 =item internal %<num>p might conflict with future printf extensions
2983 (S internal) Perl's internal routine that handles C<printf> and C<sprintf>
2984 formatting follows a slightly different set of rules when called from
2985 C or XS code. Specifically, formats consisting of digits followed
2986 by "p" (e.g., "%7p") are reserved for future use. If you see this
2987 message, then an XS module tried to call that routine with one such
2990 =item Internal urp in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
2992 (P) Something went badly awry in the regular expression parser. The
2993 S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was
2996 =item %s (...) interpreted as function
2998 (W syntax) You've run afoul of the rule that says that any list operator
2999 followed by parentheses turns into a function, with all the list
3000 operators arguments found inside the parentheses. See
3001 L<perlop/Terms and List Operators (Leftward)>.
3003 =item In '(?...)', the '(' and '?' must be adjacent in regex;
3004 marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3006 (F) The two-character sequence C<"(?"> in this context in a regular
3007 expression pattern should be an indivisible token, with nothing
3008 intervening between the C<"("> and the C<"?">, but you separated them
3011 =item In '(*...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex;
3012 marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3014 (F) The two-character sequence C<"(*"> in this context in a regular
3015 expression pattern should be an indivisible token, with nothing
3016 intervening between the C<"("> and the C<"*">, but you separated them.
3017 Fix the pattern and retry.
3019 =item Invalid %s attribute: %s
3021 (F) The indicated attribute for a subroutine or variable was not recognized
3022 by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See L<attributes>.
3024 =item Invalid %s attributes: %s
3026 (F) The indicated attributes for a subroutine or variable were not
3027 recognized by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See L<attributes>.
3029 =item Invalid character in charnames alias definition; marked by
3032 (F) You tried to create a custom alias for a character name, with
3033 the C<:alias> option to C<use charnames> and the specified character in
3034 the indicated name isn't valid. See L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
3036 =item Invalid \0 character in %s for %s: %s\0%s
3038 (W syscalls) Embedded \0 characters in pathnames or other system call
3039 arguments produce a warning as of 5.20. The parts after the \0 were
3040 formerly ignored by system calls.
3042 =item Invalid character in \N{...}; marked by S<<-- HERE> in \N{%s}
3044 (F) Only certain characters are valid for character names. The
3045 indicated one isn't. See L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>.
3047 =item Invalid conversion in %s: "%s"
3049 (W printf) Perl does not understand the given format conversion. See
3050 L<perlfunc/sprintf>.
3052 =item Invalid escape in the specified encoding in regex; marked by
3053 S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3055 (W regexp)(F) The numeric escape (for example C<\xHH>) of value < 256
3056 didn't correspond to a single character through the conversion
3057 from the encoding specified by the encoding pragma.
3058 The escape was replaced with REPLACEMENT CHARACTER (U+FFFD)
3059 instead, except within S<C<(?[ ])>>, where it is a fatal error.
3060 The S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
3061 escape was discovered.
3063 =item Invalid hexadecimal number in \N{U+...}
3065 =item Invalid hexadecimal number in \N{U+...} in regex; marked by
3066 S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3068 (F) The character constant represented by C<...> is not a valid hexadecimal
3069 number. Either it is empty, or you tried to use a character other than
3070 0 - 9 or A - F, a - f in a hexadecimal number.
3072 =item Invalid module name %s with -%c option: contains single ':'
3074 (F) The module argument to perl's B<-m> and B<-M> command-line options
3075 cannot contain single colons in the module name, but only in the
3076 arguments after "=". In other words, B<-MFoo::Bar=:baz> is ok, but
3077 B<-MFoo:Bar=baz> is not.
3079 =item Invalid mro name: '%s'
3081 (F) You tried to C<mro::set_mro("classname", "foo")> or C<use mro 'foo'>,
3082 where C<foo> is not a valid method resolution order (MRO). Currently,
3083 the only valid ones supported are C<dfs> and C<c3>, unless you have loaded
3084 a module that is a MRO plugin. See L<mro> and L<perlmroapi>.
3086 =item Invalid negative number (%s) in chr
3088 (W utf8) You passed a negative number to C<chr>. Negative numbers are
3089 not valid character numbers, so it returns the Unicode replacement
3092 =item Invalid number '%s' for -C option.
3094 (F) You supplied a number to the -C option that either has extra leading
3095 zeroes or overflows perl's unsigned integer representation.
3097 =item invalid option -D%c, use -D'' to see choices
3099 (S debugging) Perl was called with invalid debugger flags. Call perl
3100 with the B<-D> option with no flags to see the list of acceptable values.
3101 See also L<perlrun/-Dletters>.
3103 =item Invalid quantifier in {,} in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3105 (F) The pattern looks like a {min,max} quantifier, but the min or max
3106 could not be parsed as a valid number - either it has leading zeroes,
3107 or it represents too big a number to cope with. The S<<-- HERE> shows
3108 where in the regular expression the problem was discovered. See L<perlre>.
3110 =item Invalid [] range "%s" in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3112 (F) The range specified in a character class had a minimum character
3113 greater than the maximum character. One possibility is that you forgot the
3114 C<{}> from your ending C<\x{}> - C<\x> without the curly braces can go only
3115 up to C<ff>. The S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
3116 problem was discovered. See L<perlre>.
3118 =item Invalid range "%s" in transliteration operator
3120 (F) The range specified in the tr/// or y/// operator had a minimum
3121 character greater than the maximum character. See L<perlop>.
3123 =item Invalid separator character %s in attribute list
3125 (F) Something other than a colon or whitespace was seen between the
3126 elements of an attribute list. If the previous attribute had a
3127 parenthesised parameter list, perhaps that list was terminated too soon.
3130 =item Invalid separator character %s in PerlIO layer specification %s
3132 (W layer) When pushing layers onto the Perl I/O system, something other
3133 than a colon or whitespace was seen between the elements of a layer list.
3134 If the previous attribute had a parenthesised parameter list, perhaps that
3135 list was terminated too soon.
3137 =item Invalid strict version format (%s)
3139 (F) A version number did not meet the "strict" criteria for versions.
3140 A "strict" version number is a positive decimal number (integer or
3141 decimal-fraction) without exponentiation or else a dotted-decimal
3142 v-string with a leading 'v' character and at least three components.
3143 The parenthesized text indicates which criteria were not met.
3144 See the L<version> module for more details on allowed version formats.
3146 =item Invalid type '%s' in %s
3148 (F) The given character is not a valid pack or unpack type.
3149 See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3151 (W) The given character is not a valid pack or unpack type but used to be
3154 =item Invalid version format (%s)
3156 (F) A version number did not meet the "lax" criteria for versions.
3157 A "lax" version number is a positive decimal number (integer or
3158 decimal-fraction) without exponentiation or else a dotted-decimal
3159 v-string. If the v-string has fewer than three components, it
3160 must have a leading 'v' character. Otherwise, the leading 'v' is
3161 optional. Both decimal and dotted-decimal versions may have a
3162 trailing "alpha" component separated by an underscore character
3163 after a fractional or dotted-decimal component. The parenthesized
3164 text indicates which criteria were not met. See the L<version> module
3165 for more details on allowed version formats.
3167 =item Invalid version object
3169 (F) The internal structure of the version object was invalid.
3170 Perhaps the internals were modified directly in some way or
3171 an arbitrary reference was blessed into the "version" class.
3173 =item In '(*VERB...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex;
3174 marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3176 (F) The two-character sequence C<"(*"> in this context in a regular
3177 expression pattern should be an indivisible token, with nothing
3178 intervening between the C<"("> and the C<"*">, but you separated them.
3180 =item ioctl is not implemented
3182 (F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement ioctl(), which is pretty
3183 strange for a machine that supports C.
3185 =item ioctl() on unopened %s
3187 (W unopened) You tried ioctl() on a filehandle that was never opened.
3188 Check your control flow and number of arguments.
3190 =item IO layers (like '%s') unavailable
3192 (F) Your Perl has not been configured to have PerlIO, and therefore
3193 you cannot use IO layers. To have PerlIO, Perl must be configured
3196 =item IO::Socket::atmark not implemented on this architecture
3198 (F) Your machine doesn't implement the sockatmark() functionality,
3199 neither as a system call nor an ioctl call (SIOCATMARK).
3201 =item '%s' is an unknown bound type in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3203 (F) You used C<\b{...}> or C<\B{...}> and the C<...> is not known to
3204 Perl. The current valid ones are given in
3205 L<perlrebackslash/\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B>.
3207 =item %s() isn't allowed on :utf8 handles
3209 (F) The sysread(), recv(), syswrite() and send() operators are
3210 not allowed on handles that have the C<:utf8> layer, either explicitly, or
3211 implicitly, eg., with the C<:encoding(UTF-16LE)> layer.
3213 Previously sysread() and recv() currently use only the C<:utf8> flag for the stream,
3214 ignoring the actual layers. Since sysread() and recv() did no UTF-8
3215 validation they can end up creating invalidly encoded scalars.
3217 Similarly, syswrite() and send() used only the C<:utf8> flag, otherwise ignoring
3218 any layers. If the flag is set, both wrote the value UTF-8 encoded, even if
3219 the layer is some different encoding, such as the example above.
3221 Ideally, all of these operators would completely ignore the C<:utf8> state,
3222 working only with bytes, but this would result in silently breaking existing
3225 =item "%s" is more clearly written simply as "%s" in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3227 (W regexp) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>)
3229 You specified a character that has the given plainer way of writing it, and
3230 which is also portable to platforms running with different character sets.
3232 =item $* is no longer supported as of Perl 5.30
3234 (F) The special variable C<$*>, deprecated in older perls, was removed in
3235 5.10.0, is no longer supported and is a fatal error as of Perl 5.30. In
3236 previous versions of perl the use of C<$*> enabled or disabled multi-line
3237 matching within a string.
3239 Instead of using C<$*> you should use the C</m> (and maybe C</s>) regexp
3240 modifiers. You can enable C</m> for a lexical scope (even a whole file)
3241 with C<use re '/m'>. (In older versions: when C<$*> was set to a true value
3242 then all regular expressions behaved as if they were written using C</m>.)
3244 Use of this variable will be a fatal error in Perl 5.30.
3246 =item $# is no longer supported as of Perl 5.30
3248 (F) The special variable C<$#>, deprecated in older perls, was removed as of
3249 5.10.0, is no longer supported and is a fatal error as of Perl 5.30. You
3250 should use the printf/sprintf functions instead.
3252 =item '%s' is not a code reference
3254 (W overload) The second (fourth, sixth, ...) argument of
3255 overload::constant needs to be a code reference. Either
3256 an anonymous subroutine, or a reference to a subroutine.
3258 =item '%s' is not an overloadable type
3260 (W overload) You tried to overload a constant type the overload package is
3263 =item -i used with no filenames on the command line, reading from STDIN
3265 (S inplace) The C<-i> option was passed on the command line, indicating
3266 that the script is intended to edit files in place, but no files were
3267 given. This is usually a mistake, since editing STDIN in place doesn't
3268 make sense, and can be confusing because it can make perl look like
3269 it is hanging when it is really just trying to read from STDIN. You
3270 should either pass a filename to edit, or remove C<-i> from the command
3271 line. See L<perlrun> for more details.
3273 =item Junk on end of regexp in regex m/%s/
3275 (P) The regular expression parser is confused.
3277 =item Label not found for "last %s"
3279 (F) You named a loop to break out of, but you're not currently in a loop
3280 of that name, not even if you count where you were called from. See
3283 =item Label not found for "next %s"
3285 (F) You named a loop to continue, but you're not currently in a loop of
3286 that name, not even if you count where you were called from. See
3289 =item Label not found for "redo %s"
3291 (F) You named a loop to restart, but you're not currently in a loop of
3292 that name, not even if you count where you were called from. See
3295 =item leaving effective %s failed
3297 (F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, switching the real and
3298 effective uids or gids failed.
3300 =item length/code after end of string in unpack
3302 (F) While unpacking, the string buffer was already used up when an unpack
3303 length/code combination tried to obtain more data. This results in
3304 an undefined value for the length. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3306 =item length() used on %s (did you mean "scalar(%s)"?)
3308 (W syntax) You used length() on either an array or a hash when you
3309 probably wanted a count of the items.
3311 Array size can be obtained by doing:
3315 The number of items in a hash can be obtained by doing:
3319 =item Lexing code attempted to stuff non-Latin-1 character into Latin-1 input
3321 (F) An extension is attempting to insert text into the current parse
3322 (using L<lex_stuff_pvn|perlapi/lex_stuff_pvn> or similar), but tried to insert a character that
3323 couldn't be part of the current input. This is an inherent pitfall
3324 of the stuffing mechanism, and one of the reasons to avoid it. Where
3325 it is necessary to stuff, stuffing only plain ASCII is recommended.
3327 =item Lexing code internal error (%s)
3329 (F) Lexing code supplied by an extension violated the lexer's API in a
3332 =item listen() on closed socket %s
3334 (W closed) You tried to do a listen on a closed socket. Did you forget
3335 to check the return value of your socket() call? See
3338 =item List form of piped open not implemented
3340 (F) On some platforms, notably Windows, the three-or-more-arguments
3341 form of C<open> does not support pipes, such as C<open($pipe, '|-', @args)>.
3342 Use the two-argument C<open($pipe, '|prog arg1 arg2...')> form instead.
3344 =item Literal vertical space in [] is illegal except under /x in regex;
3345 marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3347 (F) (only under C<S<use re 'strict'>> or within C<(?[...])>)
3349 Likely you forgot the C</x> modifier or there was a typo in the pattern.
3350 For example, did you really mean to match a form-feed? If so, all the
3351 ASCII vertical space control characters are representable by escape
3352 sequences which won't present such a jarring appearance as your pattern
3353 does when displayed.
3360 =item %s: loadable library and perl binaries are mismatched (got handshake key %p, needed %p)
3362 (P) A dynamic loading library C<.so> or C<.dll> was being loaded into the
3363 process that was built against a different build of perl than the
3364 said library was compiled against. Reinstalling the XS module will
3365 likely fix this error.
3367 =item Locale '%s' contains (at least) the following characters which
3368 have unexpected meanings: %s The Perl program will use the expected
3371 (W locale) You are using the named UTF-8 locale. UTF-8 locales are
3372 expected to have very particular behavior, which most do. This message
3373 arises when perl found some departures from the expectations, and is
3374 notifying you that the expected behavior overrides these differences.
3375 In some cases the differences are caused by the locale definition being
3376 defective, but the most common causes of this warning are when there are
3377 ambiguities and conflicts in following the Standard, and the locale has
3378 chosen an approach that differs from Perl's.
3380 One of these is because that, contrary to the claims, Unicode is not
3381 completely locale insensitive. Turkish and some related languages
3382 have two types of C<"I"> characters. One is dotted in both upper- and
3383 lowercase, and the other is dotless in both cases. Unicode allows a
3384 locale to use either the Turkish rules, or the rules used in all other
3385 instances, where there is only one type of C<"I">, which is dotless in
3386 the uppercase, and dotted in the lower. The perl core does not (yet)
3387 handle the Turkish case, and this message warns you of that. Instead,
3388 the L<Unicode::Casing> module allows you to mostly implement the Turkish
3391 The other common cause is for the characters
3395 These are probematic. The C standard says that these should be
3396 considered punctuation in the C locale (and the POSIX standard defers to
3397 the C standard), and Unicode is generally considered a superset of
3398 the C locale. But Unicode has added an extra category, "Symbol", and
3399 classifies these particular characters as being symbols. Most UTF-8
3400 locales have them treated as punctuation, so that L<ispunct(2)> returns
3401 non-zero for them. But a few locales have it return 0. Perl takes
3402 the first approach, not using C<ispunct()> at all (see L<Note [5] in
3403 perlrecharclass|perlrecharclass/[5]>), and this message is raised to notify you that you
3404 are getting Perl's approach, not the locale's.
3406 =item Locale '%s' may not work well.%s
3408 (W locale) You are using the named locale, which is a non-UTF-8 one, and
3409 which perl has determined is not fully compatible with what it can
3410 handle. The second C<%s> gives a reason.
3412 By far the most common reason is that the locale has characters in it
3413 that are represented by more than one byte. The only such locales that
3414 Perl can handle are the UTF-8 locales. Most likely the specified locale
3415 is a non-UTF-8 one for an East Asian language such as Chinese or
3416 Japanese. If the locale is a superset of ASCII, the ASCII portion of it
3419 Some essentially obsolete locales that aren't supersets of ASCII, mainly
3420 those in ISO 646 or other 7-bit locales, such as ASMO 449, can also have
3421 problems, depending on what portions of the ASCII character set get
3422 changed by the locale and are also used by the program.
3423 The warning message lists the determinable conflicting characters.
3425 Note that not all incompatibilities are found.
3427 If this happens to you, there's not much you can do except switch to use a
3428 different locale or use L<Encode> to translate from the locale into
3429 UTF-8; if that's impracticable, you have been warned that some things
3432 This message is output once each time a bad locale is switched into
3433 within the scope of C<S<use locale>>, or on the first possibly-affected
3434 operation if the C<S<use locale>> inherits a bad one. It is not raised
3435 for any operations from the L<POSIX> module.
3437 =item localtime(%f) failed
3439 (W overflow) You called C<localtime> with a number that it could not handle:
3440 too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value is C<undef>.
3442 =item localtime(%f) too large
3444 (W overflow) You called C<localtime> with a number that was larger
3445 than it can reliably handle and C<localtime> probably returned the
3446 wrong date. This warning is also triggered with NaN (the special
3447 not-a-number value).
3449 =item localtime(%f) too small
3451 (W overflow) You called C<localtime> with a number that was smaller
3452 than it can reliably handle and C<localtime> probably returned the
3455 =item Lookbehind longer than %d not implemented in regex m/%s/
3457 (F) There is currently a limit on the length of string which lookbehind can
3458 handle. This restriction may be eased in a future release.
3460 =item Lost precision when %s %f by 1
3462 (W imprecision) The value you attempted to increment or decrement by one
3463 is too large for the underlying floating point representation to store
3464 accurately, hence the target of C<++> or C<--> is unchanged. Perl issues this
3465 warning because it has already switched from integers to floating point
3466 when values are too large for integers, and now even floating point is
3467 insufficient. You may wish to switch to using L<Math::BigInt> explicitly.
3469 =item lstat() on filehandle%s
3471 (W io) You tried to do an lstat on a filehandle. What did you mean
3472 by that? lstat() makes sense only on filenames. (Perl did a fstat()
3473 instead on the filehandle.)
3475 =item lvalue attribute %s already-defined subroutine
3477 (W misc) Although L<attributes.pm|attributes> allows this, turning the lvalue
3478 attribute on or off on a Perl subroutine that is already defined
3479 does not always work properly. It may or may not do what you
3480 want, depending on what code is inside the subroutine, with exact
3481 details subject to change between Perl versions. Only do this
3482 if you really know what you are doing.
3484 =item lvalue attribute ignored after the subroutine has been defined
3486 (W misc) Using the C<:lvalue> declarative syntax to make a Perl
3487 subroutine an lvalue subroutine after it has been defined is
3488 not permitted. To make the subroutine an lvalue subroutine,
3489 add the lvalue attribute to the definition, or put the C<sub
3490 foo :lvalue;> declaration before the definition.
3492 See also L<attributes.pm|attributes>.
3494 =item Magical list constants are not supported
3496 (F) You assigned a magical array to a stash element, and then tried
3497 to use the subroutine from the same slot. You are asking Perl to do
3498 something it cannot do, details subject to change between Perl versions.
3500 =item Malformed integer in [] in pack
3502 (F) Between the brackets enclosing a numeric repeat count only digits
3503 are permitted. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3505 =item Malformed integer in [] in unpack
3507 (F) Between the brackets enclosing a numeric repeat count only digits
3508 are permitted. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3510 =item Malformed PERLLIB_PREFIX
3512 (F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERLLIB_PREFIX should be of the form
3519 with nonempty prefix1 and prefix2. If C<prefix1> is indeed a prefix of
3520 a builtin library search path, prefix2 is substituted. The error may
3521 appear if components are not found, or are too long. See
3522 "PERLLIB_PREFIX" in L<perlos2>.
3524 =item Malformed prototype for %s: %s
3526 (F) You tried to use a function with a malformed prototype. The
3527 syntax of function prototypes is given a brief compile-time check for
3528 obvious errors like invalid characters. A more rigorous check is run
3529 when the function is called.
3530 Perhaps the function's author was trying to write a subroutine signature
3531 but didn't enable that feature first (C<use feature 'signatures'>),
3532 so the signature was instead interpreted as a bad prototype.
3534 =item Malformed UTF-8 character%s
3536 (S utf8)(F) Perl detected a string that should be UTF-8, but didn't
3537 comply with UTF-8 encoding rules, or represents a code point whose
3538 ordinal integer value doesn't fit into the word size of the current
3539 platform (overflows). Details as to the exact malformation are given in
3540 the variable, C<%s>, part of the message.
3542 One possible cause is that you set the UTF8 flag yourself for data that
3543 you thought to be in UTF-8 but it wasn't (it was for example legacy 8-bit
3544 data). To guard against this, you can use C<Encode::decode('UTF-8', ...)>.
3546 If you use the C<:encoding(UTF-8)> PerlIO layer for input, invalid byte
3547 sequences are handled gracefully, but if you use C<:utf8>, the flag is set
3548 without validating the data, possibly resulting in this error message.
3550 See also L<Encode/"Handling Malformed Data">.
3552 =item Malformed UTF-8 returned by \N{%s} immediately after '%s'
3554 (F) The charnames handler returned malformed UTF-8.
3556 =item Malformed UTF-8 string in "%s"
3558 (F) This message indicates a bug either in the Perl core or in XS
3559 code. Such code was trying to find out if a character, allegedly
3560 stored internally encoded as UTF-8, was of a given type, such as
3561 being punctuation or a digit. But the character was not encoded
3562 in legal UTF-8. The C<%s> is replaced by a string that can be used
3563 by knowledgeable people to determine what the type being checked
3566 Passing malformed strings was deprecated in Perl 5.18, and
3567 became fatal in Perl 5.26.
3569 =item Malformed UTF-8 string in '%c' format in unpack
3571 (F) You tried to unpack something that didn't comply with UTF-8 encoding
3572 rules and perl was unable to guess how to make more progress.
3574 =item Malformed UTF-8 string in pack
3576 (F) You tried to pack something that didn't comply with UTF-8 encoding
3577 rules and perl was unable to guess how to make more progress.
3579 =item Malformed UTF-8 string in unpack
3581 (F) You tried to unpack something that didn't comply with UTF-8 encoding
3582 rules and perl was unable to guess how to make more progress.
3584 =item Malformed UTF-16 surrogate
3586 (F) Perl thought it was reading UTF-16 encoded character data but while
3587 doing it Perl met a malformed Unicode surrogate.
3589 =item Mandatory parameter follows optional parameter
3591 (F) In a subroutine signature, you wrote something like "$a = undef,
3592 $b", making an earlier parameter optional and a later one mandatory.
3593 Parameters are filled from left to right, so it's impossible for the
3594 caller to omit an earlier one and pass a later one. If you want to act
3595 as if the parameters are filled from right to left, declare the rightmost
3596 optional and then shuffle the parameters around in the subroutine's body.
3598 =item Matched non-Unicode code point 0x%X against Unicode property; may
3601 (S non_unicode) Perl allows strings to contain a superset of
3602 Unicode code points; each code point may be as large as what is storable
3603 in a signed integer on your system, but these may not be accepted by
3604 other languages/systems. This message occurs when you matched a string
3605 containing such a code point against a regular expression pattern, and
3606 the code point was matched against a Unicode property, C<\p{...}> or
3607 C<\P{...}>. Unicode properties are only defined on Unicode code points,
3608 so the result of this match is undefined by Unicode, but Perl (starting
3609 in v5.20) treats non-Unicode code points as if they were typical
3610 unassigned Unicode ones, and matched this one accordingly. Whether a
3611 given property matches these code points or not is specified in
3612 L<perluniprops/Properties accessible through \p{} and \P{}>.
3614 This message is suppressed (unless it has been made fatal) if it is
3615 immaterial to the results of the match if the code point is Unicode or
3616 not. For example, the property C<\p{ASCII_Hex_Digit}> only can match
3617 the 22 characters C<[0-9A-Fa-f]>, so obviously all other code points,
3618 Unicode or not, won't match it. (And C<\P{ASCII_Hex_Digit}> will match
3619 every code point except these 22.)
3621 Getting this message indicates that the outcome of the match arguably
3622 should have been the opposite of what actually happened. If you think
3623 that is the case, you may wish to make the C<non_unicode> warnings
3624 category fatal; if you agree with Perl's decision, you may wish to turn
3627 See L<perlunicode/Beyond Unicode code points> for more information.
3629 =item %s matches null string many times in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in
3632 (W regexp) The pattern you've specified would be an infinite loop if the
3633 regular expression engine didn't specifically check for that. The S<<-- HERE>
3634 shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was discovered.
3637 =item Maximal count of pending signals (%u) exceeded
3639 (F) Perl aborted due to too high a number of signals pending. This
3640 usually indicates that your operating system tried to deliver signals
3641 too fast (with a very high priority), starving the perl process from
3642 resources it would need to reach a point where it can process signals
3643 safely. (See L<perlipc/"Deferred Signals (Safe Signals)">.)
3645 =item "%s" may clash with future reserved word
3647 (W) This warning may be due to running a perl5 script through a perl4
3648 interpreter, especially if the word that is being warned about is
3651 =item '%' may not be used in pack
3653 (F) You can't pack a string by supplying a checksum, because the
3654 checksumming process loses information, and you can't go the other way.
3655 See L<perlfunc/unpack>.
3657 =item Method for operation %s not found in package %s during blessing
3659 (F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an overloading table that
3660 doesn't resolve to a valid subroutine. See L<overload>.
3662 =item Method %s not permitted
3664 See L</500 Server error>.
3666 =item Might be a runaway multi-line %s string starting on line %d
3668 (S) An advisory indicating that the previous error may have been caused
3669 by a missing delimiter on a string or pattern, because it eventually
3670 ended earlier on the current line.
3672 =item Misplaced _ in number
3674 (W syntax) An underscore (underbar) in a numeric constant did not
3675 separate two digits.
3677 =item Missing argument for %n in %s
3679 (F) A C<%n> was used in a format string with no corresponding argument for
3680 perl to write the current string length to.
3682 =item Missing argument in %s
3684 (W missing) You called a function with fewer arguments than other
3685 arguments you supplied indicated would be needed.
3687 Currently only emitted when a printf-type format required more
3688 arguments than were supplied, but might be used in the future for
3689 other cases where we can statically determine that arguments to
3690 functions are missing, e.g. for the L<perlfunc/pack> function.
3692 =item Missing argument to -%c
3694 (F) The argument to the indicated command line switch must follow
3695 immediately after the switch, without intervening spaces.
3697 =item Missing braces on \N{}
3699 =item Missing braces on \N{} in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3701 (F) Wrong syntax of character name literal C<\N{charname}> within
3702 double-quotish context. This can also happen when there is a space
3703 (or comment) between the C<\N> and the C<{> in a regex with the C</x> modifier.
3704 This modifier does not change the requirement that the brace immediately
3707 =item Missing braces on \o{}
3709 (F) A C<\o> must be followed immediately by a C<{> in double-quotish context.
3711 =item Missing comma after first argument to %s function
3713 (F) While certain functions allow you to specify a filehandle or an
3714 "indirect object" before the argument list, this ain't one of them.
3716 =item Missing command in piped open
3718 (W pipe) You used the C<open(FH, "| command")> or
3719 C<open(FH, "command |")> construction, but the command was missing or
3722 =item Missing control char name in \c
3724 (F) A double-quoted string ended with "\c", without the required control
3727 =item Missing ']' in prototype for %s : %s
3729 (W illegalproto) A grouping was started with C<[> but never closed with C<]>.
3731 =item Missing name in "%s sub"
3733 (F) The syntax for lexically scoped subroutines requires that
3734 they have a name with which they can be found.
3736 =item Missing $ on loop variable
3738 (F) Apparently you've been programming in B<csh> too much. Variables
3739 are always mentioned with the $ in Perl, unlike in the shells, where it
3740 can vary from one line to the next.
3742 =item (Missing operator before %s?)
3744 (S syntax) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message
3745 "%s found where operator expected". Often the missing operator is a comma.
3747 =item Missing or undefined argument to %s
3749 (F) You tried to call require or do with no argument or with an undefined
3750 value as an argument. Require expects either a package name or a
3751 file-specification as an argument; do expects a filename. See
3752 L<perlfunc/require EXPR> and L<perlfunc/do EXPR>.
3754 =item Missing right brace on \%c{} in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3756 (F) Missing right brace in C<\x{...}>, C<\p{...}>, C<\P{...}>, or C<\N{...}>.
3758 =item Missing right brace on \N{}
3760 =item Missing right brace on \N{} or unescaped left brace after \N
3762 (F) C<\N> has two meanings.
3764 The traditional one has it followed by a name enclosed in braces,
3765 meaning the character (or sequence of characters) given by that
3766 name. Thus C<\N{ASTERISK}> is another way of writing C<*>, valid in both
3767 double-quoted strings and regular expression patterns. In patterns,
3768 it doesn't have the meaning an unescaped C<*> does.
3770 Starting in Perl 5.12.0, C<\N> also can have an additional meaning (only)
3771 in patterns, namely to match a non-newline character. (This is short
3772 for C<[^\n]>, and like C<.> but is not affected by the C</s> regex modifier.)
3774 This can lead to some ambiguities. When C<\N> is not followed immediately
3775 by a left brace, Perl assumes the C<[^\n]> meaning. Also, if the braces
3776 form a valid quantifier such as C<\N{3}> or C<\N{5,}>, Perl assumes that this
3777 means to match the given quantity of non-newlines (in these examples,
3778 3; and 5 or more, respectively). In all other case, where there is a
3779 C<\N{> and a matching C<}>, Perl assumes that a character name is desired.
3781 However, if there is no matching C<}>, Perl doesn't know if it was
3782 mistakenly omitted, or if C<[^\n]{> was desired, and raises this error.
3783 If you meant the former, add the right brace; if you meant the latter,
3784 escape the brace with a backslash, like so: C<\N\{>
3786 =item Missing right curly or square bracket
3788 (F) The lexer counted more opening curly or square brackets than closing
3789 ones. As a general rule, you'll find it's missing near the place you
3792 =item (Missing semicolon on previous line?)
3794 (S syntax) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message
3795 "%s found where operator expected". Don't automatically put a semicolon on
3796 the previous line just because you saw this message.
3798 =item Modification of a read-only value attempted
3800 (F) You tried, directly or indirectly, to change the value of a
3801 constant. You didn't, of course, try "2 = 1", because the compiler
3802 catches that. But an easy way to do the same thing is:
3804 sub mod { $_[0] = 1 }
3807 Another way is to assign to a substr() that's off the end of the string.
3809 Yet another way is to assign to a C<foreach> loop I<VAR> when I<VAR>
3810 is aliased to a constant in the look I<LIST>:
3813 foreach my $n ($x, 2) {
3814 $n *= 2; # modifies the $x, but fails on attempt to
3817 =item Modification of non-creatable array value attempted, %s
3819 (F) You tried to make an array value spring into existence, and the
3820 subscript was probably negative, even counting from end of the array
3823 =item Modification of non-creatable hash value attempted, %s
3825 (P) You tried to make a hash value spring into existence, and it
3826 couldn't be created for some peculiar reason.
3828 =item Module name must be constant
3830 (F) Only a bare module name is allowed as the first argument to a "use".
3832 =item Module name required with -%c option
3834 (F) The C<-M> or C<-m> options say that Perl should load some module, but
3835 you omitted the name of the module. Consult L<perlrun> for full details
3836 about C<-M> and C<-m>.
3838 =item More than one argument to '%s' open
3840 (F) The C<open> function has been asked to open multiple files. This
3841 can happen if you are trying to open a pipe to a command that takes a
3842 list of arguments, but have forgotten to specify a piped open mode.
3843 See L<perlfunc/open> for details.
3845 =item mprotect for COW string %p %u failed with %d
3847 (S) You compiled perl with B<-D>PERL_DEBUG_READONLY_COW (see
3848 L<perlguts/"Copy on Write">), but a shared string buffer
3849 could not be made read-only.
3851 =item mprotect for %p %u failed with %d
3853 (S) You compiled perl with B<-D>PERL_DEBUG_READONLY_OPS (see L<perlhacktips>),
3854 but an op tree could not be made read-only.
3856 =item mprotect RW for COW string %p %u failed with %d
3858 (S) You compiled perl with B<-D>PERL_DEBUG_READONLY_COW (see
3859 L<perlguts/"Copy on Write">), but a read-only shared string
3860 buffer could not be made mutable.
3862 =item mprotect RW for %p %u failed with %d
3864 (S) You compiled perl with B<-D>PERL_DEBUG_READONLY_OPS (see
3865 L<perlhacktips>), but a read-only op tree could not be made
3866 mutable before freeing the ops.
3868 =item msg%s not implemented
3870 (F) You don't have System V message IPC on your system.
3872 =item Multidimensional syntax %s not supported
3874 (W syntax) Multidimensional arrays aren't written like C<$foo[1,2,3]>.
3875 They're written like C<$foo[1][2][3]>, as in C.
3877 =item Multiple slurpy parameters not allowed
3879 (F) In subroutine signatures, a slurpy parameter (C<@> or C<%>) must be
3880 the last parameter, and there must not be more than one of them; for
3883 sub foo ($a, @b) {} # legal
3884 sub foo ($a, @b, %) {} # invalid
3886 =item '/' must follow a numeric type in unpack
3888 (F) You had an unpack template that contained a '/', but this did not
3889 follow some unpack specification producing a numeric value.
3890 See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3892 =item %s must not be a named sequence in transliteration operator
3894 (F) Transliteration (C<tr///> and C<y///>) transliterates individual
3895 characters. But a named sequence by definition is more than an
3896 individual character, and hence doing this operation on it doesn't make
3899 =item "my sub" not yet implemented
3901 (F) Lexically scoped subroutines are not yet implemented. Don't try
3904 =item "my" subroutine %s can't be in a package
3906 (F) Lexically scoped subroutines aren't in a package, so it doesn't make
3907 sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the front.
3909 =item "my %s" used in sort comparison
3911 (W syntax) The package variables $a and $b are used for sort comparisons.
3912 You used $a or $b in as an operand to the C<< <=> >> or C<cmp> operator inside a
3913 sort comparison block, and the variable had earlier been declared as a
3914 lexical variable. Either qualify the sort variable with the package
3915 name, or rename the lexical variable.
3917 =item "my" variable %s can't be in a package
3919 (F) Lexically scoped variables aren't in a package, so it doesn't make
3920 sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the front. Use
3921 local() if you want to localize a package variable.
3923 =item Name "%s::%s" used only once: possible typo
3925 (W once) Typographical errors often show up as unique variable
3926 names. If you had a good reason for having a unique name, then
3927 just mention it again somehow to suppress the message. The C<our>
3928 declaration is also provided for this purpose.
3930 NOTE: This warning detects package symbols that have been used
3931 only once. This means lexical variables will never trigger this
3932 warning. It also means that all of the package variables $c, @c,
3933 %c, as well as *c, &c, sub c{}, c(), and c (the filehandle or
3934 format) are considered the same; if a program uses $c only once
3935 but also uses any of the others it will not trigger this warning.
3936 Symbols beginning with an underscore and symbols using special
3937 identifiers (q.v. L<perldata>) are exempt from this warning.
3939 =item Need exactly 3 octal digits in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3941 (F) Within S<C<(?[ ])>>, all constants interpreted as octal need to be
3942 exactly 3 digits long. This helps catch some ambiguities. If your
3943 constant is too short, add leading zeros, like
3945 (?[ [ \078 ] ]) # Syntax error!
3946 (?[ [ \0078 ] ]) # Works
3947 (?[ [ \007 8 ] ]) # Clearer
3949 The maximum number this construct can express is C<\777>. If you
3950 need a larger one, you need to use L<\o{}|perlrebackslash/Octal escapes> instead. If you meant
3951 two separate things, you need to separate them:
3953 (?[ [ \7776 ] ]) # Syntax error!
3954 (?[ [ \o{7776} ] ]) # One meaning
3955 (?[ [ \777 6 ] ]) # Another meaning
3956 (?[ [ \777 \006 ] ]) # Still another
3958 =item Negative '/' count in unpack
3960 (F) The length count obtained from a length/code unpack operation was
3961 negative. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3963 =item Negative length
3965 (F) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv operation with a buffer
3966 length that is less than 0. This is difficult to imagine.
3968 =item Negative offset to vec in lvalue context
3970 (F) When C<vec> is called in an lvalue context, the second argument must be
3971 greater than or equal to zero.
3973 =item Negative repeat count does nothing
3975 (W numeric) You tried to execute the
3976 L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator fewer than 0
3977 times, which doesn't make sense.
3979 =item Nested quantifiers in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
3981 (F) You can't quantify a quantifier without intervening parentheses.
3982 So things like ** or +* or ?* are illegal. The S<<-- HERE> shows
3983 whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was discovered.
3985 Note that the minimal matching quantifiers, C<*?>, C<+?>, and
3986 C<??> appear to be nested quantifiers, but aren't. See L<perlre>.
3988 =item %s never introduced
3990 (S internal) The symbol in question was declared but somehow went out of
3991 scope before it could possibly have been used.
3993 =item next::method/next::can/maybe::next::method cannot find enclosing method
3995 (F) C<next::method> needs to be called within the context of a
3996 real method in a real package, and it could not find such a context.
3999 =item \N in a character class must be a named character: \N{...} in regex;
4000 marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
4002 (F) The new (as of Perl 5.12) meaning of C<\N> as C<[^\n]> is not valid in a
4003 bracketed character class, for the same reason that C<.> in a character
4004 class loses its specialness: it matches almost everything, which is
4005 probably not what you want.
4007 =item \N{} in inverted character class or as a range end-point is restricted to one character in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
4009 (F) Named Unicode character escapes (C<\N{...}>) may return a
4010 multi-character sequence. Even though a character class is
4011 supposed to match just one character of input, perl will match the
4012 whole thing correctly, except when the class is inverted (C<[^...]>),
4013 or the escape is the beginning or final end point of a range. The
4014 mathematically logical behavior for what matches when inverting
4015 is very different from what people expect, so we have decided to
4016 forbid it. Similarly unclear is what should be generated when the
4017 C<\N{...}> is used as one of the end points of the range, such as in
4019 [\x{41}-\N{ARABIC SEQUENCE YEH WITH HAMZA ABOVE WITH AE}]
4021 What is meant here is unclear, as the C<\N{...}> escape is a sequence
4022 of code points, so this is made an error.
4024 =item \N{NAME} must be resolved by the lexer in regex; marked by
4025 S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
4027 (F) When compiling a regex pattern, an unresolved named character or
4028 sequence was encountered. This can happen in any of several ways that
4029 bypass the lexer, such as using single-quotish context, or an extra
4030 backslash in double-quotish:
4032 $re = '\N{SPACE}'; # Wrong!
4033 $re = "\\N{SPACE}"; # Wrong!
4036 Instead, use double-quotes with a single backslash:
4038 $re = "\N{SPACE}"; # ok
4041 The lexer can be bypassed as well by creating the pattern from smaller
4045 /${re}{SPACE}/; # Wrong!
4047 It's not a good idea to split a construct in the middle like this, and
4048 it doesn't work here. Instead use the solution above.
4050 Finally, the message also can happen under the C</x> regex modifier when the
4051 C<\N> is separated by spaces from the C<{>, in which case, remove the spaces.
4053 /\N {SPACE}/x; # Wrong!
4056 =item No %s allowed while running setuid
4058 (F) Certain operations are deemed to be too insecure for a setuid or
4059 setgid script to even be allowed to attempt. Generally speaking there
4060 will be another way to do what you want that is, if not secure, at least
4061 securable. See L<perlsec>.
4063 =item No code specified for -%c
4065 (F) Perl's B<-e> and B<-E> command-line options require an argument. If
4066 you want to run an empty program, pass the empty string as a separate
4067 argument or run a program consisting of a single 0 or 1:
4073 =item No comma allowed after %s
4075 (F) A list operator that has a filehandle or "indirect object" is
4076 not allowed to have a comma between that and the following arguments.
4077 Otherwise it'd be just another one of the arguments.
4079 One possible cause for this is that you expected to have imported
4080 a constant to your name space with B<use> or B<import> while no such
4081 importing took place, it may for example be that your operating
4082 system does not support that particular constant. Hopefully you did
4083 use an explicit import list for the constants you expect to see;
4084 please see L<perlfunc/use> and L<perlfunc/import>. While an
4085 explicit import list would probably have caught this error earlier
4086 it naturally does not remedy the fact that your operating system
4087 still does not support that constant. Maybe you have a typo in
4088 the constants of the symbol import list of B<use> or B<import> or in the
4089 constant name at the line where this error was triggered?
4091 =item No command into which to pipe on command line
4093 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line
4094 redirection, and found a '|' at the end of the command line, so it
4095 doesn't know where you want to pipe the output from this command.
4097 =item No DB::DB routine defined
4099 (F) The currently executing code was compiled with the B<-d> switch, but
4100 for some reason the current debugger (e.g. F<perl5db.pl> or a C<Devel::>
4101 module) didn't define a routine to be called at the beginning of each
4104 =item No dbm on this machine
4106 (P) This is counted as an internal error, because every machine should
4107 supply dbm nowadays, because Perl comes with SDBM. See L<SDBM_File>.
4109 =item No DB::sub routine defined
4111 (F) The currently executing code was compiled with the B<-d> switch, but
4112 for some reason the current debugger (e.g. F<perl5db.pl> or a C<Devel::>
4113 module) didn't define a C<DB::sub> routine to be called at the beginning
4114 of each ordinary subroutine call.
4116 =item No directory specified for -I
4118 (F) The B<-I> command-line switch requires a directory name as part of the
4119 I<same> argument. Use B<-Ilib>, for instance. B<-I lib> won't work.
4121 =item No error file after 2> or 2>> on command line
4123 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line
4124 redirection, and found a '2>' or a '2>>' on the command line, but can't
4125 find the name of the file to which to write data destined for stderr.
4127 =item No group ending character '%c' found in template
4129 (F) A pack or unpack template has an opening '(' or '[' without its
4130 matching counterpart. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
4132 =item No input file after < on command line
4134 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line
4135 redirection, and found a '<' on the command line, but can't find the
4136 name of the file from which to read data for stdin.
4138 =item No next::method '%s' found for %s
4140 (F) C<next::method> found no further instances of this method name
4141 in the remaining packages of the MRO of this class. If you don't want
4142 it throwing an exception, use C<maybe::next::method>
4143 or C<next::can>. See L<mro>.
4145 =item Non-finite repeat count does nothing
4147 (W numeric) You tried to execute the
4148 L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator C<Inf> (or
4149 C<-Inf>) or C<NaN> times, which doesn't make sense.
4151 =item Non-hex character in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
4153 (F) In a regular expression, there was a non-hexadecimal character where
4154 a hex one was expected, like
4159 =item Non-octal character in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
4161 (F) In a regular expression, there was a non-octal character where
4162 an octal one was expected, like
4166 =item Non-octal character '%c'. Resolved as "%s"
4168 (W digit) In parsing an octal numeric constant, a character was
4169 unexpectedly encountered that isn't octal. The resulting value
4172 =item "no" not allowed in expression
4174 (F) The "no" keyword is recognized and executed at compile time, and
4175 returns no useful value. See L<perlmod>.
4177 =item Non-string passed as bitmask
4179 (W misc) A number has been passed as a bitmask argument to select().
4180 Use the vec() function to construct the file descriptor bitmasks for
4181 select. See L<perlfunc/select>.
4183 =item No output file after > on command line
4185 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line
4186 redirection, and found a lone '>' at the end of the command line, so it
4187 doesn't know where you wanted to redirect stdout.
4189 =item No output file after > or >> on command line
4191 (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line
4192 redirection, and found a '>' or a '>>' on the command line, but can't
4193 find the name of the file to which to write data destined for stdout.
4195 =item No package name allowed for subroutine %s in "our"
4197 =item No package name allowed for variable %s in "our"
4199 (F) Fully qualified subroutine and variable names are not allowed in "our"
4200 declarations, because that doesn't make much sense under existing rules.
4201 Such syntax is reserved for future extensions.
4203 =item No Perl script found in input
4205 (F) You called C<perl -x>, but no line was found in the file beginning
4206 with #! and containing the word "perl".
4208 =item No setregid available
4210 (F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the setregid() call for
4213 =item No setreuid available
4215 (F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the setreuid() call for
4218 =item No such class %s
4220 (F) You provided a class qualifier in a "my", "our" or "state"
4221 declaration, but this class doesn't exist at this point in your program.
4223 =item No such class field "%s" in variable %s of type %s
4225 (F) You tried to access a key from a hash through the indicated typed
4226 variable but that key is not allowed by the package of the same type.
4227 The indicated package has restricted the set of allowed keys using the
4230 =item No such hook: %s
4232 (F) You specified a signal hook that was not recognized by Perl.
4233 Currently, Perl accepts C<__DIE__> and C<__WARN__> as valid signal hooks.
4235 =item No such pipe open
4237 (P) An error peculiar to VMS. The internal routine my_pclose() tried to
4238 close a pipe which hadn't been opened. This should have been caught
4239 earlier as an attempt to close an unopened filehandle.
4241 =item No such signal: SIG%s
4243 (W signal) You specified a signal name as a subscript to %SIG that was
4244 not recognized. Say C<kill -l> in your shell to see the valid signal
4245 names on your system.
4247 =item Not a CODE reference
4249 (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value (that is, a
4250 subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead. You can
4251 use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See
4254 =item Not a GLOB reference
4256 (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a "typeglob" (that is, a
4257 symbol table entry that looks like C<*foo>), but found a reference to
4258 something else instead. You can use the ref() function to find out what
4259 kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
4261 =item Not a HASH reference
4263 (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a hash value, but found a
4264 reference to something else instead. You can use the ref() function to
4265 find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
4267 =item '#' not allowed immediately following a sigil in a subroutine signature
4269 (F) In a subroutine signature definition, a comment following a sigil
4270 (C<$>, C<@> or C<%>), needs to be separated by whitespace or a comma etc., in
4271 particular to avoid confusion with the C<$#> variable. For example:
4274 sub f ($# ignore first arg
4277 sub f ($, # ignore first arg
4280 =item Not an ARRAY reference
4282 (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to an array value, but found
4283 a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref() function
4284 to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
4286 =item Not a SCALAR reference
4288 (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a scalar value, but found
4289 a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref() function
4290 to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
4292 =item Not a subroutine reference
4294 (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value (that is, a
4295 subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead. You can
4296 use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See
4299 =item Not a subroutine reference in overload table
4301 (F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an overloading table that
4302 doesn't somehow point to a valid subroutine. See L<overload>.
4304 =item Not enough arguments for %s
4306 (F) The function requires more arguments than you specified.
4308 =item Not enough format arguments
4310 (W syntax) A format specified more picture fields than the next line
4311 supplied. See L<perlform>.
4315 (A) You've accidentally run your script through the Bourne shell instead
4316 of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl
4319 =item (?[...]) not valid in locale in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/
4321 (F) C<(?[...])> cannot be used within the scope of a C<S<use locale>> or with
4322 an C</l> regular expression modifier, as that would require deferring
4323 to run-time the calculation of what it should evaluate to, and it is
4324 regex compile-time only.
4326 =item no UTC offset information; assuming local time is UTC
4328 (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl was unable to find the local
4329 timezone offset, so it's assuming that local system time is equivalent
4330 to UTC. If it's not, define the logical name
4331 F<SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL> to translate to the number of seconds which
4332 need to be added to UTC to get local time.
4334 =item NULL OP IN RUN
4336 (S debugging) Some internal routine called run() with a null opcode
4339 =item Null picture in formline
4341 (F) The first argument to formline must be a valid format picture
4342 specification. It was found to be empty, which probably means you
4343 supplied it an uninitialized value. See L<perlform>.
4347 (P) An attempt was made to realloc NULL.
4349 =item NULL regexp argument
4351 (P) The internal pattern matching routines blew it big time.
4353 =item NULL regexp parameter
4355 (P) The internal pattern matching routines are out of their gourd.
4357 =item Number too long
4359 (F) Perl limits the representation of decimal numbers in programs to
4360 about 250 characters. You've exceeded that length. Future
4361 versions of Perl are likely to eliminate this arbitrary limitation. In
4362 the meantime, try using scientific notation (e.g. "1e6" instead of
4365 =item Number with no digits
4367 (F) Perl was looking for a number but found nothing that looked like
4368 a number. This happens, for example with C<\o{}>, with no number between
4371 =item Octal number > 037777777777 non-portable
4373 (W portable) The octal number you specified is larger than 2**32-1
4374 (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
4375 L<perlport> for more on portability concerns.
4377 =item Odd name/value argument for subroutine '%s'
4379 (F) A subroutine using a slurpy hash parameter in its signature
4380 received an odd number of arguments to populate the hash. It requires
4381 the arguments to be paired, with the same number of keys as values.
4382 The caller of the subroutine is presumably at fault.
4384 The message attempts to include the name of the called subroutine. If the
4385 subroutine has been aliased, the subroutine's original name will be shown,
4386 regardless of what name the caller used.
4388 =item Odd number of arguments for overload::constant
4390 (W overload) The call to overload::constant contained an odd number of
4391 arguments. The arguments should come in pairs.
4393 =item Odd number of elements in anonymous hash
4395 (W misc) You specified an odd number of elements to initialize a hash,
4396 which is odd, because hashes come in key/value pairs.
4398 =item Odd number of elements in hash assignment
4400 (W misc) You specified an odd number of elements to initialize a hash,
4401 which is odd, because hashes come in key/value pairs.
4403 =item Offset outside string
4405 (F)(W layer) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv/seek operation
4406 with an offset pointing outside the buffer. This is difficult to
4407 imagine. The sole exceptions to this are that zero padding will
4408 take place when going past the end of the string when either
4409 C<sysread()>ing a file, or when seeking past the end of a scalar opened
4410 for I/O (in anticipation of future reads and to imitate the behavior
4413 =item Old package separator used in string
4415 (W syntax) You used the old package separator, "'", in a variable
4416 named inside a double-quoted string; e.g., C<"In $name's house">. This
4417 is equivalent to C<"In $name::s house">. If you meant the former, put
4418 a backslash before the apostrophe (C<"In $name\'s house">).
4420 =item %s() on unopened %s
4422 (W unopened) An I/O operation was attempted on a filehandle that was
4423 never initialized. You need to do an open(), a sysopen(), or a socket()
4424 call, or call a constructor from the FileHandle package.
4426 =item -%s on unopened filehandle %s
4428 (W unopened) You tried to invoke a file test operator on a filehandle
4429 that isn't open. Check your control flow. See also L<perlfunc/-X>.
4433 (S internal) An internal warning that the grammar is screwed up.
4437 (S internal) An internal warning that the grammar is screwed up.
4439 =item Operand with no preceding operator in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in
4442 (F) You wrote something like
4444 (?[ \p{Digit} \p{Thai} ])
4446 There are two operands, but no operator giving how you want to combine
4449 =item Operation "%s": no method found, %s
4451 (F) An attempt was made to perform an overloaded operation for which no
4452 handler was defined. While some handlers can be autogenerated in terms
4453 of other handlers, there is no default handler for any operation, unless
4454 the C<fallback> overloading key is specified to be true. See L<overload>.
4456 =item Operation "%s" returns its argument for non-Unicode code point 0x%X
4458 (S non_unicode) You performed an operation requiring Unicode rules
4459 on a code point that is not in Unicode, so what it should do is not
4460 defined. Perl has chosen to have it do nothing, and warn you.
4462 If the operation shown is "ToFold", it means that case-insensitive
4463 matching in a regular expression was done on the code point.
4465 If you know what you are doing you can turn off this warning by
4466 C<no warnings 'non_unicode';>.
4468 =item Operation "%s" returns its argument for UTF-16 surrogate U+%X
4470 (S surrogate) You performed an operation requiring Unicode
4471 rules on a Unicode surrogate. Unicode frowns upon the use
4472 of surrogates for anything but storing strings in UTF-16, but
4473 rules are (reluctantly) defined for the surrogates, and
4474 they are to do nothing for this operation. Because the use of
4475 surrogates can be dangerous, Perl warns.
4477 If the operation shown is "ToFold", it means that case-insensitive
4478 matching in a regular expression was done on the code point.
4480 If you know what you are doing you can turn off this warning by
4481 C<no warnings 'surrogate';>.
4483 =item Operator or semicolon missing before %s
4485 (S ambiguous) You used a variable or subroutine call where the parser
4486 was expecting an operator. The parser has assumed you really meant to
4487 use an operator, but this is highly likely to be incorrect. For
4488 example, if you say "*foo *foo" it will be interpreted as if you said
4491 =item Optional parameter lacks default expression
4493 (F) In a subroutine signature, you wrote something like "$a =", making a
4494 named optional parameter without a default value. A nameless optional
4495 parameter is permitted to have no default value, but a named one must
4496 have a specific default. You probably want "$a = undef".
4498 =item "our" variable %s redeclared
4500 (W shadow) You seem to have already declared the same global once before
4501 in the current lexical scope.
4503 =item Out of memory!
4505 (X) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient
4506 remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request. Perl has
4507 no option but to exit immediately.
4509 At least in Unix you may be able to get past this by increasing your
4510 process datasize limits: in csh/tcsh use C<limit> and
4511 C<limit datasize n> (where C<n> is the number of kilobytes) to check
4512 the current limits and change them, and in ksh/bash/zsh use C<ulimit -a>
4513 and C<ulimit -d n>, respectively.
4515 =item Out of memory during %s extend
4517 (X) An attempt was made to extend an array, a list, or a string beyond
4518 the largest possible memory allocation.
4520 =item Out of memory during "large" request for %s
4522 (F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient
4523 remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request. However,
4524 the request was judged large enough (compile-time default is 64K), so a
4525 possibility to shut down by trapping this error is granted.
4527 =item Out of memory during request for %s
4529 (X)(F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was
4530 insufficient remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the
4533 The request was judged to be small, so the possibility to trap it
4534 depends on the way perl was compiled. By default it is not trappable.
4535 However, if compiled for this, Perl may use the contents of C<$^M> as an
4536 emergency pool after die()ing with this message. In this case the error
4537 is trappable I<once>, and the error message will include the line and file
4538 where the failed request happened.
4540 =item Out of memory during ridiculously large request
4542 (F) You can't allocate more than 2^31+"small amount" bytes. This error
4543 is most likely to be caused by a typo in the Perl program. e.g.,
4544 C<$arr[time]> instead of C<$arr[$time]>.
4546 =item Out of memory for yacc stack
4548 (F) The yacc parser wanted to grow its stack so it could continue
4549 parsing, but realloc() wouldn't give it more memory, virtual or
4552 =item '.' outside of string in pack
4554 (F) The argument to a '.' in your template tried to move the working
4555 position to before the start of the packed string being built.
4557 =item '@' outside of string in unpack
4559 (F) You had a template that specified an absolute position outside
4560 the string being unpacked. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
4562 =item '@' outside of string with malformed UTF-8 in unpack
4564 (F) You had a template that specified an absolute position outside
4565 the string being unpacked. The string being unpacked was also invalid
4566 UTF-8. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
4568 =item overload arg '%s' is invalid
4570 (W overload) The L<overload> pragma was passed an argument it did not
4571 recognize. Did you mistype an operator?
4573 =item Overloaded dereference did not return a reference
4575 (F) An object with an overloaded dereference operator was dereferenced,
4576 but the overloaded operation did not return a reference. See
4579 =item Overloaded qr did not return a REGEXP
4581 (F) An object with a C<qr> overload was used as part of a match, but the
4582 overloaded operation didn't return a compiled regexp. See L<overload>.
4584 =item %s package attribute may clash with future reserved word: %s
4586 (W reserved) A lowercase attribute name was used that had a
4587 package-specific handler. That name might have a meaning to Perl itself
4588 some day, even though it doesn't yet. Perhaps you should use a
4589 mixed-case attribute name, instead. See L<attributes>.
4591 =item pack/unpack repeat count overflow
4593 (F) You can't specify a repeat count so large that it overflows your
4594 signed integers. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
4598 (W io) A single call to write() produced more lines than can fit on a
4599 page. See L<perlform>.
4603 (P) An internal error.
4605 =item panic: attempt to call %s in %s
4607 (P) One of the file test operators entered a code branch that calls
4608 an ACL related-function, but that function is not available on this
4609 platform. Earlier checks mean that it should not be possible to
4610 enter this branch on this platform.
4612 =item panic: child pseudo-process was never scheduled
4614 (P) A child pseudo-process in the ithreads implementation on Windows
4615 was not scheduled within the time period allowed and therefore was not
4616 able to initialize properly.
4618 =item panic: ck_grep, type=%u
4620 (P) Failed an internal consistency check trying to compile a grep.
4622 =item panic: corrupt saved stack index %ld
4624 (P) The savestack was requested to restore more localized values than
4625 there are in the savestack.
4627 =item panic: del_backref
4629 (P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to reset a weak
4632 =item panic: do_subst
4634 (P) The internal pp_subst() routine was called with invalid operational
4637 =item panic: do_trans_%s
4639 (P) The internal do_trans routines were called with invalid operational
4642 =item panic: fold_constants JMPENV_PUSH returned %d
4644 (P) While attempting folding constants an exception other than an C<eval>
4647 =item panic: frexp: %f
4649 (P) The library function frexp() failed, making printf("%f") impossible.
4651 =item panic: goto, type=%u, ix=%ld
4653 (P) We popped the context stack to a context with the specified label,
4654 and then discovered it wasn't a context we know how to do a goto in.
4656 =item panic: gp_free failed to free glob pointer
4658 (P) The internal routine used to clear a typeglob's entries tried
4659 repeatedly, but each time something re-created entries in the glob.
4660 Most likely the glob contains an object with a reference back to
4661 the glob and a destructor that adds a new object to the glob.
4663 =item panic: INTERPCASEMOD, %s
4665 (P) The lexer got into a bad state at a case modifier.
4667 =item panic: INTERPCONCAT, %s
4669 (P) The lexer got into a bad state parsing a string with brackets.
4671 =item panic: kid popen errno read
4673 (F) A forked child returned an incomprehensible message about its errno.
4675 =item panic: last, type=%u
4677 (P) We popped the context stack to a block context, and then discovered
4678 it wasn't a block context.
4680 =item panic: leave_scope clearsv
4682 (P) A writable lexical variable became read-only somehow within the
4685 =item panic: leave_scope inconsistency %u
4687 (P) The savestack probably got out of sync. At least, there was an
4688 invalid enum on the top of it.
4690 =item panic: magic_killbackrefs
4692 (P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to reset all weak
4693 references to an object.
4695 =item panic: malloc, %s
4697 (P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of malloc.
4699 =item panic: memory wrap
4701 (P) Something tried to allocate either more memory than possible or a
4704 =item panic: pad_alloc, %p!=%p
4706 (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
4707 and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
4709 =item panic: pad_free curpad, %p!=%p
4711 (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
4712 and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
4714 =item panic: pad_free po
4716 (P) A zero scratch pad offset was detected internally. An attempt was
4717 made to free a target that had not been allocated to begin with.
4719 =item panic: pad_reset curpad, %p!=%p
4721 (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
4722 and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
4724 =item panic: pad_sv po
4726 (P) A zero scratch pad offset was detected internally. Most likely
4727 an operator needed a target but that target had not been allocated
4728 for whatever reason.
4730 =item panic: pad_swipe curpad, %p!=%p
4732 (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
4733 and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
4735 =item panic: pad_swipe po
4737 (P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected internally.
4739 =item panic: pp_iter, type=%u
4741 (P) The foreach iterator got called in a non-loop context frame.
4743 =item panic: pp_match%s
4745 (P) The internal pp_match() routine was called with invalid operational
4748 =item panic: realloc, %s
4750 (P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of realloc.
4752 =item panic: reference miscount on nsv in sv_replace() (%d != 1)
4754 (P) The internal sv_replace() function was handed a new SV with a
4755 reference count other than 1.
4757 =item panic: restartop in %s
4759 (P) Some internal routine requested a goto (or something like it), and
4760 didn't supply the destination.
4762 =item panic: return, type=%u
4764 (P) We popped the context stack to a subroutine or eval context, and
4765 then discovered it wasn't a subroutine or eval context.
4767 =item panic: scan_num, %s
4769 (P) scan_num() got called on something that wasn't a number.
4771 =item panic: Sequence (?{...}): no code block found in regex m/%s/
4773 (P) While compiling a pattern that has embedded (?{}) or (??{}) code
4774 blocks, perl couldn't locate the code block that should have already been
4775 seen and compiled by perl before control passed to the regex compiler.
4777 =item panic: strxfrm() gets absurd - a => %u, ab => %u
4779 (P) The interpreter's sanity check of the C function strxfrm() failed.
4780 In your current locale the returned transformation of the string "ab"
4781 is shorter than that of the string "a", which makes no sense.
4783 =item panic: sv_chop %s
4785 (P) The sv_chop() routine was passed a position that is not within the
4786 scalar's string buffer.
4788 =item panic: sv_insert, midend=%p, bigend=%p
4790 (P) The sv_insert() routine was told to remove mo