oops, backout bogus change#3545
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perldiag.pod
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a0d0e21e 1=head1 NAME
2
3perldiag - various Perl diagnostics
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7These messages are classified as follows (listed in increasing order of
8desperation):
9
10 (W) A warning (optional).
11 (D) A deprecation (optional).
12 (S) A severe warning (mandatory).
13 (F) A fatal error (trappable).
14 (P) An internal error you should never see (trappable).
54310121 15 (X) A very fatal error (nontrappable).
cb1a09d0 16 (A) An alien error message (not generated by Perl).
a0d0e21e 17
748a9306 18Optional warnings are enabled by using the B<-w> switch. Warnings may
68dc0745 19be captured by setting C<$SIG{__WARN__}> to a reference to a routine that
20will be called on each warning instead of printing it. See L<perlvar>.
748a9306 21Trappable errors may be trapped using the eval operator. See
22L<perlfunc/eval>.
a0d0e21e 23
24Some of these messages are generic. Spots that vary are denoted with a %s,
2ba9eb46 25just as in a printf format. Note that some messages start with a %s!
702d120d 26The symbols C<"%(-?@> sort before the letters, while C<[> and C<\> sort after.
a0d0e21e 27
28=over 4
29
30=item "my" variable %s can't be in a package
31
32(F) Lexically scoped variables aren't in a package, so it doesn't make sense
33to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the front. Use local()
34if you want to localize a package variable.
35
9fbbe825 36=item "my" variable %s masks earlier declaration in same %s
2ba9eb46 37
9fbbe825 38(W) A lexical variable has been redeclared in the current scope or statement,
39effectively eliminating all access to the previous instance. This is almost
40always a typographical error. Note that the earlier variable will still exist
2ba9eb46 41until the end of the scope or until all closure referents to it are
42destroyed.
43
a0d0e21e 44=item "no" not allowed in expression
45
46(F) The "no" keyword is recognized and executed at compile time, and returns
47no useful value. See L<perlmod>.
48
49=item "use" not allowed in expression
50
51(F) The "use" keyword is recognized and executed at compile time, and returns
52no useful value. See L<perlmod>.
53
f61d411c 54=item '!' allowed only after types %s
ef54e1a4 55
f61d411c 56(F) The '!' is allowed in pack() and unpack() only after certain types.
57See L<perlfunc/pack>.
ef54e1a4 58
a0d0e21e 59=item % may only be used in unpack
60
5f05dabc 61(F) You can't pack a string by supplying a checksum, because the
a0d0e21e 62checksumming process loses information, and you can't go the other
63way. See L<perlfunc/unpack>.
64
c9f97d15 65=item /%s/: Unrecognized escape \\%c passed through
66
67(W) You used a backslash-character combination which is not recognized
68by Perl. This combination appears in an interpolated variable or a
69C<'>-delimited regular expression.
70
a0d0e21e 71=item %s (...) interpreted as function
72
73(W) You've run afoul of the rule that says that any list operator followed
8b1a09fc 74by parentheses turns into a function, with all the list operators arguments
5f05dabc 75found inside the parentheses. See L<perlop/Terms and List Operators (Leftward)>.
a0d0e21e 76
77=item %s argument is not a HASH element
78
5f05dabc 79(F) The argument to exists() must be a hash element, such as
a0d0e21e 80
81 $foo{$bar}
82 $ref->[12]->{"susie"}
83
5f05dabc 84=item %s argument is not a HASH element or slice
85
86(F) The argument to delete() must be either a hash element, such as
87
88 $foo{$bar}
89 $ref->[12]->{"susie"}
90
91or a hash slice, such as
92
93 @foo{$bar, $baz, $xyzzy}
94 @{$ref->[12]}{"susie", "queue"}
95
a0d0e21e 96=item %s did not return a true value
97
98(F) A required (or used) file must return a true value to indicate that
99it compiled correctly and ran its initialization code correctly. It's
100traditional to end such a file with a "1;", though any true value would
101do. See L<perlfunc/require>.
102
103=item %s found where operator expected
104
105(S) The Perl lexer knows whether to expect a term or an operator. If it
106sees what it knows to be a term when it was expecting to see an operator,
107it gives you this warning. Usually it indicates that an operator or
108delimiter was omitted, such as a semicolon.
109
f86702cc 110=item %s had compilation errors
a0d0e21e 111
112(F) The final summary message when a C<perl -c> fails.
113
f86702cc 114=item %s has too many errors
a0d0e21e 115
116(F) The parser has given up trying to parse the program after 10 errors.
117Further error messages would likely be uninformative.
118
119=item %s matches null string many times
120
121(W) The pattern you've specified would be an infinite loop if the
122regular expression engine didn't specifically check for that. See L<perlre>.
123
124=item %s never introduced
125
126(S) The symbol in question was declared but somehow went out of scope
127before it could possibly have been used.
128
129=item %s syntax OK
130
131(F) The final summary message when a C<perl -c> succeeds.
132
f86702cc 133=item %s: Command not found
cb1a09d0 134
135(A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead
3a52c276 136of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
137Perl yourself.
cb1a09d0 138
f86702cc 139=item %s: Expression syntax
cb1a09d0 140
141(A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead
3a52c276 142of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
143Perl yourself.
cb1a09d0 144
f86702cc 145=item %s: Undefined variable
cb1a09d0 146
147(A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead
3a52c276 148of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
149Perl yourself.
cb1a09d0 150
151=item %s: not found
152
8b1a09fc 153(A) You've accidentally run your script through the Bourne shell
3a52c276 154instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script
cb1a09d0 155into Perl yourself.
156
a99e4ac2 157=item (in cleanup) %s
158
159(W) This prefix usually indicates that a DESTROY() method raised
160the indicated exception. Since destructors are usually called by
161the system at arbitrary points during execution, and often a vast
162number of times, the warning is issued only once for any number
163of failures that would otherwise result in the same message being
164repeated.
165
166Failure of user callbacks dispatched using the C<G_KEEPERR> flag
167could also result in this warning. See L<perlcall/G_KEEPERR>.
168
702d120d 169=item (Missing semicolon on previous line?)
170
171(S) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message "%s
172found where operator expected". Don't automatically put a semicolon on
173the previous line just because you saw this message.
174
a0d0e21e 175=item B<-P> not allowed for setuid/setgid script
176
177(F) The script would have to be opened by the C preprocessor by name,
178which provides a race condition that breaks security.
179
180=item C<-T> and C<-B> not implemented on filehandles
181
182(F) Perl can't peek at the stdio buffer of filehandles when it doesn't
183know about your kind of stdio. You'll have to use a filename instead.
184
08e9d68e 185=item C<-p> destination: %s
186
187(F) An error occurred during the implicit output invoked by the C<-p>
188command-line switch. (This output goes to STDOUT unless you've
189redirected it with select().)
190
a5f75d66 191=item 500 Server error
192
193See Server error.
194
a0d0e21e 195=item ?+* follows nothing in regexp
196
197(F) You started a regular expression with a quantifier. Backslash it
198if you meant it literally. See L<perlre>.
199
200=item @ outside of string
201
2ba9eb46 202(F) You had a pack template that specified an absolute position outside
a0d0e21e 203the string being unpacked. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
204
742c16d1 205=item <> should be quotes
206
207(F) You wrote C<require E<lt>fileE<gt>> when you should have written
208C<require 'file'>.
209
a0d0e21e 210=item accept() on closed fd
211
212(W) You tried to do an accept on a closed socket. Did you forget to check
213the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/accept>.
214
215=item Allocation too large: %lx
216
54310121 217(X) You can't allocate more than 64K on an MS-DOS machine.
55497cff 218
2ae324a7 219=item Applying %s to %s will act on scalar(%s)
220
2c268ad5 221(W) The pattern match (//), substitution (s///), and transliteration (tr///)
2ae324a7 222operators work on scalar values. If you apply one of them to an array
223or a hash, it will convert the array or hash to a scalar value -- the
224length of an array, or the population info of a hash -- and then work on
225that scalar value. This is probably not what you meant to do. See
226L<perlfunc/grep> and L<perlfunc/map> for alternatives.
227
a0d0e21e 228=item Arg too short for msgsnd
229
230(F) msgsnd() requires a string at least as long as sizeof(long).
231
748a9306 232=item Ambiguous use of %s resolved as %s
233
234(W)(S) You said something that may not be interpreted the way
235you thought. Normally it's pretty easy to disambiguate it by supplying
5f05dabc 236a missing quote, operator, parenthesis pair or declaration.
748a9306 237
5315574d 238=item Ambiguous call resolved as CORE::%s(), qualify as such or use &
239
240(W) A subroutine you have declared has the same name as a Perl keyword,
241and you have used the name without qualification for calling one or the
242other. Perl decided to call the builtin because the subroutine is
243not imported.
244
245To force interpretation as a subroutine call, either put an ampersand
246before the subroutine name, or qualify the name with its package.
247Alternatively, you can import the subroutine (or pretend that it's
248imported with the C<use subs> pragma).
249
250To silently interpret it as the Perl operator, use the C<CORE::> prefix
251on the operator (e.g. C<CORE::log($x)>) or by declaring the subroutine
252to be an object method (see L<attrs>).
253
a0d0e21e 254=item Args must match #! line
255
256(F) The setuid emulator requires that the arguments Perl was invoked
3a52c276 257with match the arguments specified on the #! line. Since some systems
258impose a one-argument limit on the #! line, try combining switches;
259for example, turn C<-w -U> into C<-wU>.
a0d0e21e 260
f86702cc 261=item Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s
a0d0e21e 262
263(W) The indicated string was fed as an argument to an operator that
264expected a numeric value instead. If you're fortunate the message
265will identify which operator was so unfortunate.
266
267=item Array @%s missing the @ in argument %d of %s()
268
269(D) Really old Perl let you omit the @ on array names in some spots. This
270is now heavily deprecated.
271
272=item assertion botched: %s
273
274(P) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal failure.
275
276=item Assertion failed: file "%s"
277
278(P) A general assertion failed. The file in question must be examined.
279
280=item Assignment to both a list and a scalar
281
282(F) If you assign to a conditional operator, the 2nd and 3rd arguments
283must either both be scalars or both be lists. Otherwise Perl won't
284know which context to supply to the right side.
285
286=item Attempt to free non-arena SV: 0x%lx
287
288(P) All SV objects are supposed to be allocated from arenas that will
289be garbage collected on exit. An SV was discovered to be outside any
290of those arenas.
291
54310121 292=item Attempt to free nonexistent shared string
bbce6d69 293
294(P) Perl maintains a reference counted internal table of strings to
295optimize the storage and access of hash keys and other strings. This
296indicates someone tried to decrement the reference count of a string
297that can no longer be found in the table.
298
a0d0e21e 299=item Attempt to free temp prematurely
300
301(W) Mortalized values are supposed to be freed by the free_tmps()
302routine. This indicates that something else is freeing the SV before
303the free_tmps() routine gets a chance, which means that the free_tmps()
304routine will be freeing an unreferenced scalar when it does try to free
305it.
306
307=item Attempt to free unreferenced glob pointers
308
309(P) The reference counts got screwed up on symbol aliases.
310
311=item Attempt to free unreferenced scalar
312
313(W) Perl went to decrement the reference count of a scalar to see if it
314would go to 0, and discovered that it had already gone to 0 earlier,
315and should have been freed, and in fact, probably was freed. This
316could indicate that SvREFCNT_dec() was called too many times, or that
317SvREFCNT_inc() was called too few times, or that the SV was mortalized
318when it shouldn't have been, or that memory has been corrupted.
319
84902520 320=item Attempt to pack pointer to temporary value
321
322(W) You tried to pass a temporary value (like the result of a
323function, or a computed expression) to the "p" pack() template. This
324means the result contains a pointer to a location that could become
325invalid anytime, even before the end of the current statement. Use
326literals or global values as arguments to the "p" pack() template to
327avoid this warning.
328
b7a902f4 329=item Attempt to use reference as lvalue in substr
330
331(W) You supplied a reference as the first argument to substr() used
8b1a09fc 332as an lvalue, which is pretty strange. Perhaps you forgot to
b7a902f4 333dereference it first. See L<perlfunc/substr>.
334
a0d0e21e 335=item Bad arg length for %s, is %d, should be %d
336
337(F) You passed a buffer of the wrong size to one of msgctl(), semctl() or
2ba9eb46 338shmctl(). In C parlance, the correct sizes are, respectively,
5f05dabc 339S<sizeof(struct msqid_ds *)>, S<sizeof(struct semid_ds *)>, and
a0d0e21e 340S<sizeof(struct shmid_ds *)>.
341
a0d0e21e 342=item Bad filehandle: %s
343
344(F) A symbol was passed to something wanting a filehandle, but the symbol
345has no filehandle associated with it. Perhaps you didn't do an open(), or
346did it in another package.
347
348=item Bad free() ignored
349
350(S) An internal routine called free() on something that had never been
33c8a3fe 351malloc()ed in the first place. Mandatory, but can be disabled by
352setting environment variable C<PERL_BADFREE> to 1.
353
354This message can be quite often seen with DB_File on systems with
355"hard" dynamic linking, like C<AIX> and C<OS/2>. It is a bug of
356C<Berkeley DB> which is left unnoticed if C<DB> uses I<forgiving>
357system malloc().
a0d0e21e 358
aa689395 359=item Bad hash
360
361(P) One of the internal hash routines was passed a null HV pointer.
362
f1192cee 363=item Bad index while coercing array into hash
364
6f54a448 365(F) The index looked up in the hash found as the 0'th element of a
366pseudo-hash is not legal. Index values must be at 1 or greater.
367See L<perlref>.
57079c46 368
a0d0e21e 369=item Bad name after %s::
370
371(F) You started to name a symbol by using a package prefix, and then didn't
372finish the symbol. In particular, you can't interpolate outside of quotes,
373so
374
375 $var = 'myvar';
376 $sym = mypack::$var;
377
378is not the same as
379
380 $var = 'myvar';
381 $sym = "mypack::$var";
382
383=item Bad symbol for array
384
385(P) An internal request asked to add an array entry to something that
386wasn't a symbol table entry.
387
388=item Bad symbol for filehandle
389
390(P) An internal request asked to add a filehandle entry to something that
391wasn't a symbol table entry.
392
393=item Bad symbol for hash
394
395(P) An internal request asked to add a hash entry to something that
396wasn't a symbol table entry.
397
8b1a09fc 398=item Badly placed ()'s
cb1a09d0 399
400(A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead
3a52c276 401of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
402Perl yourself.
cb1a09d0 403
3fe9a6f1 404=item Bareword "%s" not allowed while "strict subs" in use
405
406(F) With "strict subs" in use, a bareword is only allowed as a
d98d5fff 407subroutine identifier, in curly brackets or to the left of the "=>" symbol.
54310121 408Perhaps you need to predeclare a subroutine?
3fe9a6f1 409
c3e0f903 410=item Bareword "%s" refers to nonexistent package
411
412(W) You used a qualified bareword of the form C<Foo::>, but
413the compiler saw no other uses of that namespace before that point.
414Perhaps you need to predeclare a package?
415
a0d0e21e 416=item BEGIN failed--compilation aborted
417
418(F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing a BEGIN subroutine.
419Compilation stops immediately and the interpreter is exited.
420
68dc0745 421=item BEGIN not safe after errors--compilation aborted
422
423(F) Perl found a C<BEGIN {}> subroutine (or a C<use> directive, which
424implies a C<BEGIN {}>) after one or more compilation errors had
425already occurred. Since the intended environment for the C<BEGIN {}>
426could not be guaranteed (due to the errors), and since subsequent code
427likely depends on its correct operation, Perl just gave up.
428
a0d0e21e 429=item bind() on closed fd
430
431(W) You tried to do a bind on a closed socket. Did you forget to check
432the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/bind>.
433
4633a7c4 434=item Bizarre copy of %s in %s
435
436(P) Perl detected an attempt to copy an internal value that is not copiable.
437
f675dbe5 438=item Buffer overflow in prime_env_iter: %s
439
440(W) A warning peculiar to VMS. While Perl was preparing to iterate over
441%ENV, it encountered a logical name or symbol definition which was too long,
442so it was truncated to the string shown.
443
a0d0e21e 444=item Callback called exit
445
446(F) A subroutine invoked from an external package via perl_call_sv()
447exited by calling exit.
448
0a753a76 449=item Can't "goto" outside a block
450
451(F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump out of what might look
452like a block, except that it isn't a proper block. This usually
453occurs if you tried to jump out of a sort() block or subroutine, which
454is a no-no. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
455
84902520 456=item Can't "goto" into the middle of a foreach loop
457
458(F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into the middle of a
459foreach loop. You can't get there from here. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
460
a0d0e21e 461=item Can't "last" outside a block
462
463(F) A "last" statement was executed to break out of the current block,
464except that there's this itty bitty problem called there isn't a
465current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't count as a
0a753a76 466"loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(). You can usually double
467the curlies to get the same effect though, because the inner curlies
468will be considered a block that loops once. See L<perlfunc/last>.
a0d0e21e 469
470=item Can't "next" outside a block
471
472(F) A "next" statement was executed to reiterate the current block, but
473there isn't a current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't
0a753a76 474count as a "loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(). You can
475usually double the curlies to get the same effect though, because the inner
54310121 476curlies will be considered a block that loops once. See L<perlfunc/next>.
a0d0e21e 477
f675dbe5 478=item Can't read CRTL environ
479
480(S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read an element of %ENV
481from the CRTL's internal environment array and discovered the array was
482missing. You need to figure out where your CRTL misplaced its environ
483or define F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> (see L<perlvms>) so that environ is not searched.
484
a0d0e21e 485=item Can't "redo" outside a block
486
487(F) A "redo" statement was executed to restart the current block, but
488there isn't a current block. Note that an "if" or "else" block doesn't
0a753a76 489count as a "loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(). You can
490usually double the curlies to get the same effect though, because the inner
54310121 491curlies will be considered a block that loops once. See L<perlfunc/redo>.
a0d0e21e 492
493=item Can't bless non-reference value
494
495(F) Only hard references may be blessed. This is how Perl "enforces"
496encapsulation of objects. See L<perlobj>.
497
498=item Can't break at that line
499
54310121 500(S) A warning intended to only be printed while running within the debugger, indicating
a0d0e21e 501the line number specified wasn't the location of a statement that could
502be stopped at.
503
504=item Can't call method "%s" in empty package "%s"
505
506(F) You called a method correctly, and it correctly indicated a package
507functioning as a class, but that package doesn't have ANYTHING defined
508in it, let alone methods. See L<perlobj>.
509
510=item Can't call method "%s" on unblessed reference
511
54310121 512(F) A method call must know in what package it's supposed to run. It
a0d0e21e 513ordinarily finds this out from the object reference you supply, but
514you didn't supply an object reference in this case. A reference isn't
515an object reference until it has been blessed. See L<perlobj>.
516
517=item Can't call method "%s" without a package or object reference
518
519(F) You used the syntax of a method call, but the slot filled by the
520object reference or package name contains an expression that returns
72b5445b 521a defined value which is neither an object reference nor a package name.
522Something like this will reproduce the error:
523
524 $BADREF = 42;
525 process $BADREF 1,2,3;
526 $BADREF->process(1,2,3);
527
528=item Can't call method "%s" on an undefined value
529
530(F) You used the syntax of a method call, but the slot filled by the
531object reference or package name contains an undefined value.
a0d0e21e 532Something like this will reproduce the error:
533
534 $BADREF = undef;
535 process $BADREF 1,2,3;
536 $BADREF->process(1,2,3);
537
538=item Can't chdir to %s
539
540(F) You called C<perl -x/foo/bar>, but C</foo/bar> is not a directory
541that you can chdir to, possibly because it doesn't exist.
542
104d25b7 543=item Can't check filesystem of script "%s"
544
545(P) For some reason you can't check the filesystem of the script for nosuid.
546
a0d0e21e 547=item Can't coerce %s to integer in %s
548
549(F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table entries
55497cff 550(typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are. So you can't
a0d0e21e 551say things like:
552
553 *foo += 1;
554
555You CAN say
556
557 $foo = *foo;
558 $foo += 1;
559
560but then $foo no longer contains a glob.
561
562=item Can't coerce %s to number in %s
563
564(F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table entries
55497cff 565(typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are.
a0d0e21e 566
567=item Can't coerce %s to string in %s
568
569(F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table entries
55497cff 570(typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are.
a0d0e21e 571
57079c46 572=item Can't coerce array into hash
573
574(F) You used an array where a hash was expected, but the array has no
575information on how to map from keys to array indices. You can do that
576only with arrays that have a hash reference at index 0.
577
a0d0e21e 578=item Can't create pipe mailbox
579
748a9306 580(P) An error peculiar to VMS. The process is suffering from exhausted quotas
581or other plumbing problems.
a0d0e21e 582
583=item Can't declare %s in my
584
5f05dabc 585(F) Only scalar, array, and hash variables may be declared as lexical variables.
a0d0e21e 586They must have ordinary identifiers as names.
587
588=item Can't do inplace edit on %s: %s
589
590(S) The creation of the new file failed for the indicated reason.
591
54310121 592=item Can't do inplace edit without backup
a0d0e21e 593
54310121 594(F) You're on a system such as MS-DOS that gets confused if you try reading
3fe9a6f1 595from a deleted (but still opened) file. You have to say C<-i.bak>, or some
a0d0e21e 596such.
597
8b1a09fc 598=item Can't do inplace edit: %s E<gt> 14 characters
a0d0e21e 599
600(S) There isn't enough room in the filename to make a backup name for the file.
601
602=item Can't do inplace edit: %s is not a regular file
603
604(S) You tried to use the B<-i> switch on a special file, such as a file in
605/dev, or a FIFO. The file was ignored.
606
607=item Can't do setegid!
608
609(P) The setegid() call failed for some reason in the setuid emulator
610of suidperl.
611
612=item Can't do seteuid!
613
614(P) The setuid emulator of suidperl failed for some reason.
615
616=item Can't do setuid
617
618(F) This typically means that ordinary perl tried to exec suidperl to
619do setuid emulation, but couldn't exec it. It looks for a name of the
620form sperl5.000 in the same directory that the perl executable resides
621under the name perl5.000, typically /usr/local/bin on Unix machines.
622If the file is there, check the execute permissions. If it isn't, ask
623your sysadmin why he and/or she removed it.
624
625=item Can't do waitpid with flags
626
627(F) This machine doesn't have either waitpid() or wait4(), so only waitpid()
628without flags is emulated.
629
8b1a09fc 630=item Can't do {n,m} with n E<gt> m
a0d0e21e 631
632(F) Minima must be less than or equal to maxima. If you really want
633your regexp to match something 0 times, just put {0}. See L<perlre>.
634
635=item Can't emulate -%s on #! line
636
637(F) The #! line specifies a switch that doesn't make sense at this point.
638For example, it'd be kind of silly to put a B<-x> on the #! line.
639
640=item Can't exec "%s": %s
641
5f05dabc 642(W) An system(), exec(), or piped open call could not execute the named
a0d0e21e 643program for the indicated reason. Typical reasons include: the permissions
644were wrong on the file, the file wasn't found in C<$ENV{PATH}>, the
645executable in question was compiled for another architecture, or the
646#! line in a script points to an interpreter that can't be run for
647similar reasons. (Or maybe your system doesn't support #! at all.)
648
649=item Can't exec %s
650
651(F) Perl was trying to execute the indicated program for you because that's
652what the #! line said. If that's not what you wanted, you may need to
653mention "perl" on the #! line somewhere.
654
655=item Can't execute %s
656
2a92aaa0 657(F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the copies of the script to execute found
658in the PATH did not have correct permissions.
659
660=item Can't find %s on PATH, '.' not in PATH
661
662(F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the script to execute could not be found
663in the PATH, or at least not with the correct permissions. The script
664exists in the current directory, but PATH prohibits running it.
665
666=item Can't find %s on PATH
667
a0d0e21e 668(F) You used the B<-S> switch, but the script to execute could not be found
2a92aaa0 669in the PATH.
a0d0e21e 670
671=item Can't find label %s
672
673(F) You said to goto a label that isn't mentioned anywhere that it's possible
674for us to go to. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
675
676=item Can't find string terminator %s anywhere before EOF
677
678(F) Perl strings can stretch over multiple lines. This message means that
5f05dabc 679the closing delimiter was omitted. Because bracketed quotes count nesting
a0d0e21e 680levels, the following is missing its final parenthesis:
681
fb73857a 682 print q(The character '(' starts a side comment.);
683
684If you're getting this error from a here-document, you may have
685included unseen whitespace before or after your closing tag. A good
686programmer's editor will have a way to help you find these characters.
a0d0e21e 687
688=item Can't fork
689
690(F) A fatal error occurred while trying to fork while opening a pipeline.
691
748a9306 692=item Can't get filespec - stale stat buffer?
693
694(S) A warning peculiar to VMS. This arises because of the difference between
695access checks under VMS and under the Unix model Perl assumes. Under VMS,
696access checks are done by filename, rather than by bits in the stat buffer, so
697that ACLs and other protections can be taken into account. Unfortunately, Perl
698assumes that the stat buffer contains all the necessary information, and passes
699it, instead of the filespec, to the access checking routine. It will try to
700retrieve the filespec using the device name and FID present in the stat buffer,
701but this works only if you haven't made a subsequent call to the CRTL stat()
5f05dabc 702routine, because the device name is overwritten with each call. If this warning
748a9306 703appears, the name lookup failed, and the access checking routine gave up and
704returned FALSE, just to be conservative. (Note: The access checking routine
705knows about the Perl C<stat> operator and file tests, so you shouldn't ever
706see this warning in response to a Perl command; it arises only if some internal
707code takes stat buffers lightly.)
708
a0d0e21e 709=item Can't get pipe mailbox device name
710
748a9306 711(P) An error peculiar to VMS. After creating a mailbox to act as a pipe, Perl
712can't retrieve its name for later use.
a0d0e21e 713
714=item Can't get SYSGEN parameter value for MAXBUF
715
748a9306 716(P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl asked $GETSYI how big you want your
717mailbox buffers to be, and didn't get an answer.
a0d0e21e 718
719=item Can't goto subroutine outside a subroutine
720
721(F) The deeply magical "goto subroutine" call can only replace one subroutine
722call for another. It can't manufacture one out of whole cloth. In general
5f05dabc 723you should be calling it out of only an AUTOLOAD routine anyway. See
a0d0e21e 724L<perlfunc/goto>.
725
b150fb22 726=item Can't goto subroutine from an eval-string
727
728(F) The "goto subroutine" call can't be used to jump out of an eval "string".
729(You can use it to jump out of an eval {BLOCK}, but you probably don't want to.)
730
706a304b 731=item Can't localize through a reference
4633a7c4 732
706a304b 733(F) You said something like C<local $$ref>, which Perl can't currently
734handle, because when it goes to restore the old value of whatever $ref
735pointed to after the scope of the local() is finished, it can't be
736sure that $ref will still be a reference.
4633a7c4 737
748a9306 738=item Can't localize lexical variable %s
739
2ba9eb46 740(F) You used local on a variable name that was previously declared as a
748a9306 741lexical variable using "my". This is not allowed. If you want to
742localize a package variable of the same name, qualify it with the
743package name.
744
0ebe0038 745=item Can't localize pseudo-hash element
746
747(F) You said something like C<local $ar-E<gt>{'key'}>, where $ar is
748a reference to a pseudo-hash. That hasn't been implemented yet, but
749you can get a similar effect by localizing the corresponding array
750element directly -- C<local $ar-E<gt>[$ar-E<gt>[0]{'key'}]>.
751
4727527e 752=item Can't locate auto/%s.al in @INC
753
754(F) A function (or method) was called in a package which allows autoload,
755but there is no function to autoload. Most probable causes are a misprint
756in a function/method name or a failure to C<AutoSplit> the file, say, by
757doing C<make install>.
758
ec889f3a 759=item Can't locate %s
760
761(F) You said to C<do> (or C<require>, or C<use>) a file that couldn't be
762found. Perl looks for the file in all the locations mentioned in @INC,
763unless the file name included the full path to the file. Perhaps you need
764to set the PERL5LIB or PERL5OPT environment variable to say where the extra
765library is, or maybe the script needs to add the library name to @INC. Or
766maybe you just misspelled the name of the file. See L<perlfunc/require>
767and L<lib>.
a0d0e21e 768
769=item Can't locate object method "%s" via package "%s"
770
771(F) You called a method correctly, and it correctly indicated a package
772functioning as a class, but that package doesn't define that particular
2ba9eb46 773method, nor does any of its base classes. See L<perlobj>.
a0d0e21e 774
775=item Can't locate package %s for @%s::ISA
776
777(W) The @ISA array contained the name of another package that doesn't seem
778to exist.
779
3e3baf6d 780=item Can't make list assignment to \%ENV on this system
781
782(F) List assignment to %ENV is not supported on some systems, notably VMS.
783
a0d0e21e 784=item Can't modify %s in %s
785
786(F) You aren't allowed to assign to the item indicated, or otherwise try to
5f05dabc 787change it, such as with an auto-increment.
a0d0e21e 788
54310121 789=item Can't modify nonexistent substring
a0d0e21e 790
791(P) The internal routine that does assignment to a substr() was handed
792a NULL.
793
5f05dabc 794=item Can't msgrcv to read-only var
a0d0e21e 795
5f05dabc 796(F) The target of a msgrcv must be modifiable to be used as a receive
a0d0e21e 797buffer.
798
799=item Can't open %s: %s
800
08e9d68e 801(S) The implicit opening of a file through use of the C<E<lt>E<gt>>
802filehandle, either implicitly under the C<-n> or C<-p> command-line
803switches, or explicitly, failed for the indicated reason. Usually this
804is because you don't have read permission for a file which you named
805on the command line.
a0d0e21e 806
807=item Can't open bidirectional pipe
808
809(W) You tried to say C<open(CMD, "|cmd|")>, which is not supported. You can
810try any of several modules in the Perl library to do this, such as
7e1af8bc 811IPC::Open2. Alternately, direct the pipe's output to a file using "E<gt>",
a0d0e21e 812and then read it in under a different file handle.
813
748a9306 814=item Can't open error file %s as stderr
815
816(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and
8b1a09fc 817couldn't open the file specified after '2E<gt>' or '2E<gt>E<gt>' on the
818command line for writing.
748a9306 819
820=item Can't open input file %s as stdin
821
822(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and
8b1a09fc 823couldn't open the file specified after 'E<lt>' on the command line for reading.
748a9306 824
825=item Can't open output file %s as stdout
826
827(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and
8b1a09fc 828couldn't open the file specified after 'E<gt>' or 'E<gt>E<gt>' on the command
829line for writing.
748a9306 830
831=item Can't open output pipe (name: %s)
832
833(P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and
834couldn't open the pipe into which to send data destined for stdout.
835
a0d0e21e 836=item Can't open perl script "%s": %s
837
838(F) The script you specified can't be opened for the indicated reason.
839
7bac28a0 840=item Can't redefine active sort subroutine %s
841
842(F) Perl optimizes the internal handling of sort subroutines and keeps
843pointers into them. You tried to redefine one such sort subroutine when it
844was currently active, which is not allowed. If you really want to do
845this, you should write C<sort { &func } @x> instead of C<sort func @x>.
846
a0d0e21e 847=item Can't rename %s to %s: %s, skipping file
848
849(S) The rename done by the B<-i> switch failed for some reason, probably because
850you don't have write permission to the directory.
851
748a9306 852=item Can't reopen input pipe (name: %s) in binary mode
853
854(P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl thought stdin was a pipe, and tried to
855reopen it to accept binary data. Alas, it failed.
856
a0d0e21e 857=item Can't reswap uid and euid
858
859(P) The setreuid() call failed for some reason in the setuid emulator
860of suidperl.
861
862=item Can't return outside a subroutine
863
864(F) The return statement was executed in mainline code, that is, where
865there was no subroutine call to return out of. See L<perlsub>.
866
867=item Can't stat script "%s"
868
869(P) For some reason you can't fstat() the script even though you have
870it open already. Bizarre.
871
872=item Can't swap uid and euid
873
874(P) The setreuid() call failed for some reason in the setuid emulator
875of suidperl.
876
877=item Can't take log of %g
878
fb73857a 879(F) For ordinary real numbers, you can't take the logarithm of a
880negative number or zero. There's a Math::Complex package that comes
881standard with Perl, though, if you really want to do that for
882the negative numbers.
a0d0e21e 883
884=item Can't take sqrt of %g
885
886(F) For ordinary real numbers, you can't take the square root of a
fb73857a 887negative number. There's a Math::Complex package that comes standard
888with Perl, though, if you really want to do that.
a0d0e21e 889
890=item Can't undef active subroutine
891
892(F) You can't undefine a routine that's currently running. You can,
893however, redefine it while it's running, and you can even undef the
894redefined subroutine while the old routine is running. Go figure.
895
896=item Can't unshift
897
898(F) You tried to unshift an "unreal" array that can't be unshifted, such
899as the main Perl stack.
900
901=item Can't upgrade that kind of scalar
902
903(P) The internal sv_upgrade routine adds "members" to an SV, making
904it into a more specialized kind of SV. The top several SV types are
905so specialized, however, that they cannot be interconverted. This
906message indicates that such a conversion was attempted.
907
908=item Can't upgrade to undef
909
910(P) The undefined SV is the bottom of the totem pole, in the scheme
911of upgradability. Upgrading to undef indicates an error in the
912code calling sv_upgrade.
913
1d2dff63 914=item Can't use %%! because Errno.pm is not available
915
916(F) The first time the %! hash is used, perl automatically loads the
917Errno.pm module. The Errno module is expected to tie the %! hash to
918provide symbolic names for C<$!> errno values.
919
c07a80fd 920=item Can't use "my %s" in sort comparison
921
922(F) The global variables $a and $b are reserved for sort comparisons.
8b1a09fc 923You mentioned $a or $b in the same line as the E<lt>=E<gt> or cmp operator,
c07a80fd 924and the variable had earlier been declared as a lexical variable.
925Either qualify the sort variable with the package name, or rename the
926lexical variable.
927
e9fa98b2 928=item Bad evalled substitution pattern
929
930(F) You've used the /e switch to evaluate the replacement for a
931substitution, but perl found a syntax error in the code to evaluate,
932most likely an unexpected right brace '}'.
933
a0d0e21e 934=item Can't use %s for loop variable
935
936(F) Only a simple scalar variable may be used as a loop variable on a foreach.
937
938=item Can't use %s ref as %s ref
939
940(F) You've mixed up your reference types. You have to dereference a
941reference of the type needed. You can use the ref() function to
942test the type of the reference, if need be.
943
748a9306 944=item Can't use \1 to mean $1 in expression
945
946(W) In an ordinary expression, backslash is a unary operator that creates
947a reference to its argument. The use of backslash to indicate a backreference
5f05dabc 948to a matched substring is valid only as part of a regular expression pattern.
748a9306 949Trying to do this in ordinary Perl code produces a value that prints
950out looking like SCALAR(0xdecaf). Use the $1 form instead.
951
44a8e56a 952=item Can't use bareword ("%s") as %s ref while \"strict refs\" in use
953
954(F) Only hard references are allowed by "strict refs". Symbolic references
955are disallowed. See L<perlref>.
956
748a9306 957=item Can't use string ("%s") as %s ref while "strict refs" in use
a0d0e21e 958
959(F) Only hard references are allowed by "strict refs". Symbolic references
960are disallowed. See L<perlref>.
961
962=item Can't use an undefined value as %s reference
963
964(F) A value used as either a hard reference or a symbolic reference must
54310121 965be a defined value. This helps to delurk some insidious errors.
a0d0e21e 966
a0d0e21e 967=item Can't use global %s in "my"
968
969(F) You tried to declare a magical variable as a lexical variable. This is
5f05dabc 970not allowed, because the magic can be tied to only one location (namely
a0d0e21e 971the global variable) and it would be incredibly confusing to have
972variables in your program that looked like magical variables but
973weren't.
974
748a9306 975=item Can't use subscript on %s
976
977(F) The compiler tried to interpret a bracketed expression as a
978subscript. But to the left of the brackets was an expression that
979didn't look like an array reference, or anything else subscriptable.
980
810b8aa5 981=item Can't weaken a nonreference
982
983(F) You attempted to weaken something that was not a reference. Only
984references can be weakened.
985
5f05dabc 986=item Can't x= to read-only value
a0d0e21e 987
988(F) You tried to repeat a constant value (often the undefined value) with
989an assignment operator, which implies modifying the value itself.
990Perhaps you need to copy the value to a temporary, and repeat that.
991
3f4520fe 992=item Can't find an opnumber for "%s"
b6c543e3 993
994(F) A string of a form C<CORE::word> was given to prototype(), but
995there is no builtin with the name C<word>.
996
3f4520fe 997=item Can't resolve method `%s' overloading `%s' in package `%s'
e7ea3e70 998
999(F|P) Error resolving overloading specified by a method name (as
1000opposed to a subroutine reference): no such method callable via the
1001package. If method name is C<???>, this is an internal error.
1002
4599a1de 1003=item Character class syntax [. .] is reserved for future extensions
1004
1005(W) Within regular expression character classes ([]) the syntax beginning
1006with "[." and ending with ".]" is reserved for future extensions.
1007If you need to represent those character sequences inside a regular
1008expression character class, just quote the square brackets with the
1009backslash: "\[." and ".\]".
1010
1011=item Character class syntax [: :] is reserved for future extensions
1012
1013(W) Within regular expression character classes ([]) the syntax beginning
1014with "[:" and ending with ":]" is reserved for future extensions.
1015If you need to represent those character sequences inside a regular
1016expression character class, just quote the square brackets with the
1017backslash: "\[:" and ":\]".
1018
1019=item Character class syntax [= =] is reserved for future extensions
1020
1021(W) Within regular expression character classes ([]) the syntax
1022beginning with "[=" and ending with "=]" is reserved for future extensions.
1023If you need to represent those character sequences inside a regular
1024expression character class, just quote the square brackets with the
1025backslash: "\[=" and "=\]".
1026
a0d0e21e 1027=item chmod: mode argument is missing initial 0
1028
1029(W) A novice will sometimes say
1030
1031 chmod 777, $filename
1032
1033not realizing that 777 will be interpreted as a decimal number, equivalent
1034to 01411. Octal constants are introduced with a leading 0 in Perl, as in C.
1035
8b1a09fc 1036=item Close on unopened file E<lt>%sE<gt>
a0d0e21e 1037
1038(W) You tried to close a filehandle that was never opened.
1039
7a2e2cd6 1040=item Compilation failed in require
1041
1042(F) Perl could not compile a file specified in a C<require> statement.
1043Perl uses this generic message when none of the errors that it encountered
1044were severe enough to halt compilation immediately.
1045
c3464db5 1046=item Complex regular subexpression recursion limit (%d) exceeded
1047
1048(W) The regular expression engine uses recursion in complex situations
1049where back-tracking is required. Recursion depth is limited to 32766,
1050or perhaps less in architectures where the stack cannot grow
1051arbitrarily. ("Simple" and "medium" situations are handled without
1052recursion and are not subject to a limit.) Try shortening the string
1053under examination; looping in Perl code (e.g. with C<while>) rather
1054than in the regular expression engine; or rewriting the regular
1055expression so that it is simpler or backtracks less. (See L<perlbook>
1056for information on I<Mastering Regular Expressions>.)
1057
a0d0e21e 1058=item connect() on closed fd
1059
1060(W) You tried to do a connect on a closed socket. Did you forget to check
1061the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/connect>.
1062
779c5bc9 1063=item Constant is not %s reference
1064
1065(F) A constant value (perhaps declared using the C<use constant> pragma)
1066is being dereferenced, but it amounts to the wrong type of reference. The
1067message indicates the type of reference that was expected. This usually
1068indicates a syntax error in dereferencing the constant value.
1069See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> and L<constant>.
1070
4cee8e80 1071=item Constant subroutine %s redefined
1072
1073(S) You redefined a subroutine which had previously been eligible for
1074inlining. See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> for commentary and
1075workarounds.
1076
9607fc9c 1077=item Constant subroutine %s undefined
1078
1079(S) You undefined a subroutine which had previously been eligible for
1080inlining. See L<perlsub/"Constant Functions"> for commentary and
1081workarounds.
1082
e7ea3e70 1083=item Copy method did not return a reference
1084
1085(F) The method which overloads "=" is buggy. See L<overload/Copy Constructor>.
1086
a0d0e21e 1087=item Corrupt malloc ptr 0x%lx at 0x%lx
1088
1089(P) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal failure.
1090
1091=item corrupted regexp pointers
1092
1093(P) The regular expression engine got confused by what the regular
1094expression compiler gave it.
1095
1096=item corrupted regexp program
1097
1098(P) The regular expression engine got passed a regexp program without
1099a valid magic number.
1100
1101=item Deep recursion on subroutine "%s"
1102
1103(W) This subroutine has called itself (directly or indirectly) 100
3e3baf6d 1104times more than it has returned. This probably indicates an infinite
a0d0e21e 1105recursion, unless you're writing strange benchmark programs, in which
1106case it indicates something else.
1107
69794302 1108=item defined(@array) is deprecated (and not really meaningful)
1109
1110(D) defined() is not usually useful on arrays because it checks for an
1111undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the array is empty,
1112just use C<if (@array) { # not empty }> for example.
1113
1114=item defined(%hash) is deprecated (and not really meaningful)
1115
1116(D) defined() is not usually useful on hashes because it checks for an
1117undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the hash is empty,
1118just use C<if (%hash) { # not empty }> for example.
1119
fc36a67e 1120=item Delimiter for here document is too long
1121
1122(F) In a here document construct like C<E<lt>E<lt>FOO>, the label
1123C<FOO> is too long for Perl to handle. You have to be seriously
1124twisted to write code that triggers this error.
1125
4633a7c4 1126=item Did you mean &%s instead?
1127
1128(W) You probably referred to an imported subroutine &FOO as $FOO or some such.
1129
748a9306 1130=item Did you mean $ or @ instead of %?
a0d0e21e 1131
748a9306 1132(W) You probably said %hash{$key} when you meant $hash{$key} or @hash{@keys}.
1133On the other hand, maybe you just meant %hash and got carried away.
1134
7e1af8bc 1135=item Died
5f05dabc 1136
1137(F) You passed die() an empty string (the equivalent of C<die "">) or
1138you called it with no args and both C<$@> and C<$_> were empty.
1139
54310121 1140=item Do you need to predeclare %s?
748a9306 1141
1142(S) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message "%s
1143found where operator expected". It often means a subroutine or module
1144name is being referenced that hasn't been declared yet. This may be
1145because of ordering problems in your file, or because of a missing
1146"sub", "package", "require", or "use" statement. If you're
1147referencing something that isn't defined yet, you don't actually have
1148to define the subroutine or package before the current location. You
1149can use an empty "sub foo;" or "package FOO;" to enter a "forward"
1150declaration.
a0d0e21e 1151
1152=item Don't know how to handle magic of type '%s'
1153
1154(P) The internal handling of magical variables has been cursed.
1155
1156=item do_study: out of memory
1157
1158(P) This should have been caught by safemalloc() instead.
1159
1160=item Duplicate free() ignored
1161
1162(S) An internal routine called free() on something that had already
1163been freed.
1164
4633a7c4 1165=item elseif should be elsif
1166
1167(S) There is no keyword "elseif" in Perl because Larry thinks it's
1168ugly. Your code will be interpreted as an attempt to call a method
1169named "elseif" for the class returned by the following block. This is
1170unlikely to be what you want.
1171
a0d0e21e 1172=item END failed--cleanup aborted
1173
1174(F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing an END subroutine.
1175The interpreter is immediately exited.
1176
85ab1d1d 1177=item entering effective %s failed
5ff3f7a4 1178
85ab1d1d 1179(F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, switching the real and
5ff3f7a4 1180effective uids or gids failed.
1181
748a9306 1182=item Error converting file specification %s
1183
5f05dabc 1184(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Because Perl may have to deal with file
748a9306 1185specifications in either VMS or Unix syntax, it converts them to a
1186single form when it must operate on them directly. Either you've
1187passed an invalid file specification to Perl, or you've found a
1188case the conversion routines don't handle. Drat.
1189
e4d48cc9 1190=item %s: Eval-group in insecure regular expression
1191
1192(F) Perl detected tainted data when trying to compile a regular expression
1193that contains the C<(?{ ... })> zero-width assertion, which is unsafe.
1194See L<perlre/(?{ code })>, and L<perlsec>.
1195
1196=item %s: Eval-group not allowed, use re 'eval'
1197
1198(F) A regular expression contained the C<(?{ ... })> zero-width assertion,
1199but that construct is only allowed when the C<use re 'eval'> pragma is
1200in effect. See L<perlre/(?{ code })>.
1201
1202=item %s: Eval-group not allowed at run time
1203
1204(F) Perl tried to compile a regular expression containing the C<(?{ ... })>
3c247ff3 1205zero-width assertion at run time, as it would when the pattern contains
1206interpolated values. Since that is a security risk, it is not allowed.
e4d48cc9 1207If you insist, you may still do this by explicitly building the pattern
1208from an interpolated string at run time and using that in an eval().
1209See L<perlre/(?{ code })>.
1210
fc36a67e 1211=item Excessively long <> operator
1212
1213(F) The contents of a <> operator may not exceed the maximum size of a
1214Perl identifier. If you're just trying to glob a long list of
1215filenames, try using the glob() operator, or put the filenames into a
1216variable and glob that.
1217
f86702cc 1218=item Execution of %s aborted due to compilation errors
a0d0e21e 1219
1220(F) The final summary message when a Perl compilation fails.
1221
1222=item Exiting eval via %s
1223
8b1a09fc 1224(W) You are exiting an eval by unconventional means, such as
a0d0e21e 1225a goto, or a loop control statement.
1226
0a753a76 1227=item Exiting pseudo-block via %s
1228
1229(W) You are exiting a rather special block construct (like a sort block or
1230subroutine) by unconventional means, such as a goto, or a loop control
1231statement. See L<perlfunc/sort>.
1232
a0d0e21e 1233=item Exiting subroutine via %s
1234
8b1a09fc 1235(W) You are exiting a subroutine by unconventional means, such as
a0d0e21e 1236a goto, or a loop control statement.
1237
1238=item Exiting substitution via %s
1239
8b1a09fc 1240(W) You are exiting a substitution by unconventional means, such as
a0d0e21e 1241a return, a goto, or a loop control statement.
1242
7b8d334a 1243=item Explicit blessing to '' (assuming package main)
1244
1245(W) You are blessing a reference to a zero length string. This has
1246the effect of blessing the reference into the package main. This is
1247usually not what you want. Consider providing a default target
ae6c4aac 1248package, e.g. bless($ref, $p || 'MyPackage');
7b8d334a 1249
748a9306 1250=item Fatal VMS error at %s, line %d
a0d0e21e 1251
748a9306 1252(P) An error peculiar to VMS. Something untoward happened in a VMS system
1253service or RTL routine; Perl's exit status should provide more details. The
1254filename in "at %s" and the line number in "line %d" tell you which section of
1255the Perl source code is distressed.
a0d0e21e 1256
1257=item fcntl is not implemented
1258
1259(F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement fcntl(). What is this, a
1260PDP-11 or something?
1261
1262=item Filehandle %s never opened
1263
1264(W) An I/O operation was attempted on a filehandle that was never initialized.
1265You need to do an open() or a socket() call, or call a constructor from
1266the FileHandle package.
1267
5f05dabc 1268=item Filehandle %s opened for only input
a0d0e21e 1269
1270(W) You tried to write on a read-only filehandle. If you
1271intended it to be a read-write filehandle, you needed to open it with
8b1a09fc 1272"+E<lt>" or "+E<gt>" or "+E<gt>E<gt>" instead of with "E<lt>" or nothing. If
5f05dabc 1273you intended only to write the file, use "E<gt>" or "E<gt>E<gt>". See
8b1a09fc 1274L<perlfunc/open>.
a0d0e21e 1275
5f05dabc 1276=item Filehandle opened for only input
a0d0e21e 1277
1278(W) You tried to write on a read-only filehandle. If you
1279intended it to be a read-write filehandle, you needed to open it with
8b1a09fc 1280"+E<lt>" or "+E<gt>" or "+E<gt>E<gt>" instead of with "E<lt>" or nothing. If
5f05dabc 1281you intended only to write the file, use "E<gt>" or "E<gt>E<gt>". See
8b1a09fc 1282L<perlfunc/open>.
a0d0e21e 1283
1284=item Final $ should be \$ or $name
1285
1286(F) You must now decide whether the final $ in a string was meant to be
1287a literal dollar sign, or was meant to introduce a variable name
1288that happens to be missing. So you have to put either the backslash or
1289the name.
1290
1291=item Final @ should be \@ or @name
1292
1293(F) You must now decide whether the final @ in a string was meant to be
1294a literal "at" sign, or was meant to introduce a variable name
1295that happens to be missing. So you have to put either the backslash or
1296the name.
1297
1298=item Format %s redefined
1299
1300(W) You redefined a format. To suppress this warning, say
1301
1302 {
1303 local $^W = 0;
1304 eval "format NAME =...";
1305 }
1306
1307=item Format not terminated
1308
1309(F) A format must be terminated by a line with a solitary dot. Perl got
1310to the end of your file without finding such a line.
1311
1312=item Found = in conditional, should be ==
1313
1314(W) You said
1315
1316 if ($foo = 123)
1317
1318when you meant
1319
1320 if ($foo == 123)
1321
1322(or something like that).
1323
1324=item gdbm store returned %d, errno %d, key "%s"
1325
1326(S) A warning from the GDBM_File extension that a store failed.
1327
1328=item gethostent not implemented
1329
1330(F) Your C library apparently doesn't implement gethostent(), probably
1331because if it did, it'd feel morally obligated to return every hostname
1332on the Internet.
1333
1334=item get{sock,peer}name() on closed fd
1335
1336(W) You tried to get a socket or peer socket name on a closed socket.
1337Did you forget to check the return value of your socket() call?
1338
748a9306 1339=item getpwnam returned invalid UIC %#o for user "%s"
1340
1341(S) A warning peculiar to VMS. The call to C<sys$getuai> underlying the
1342C<getpwnam> operator returned an invalid UIC.
1343
a0d0e21e 1344=item Glob not terminated
1345
1346(F) The lexer saw a left angle bracket in a place where it was expecting
1347a term, so it's looking for the corresponding right angle bracket, and not
1348finding it. Chances are you left some needed parentheses out earlier in
1349the line, and you really meant a "less than".
1350
1351=item Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name
1352
68dc0745 1353(F) You've said "use strict vars", which indicates that all variables
1354must either be lexically scoped (using "my"), or explicitly qualified to
a0d0e21e 1355say which package the global variable is in (using "::").
1356
1357=item goto must have label
1358
1359(F) Unlike with "next" or "last", you're not allowed to goto an
1360unspecified destination. See L<perlfunc/goto>.
1361
1362=item Had to create %s unexpectedly
1363
1364(S) A routine asked for a symbol from a symbol table that ought to have
1365existed already, but for some reason it didn't, and had to be created on
1366an emergency basis to prevent a core dump.
1367
1368=item Hash %%s missing the % in argument %d of %s()
1369
1370(D) Really old Perl let you omit the % on hash names in some spots. This
1371is now heavily deprecated.
1372
8903cb82 1373=item Identifier too long
1374
1375(F) Perl limits identifiers (names for variables, functions, etc.) to
fc36a67e 1376about 250 characters for simple names, and somewhat more for compound
1377names (like C<$A::B>). You've exceeded Perl's limits. Future
1378versions of Perl are likely to eliminate these arbitrary limitations.
8903cb82 1379
f675dbe5 1380=item Ill-formed CRTL environ value "%s"
1381
1382(W) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read the CRTL's internal
1383environ array, and encountered an element without the C<=> delimiter
1384used to spearate keys from values. The element is ignored.
1385
1386=item Ill-formed message in prime_env_iter: |%s|
a0d0e21e 1387
f675dbe5 1388(W) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read a logical name
1389or CLI symbol definition when preparing to iterate over %ENV, and
1390didn't see the expected delimiter between key and value, so the
1391line was ignored.
a0d0e21e 1392
4fdae800 1393=item Illegal character %s (carriage return)
1394
1395(F) A carriage return character was found in the input. This is an
1396error, and not a warning, because carriage return characters can break
54310121 1397multi-line strings, including here documents (e.g., C<print E<lt>E<lt>EOF;>).
1398
1399Under Unix, this error is usually caused by executing Perl code --
68dc0745 1400either the main program, a module, or an eval'd string -- that was
54310121 1401transferred over a network connection from a non-Unix system without
68dc0745 1402properly converting the text file format.
1403
1404Under systems that use something other than '\n' to delimit lines of
1405text, this error can also be caused by reading Perl code from a file
1406handle that is in binary mode (as set by the C<binmode> operator).
1407
1408In either case, the Perl code in question will probably need to be
1409converted with something like C<s/\x0D\x0A?/\n/g> before it can be
1410executed.
4fdae800 1411
a0d0e21e 1412=item Illegal division by zero
1413
1414(F) You tried to divide a number by 0. Either something was wrong in your
1415logic, or you need to put a conditional in to guard against meaningless input.
1416
1417=item Illegal modulus zero
1418
1419(F) You tried to divide a number by 0 to get the remainder. Most numbers
1420don't take to this kindly.
1421
399388f4 1422=item Illegal binary digit %s
1423
1424(F) You used a digit other than 0 and 1 in a binary number.
1425
1426=item Illegal octal digit %s
a0d0e21e 1427
1428(F) You used an 8 or 9 in a octal number.
1429
399388f4 1430=item Illegal binary digit %s ignored
1431
1432(W) You may have tried to use a digit other than 0 or 1 in a binary number.
1433Interpretation of the binary number stopped before the offending digit.
1434
1435=item Illegal octal digit %s ignored
748a9306 1436
1437(W) You may have tried to use an 8 or 9 in a octal number. Interpretation
1438of the octal number stopped before the 8 or 9.
1439
399388f4 1440=item Illegal hex digit %s ignored
6ff81951 1441
1442(W) You may have tried to use a character other than 0 - 9 or A - F in a
1443hexadecimal number. Interpretation of the hexadecimal number stopped
1444before the illegal character.
1445
54310121 1446=item Illegal switch in PERL5OPT: %s
1447
1448(X) The PERL5OPT environment variable may only be used to set the
1449following switches: B<-[DIMUdmw]>.
1450
9607fc9c 1451=item In string, @%s now must be written as \@%s
1452
1453(F) It used to be that Perl would try to guess whether you wanted an
1454array interpolated or a literal @. It did this when the string was first
1455used at runtime. Now strings are parsed at compile time, and ambiguous
1456instances of @ must be disambiguated, either by prepending a backslash to
1457indicate a literal, or by declaring (or using) the array within the
1458program before the string (lexically). (Someday it will simply assume
1459that an unbackslashed @ interpolates an array.)
1460
a0d0e21e 1461=item Insecure dependency in %s
1462
8b1a09fc 1463(F) You tried to do something that the tainting mechanism didn't like.
a0d0e21e 1464The tainting mechanism is turned on when you're running setuid or setgid,
1465or when you specify B<-T> to turn it on explicitly. The tainting mechanism
1466labels all data that's derived directly or indirectly from the user,
1467who is considered to be unworthy of your trust. If any such data is
1468used in a "dangerous" operation, you get this error. See L<perlsec>
1469for more information.
1470
1471=item Insecure directory in %s
1472
1473(F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a piped open in a setuid or setgid
8b1a09fc 1474script if C<$ENV{PATH}> contains a directory that is writable by the world.
a0d0e21e 1475See L<perlsec>.
1476
62f468fc 1477=item Insecure $ENV{%s} while running %s
a0d0e21e 1478
1479(F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a piped open in a setuid or
62f468fc 1480setgid script if any of C<$ENV{PATH}>, C<$ENV{IFS}>, C<$ENV{CDPATH}>,
1481C<$ENV{ENV}> or C<$ENV{BASH_ENV}> are derived from data supplied (or
a0d0e21e 1482potentially supplied) by the user. The script must set the path to a
1483known value, using trustworthy data. See L<perlsec>.
1484
a7ae9550 1485=item Integer overflow in %s number
1486
1487(S) The literal hex, octal or binary number you have specified is
1488too big for your architecture. On a 32-bit architecture the largest
1489literal hex, octal or binary number representable without overflow
1490is 0xFFFFFFFF, 037777777777, or 0b11111111111111111111111111111111
1491respectively. Note that Perl transparently promotes decimal literals
1492to a floating point representation internally--subject to loss of
1493precision errors in subsequent operations--so this limit usually
1494doesn't apply to decimal literals.
bbce6d69 1495
748a9306 1496=item Internal inconsistency in tracking vforks
1497
1498(S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl keeps track of the number
5f05dabc 1499of times you've called C<fork> and C<exec>, to determine
2ba9eb46 1500whether the current call to C<exec> should affect the current
b687b08b 1501script or a subprocess (see L<perlvms/"exec LIST">). Somehow, this count
748a9306 1502has become scrambled, so Perl is making a guess and treating
1503this C<exec> as a request to terminate the Perl script
1504and execute the specified command.
1505
a0d0e21e 1506=item internal disaster in regexp
1507
1508(P) Something went badly wrong in the regular expression parser.
1509
4eb79ab5 1510=item glob failed (%s)
1511
1512(W) Something went wrong with the external program(s) used for C<glob>
1513and C<E<lt>*.cE<gt>>. Usually, this means that you supplied a C<glob>
1514pattern that caused the external program to fail and exit with a nonzero
1515status. If the message indicates that the abnormal exit resulted in a
1516coredump, this may also mean that your csh (C shell) is broken. If so,
1517you should change all of the csh-related variables in config.sh: If you
1518have tcsh, make the variables refer to it as if it were csh (e.g.
1519C<full_csh='/usr/bin/tcsh'>); otherwise, make them all empty (except that
1520C<d_csh> should be C<'undef'>) so that Perl will think csh is missing.
1521In either case, after editing config.sh, run C<./Configure -S> and
1522rebuild Perl.
5cd24f17 1523
a0d0e21e 1524=item internal urp in regexp at /%s/
1525
1526(P) Something went badly awry in the regular expression parser.
1527
1528=item invalid [] range in regexp
1529
1530(F) The range specified in a character class had a minimum character
1531greater than the maximum character. See L<perlre>.
1532
c635e13b 1533=item Invalid conversion in %s: "%s"
1534
878e08df 1535(W) Perl does not understand the given format conversion.
c635e13b 1536See L<perlfunc/sprintf>.
1537
96e4d5b1 1538=item Invalid type in pack: '%s'
1539
8903cb82 1540(F) The given character is not a valid pack type. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
fb73857a 1541(W) The given character is not a valid pack type but used to be silently
1542ignored.
96e4d5b1 1543
1544=item Invalid type in unpack: '%s'
1545
8903cb82 1546(F) The given character is not a valid unpack type. See L<perlfunc/unpack>.
fb73857a 1547(W) The given character is not a valid unpack type but used to be silently
1548ignored.
96e4d5b1 1549
a0d0e21e 1550=item ioctl is not implemented
1551
1552(F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement ioctl(), which is pretty
1553strange for a machine that supports C.
1554
1555=item junk on end of regexp
1556
1557(P) The regular expression parser is confused.
1558
1559=item Label not found for "last %s"
1560
1561(F) You named a loop to break out of, but you're not currently in a
1562loop of that name, not even if you count where you were called from.
1563See L<perlfunc/last>.
1564
1565=item Label not found for "next %s"
1566
1567(F) You named a loop to continue, but you're not currently in a loop of
1568that name, not even if you count where you were called from. See
1569L<perlfunc/last>.
1570
1571=item Label not found for "redo %s"
1572
1573(F) You named a loop to restart, but you're not currently in a loop of
1574that name, not even if you count where you were called from. See
1575L<perlfunc/last>.
1576
85ab1d1d 1577=item leaving effective %s failed
5ff3f7a4 1578
85ab1d1d 1579(F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, switching the real and
5ff3f7a4 1580effective uids or gids failed.
1581
a0d0e21e 1582=item listen() on closed fd
1583
1584(W) You tried to do a listen on a closed socket. Did you forget to check
1585the return value of your socket() call? See L<perlfunc/listen>.
1586
a0d0e21e 1587=item Method for operation %s not found in package %s during blessing
1588
1589(F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an overloading table that
e7ea3e70 1590doesn't resolve to a valid subroutine. See L<overload>.
a0d0e21e 1591
1592=item Might be a runaway multi-line %s string starting on line %d
1593
1594(S) An advisory indicating that the previous error may have been caused
1595by a missing delimiter on a string or pattern, because it eventually
1596ended earlier on the current line.
1597
1598=item Misplaced _ in number
1599
1600(W) An underline in a decimal constant wasn't on a 3-digit boundary.
1601
1602=item Missing $ on loop variable
1603
8b1a09fc 1604(F) Apparently you've been programming in B<csh> too much. Variables are always
1605mentioned with the $ in Perl, unlike in the shells, where it can vary from
a0d0e21e 1606one line to the next.
1607
1608=item Missing comma after first argument to %s function
1609
1610(F) While certain functions allow you to specify a filehandle or an
1611"indirect object" before the argument list, this ain't one of them.
1612
06eaf0bc 1613=item Missing command in piped open
1614
1615(W) You used the C<open(FH, "| command")> or C<open(FH, "command |")>
1616construction, but the command was missing or blank.
1617
748a9306 1618=item Missing operator before %s?
1619
1620(S) This is an educated guess made in conjunction with the message "%s
1621found where operator expected". Often the missing operator is a comma.
1622
d98d5fff 1623=item Missing right curly or square bracket
a0d0e21e 1624
d98d5fff 1625(F) The lexer counted more opening curly or square brackets than
1626closing ones. As a general rule, you'll find it's missing near the place
1627you were last editing.
a0d0e21e 1628
a0d0e21e 1629=item Modification of a read-only value attempted
1630
1631(F) You tried, directly or indirectly, to change the value of a
5f05dabc 1632constant. You didn't, of course, try "2 = 1", because the compiler
a0d0e21e 1633catches that. But an easy way to do the same thing is:
1634
1635 sub mod { $_[0] = 1 }
1636 mod(2);
1637
1638Another way is to assign to a substr() that's off the end of the string.
1639
4fe4fdb3 1640=item Modification of non-creatable array value attempted, subscript %d
a0d0e21e 1641
1642(F) You tried to make an array value spring into existence, and the
1643subscript was probably negative, even counting from end of the array
1644backwards.
1645
4fe4fdb3 1646=item Modification of non-creatable hash value attempted, subscript "%s"
a0d0e21e 1647
19a09eb8 1648(P) You tried to make a hash value spring into existence, and it couldn't
a0d0e21e 1649be created for some peculiar reason.
1650
1651=item Module name must be constant
1652
1653(F) Only a bare module name is allowed as the first argument to a "use".
1654
1655=item msg%s not implemented
1656
1657(F) You don't have System V message IPC on your system.
1658
1659=item Multidimensional syntax %s not supported
1660
8b1a09fc 1661(W) Multidimensional arrays aren't written like C<$foo[1,2,3]>. They're written
1662like C<$foo[1][2][3]>, as in C.
1663
1664=item Name "%s::%s" used only once: possible typo
1665
68dc0745 1666(W) Typographical errors often show up as unique variable names.
1667If you had a good reason for having a unique name, then just mention
1668it again somehow to suppress the message. The C<use vars> pragma is
1669provided for just this purpose.
a0d0e21e 1670
1671=item Negative length
1672
1673(F) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv operation with a buffer length
1674that is less than 0. This is difficult to imagine.
1675
1676=item nested *?+ in regexp
1677
5f05dabc 1678(F) You can't quantify a quantifier without intervening parentheses. So
a0d0e21e 1679things like ** or +* or ?* are illegal.
1680
5f05dabc 1681Note, however, that the minimal matching quantifiers, C<*?>, C<+?>, and C<??> appear
a0d0e21e 1682to be nested quantifiers, but aren't. See L<perlre>.
1683
1684=item No #! line
1685
1686(F) The setuid emulator requires that scripts have a well-formed #! line
1687even on machines that don't support the #! construct.
1688
1689=item No %s allowed while running setuid
1690
1691(F) Certain operations are deemed to be too insecure for a setuid or setgid
1692script to even be allowed to attempt. Generally speaking there will be
1693another way to do what you want that is, if not secure, at least securable.
1694See L<perlsec>.
1695
1696=item No B<-e> allowed in setuid scripts
1697
1698(F) A setuid script can't be specified by the user.
1699
1700=item No comma allowed after %s
1701
1702(F) A list operator that has a filehandle or "indirect object" is not
1703allowed to have a comma between that and the following arguments.
1704Otherwise it'd be just another one of the arguments.
1705
0a753a76 1706One possible cause for this is that you expected to have imported a
1707constant to your name space with B<use> or B<import> while no such
1708importing took place, it may for example be that your operating system
1709does not support that particular constant. Hopefully you did use an
1710explicit import list for the constants you expect to see, please see
1711L<perlfunc/use> and L<perlfunc/import>. While an explicit import list
1712would probably have caught this error earlier it naturally does not
1713remedy the fact that your operating system still does not support that
1714constant. Maybe you have a typo in the constants of the symbol import
1715list of B<use> or B<import> or in the constant name at the line where
1716this error was triggered?
1717
748a9306 1718=item No command into which to pipe on command line
1719
1720(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection,
54310121 1721and found a '|' at the end of the command line, so it doesn't know where you
748a9306 1722want to pipe the output from this command.
1723
a0d0e21e 1724=item No DB::DB routine defined
1725
1726(F) The currently executing code was compiled with the B<-d> switch,
1727but for some reason the perl5db.pl file (or some facsimile thereof)
1728didn't define a routine to be called at the beginning of each
1729statement. Which is odd, because the file should have been required
1730automatically, and should have blown up the require if it didn't parse
1731right.
1732
1733=item No dbm on this machine
1734
1735(P) This is counted as an internal error, because every machine should
5f05dabc 1736supply dbm nowadays, because Perl comes with SDBM. See L<SDBM_File>.
a0d0e21e 1737
1738=item No DBsub routine
1739
1740(F) The currently executing code was compiled with the B<-d> switch,
1741but for some reason the perl5db.pl file (or some facsimile thereof)
1742didn't define a DB::sub routine to be called at the beginning of each
1743ordinary subroutine call.
1744
8b1a09fc 1745=item No error file after 2E<gt> or 2E<gt>E<gt> on command line
748a9306 1746
1747(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection,
8b1a09fc 1748and found a '2E<gt>' or a '2E<gt>E<gt>' on the command line, but can't find
1749the name of the file to which to write data destined for stderr.
748a9306 1750
8b1a09fc 1751=item No input file after E<lt> on command line
748a9306 1752
1753(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection,
8b1a09fc 1754and found a 'E<lt>' on the command line, but can't find the name of the file
1755from which to read data for stdin.
748a9306 1756
8b1a09fc 1757=item No output file after E<gt> on command line
748a9306 1758
1759(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection,
8b1a09fc 1760and found a lone 'E<gt>' at the end of the command line, so it doesn't know
54310121 1761where you wanted to redirect stdout.
748a9306 1762
8b1a09fc 1763=item No output file after E<gt> or E<gt>E<gt> on command line
748a9306 1764
1765(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command line redirection,
8b1a09fc 1766and found a 'E<gt>' or a 'E<gt>E<gt>' on the command line, but can't find the
1767name of the file to which to write data destined for stdout.
748a9306 1768
a0d0e21e 1769=item No Perl script found in input
1770
1771(F) You called C<perl -x>, but no line was found in the file beginning
1772with #! and containing the word "perl".
1773
1774=item No setregid available
1775
1776(F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the setregid() call for
1777your system.
1778
1779=item No setreuid available
1780
1781(F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the setreuid() call for
1782your system.
1783
1784=item No space allowed after B<-I>
1785
1786(F) The argument to B<-I> must follow the B<-I> immediately with no
1787intervening space.
1788
57079c46 1789=item No such array field
1790
1791(F) You tried to access an array as a hash, but the field name used is
1792not defined. The hash at index 0 should map all valid field names to
1793array indices for that to work.
1794
f1192cee 1795=item No such field "%s" in variable %s of type %s
1796
1797(F) You tried to access a field of a typed variable where the type
1798does not know about the field name. The field names are looked up in
1799the %FIELDS hash in the type package at compile time. The %FIELDS hash
1800is usually set up with the 'fields' pragma.
1801
748a9306 1802=item No such pipe open
1803
1804(P) An error peculiar to VMS. The internal routine my_pclose() tried to
1805close a pipe which hadn't been opened. This should have been caught earlier as
1806an attempt to close an unopened filehandle.
1807
a0d0e21e 1808=item No such signal: SIG%s
1809
1810(W) You specified a signal name as a subscript to %SIG that was not recognized.
1811Say C<kill -l> in your shell to see the valid signal names on your system.
1812
bd3fa61c 1813=item no UTC offset information; assuming local time is UTC
1814
db7c17d7 1815(S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl was unable to find the local
f675dbe5 1816timezone offset, so it's assuming that local system time is equivalent
1817to UTC. If it's not, define the logical name F<SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL>
1818to translate to the number of seconds which need to be added to UTC to
1819get local time.
1820
a0d0e21e 1821=item Not a CODE reference
1822
1823(F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value (that is, a
1824subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead. You can
1825use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was.
1826See also L<perlref>.
1827
1828=item Not a format reference
1829
1830(F) I'm not sure how you managed to generate a reference to an anonymous
1831format, but this indicates you did, and that it didn't exist.
1832
1833=item Not a GLOB reference
1834
55497cff 1835(F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a "typeglob" (that is,
a0d0e21e 1836a symbol table entry that looks like C<*foo>), but found a reference to
1837something else instead. You can use the ref() function to find out
1838what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
1839
1840=item Not a HASH reference
1841
1842(F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a hash value, but
1843found a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref()
1844function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
1845
1846=item Not a perl script
1847
1848(F) The setuid emulator requires that scripts have a well-formed #! line
1849even on machines that don't support the #! construct. The line must
1850mention perl.
1851
1852=item Not a SCALAR reference
1853
1854(F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a scalar value, but
1855found a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref()
1856function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
1857
1858=item Not a subroutine reference
1859
1860(F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value (that is, a
1861subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead. You can
1862use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was.
1863See also L<perlref>.
1864
e7ea3e70 1865=item Not a subroutine reference in overload table
a0d0e21e 1866
1867(F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an overloading table that
8b1a09fc 1868doesn't somehow point to a valid subroutine. See L<overload>.
a0d0e21e 1869
1870=item Not an ARRAY reference
1871
1872(F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to an array value, but
1873found a reference to something else instead. You can use the ref()
1874function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See L<perlref>.
1875
1876=item Not enough arguments for %s
1877
1878(F) The function requires more arguments than you specified.
1879
1880=item Not enough format arguments
1881
1882(W) A format specified more picture fields than the next line supplied.
1883See L<perlform>.
1884
1885=item Null filename used
1886
5f05dabc 1887(F) You can't require the null filename, especially because on many machines
a0d0e21e 1888that means the current directory! See L<perlfunc/require>.
1889
55497cff 1890=item Null picture in formline
1891
1892(F) The first argument to formline must be a valid format picture
1893specification. It was found to be empty, which probably means you
1894supplied it an uninitialized value. See L<perlform>.
1895
a0d0e21e 1896=item NULL OP IN RUN
1897
1898(P) Some internal routine called run() with a null opcode pointer.
1899
1900=item Null realloc
1901
1902(P) An attempt was made to realloc NULL.
1903
1904=item NULL regexp argument
1905
5f05dabc 1906(P) The internal pattern matching routines blew it big time.
a0d0e21e 1907
1908=item NULL regexp parameter
1909
1910(P) The internal pattern matching routines are out of their gourd.
1911
fc36a67e 1912=item Number too long
1913
1914(F) Perl limits the representation of decimal numbers in programs to about
1915about 250 characters. You've exceeded that length. Future versions of
1916Perl are likely to eliminate this arbitrary limitation. In the meantime,
1917try using scientific notation (e.g. "1e6" instead of "1_000_000").
1918
1930e939 1919=item Odd number of elements in hash assignment
a0d0e21e 1920
1930e939 1921(S) You specified an odd number of elements to initialize a hash, which
1922is odd, because hashes come in key/value pairs.
a0d0e21e 1923
bbce6d69 1924=item Offset outside string
1925
1926(F) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv operation with an offset
1927pointing outside the buffer. This is difficult to imagine.
1928The sole exception to this is that C<sysread()>ing past the buffer
1929will extend the buffer and zero pad the new area.
1930
a0d0e21e 1931=item oops: oopsAV
1932
1933(S) An internal warning that the grammar is screwed up.
1934
1935=item oops: oopsHV
1936
1937(S) An internal warning that the grammar is screwed up.
1938
56f7f34b 1939=item Operation `%s': no method found, %s
44a8e56a 1940
e7ea3e70 1941(F) An attempt was made to perform an overloaded operation for which
1942no handler was defined. While some handlers can be autogenerated in
1943terms of other handlers, there is no default handler for any
1944operation, unless C<fallback> overloading key is specified to be
1945true. See L<overload>.
44a8e56a 1946
748a9306 1947=item Operator or semicolon missing before %s
1948
1949(S) You used a variable or subroutine call where the parser was
1950expecting an operator. The parser has assumed you really meant
1951to use an operator, but this is highly likely to be incorrect.
1952For example, if you say "*foo *foo" it will be interpreted as
1953if you said "*foo * 'foo'".
1954
a0d0e21e 1955=item Out of memory for yacc stack
1956
1957(F) The yacc parser wanted to grow its stack so it could continue parsing,
1958but realloc() wouldn't give it more memory, virtual or otherwise.
1959
1b979e0a 1960=item Out of memory during request for %s
a0d0e21e 1961
55497cff 1962(X|F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient
54310121 1963remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request.
eff9c6e2 1964
1965The request was judged to be small, so the possibility to trap it
1966depends on the way perl was compiled. By default it is not trappable.
1967However, if compiled for this, Perl may use the contents of C<$^M> as
1968an emergency pool after die()ing with this message. In this case the
55497cff 1969error is trappable I<once>.
1970
1b979e0a 1971=item Out of memory during "large" request for %s
55497cff 1972
1973(F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating there was insufficient
1974remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the request. However,
1975the request was judged large enough (compile-time default is 64K), so
1976a possibility to shut down by trapping this error is granted.
1977
1b979e0a 1978=item Out of memory during ridiculously large request
1979
1980(F) You can't allocate more than 2^31+"small amount" bytes. This error
1981is most likely to be caused by a typo in the Perl program. e.g., C<$arr[time]>
1982instead of C<$arr[$time]>.
1983
a0d0e21e 1984=item page overflow
1985
1986(W) A single call to write() produced more lines than can fit on a page.
1987See L<perlform>.
1988
1989=item panic: ck_grep
1990
1991(P) Failed an internal consistency check trying to compile a grep.
1992
1993=item panic: ck_split
1994
1995(P) Failed an internal consistency check trying to compile a split.
1996
1997=item panic: corrupt saved stack index
1998
1999(P) The savestack was requested to restore more localized values than there
2000are in the savestack.
2001
810b8aa5 2002=item panic: del_backref
2003
2004(P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to reset a weak
2005reference.
2006
a0d0e21e 2007=item panic: die %s
2008
2009(P) We popped the context stack to an eval context, and then discovered
2010it wasn't an eval context.
2011
2012=item panic: do_match
2013
2014(P) The internal pp_match() routine was called with invalid operational data.
2015
2016=item panic: do_split
2017
2018(P) Something terrible went wrong in setting up for the split.
2019
2020=item panic: do_subst
2021
2022(P) The internal pp_subst() routine was called with invalid operational data.
2023
2024=item panic: do_trans
2025
2026(P) The internal do_trans() routine was called with invalid operational data.
2027
c635e13b 2028=item panic: frexp
2029
2030(P) The library function frexp() failed, making printf("%f") impossible.
2031
a0d0e21e 2032=item panic: goto
2033
2034(P) We popped the context stack to a context with the specified label,
2035and then discovered it wasn't a context we know how to do a goto in.
2036
2037=item panic: INTERPCASEMOD
2038
2039(P) The lexer got into a bad state at a case modifier.
2040
2041=item panic: INTERPCONCAT
2042
2043(P) The lexer got into a bad state parsing a string with brackets.
2044
e446cec8 2045=item panic: kid popen errno read
2046
2047(F) forked child returned an incomprehensible message about its errno.
2048
a0d0e21e 2049=item panic: last
2050
2051(P) We popped the context stack to a block context, and then discovered
2052it wasn't a block context.
2053
2054=item panic: leave_scope clearsv
2055
5f05dabc 2056(P) A writable lexical variable became read-only somehow within the scope.
a0d0e21e 2057
2058=item panic: leave_scope inconsistency
2059
2060(P) The savestack probably got out of sync. At least, there was an
2061invalid enum on the top of it.
2062
2063=item panic: malloc
2064
2065(P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of malloc.
2066
810b8aa5 2067=item panic: magic_killbackrefs
2068
2069(P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to reset all weak
2070references to an object.
2071
a0d0e21e 2072=item panic: mapstart
2073
2074(P) The compiler is screwed up with respect to the map() function.
2075
2076=item panic: null array
2077
2078(P) One of the internal array routines was passed a null AV pointer.
2079
2080=item panic: pad_alloc
2081
2082(P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
2083and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
2084
2085=item panic: pad_free curpad
2086
2087(P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
2088and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
2089
2090=item panic: pad_free po
2091
2092(P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected internally.
2093
2094=item panic: pad_reset curpad
2095
2096(P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
2097and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
2098
2099=item panic: pad_sv po
2100
2101(P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected internally.
2102
2103=item panic: pad_swipe curpad
2104
2105(P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it was allocating
2106and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
2107
2108=item panic: pad_swipe po
2109
2110(P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected internally.
2111
2112=item panic: pp_iter
2113
2114(P) The foreach iterator got called in a non-loop context frame.
2115
2116=item panic: realloc
2117
2118(P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of realloc.
2119
2120=item panic: restartop
2121
2122(P) Some internal routine requested a goto (or something like it), and
2123didn't supply the destination.
2124
2125=item panic: return
2126
2127(P) We popped the context stack to a subroutine or eval context, and
2128then discovered it wasn't a subroutine or eval context.
2129
2130=item panic: scan_num
2131
2132(P) scan_num() got called on something that wasn't a number.
2133
2134=item panic: sv_insert
2135
2136(P) The sv_insert() routine was told to remove more string than there
2137was string.
2138
2139=item panic: top_env
2140
6224f72b 2141(P) The compiler attempted to do a goto, or something weird like that.
a0d0e21e 2142
2143=item panic: yylex
2144
2145(P) The lexer got into a bad state while processing a case modifier.
2146
7b8d334a 2147=item Parentheses missing around "%s" list
a0d0e21e 2148
2149(W) You said something like
2150
2151 my $foo, $bar = @_;
2152
2153when you meant
2154
2155 my ($foo, $bar) = @_;
2156
2157Remember that "my" and "local" bind closer than comma.
2158
2159=item Perl %3.3f required--this is only version %s, stopped
2160
2161(F) The module in question uses features of a version of Perl more recent
2162than the currently running version. How long has it been since you upgraded,
2163anyway? See L<perlfunc/require>.
2164
2165=item Permission denied
2166
2167(F) The setuid emulator in suidperl decided you were up to no good.
2168
bd3fa61c 2169=item pid %x not a child
748a9306 2170
2171(W) A warning peculiar to VMS. Waitpid() was asked to wait for a process which
2172isn't a subprocess of the current process. While this is fine from VMS'
2173perspective, it's probably not what you intended.
2174
a0d0e21e 2175=item POSIX getpgrp can't take an argument
2176
2177(F) Your C compiler uses POSIX getpgrp(), which takes no argument, unlike
2178the BSD version, which takes a pid.
2179
bbce6d69 2180=item Possible attempt to put comments in qw() list
2181
774d564b 2182(W) qw() lists contain items separated by whitespace; as with literal
2183strings, comment characters are not ignored, but are instead treated
2184as literal data. (You may have used different delimiters than the
7b8d334a 2185parentheses shown here; braces are also frequently used.)
bbce6d69 2186
774d564b 2187You probably wrote something like this:
2188
54310121 2189 @list = qw(
774d564b 2190 a # a comment
bbce6d69 2191 b # another comment
774d564b 2192 );
bbce6d69 2193
2194when you should have written this:
2195
774d564b 2196 @list = qw(
54310121 2197 a
2198 b
774d564b 2199 );
2200
2201If you really want comments, build your list the
2202old-fashioned way, with quotes and commas:
2203
2204 @list = (
2205 'a', # a comment
2206 'b', # another comment
2207 );
bbce6d69 2208
2209=item Possible attempt to separate words with commas
2210
774d564b 2211(W) qw() lists contain items separated by whitespace; therefore commas
68dc0745 2212aren't needed to separate the items. (You may have used different
774d564b 2213delimiters than the parentheses shown here; braces are also frequently
2214used.)
bbce6d69 2215
54310121 2216You probably wrote something like this:
bbce6d69 2217
774d564b 2218 qw! a, b, c !;
2219
2220which puts literal commas into some of the list items. Write it without
2221commas if you don't want them to appear in your data:
bbce6d69 2222
774d564b 2223 qw! a b c !;
bbce6d69 2224
a0d0e21e 2225=item Possible memory corruption: %s overflowed 3rd argument
2226
2227(F) An ioctl() or fcntl() returned more than Perl was bargaining for.
2228Perl guesses a reasonable buffer size, but puts a sentinel byte at the
2229end of the buffer just in case. This sentinel byte got clobbered, and
2230Perl assumes that memory is now corrupted. See L<perlfunc/ioctl>.
2231
2232=item Precedence problem: open %s should be open(%s)
2233
2234(S) The old irregular construct
cb1a09d0 2235
a0d0e21e 2236 open FOO || die;
2237
2238is now misinterpreted as
2239
2240 open(FOO || die);
2241
68dc0745 2242because of the strict regularization of Perl 5's grammar into unary
2243and list operators. (The old open was a little of both.) You must
2244put parentheses around the filehandle, or use the new "or" operator
2245instead of "||".
a0d0e21e 2246
2247=item print on closed filehandle %s
2248
2249(W) The filehandle you're printing on got itself closed sometime before now.
2250Check your logic flow.
2251
2252=item printf on closed filehandle %s
2253
2254(W) The filehandle you're writing to got itself closed sometime before now.
2255Check your logic flow.
2256
2257=item Probable precedence problem on %s
2258
54310121 2259(W) The compiler found a bareword where it expected a conditional,
a0d0e21e 2260which often indicates that an || or && was parsed as part of the
2261last argument of the previous construct, for example:
2262
2263 open FOO || die;
2264
3fe9a6f1 2265=item Prototype mismatch: %s vs %s
4633a7c4 2266
3fe9a6f1 2267(S) The subroutine being declared or defined had previously been declared
2268or defined with a different function prototype.
4633a7c4 2269
89ea2908 2270=item Range iterator outside integer range
2271
2272(F) One (or both) of the numeric arguments to the range operator ".."
2273are outside the range which can be represented by integers internally.
2274One possible workaround is to force Perl to use magical string
2275increment by prepending "0" to your numbers.
2276
8b1a09fc 2277=item Read on closed filehandle E<lt>%sE<gt>
a0d0e21e 2278
2279(W) The filehandle you're reading from got itself closed sometime before now.
2280Check your logic flow.
2281
2282=item Reallocation too large: %lx
2283
54310121 2284(F) You can't allocate more than 64K on an MS-DOS machine.
a0d0e21e 2285
2286=item Recompile perl with B<-D>DEBUGGING to use B<-D> switch
2287
2288(F) You can't use the B<-D> option unless the code to produce the
2289desired output is compiled into Perl, which entails some overhead,
2290which is why it's currently left out of your copy.
2291
3e0ccd42 2292=item Recursive inheritance detected in package '%s'
a0d0e21e 2293
2294(F) More than 100 levels of inheritance were used. Probably indicates
2295an unintended loop in your inheritance hierarchy.
2296
3e0ccd42 2297=item Recursive inheritance detected while looking for method '%s' in package '%s'
2298
2299(F) More than 100 levels of inheritance were encountered while invoking a
2300method. Probably indicates an unintended loop in your inheritance hierarchy.
2301
1930e939 2302=item Reference found where even-sized list expected
2303
2304(W) You gave a single reference where Perl was expecting a list with
2305an even number of elements (for assignment to a hash). This
2306usually means that you used the anon hash constructor when you meant
2307to use parens. In any case, a hash requires key/value B<pairs>.
7b8d334a 2308
2309 %hash = { one => 1, two => 2, }; # WRONG
2310 %hash = [ qw/ an anon array / ]; # WRONG
2311 %hash = ( one => 1, two => 2, ); # right
2312 %hash = qw( one 1 two 2 ); # also fine
2313
810b8aa5 2314=item Reference is already weak
2315
2316(W) You have attempted to weaken a reference that is already weak.
2317Doing so has no effect.
2318
a0d0e21e 2319=item Reference miscount in sv_replace()
2320
2321(W) The internal sv_replace() function was handed a new SV with a
2322reference count of other than 1.
2323
fb73857a 2324=item regexp *+ operand could be empty
2325
2326(F) The part of the regexp subject to either the * or + quantifier
2327could match an empty string.
2328
a0d0e21e 2329=item regexp memory corruption
2330
2331(P) The regular expression engine got confused by what the regular
2332expression compiler gave it.
2333
2334=item regexp out of space
2335
2336(P) A "can't happen" error, because safemalloc() should have caught it earlier.
2337
a0d0e21e 2338=item Reversed %s= operator
2339
2340(W) You wrote your assignment operator backwards. The = must always
2341comes last, to avoid ambiguity with subsequent unary operators.
2342
2343=item Runaway format
2344
2345(F) Your format contained the ~~ repeat-until-blank sequence, but it
2346produced 200 lines at once, and the 200th line looked exactly like the
2347199th line. Apparently you didn't arrange for the arguments to exhaust
2348themselves, either by using ^ instead of @ (for scalar variables), or by
2349shifting or popping (for array variables). See L<perlform>.
2350
2351=item Scalar value @%s[%s] better written as $%s[%s]
2352
a6006777 2353(W) You've used an array slice (indicated by @) to select a single element of
a0d0e21e 2354an array. Generally it's better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $).
8b1a09fc 2355The difference is that C<$foo[&bar]> always behaves like a scalar, both when
2356assigning to it and when evaluating its argument, while C<@foo[&bar]> behaves
a0d0e21e 2357like a list when you assign to it, and provides a list context to its
5f05dabc 2358subscript, which can do weird things if you're expecting only one subscript.
a0d0e21e 2359
748a9306 2360On the other hand, if you were actually hoping to treat the array
5f05dabc 2361element as a list, you need to look into how references work, because
748a9306 2362Perl will not magically convert between scalars and lists for you. See
2363L<perlref>.
2364
a6006777 2365=item Scalar value @%s{%s} better written as $%s{%s}
2366
2367(W) You've used a hash slice (indicated by @) to select a single element of
2368a hash. Generally it's better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $).
2369The difference is that C<$foo{&bar}> always behaves like a scalar, both when
2370assigning to it and when evaluating its argument, while C<@foo{&bar}> behaves
2371like a list when you assign to it, and provides a list context to its
2372subscript, which can do weird things if you're expecting only one subscript.
2373
2374On the other hand, if you were actually hoping to treat the hash
2375element as a list, you need to look into how references work, because
2376Perl will not magically convert between scalars and lists for you. See
2377L<perlref>.
2378
a0d0e21e 2379=item Script is not setuid/setgid in suidperl
2380
54310121 2381(F) Oddly, the suidperl program was invoked on a script without a setuid
2382or setgid bit set. This doesn't make much sense.
a0d0e21e 2383
2384=item Search pattern not terminated
2385
2386(F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a // or m{}
2387construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting level.
fb73857a 2388Missing the leading C<$> from a variable C<$m> may cause this error.
a0d0e21e 2389
96e4d5b1 2390=item %sseek() on unopened file
a0d0e21e 2391
96e4d5b1 2392(W) You tried to use the seek() or sysseek() function on a filehandle that
2393was either never opened or has since been closed.
a0d0e21e 2394
2395=item select not implemented
2396
2397(F) This machine doesn't implement the select() system call.
2398
2399=item sem%s not implemented
2400
2401(F) You don't have System V semaphore IPC on your system.
2402
2403=item semi-panic: attempt to dup freed string
2404
2405(S) The internal newSVsv() routine was called to duplicate a scalar
2406that had previously been marked as free.
2407
2408=item Semicolon seems to be missing
2409
2410(W) A nearby syntax error was probably caused by a missing semicolon,
2411or possibly some other missing operator, such as a comma.
2412
2413=item Send on closed socket
2414
2415(W) The filehandle you're sending to got itself closed sometime before now.
2416Check your logic flow.
2417
1b1626e4 2418=item Sequence (? incomplete
7b8d334a 2419
1b1626e4 2420(F) A regular expression ended with an incomplete extension (?.
2421See L<perlre>.
2422
a0d0e21e 2423=item Sequence (?#... not terminated
2424
2425(F) A regular expression comment must be terminated by a closing
5f05dabc 2426parenthesis. Embedded parentheses aren't allowed. See L<perlre>.
a0d0e21e 2427
2428=item Sequence (?%s...) not implemented
2429
2430(F) A proposed regular expression extension has the character reserved
2431but has not yet been written. See L<perlre>.
2432
2433=item Sequence (?%s...) not recognized
2434
2435(F) You used a regular expression extension that doesn't make sense.
2436See L<perlre>.
2437
a5f75d66 2438=item Server error
2439
9607fc9c 2440Also known as "500 Server error".
2441
2442B<This is a CGI error, not a Perl error>.
2443
2444You need to make sure your script is executable, is accessible by the user
2445CGI is running the script under (which is probably not the user account you
2446tested it under), does not rely on any environment variables (like PATH)
2447from the user it isn't running under, and isn't in a location where the CGI
2448server can't find it, basically, more or less. Please see the following
2449for more information:
2450
be94a901 2451 http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FAQs/cgi/idiots-guide.html
2452 http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FAQs/cgi/perl-cgi-faq.html
9607fc9c 2453 ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/www/cgi-faq
2454 http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/interface.html
2455 http://www-genome.wi.mit.edu/WWW/faqs/www-security-faq.html
a5f75d66 2456
be94a901 2457You should also look at L<perlfaq9>.
2458
a0d0e21e 2459=item setegid() not implemented
2460
8b1a09fc 2461(F) You tried to assign to C<$)>, and your operating system doesn't support
a0d0e21e 2462the setegid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't
2463think so.
2464
2465=item seteuid() not implemented
2466
8b1a09fc 2467(F) You tried to assign to C<$E<gt>>, and your operating system doesn't support
a0d0e21e 2468the seteuid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't
2469think so.
2470
2471=item setrgid() not implemented
2472
8b1a09fc 2473(F) You tried to assign to C<$(>, and your operating system doesn't support
a0d0e21e 2474the setrgid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't
2475think so.
2476
2477=item setruid() not implemented
2478
1f8d2005 2479(F) You tried to assign to C<$E<lt>>, and your operating system doesn't support
a0d0e21e 2480the setruid() system call (or equivalent), or at least Configure didn't
2481think so.
2482
2483=item Setuid/gid script is writable by world
2484
2485(F) The setuid emulator won't run a script that is writable by the world,
2486because the world might have written on it already.
2487
2488=item shm%s not implemented
2489
2490(F) You don't have System V shared memory IPC on your system.
2491
2492=item shutdown() on closed fd
2493
2494(W) You tried to do a shutdown on a closed socket. Seems a bit superfluous.
2495
f86702cc 2496=item SIG%s handler "%s" not defined
a0d0e21e 2497
2498(W) The signal handler named in %SIG doesn't, in fact, exist. Perhaps you
2499put it into the wrong package?
2500
2501=item sort is now a reserved word
2502
2503(F) An ancient error message that almost nobody ever runs into anymore.
2504But before sort was a keyword, people sometimes used it as a filehandle.
2505
2506=item Sort subroutine didn't return a numeric value
2507
2508(F) A sort comparison routine must return a number. You probably blew
4633a7c4 2509it by not using C<E<lt>=E<gt>> or C<cmp>, or by not using them correctly.
a0d0e21e 2510See L<perlfunc/sort>.
2511
2512=item Sort subroutine didn't return single value
2513
2514(F) A sort comparison subroutine may not return a list value with more
2515or less than one element. See L<perlfunc/sort>.
2516
2517=item Split loop
2518
2519(P) The split was looping infinitely. (Obviously, a split shouldn't iterate
2520more times than there are characters of input, which is what happened.)
2521See L<perlfunc/split>.
2522
8b1a09fc 2523=item Stat on unopened file E<lt>%sE<gt>
a0d0e21e 2524
2525(W) You tried to use the stat() function (or an equivalent file test)
54310121 2526on a filehandle that was either never opened or has since been closed.
a0d0e21e 2527
2528=item Statement unlikely to be reached
2529
2530(W) You did an exec() with some statement after it other than a die().
2531This is almost always an error, because exec() never returns unless
2532there was a failure. You probably wanted to use system() instead,
2533which does return. To suppress this warning, put the exec() in a block
2534by itself.
2535
17feb5d5 2536=item Strange *+?{} on zero-length expression
2537
2538(W) You applied a regular expression quantifier in a place where it
2539makes no sense, such as on a zero-width assertion.
2540Try putting the quantifier inside the assertion instead. For example,
2541the way to match "abc" provided that it is followed by three
2542repetitions of "xyz" is C</abc(?=(?:xyz){3})/>, not C</abc(?=xyz){3}/>.
2543
e7ea3e70 2544=item Stub found while resolving method `%s' overloading `%s' in package `%s'
2545
2546(P) Overloading resolution over @ISA tree may be broken by importation stubs.
2547Stubs should never be implicitely created, but explicit calls to C<can>
2548may break this.
2549
a0d0e21e 2550=item Subroutine %s redefined
2551
2552(W) You redefined a subroutine. To suppress this warning, say
2553
2554 {
2555 local $^W = 0;
2556 eval "sub name { ... }";
2557 }
2558
2559=item Substitution loop
2560
2561(P) The substitution was looping infinitely. (Obviously, a
2562substitution shouldn't iterate more times than there are characters of
68dc0745 2563input, which is what happened.) See the discussion of substitution in
5f05dabc 2564L<perlop/"Quote and Quote-like Operators">.
a0d0e21e 2565
2566=item Substitution pattern not terminated
2567
2568(F) The lexer couldn't find the interior delimiter of a s/// or s{}{}
2569construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting level.
fb73857a 2570Missing the leading C<$> from variable C<$s> may cause this error.
a0d0e21e 2571
2572=item Substitution replacement not terminated
2573
2574(F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a s/// or s{}{}
2575construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting level.
fb73857a 2576Missing the leading C<$> from variable C<$s> may cause this error.
a0d0e21e 2577
2578=item substr outside of string
2579
3e3baf6d 2580(S),(W) You tried to reference a substr() that pointed outside of a
2581string. That is, the absolute value of the offset was larger than the
2582length of the string. See L<perlfunc/substr>. This warning is
2583mandatory if substr is used in an lvalue context (as the left hand side
2584of an assignment or as a subroutine argument for example).
a0d0e21e 2585
f86702cc 2586=item suidperl is no longer needed since %s
a0d0e21e 2587
2588(F) Your Perl was compiled with B<-D>SETUID_SCRIPTS_ARE_SECURE_NOW, but a
2589version of the setuid emulator somehow got run anyway.
2590
85ab1d1d 2591=item switching effective %s is not implemented
2592
2593(F) While under the C<use filetest> pragma, we cannot switch the
2594real and effective uids or gids.
2595
a0d0e21e 2596=item syntax error
2597
2598(F) Probably means you had a syntax error. Common reasons include:
2599
2600 A keyword is misspelled.
2601 A semicolon is missing.
2602 A comma is missing.
2603 An opening or closing parenthesis is missing.
2604 An opening or closing brace is missing.
2605 A closing quote is missing.
2606
2607Often there will be another error message associated with the syntax
2608error giving more information. (Sometimes it helps to turn on B<-w>.)
2609The error message itself often tells you where it was in the line when
2610it decided to give up. Sometimes the actual error is several tokens
5f05dabc 2611before this, because Perl is good at understanding random input.
a0d0e21e 2612Occasionally the line number may be misleading, and once in a blue moon
2613the only way to figure out what's triggering the error is to call
2614C<perl -c> repeatedly, chopping away half the program each time to see
2615if the error went away. Sort of the cybernetic version of S<20 questions>.
2616
cb1a09d0 2617=item syntax error at line %d: `%s' unexpected
2618
8b1a09fc 2619(A) You've accidentally run your script through the Bourne shell
3a52c276 2620instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script
cb1a09d0 2621into Perl yourself.
2622
6087ac44 2623=item System V %s is not implemented on this machine
a0d0e21e 2624
6087ac44 2625(F) You tried to do something with a function beginning with "sem",
2626"shm", or "msg" but that System V IPC is not implemented in your
2627machine. In some machines the functionality can exist but be
2628unconfigured. Consult your system support.
a0d0e21e 2629
2630=item Syswrite on closed filehandle
2631
2632(W) The filehandle you're writing to got itself closed sometime before now.
2633Check your logic flow.
2634
fc36a67e 2635=item Target of goto is too deeply nested
2636
2637(F) You tried to use C<goto> to reach a label that was too deeply
2638nested for Perl to reach. Perl is doing you a favor by refusing.
2639
8903cb82 2640=item tell() on unopened file
a0d0e21e 2641
8903cb82 2642(W) You tried to use the tell() function on a filehandle that was either
2643never opened or has since been closed.
a0d0e21e 2644
8b1a09fc 2645=item Test on unopened file E<lt>%sE<gt>
a0d0e21e 2646
2647(W) You tried to invoke a file test operator on a filehandle that isn't
2648open. Check your logic. See also L<perlfunc/-X>.
2649
2650=item That use of $[ is unsupported
2651
8b1a09fc 2652(F) Assignment to C<$[> is now strictly circumscribed, and interpreted as
5f05dabc 2653a compiler directive. You may say only one of
a0d0e21e 2654
2655 $[ = 0;
2656 $[ = 1;
2657 ...
2658 local $[ = 0;
2659 local $[ = 1;
2660 ...
2661
2662This is to prevent the problem of one module changing the array base
2663out from under another module inadvertently. See L<perlvar/$[>.
2664
2665=item The %s function is unimplemented
2666
2667The function indicated isn't implemented on this architecture, according
2668to the probings of Configure.
2669
f86702cc 2670=item The crypt() function is unimplemented due to excessive paranoia
a0d0e21e 2671
2672(F) Configure couldn't find the crypt() function on your machine,
2673probably because your vendor didn't supply it, probably because they
8b1a09fc 2674think the U.S. Government thinks it's a secret, or at least that they
a0d0e21e 2675will continue to pretend that it is. And if you quote me on that, I
2676will deny it.
2677
2678=item The stat preceding C<-l _> wasn't an lstat
2679
2680(F) It makes no sense to test the current stat buffer for symbolic linkhood
2681if the last stat that wrote to the stat buffer already went past
2682the symlink to get to the real file. Use an actual filename instead.
2683
f675dbe5 2684=item This Perl can't reset CRTL eviron elements (%s)
2685
2686=item This Perl can't set CRTL environ elements (%s=%s)
2687
2688(W) Warnings peculiar to VMS. You tried to change or delete an element
2689of the CRTL's internal environ array, but your copy of Perl wasn't
2690built with a CRTL that contained the setenv() function. You'll need to
2691rebuild Perl with a CRTL that does, or redefine F<PERL_ENV_TABLES> (see
2692L<perlvms>) so that the environ array isn't the target of the change to
2693%ENV which produced the warning.
2694
a0d0e21e 2695=item times not implemented
2696
2697(F) Your version of the C library apparently doesn't do times(). I suspect
2698you're not running on Unix.
2699
2700=item Too few args to syscall
2701
2702(F) There has to be at least one argument to syscall() to specify the
2703system call to call, silly dilly.
2704
9607fc9c 2705=item Too late for "B<-T>" option
2706
2707(X) The #! line (or local equivalent) in a Perl script contains the
8cc95fdb 2708B<-T> option, but Perl was not invoked with B<-T> in its command line.
2709This is an error because, by the time Perl discovers a B<-T> in a
2710script, it's too late to properly taint everything from the environment.
2711So Perl gives up.
f86702cc 2712
9607fc9c 2713If the Perl script is being executed as a command using the #!
2714mechanism (or its local equivalent), this error can usually be fixed
2715by editing the #! line so that the B<-T> option is a part of Perl's
2716first argument: e.g. change C<perl -n -T> to C<perl -T -n>.
f86702cc 2717
9607fc9c 2718If the Perl script is being executed as C<perl scriptname>, then the
2719B<-T> option must appear on the command line: C<perl -T scriptname>.
f86702cc 2720
8cc95fdb 2721=item Too late for "-%s" option
2722
2723(X) The #! line (or local equivalent) in a Perl script contains the
2724B<-M> or B<-m> option. This is an error because B<-M> and B<-m> options
2725are not intended for use inside scripts. Use the C<use> pragma instead.
2726
cb1a09d0 2727=item Too many ('s
2728
2729=item Too many )'s
2730
2731(A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead
3a52c276 2732of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
2733Perl yourself.
cb1a09d0 2734
a0d0e21e 2735=item Too many args to syscall
2736
5f05dabc 2737(F) Perl supports a maximum of only 14 args to syscall().
a0d0e21e 2738
2739=item Too many arguments for %s
2740
2741(F) The function requires fewer arguments than you specified.
2742
2743=item trailing \ in regexp
2744
2745(F) The regular expression ends with an unbackslashed backslash. Backslash
2746it. See L<perlre>.
2747
2c268ad5 2748=item Transliteration pattern not terminated
a0d0e21e 2749
2750(F) The lexer couldn't find the interior delimiter of a tr/// or tr[][]
fb73857a 2751or y/// or y[][] construct. Missing the leading C<$> from variables
2752C<$tr> or C<$y> may cause this error.
a0d0e21e 2753
2c268ad5 2754=item Transliteration replacement not terminated
a0d0e21e 2755
2756(F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a tr/// or tr[][]
2757construct.
2758
2759=item truncate not implemented
2760
2761(F) Your machine doesn't implement a file truncation mechanism that
2762Configure knows about.
2763
2764=item Type of arg %d to %s must be %s (not %s)
2765
2766(F) This function requires the argument in that position to be of a
8b1a09fc 2767certain type. Arrays must be @NAME or C<@{EXPR}>. Hashes must be
2768%NAME or C<%{EXPR}>. No implicit dereferencing is allowed--use the
a0d0e21e 2769{EXPR} forms as an explicit dereference. See L<perlref>.
2770
2771=item umask: argument is missing initial 0
2772
eec2d3df 2773(W) A umask of 222 is incorrect. It should be 0222, because octal
2774literals always start with 0 in Perl, as in C.
2775
2776=item umask not implemented
2777
2778(F) Your machine doesn't implement the umask function and you tried
2779to use it to restrict permissions for yourself (EXPR & 0700).
a0d0e21e 2780
4633a7c4 2781=item Unable to create sub named "%s"
2782
2783(F) You attempted to create or access a subroutine with an illegal name.
2784
a0d0e21e 2785=item Unbalanced context: %d more PUSHes than POPs
2786
2787(W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many execution
2788contexts were entered and left.
2789
2790=item Unbalanced saves: %d more saves than restores
2791
2792(W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many
2793values were temporarily localized.
2794
2795=item Unbalanced scopes: %d more ENTERs than LEAVEs
2796
2797(W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many blocks
2798were entered and left.
2799
2800=item Unbalanced tmps: %d more allocs than frees
2801
2802(W) The exit code detected an internal inconsistency in how many mortal
2803scalars were allocated and freed.
2804
2805=item Undefined format "%s" called
2806
2807(F) The format indicated doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps it's really in
2808another package? See L<perlform>.
2809
2810=item Undefined sort subroutine "%s" called
2811
2812(F) The sort comparison routine specified doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps
2813it's in a different package? See L<perlfunc/sort>.
2814
2815=item Undefined subroutine &%s called
2816
2817(F) The subroutine indicated hasn't been defined, or if it was, it
2818has since been undefined.
2819
2820=item Undefined subroutine called
2821
2822(F) The anonymous subroutine you're trying to call hasn't been defined,
2823or if it was, it has since been undefined.
2824
2825=item Undefined subroutine in sort
2826
2827(F) The sort comparison routine specified is declared but doesn't seem to
2828have been defined yet. See L<perlfunc/sort>.
2829
4633a7c4 2830=item Undefined top format "%s" called
2831
2832(F) The format indicated doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps it's really in
2833another package? See L<perlform>.
2834
20408e3c 2835=item Undefined value assigned to typeglob
2836
2837(W) An undefined value was assigned to a typeglob, a la C<*foo = undef>.
2838This does nothing. It's possible that you really mean C<undef *foo>.
2839
a0d0e21e 2840=item unexec of %s into %s failed!
2841
2842(F) The unexec() routine failed for some reason. See your local FSF
2843representative, who probably put it there in the first place.
2844
2845=item Unknown BYTEORDER
2846
5f05dabc 2847(F) There are no byte-swapping functions for a machine with this byte order.
a0d0e21e 2848
f675dbe5 2849=item Unknown process %x sent message to prime_env_iter: %s
2850
2851(P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl was reading values for %ENV before
2852iterating over it, and someone else stuck a message in the stream of
2853data Perl expected. Someone's very confused, or perhaps trying to
2854subvert Perl's population of %ENV for nefarious purposes.
2855
a0d0e21e 2856=item unmatched () in regexp
2857
2858(F) Unbackslashed parentheses must always be balanced in regular
2859expressions. If you're a vi user, the % key is valuable for finding
5f05dabc 2860the matching parenthesis. See L<perlre>.
a0d0e21e 2861
d98d5fff 2862=item Unmatched right %s bracket
a0d0e21e 2863
d98d5fff 2864(F) The lexer counted more closing curly or square brackets than
2865opening ones, so you're probably missing a matching opening bracket.
2866As a general rule, you'll find the missing one (so to speak) near the
2867place you were last editing.
a0d0e21e 2868
2869=item unmatched [] in regexp
2870
2871(F) The brackets around a character class must match. If you wish to
2872include a closing bracket in a character class, backslash it or put it first.
2873See L<perlre>.
2874
2875=item Unquoted string "%s" may clash with future reserved word
2876
54310121 2877(W) You used a bareword that might someday be claimed as a reserved word.
a0d0e21e 2878It's best to put such a word in quotes, or capitalize it somehow, or insert
2879an underbar into it. You might also declare it as a subroutine.
2880
54310121 2881=item Unrecognized character %s
a0d0e21e 2882
54310121 2883(F) The Perl parser has no idea what to do with the specified character
2884in your Perl script (or eval). Perhaps you tried to run a compressed
2885script, a binary program, or a directory as a Perl program.
a0d0e21e 2886
c9f97d15 2887=item Unrecognized escape \\%c passed through
2888
2889(W) You used a backslash-character combination which is not recognized
2890by Perl.
2891
a0d0e21e 2892=item Unrecognized signal name "%s"
2893
2894(F) You specified a signal name to the kill() function that was not recognized.
2895Say C<kill -l> in your shell to see the valid signal names on your system.
2896
90248788 2897=item Unrecognized switch: -%s (-h will show valid options)
a0d0e21e 2898
2899(F) You specified an illegal option to Perl. Don't do that.
2900(If you think you didn't do that, check the #! line to see if it's
2901supplying the bad switch on your behalf.)
2902
2903=item Unsuccessful %s on filename containing newline
2904
2905(W) A file operation was attempted on a filename, and that operation
2906failed, PROBABLY because the filename contained a newline, PROBABLY
54310121 2907because you forgot to chop() or chomp() it off. See L<perlfunc/chomp>.
a0d0e21e 2908
2909=item Unsupported directory function "%s" called
2910
2911(F) Your machine doesn't support opendir() and readdir().
2912
54310121 2913=item Unsupported function fork
2914
2915(F) Your version of executable does not support forking.
2916
2917Note that under some systems, like OS/2, there may be different flavors of
2918Perl executables, some of which may support fork, some not. Try changing
2919the name you call Perl by to C<perl_>, C<perl__>, and so on.
2920
a0d0e21e 2921=item Unsupported function %s
2922
7b8d334a 2923(F) This machine doesn't implement the indicated function, apparently.
a0d0e21e 2924At least, Configure doesn't think so.
2925
2926=item Unsupported socket function "%s" called
2927
2928(F) Your machine doesn't support the Berkeley socket mechanism, or at
2929least that's what Configure thought.
2930
8b1a09fc 2931=item Unterminated E<lt>E<gt> operator
a0d0e21e 2932
2933(F) The lexer saw a left angle bracket in a place where it was expecting
2934a term, so it's looking for the corresponding right angle bracket, and not
2935finding it. Chances are you left some needed parentheses out earlier in
2936the line, and you really meant a "less than".
2937
2938=item Use of $# is deprecated
2939
8b1a09fc 2940(D) This was an ill-advised attempt to emulate a poorly defined B<awk> feature.
a0d0e21e 2941Use an explicit printf() or sprintf() instead.
2942
2943=item Use of $* is deprecated
2944
4a6725af 2945(D) This variable magically turned on multi-line pattern matching, both for
a0d0e21e 2946you and for any luckless subroutine that you happen to call. You should
2947use the new C<//m> and C<//s> modifiers now to do that without the dangerous
2948action-at-a-distance effects of C<$*>.
2949
748a9306 2950=item Use of %s in printf format not supported
2951
5f05dabc 2952(F) You attempted to use a feature of printf that is accessible from
2953only C. This usually means there's a better way to do it in Perl.
748a9306 2954
8b1a09fc 2955=item Use of bare E<lt>E<lt> to mean E<lt>E<lt>"" is deprecated
4633a7c4 2956
2957(D) You are now encouraged to use the explicitly quoted form if you
3fe9a6f1 2958wish to use an empty line as the terminator of the here-document.
4633a7c4 2959
a0d0e21e 2960=item Use of implicit split to @_ is deprecated
2961
2962(D) It makes a lot of work for the compiler when you clobber a
2963subroutine's argument list, so it's better if you assign the results of
2964a split() explicitly to an array (or list).
2965
dc848c6f 2966=item Use of inherited AUTOLOAD for non-method %s() is deprecated
2967
5cd24f17 2968(D) As an (ahem) accidental feature, C<AUTOLOAD> subroutines are looked
2969up as methods (using the C<@ISA> hierarchy) even when the subroutines to
2970be autoloaded were called as plain functions (e.g. C<Foo::bar()>), not
7b8d334a 2971as methods (e.g. C<Foo-E<gt>bar()> or C<$obj-E<gt>bar()>).
dc848c6f 2972
2973This bug will be rectified in Perl 5.005, which will use method lookup
2974only for methods' C<AUTOLOAD>s. However, there is a significant base
2975of existing code that may be using the old behavior. So, as an
2976interim step, Perl 5.004 issues an optional warning when non-methods
2977use inherited C<AUTOLOAD>s.
2978
2979The simple rule is: Inheritance will not work when autoloading
2980non-methods. The simple fix for old code is: In any module that used to
2981depend on inheriting C<AUTOLOAD> for non-methods from a base class named
2982C<BaseClass>, execute C<*AUTOLOAD = \&BaseClass::AUTOLOAD> during startup.
2983
fb73857a 2984In code that currently says C<use AutoLoader; @ISA = qw(AutoLoader);> you
2985should remove AutoLoader from @ISA and change C<use AutoLoader;> to
7b8d334a 2986C<use AutoLoader 'AUTOLOAD';>.
fb73857a 2987
85b81015 2988=item Use of reserved word "%s" is deprecated
2989
2990(D) The indicated bareword is a reserved word. Future versions of perl
2991may use it as a keyword, so you're better off either explicitly quoting
2992the word in a manner appropriate for its context of use, or using a
2993different name altogether. The warning can be suppressed for subroutine
2994names by either adding a C<&> prefix, or using a package qualifier,
2995e.g. C<&our()>, or C<Foo::our()>.
2996
dc848c6f 2997=item Use of %s is deprecated
2998
2999(D) The construct indicated is no longer recommended for use, generally
3000because there's a better way to do it, and also because the old way has
3001bad side effects.
3002
a0d0e21e 3003=item Use of uninitialized value
3004
3005(W) An undefined value was used as if it were already defined. It was
3006interpreted as a "" or a 0, but maybe it was a mistake. To suppress this
5311ebfa 3007warning assign a defined value to your variables.
a0d0e21e 3008
8202fd39 3009=item Useless use of "re" pragma
3010
3011(W) You did C<use re;> without any arguments. That isn't very useful.
3012
a0d0e21e 3013=item Useless use of %s in void context
3014
3015(W) You did something without a side effect in a context that does nothing
3016with the return value, such as a statement that doesn't return a value
3017from a block, or the left side of a scalar comma operator. Very often
3018this points not to stupidity on your part, but a failure of Perl to parse
3019your program the way you thought it would. For example, you'd get this
3020if you mixed up your C precedence with Python precedence and said
3021
3022 $one, $two = 1, 2;
3023
3024when you meant to say
3025
3026 ($one, $two) = (1, 2);
3027
748a9306 3028Another common error is to use ordinary parentheses to construct a list
3029reference when you should be using square or curly brackets, for
3030example, if you say
3031
3032 $array = (1,2);
3033
3034when you should have said
3035
3036 $array = [1,2];
3037
3038The square brackets explicitly turn a list value into a scalar value,
3039while parentheses do not. So when a parenthesized list is evaluated in
3040a scalar context, the comma is treated like C's comma operator, which
3041throws away the left argument, which is not what you want. See
3042L<perlref> for more on this.
3043
55497cff 3044=item untie attempted while %d inner references still exist
3045
3046(W) A copy of the object returned from C<tie> (or C<tied>) was still
3047valid when C<untie> was called.
3048
68dc0745 3049=item Value of %s can be "0"; test with defined()
a6006777 3050
68dc0745 3051(W) In a conditional expression, you used <HANDLE>, <*> (glob), C<each()>,
3052or C<readdir()> as a boolean value. Each of these constructs can return a
3053value of "0"; that would make the conditional expression false, which is
3054probably not what you intended. When using these constructs in conditional
3055expressions, test their values with the C<defined> operator.
a6006777 3056
f675dbe5 3057=item Value of CLI symbol "%s" too long
3058
3059(W) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read the value of an %ENV
3060element from a CLI symbol table, and found a resultant string longer
3061than 1024 characters. The return value has been truncated to 1024
3062characters.
3063
9607fc9c 3064=item Variable "%s" is not imported%s
4633a7c4 3065
3066(F) While "use strict" in effect, you referred to a global variable
3067that you apparently thought was imported from another module, because
3068something else of the same name (usually a subroutine) is exported
3069by that module. It usually means you put the wrong funny character
3070on the front of your variable.
3071
44a8e56a 3072=item Variable "%s" may be unavailable
3073
3074(W) An inner (nested) I<anonymous> subroutine is inside a I<named>
3075subroutine, and outside that is another subroutine; and the anonymous
3076(innermost) subroutine is referencing a lexical variable defined in
3077the outermost subroutine. For example:
3078
3079 sub outermost { my $a; sub middle { sub { $a } } }
3080
3081If the anonymous subroutine is called or referenced (directly or
3082indirectly) from the outermost subroutine, it will share the variable
3083as you would expect. But if the anonymous subroutine is called or
3084referenced when the outermost subroutine is not active, it will see
3085the value of the shared variable as it was before and during the
3086*first* call to the outermost subroutine, which is probably not what
3087you want.
3088
3089In these circumstances, it is usually best to make the middle
3090subroutine anonymous, using the C<sub {}> syntax. Perl has specific
3091support for shared variables in nested anonymous subroutines; a named
3092subroutine in between interferes with this feature.
3093
3094=item Variable "%s" will not stay shared
3095
3096(W) An inner (nested) I<named> subroutine is referencing a lexical
3097variable defined in an outer subroutine.
3098
3099When the inner subroutine is called, it will probably see the value of
3100the outer subroutine's variable as it was before and during the
3101*first* call to the outer subroutine; in this case, after the first
3102call to the outer subroutine is complete, the inner and outer
3103subroutines will no longer share a common value for the variable. In
3104other words, the variable will no longer be shared.
3105
3106Furthermore, if the outer subroutine is anonymous and references a
3107lexical variable outside itself, then the outer and inner subroutines
3108will I<never> share the given variable.
3109
3110This problem can usually be solved by making the inner subroutine
3111anonymous, using the C<sub {}> syntax. When inner anonymous subs that
3112reference variables in outer subroutines are called or referenced,
54310121 3113they are automatically rebound to the current values of such
44a8e56a 3114variables.
3115
f86702cc 3116=item Variable syntax
cb1a09d0 3117
3118(A) You've accidentally run your script through B<csh> instead
3a52c276 3119of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into
3120Perl yourself.
cb1a09d0 3121
3e6e419a 3122=item perl: warning: Setting locale failed.
3123
3124(S) The whole warning message will look something like:
3125
3126 perl: warning: Setting locale failed.
3127 perl: warning: Please check that your locale settings:
3128 LC_ALL = "En_US",
3129 LANG = (unset)
3130 are supported and installed on your system.
3131 perl: warning: Falling back to the standard locale ("C").
3132
3133Exactly what were the failed locale settings varies. In the above the
3134settings were that the LC_ALL was "En_US" and the LANG had no value.
3135This error means that Perl detected that you and/or your system
3136administrator have set up the so-called variable system but Perl could
3137not use those settings. This was not dead serious, fortunately: there
3138is a "default locale" called "C" that Perl can and will use, the
3139script will be run. Before you really fix the problem, however, you
3140will get the same error message each time you run Perl. How to really
3141fix the problem can be found in L<perllocale> section B<LOCALE PROBLEMS>.
3142
7e1af8bc 3143=item Warning: something's wrong
5f05dabc 3144
3145(W) You passed warn() an empty string (the equivalent of C<warn "">) or
3146you called it with no args and C<$_> was empty.
3147
f86702cc 3148=item Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly
a0d0e21e 3149
8b1a09fc 3150(S) The implicit close() done by an open() got an error indication on the
5f05dabc 3151close(). This usually indicates your file system ran out of disk space.
a0d0e21e 3152
5f05dabc 3153=item Warning: Use of "%s" without parentheses is ambiguous
a0d0e21e 3154
3155(S) You wrote a unary operator followed by something that looks like a
3156binary operator that could also have been interpreted as a term or
3157unary operator. For instance, if you know that the rand function
3158has a default argument of 1.0, and you write
3159
3160 rand + 5;
3161
3162you may THINK you wrote the same thing as
3163
3164 rand() + 5;
3165
3166but in actual fact, you got
3167
3168 rand(+5);
3169
5f05dabc 3170So put in parentheses to say what you really mean.
a0d0e21e 3171
3172=item Write on closed filehandle
3173
3174(W) The filehandle you're writing to got itself closed sometime before now.
3175Check your logic flow.
3176
3177=item X outside of string
3178
3179(F) You had a pack template that specified a relative position before
3180the beginning of the string being unpacked. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3181
3182=item x outside of string
3183
3184(F) You had a pack template that specified a relative position after
3185the end of the string being unpacked. See L<perlfunc/pack>.
3186
3187=item Xsub "%s" called in sort
3188
3189(F) The use of an external subroutine as a sort comparison is not yet supported.
3190
3191=item Xsub called in sort
3192
3193(F) The use of an external subroutine as a sort comparison is not yet supported.
3194
3195=item You can't use C<-l> on a filehandle
3196
3197(F) A filehandle represents an opened file, and when you opened the file it
3198already went past any symlink you are presumably trying to look for.
3199Use a filename instead.
3200
3201=item YOU HAVEN'T DISABLED SET-ID SCRIPTS IN THE KERNEL YET!
3202
5f05dabc 3203(F) And you probably never will, because you probably don't have the
a0d0e21e 3204sources to your kernel, and your vendor probably doesn't give a rip
3205about what you want. Your best bet is to use the wrapsuid script in
3206the eg directory to put a setuid C wrapper around your script.
3207
3208=item You need to quote "%s"
3209
3210(W) You assigned a bareword as a signal handler name. Unfortunately, you
3211already have a subroutine of that name declared, which means that Perl 5
3212will try to call the subroutine when the assignment is executed, which is
3213probably not what you want. (If it IS what you want, put an & in front.)
3214
3215=item [gs]etsockopt() on closed fd
3216
3217(W) You tried to get or set a socket option on a closed socket.
3218Did you forget to check the return value of your socket() call?
3219See L<perlfunc/getsockopt>.
3220
3221=item \1 better written as $1
3222
3223(W) Outside of patterns, backreferences live on as variables. The use
5f05dabc 3224of backslashes is grandfathered on the right-hand side of a
a0d0e21e 3225substitution, but stylistically it's better to use the variable form
3226because other Perl programmers will expect it, and it works better
3227if there are more than 9 backreferences.
3228
8b1a09fc 3229=item '|' and 'E<lt>' may not both be specified on command line
748a9306 3230
3231(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and
3232found that STDIN was a pipe, and that you also tried to redirect STDIN using
8b1a09fc 3233'E<lt>'. Only one STDIN stream to a customer, please.
748a9306 3234
8b1a09fc 3235=item '|' and 'E<gt>' may not both be specified on command line
748a9306 3236
3237(F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command line redirection, and
3238thinks you tried to redirect stdout both to a file and into a pipe to another
3239command. You need to choose one or the other, though nothing's stopping you
3240from piping into a program or Perl script which 'splits' output into two
3241streams, such as
3242
3243 open(OUT,">$ARGV[0]") or die "Can't write to $ARGV[0]: $!";
3244 while (<STDIN>) {
3245 print;
3246 print OUT;
3247 }
3248 close OUT;
3249
774d564b 3250=item Got an error from DosAllocMem
33c8a3fe 3251
774d564b 3252(P) An error peculiar to OS/2. Most probably you're using an obsolete
3253version of Perl, and this should not happen anyway.
33c8a3fe 3254
3255=item Malformed PERLLIB_PREFIX
3256
dc848c6f 3257(F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERLLIB_PREFIX should be of the form
33c8a3fe 3258
3259 prefix1;prefix2
3260
3261or
3262
3263 prefix1 prefix2
3264
dc848c6f 3265with nonempty prefix1 and prefix2. If C<prefix1> is indeed a prefix
3266of a builtin library search path, prefix2 is substituted. The error
3267may appear if components are not found, or are too long. See
3268"PERLLIB_PREFIX" in F<README.os2>.
33c8a3fe 3269
3270=item PERL_SH_DIR too long
3271
54310121 3272(F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERL_SH_DIR is the directory to find the
dc848c6f 3273C<sh>-shell in. See "PERL_SH_DIR" in F<README.os2>.
33c8a3fe 3274
3275=item Process terminated by SIG%s
3276
3277(W) This is a standard message issued by OS/2 applications, while *nix
dc848c6f 3278applications die in silence. It is considered a feature of the OS/2
3279port. One can easily disable this by appropriate sighandlers, see
3280L<perlipc/"Signals">. See also "Process terminated by SIGTERM/SIGINT"
3281in F<README.os2>.
33c8a3fe 3282
a0d0e21e 3283=back
3284