1 This stuff is supplied on an as-is basis--little attempt has been made to make
2 any of it portable. It's mostly here to give you an idea of what perl code
3 looks like, and what tricks and idioms are used.
5 System administrators responsible for many computers will enjoy the items
6 down in the g directory very much. The scan directory contains the beginnings
7 of a system to check on and report various kinds of anomalies.
9 If you machine doesn't support #!, the first thing you'll want to do is
10 replace the #! with a couple of lines that look like this:
12 eval "exec /usr/bin/perl -S $0 $*"
13 if $running_under_some_shell;
15 being sure to include any flags that were on the #! line. A supplied script
16 called "nih" will translate perl scripts in place for you: