print STDOUT "stdout 2\n";
print STDERR "stderr 2\n";
-If you specify C<< '<&=N' >>, where C<N> is a number, then Perl will do an
-equivalent of C's C<fdopen> of that file descriptor; this is more
-parsimonious of file descriptors. For example:
+If you specify C<< '<&=N' >>, where C<N> is a number, then Perl will
+do an equivalent of C's C<fdopen> of that file descriptor; this is
+more parsimonious of file descriptors. For example:
open(FILEHANDLE, "<&=$fd")
+
or
+
open(FILEHANDLE, "<&=", $fd)
-Note that if perl is using the standard C libaries fdopen() then on many UNIX systems,
-fdopen() is known to fail when file descriptors
+Note that if Perl is using the standard C libraries' fdopen() then on
+many UNIX systems, fdopen() is known to fail when file descriptors
exceed a certain value, typically 255. If you need more file
descriptors than that, consider rebuilding Perl to use the C<PerlIO>.
+You can see whether Perl has been compiled with PerlIO or not by
+running C<perl -V> and looking for C<useperlio=> line. If C<useperlio>
+is C<define>, you have PerlIO, otherwise you don't.
+
If you open a pipe on the command C<'-'>, i.e., either C<'|-'> or C<'-|'>
with 2-arguments (or 1-argument) form of open(), then
there is an implicit fork done, and the return value of open is the pid
depending on how you look at it. Prepends list to the front of the
array, and returns the new number of elements in the array.
- unshift(ARGV, '-e') unless $ARGV[0] =~ /^-/;
+ unshift(@ARGV, '-e') unless $ARGV[0] =~ /^-/;
Note the LIST is prepended whole, not one element at a time, so the
prepended elements stay in the same order. Use C<reverse> to do the