perldiag - various Perl diagnostics
These messages are classified as follows (listed in increasing order of
desperation):
(W) A warning (optional).
(D) A deprecation (enabled by default).
(S) A severe warning (enabled by default).
(F) A fatal error (trappable).
(P) An internal error you should never see (trappable).
(X) A very fatal error (nontrappable).
(A) An alien error message (not generated by Perl).
The majority of messages from the first three classifications above (W, D &
S) can be controlled using the "warnings" pragma.
If a message can be controlled by the "warnings" pragma, its warning
category is included with the classification letter in the description below.
E.g. "(W closed)" means a warning in the "closed"
category.
Optional warnings are enabled by using the "warnings" pragma or the
-w and
-W switches. Warnings may be captured by setting
$SIG{__WARN__} to a reference to a routine that will be called on each warning
instead of printing it. See perlvar.
Severe warnings are always enabled, unless they are explicitly disabled with the
"warnings" pragma or the
-X switch.
Trappable errors may be trapped using the eval operator. See "eval" in
perlfunc. In almost all cases, warnings may be selectively disabled or
promoted to fatal errors using the "warnings" pragma. See warnings.
The messages are in alphabetical order, without regard to upper or lower-case.
Some of these messages are generic. Spots that vary are denoted with a %s or
other printf-style escape. These escapes are ignored by the alphabetical
order, as are all characters other than letters. To look up your message, just
ignore anything that is not a letter.
-
accept() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to do an accept on a closed socket.
Did you forget to check the return value of your socket() call? See
"accept" in perlfunc.
- Aliasing via reference is experimental
- (S experimental::refaliasing) This warning is emitted if
you use a reference constructor on the left-hand side of an assignment to
alias one variable to another. Simply suppress the warning if you want to
use the feature, but know that in doing so you are taking the risk of
using an experimental feature which may change or be removed in a future
Perl version:
no warnings "experimental::refaliasing";
use feature "refaliasing";
\$x = \$y;
- '%c' allowed only after types %s in %s
- (F) The modifiers '!', '<' and '>' are allowed in
pack() or unpack() only after certain types. See
"pack" in perlfunc.
- alpha->numify() is lossy
- (W numeric) An alpha version can not be numified without
losing information.
- Ambiguous call resolved as CORE::%s(), qualify as such or
use &
- (W ambiguous) A subroutine you have declared has the same
name as a Perl keyword, and you have used the name without qualification
for calling one or the other. Perl decided to call the builtin because the
subroutine is not imported.
To force interpretation as a subroutine call, either put an ampersand before
the subroutine name, or qualify the name with its package. Alternatively,
you can import the subroutine (or pretend that it's imported with the
"use subs" pragma).
To silently interpret it as the Perl operator, use the "CORE::"
prefix on the operator (e.g. "CORE::log($x)") or declare the
subroutine to be an object method (see "Subroutine Attributes"
in perlsub or attributes).
- Ambiguous range in transliteration operator
- (F) You wrote something like "tr/a-z-0//" which
doesn't mean anything at all. To include a "-" character in a
transliteration, put it either first or last. (In the past,
"tr/a-z-0//" was synonymous with "tr/a-y//", which was
probably not what you would have expected.)
- Ambiguous use of %s resolved as %s
- (S ambiguous) You said something that may not be
interpreted the way you thought. Normally it's pretty easy to disambiguate
it by supplying a missing quote, operator, parenthesis pair or
declaration.
- Ambiguous use of -%s resolved as -&%s()
- (S ambiguous) You wrote something like "-foo",
which might be the string "-foo", or a call to the function
"foo", negated. If you meant the string, just write
"-foo". If you meant the function call, write
"-foo()".
- Ambiguous use of %c resolved as operator %c
- (S ambiguous) "%", "&", and
"*" are both infix operators (modulus, bitwise and, and
multiplication) and initial special characters (denoting hashes,
subroutines and typeglobs), and you said something like "*foo *
foo" that might be interpreted as either of them. We assumed you
meant the infix operator, but please try to make it more clear -- in the
example given, you might write "*foo * foo()" if you really
meant to multiply a glob by the result of calling a function.
- Ambiguous use of %c{%s} resolved to %c%s
- (W ambiguous) You wrote something like "@{foo}",
which might be asking for the variable @foo, or it might be calling a
function named foo, and dereferencing it as an array reference. If you
wanted the variable, you can just write @foo. If you wanted to call the
function, write "@{foo()}" ... or you could just not have a
variable and a function with the same name, and save yourself a lot of
trouble.
- Ambiguous use of %c{%s[...]} resolved to %c%s[...]
- Ambiguous use of %c{%s{...}} resolved to %c%s{...}
- (W ambiguous) You wrote something like
"${foo[2]}" (where foo represents the name of a Perl keyword),
which might be looking for element number 2 of the array named @foo, in
which case please write $foo[2], or you might have meant to pass an
anonymous arrayref to the function named foo, and then do a scalar deref
on the value it returns. If you meant that, write "${foo([2])}".
In regular expressions, the "${foo[2]}" syntax is sometimes
necessary to disambiguate between array subscripts and character classes.
"/$length[2345]/", for instance, will be interpreted as $length
followed by the character class "[2345]". If an array subscript
is what you want, you can avoid the warning by changing
"/${length[2345]}/" to the unsightly
"/${\$length[2345]}/", by renaming your array to something that
does not coincide with a built-in keyword, or by simply turning off
warnings with "no warnings 'ambiguous';".
- '|' and '<' may not both be specified on command
line
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command
line redirection, and found that STDIN was a pipe, and that you also tried
to redirect STDIN using '<'. Only one STDIN stream to a customer,
please.
- '|' and '>' may not both be specified on command
line
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command
line redirection, and thinks you tried to redirect stdout both to a file
and into a pipe to another command. You need to choose one or the other,
though nothing's stopping you from piping into a program or Perl script
which 'splits' output into two streams, such as
open(OUT,">$ARGV[0]") or die "Can't write to $ARGV[0]: $!";
while (<STDIN>) {
print;
print OUT;
}
close OUT;
- Applying %s to %s will act on scalar(%s)
- (W misc) The pattern match ("//"), substitution
("s///"), and transliteration ("tr///") operators work
on scalar values. If you apply one of them to an array or a hash, it will
convert the array or hash to a scalar value (the length of an array, or
the population info of a hash) and then work on that scalar value. This is
probably not what you meant to do. See "grep" in perlfunc and
"map" in perlfunc for alternatives.
- Arg too short for msgsnd
- (F) msgsnd() requires a string at least as long as
sizeof(long).
- Argument "%s" isn't numeric%s
- (W numeric) The indicated string was fed as an argument to
an operator that expected a numeric value instead. If you're fortunate the
message will identify which operator was so unfortunate.
Note that for the "Inf" and "NaN" (infinity and
not-a-number) the definition of "numeric" is somewhat unusual:
the strings themselves (like "Inf") are considered numeric, and
anything following them is considered non-numeric.
- Argument list not closed for PerlIO layer
"%s"
- (W layer) When pushing a layer with arguments onto the Perl
I/O system you forgot the ) that closes the argument list. (Layers take
care of transforming data between external and internal representations.)
Perl stopped parsing the layer list at this point and did not attempt to
push this layer. If your program didn't explicitly request the failing
operation, it may be the result of the value of the environment variable
PERLIO.
- Argument "%s" treated as 0 in increment (++)
- (W numeric) The indicated string was fed as an argument to
the "++" operator which expects either a number or a string
matching "/^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/". See "Auto-increment and
Auto-decrement" in perlop for details.
- Array passed to stat will be coerced to a scalar%s
- (W syntax) You called stat() on an array, but the
array will be coerced to a scalar - the number of elements in the
array.
- A signature parameter must start with '$', '@' or '%'
- (F) Each subroutine signature parameter declaration must
start with a valid sigil; for example:
sub foo ($a, $, $b = 1, @c) {}
- A slurpy parameter may not have a default value
- (F) Only scalar subroutine signature parameters may have a
default value; for example:
sub foo ($a = 1) {} # legal
sub foo (@a = (1)) {} # invalid
sub foo (%a = (a => b)) {} # invalid
- assertion botched: %s
- (X) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal
failure.
- Assertion %s failed: file "%s", line %d
- (X) A general assertion failed. The file in question must
be examined.
- Assigned value is not a reference
- (F) You tried to assign something that was not a reference
to an lvalue reference (e.g., "\$x = $y"). If you meant to make
$x an alias to $y, use "\$x = \$y".
- Assigned value is not %s reference
- (F) You tried to assign a reference to a reference
constructor, but the two references were not of the same type. You cannot
alias a scalar to an array, or an array to a hash; the two types must
match.
\$x = \@y; # error
\@x = \%y; # error
$y = [];
\$x = $y; # error; did you mean \$y?
- Assigning non-zero to $[ is no longer possible
- (F) When the "array_base" feature is disabled
(e.g., and under "use v5.16;", and as of Perl 5.30) the special
variable $[, which is deprecated, is now a fixed zero value.
- Assignment to both a list and a scalar
- (F) If you assign to a conditional operator, the 2nd and
3rd arguments must either both be scalars or both be lists. Otherwise Perl
won't know which context to supply to the right side.
- Assuming NOT a POSIX class since %s in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) You had something like these:
[[:alnum]]
[[:digit:xyz]
They look like they might have been meant to be the POSIX classes
"[:alnum:]" or "[:digit:]". If so, they should be
written:
[[:alnum:]]
[[:digit:]xyz]
Since these aren't legal POSIX class specifications, but are legal bracketed
character classes, Perl treats them as the latter. In the first example,
it matches the characters ":", "[", "a",
"l", "m", "n", and "u".
If these weren't meant to be POSIX classes, this warning message is
spurious, and can be suppressed by reordering things, such as
[[al:num]]
or
[[:munla]]
- <> at require-statement should be quotes
- (F) You wrote "require <file>" when you
should have written "require 'file'".
- Attempt to access disallowed key '%s' in a restricted
hash
- (F) The failing code has attempted to get or set a key
which is not in the current set of allowed keys of a restricted hash.
- Attempt to bless into a freed package
- (F) You wrote "bless $foo" with one argument
after somehow causing the current package to be freed. Perl cannot figure
out what to do, so it throws up its hands in despair.
- Attempt to bless into a reference
- (F) The CLASSNAME argument to the bless() operator
is expected to be the name of the package to bless the resulting object
into. You've supplied instead a reference to something: perhaps you wrote
bless $self, $proto;
when you intended
bless $self, ref($proto) || $proto;
If you actually want to bless into the stringified version of the reference
supplied, you need to stringify it yourself, for example by:
bless $self, "$proto";
- Attempt to clear deleted array
- (S debugging) An array was assigned to when it was being
freed. Freed values are not supposed to be visible to Perl code. This can
also happen if XS code calls "av_clear" from a custom magic
callback on the array.
- Attempt to delete disallowed key '%s' from a restricted
hash
- (F) The failing code attempted to delete from a restricted
hash a key which is not in its key set.
- Attempt to delete readonly key '%s' from a restricted
hash
- (F) The failing code attempted to delete a key whose value
has been declared readonly from a restricted hash.
- Attempt to free non-arena SV: 0x%x
- (S internal) All SV objects are supposed to be allocated
from arenas that will be garbage collected on exit. An SV was discovered
to be outside any of those arenas.
- Attempt to free nonexistent shared string '%s'%s
- (S internal) Perl maintains a reference-counted internal
table of strings to optimize the storage and access of hash keys and other
strings. This indicates someone tried to decrement the reference count of
a string that can no longer be found in the table.
- Attempt to free temp prematurely: SV 0x%x
- (S debugging) Mortalized values are supposed to be freed by
the free_tmps() routine. This indicates that something else is
freeing the SV before the free_tmps() routine gets a chance, which
means that the free_tmps() routine will be freeing an unreferenced
scalar when it does try to free it.
- Attempt to free unreferenced glob pointers
- (S internal) The reference counts got screwed up on symbol
aliases.
- Attempt to free unreferenced scalar: SV 0x%x
- (S internal) Perl went to decrement the reference count of
a scalar to see if it would go to 0, and discovered that it had already
gone to 0 earlier, and should have been freed, and in fact, probably was
freed. This could indicate that SvREFCNT_dec() was called too many
times, or that SvREFCNT_inc() was called too few times, or that the
SV was mortalized when it shouldn't have been, or that memory has been
corrupted.
- Attempt to pack pointer to temporary value
- (W pack) You tried to pass a temporary value (like the
result of a function, or a computed expression) to the "p"
pack() template. This means the result contains a pointer to a
location that could become invalid anytime, even before the end of the
current statement. Use literals or global values as arguments to the
"p" pack() template to avoid this warning.
- Attempt to reload %s aborted.
- (F) You tried to load a file with "use" or
"require" that failed to compile once already. Perl will not try
to compile this file again unless you delete its entry from %INC. See
"require" in perlfunc and "%INC" in perlvar.
- Attempt to set length of freed array
- (W misc) You tried to set the length of an array which has
been freed. You can do this by storing a reference to the scalar
representing the last index of an array and later assigning through that
reference. For example
$r = do {my @a; \$#a};
$$r = 503
- Attempt to use reference as lvalue in substr
- (W substr) You supplied a reference as the first argument
to substr() used as an lvalue, which is pretty strange. Perhaps you
forgot to dereference it first. See "substr" in perlfunc.
- Attribute prototype(%s) discards earlier prototype
attribute in same sub
- (W misc) A sub was declared as sub foo : prototype(A) :
prototype(B) {}, for example. Since each sub can only have one prototype,
the earlier declaration(s) are discarded while the last one is
applied.
- av_reify called on tied array
- (S debugging) This indicates that something went wrong and
Perl got very confused about @_ or @DB::args being tied.
- Bad arg length for %s, is %u, should be %d
- (F) You passed a buffer of the wrong size to one of
msgctl(), semctl() or shmctl(). In C parlance, the
correct sizes are, respectively, sizeof(struct msqid_ds *),
sizeof(struct semid_ds *), and
sizeof(struct shmid_ds *).
- Bad evalled substitution pattern
- (F) You've used the "/e" switch to evaluate the
replacement for a substitution, but perl found a syntax error in the code
to evaluate, most likely an unexpected right brace '}'.
- Bad filehandle: %s
- (F) A symbol was passed to something wanting a filehandle,
but the symbol has no filehandle associated with it. Perhaps you didn't do
an open(), or did it in another package.
- Bad free() ignored
- (S malloc) An internal routine called free() on
something that had never been malloc()ed in the first place.
Mandatory, but can be disabled by setting environment variable
"PERL_BADFREE" to 0.
This message can be seen quite often with DB_File on systems with
"hard" dynamic linking, like "AIX" and
"OS/2". It is a bug of "Berkeley DB" which is left
unnoticed if "DB" uses forgiving system
malloc().
- Badly placed ()'s
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through csh
instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl
yourself.
- Bad name after %s
- (F) You started to name a symbol by using a package prefix,
and then didn't finish the symbol. In particular, you can't interpolate
outside of quotes, so
$var = 'myvar';
$sym = mypack::$var;
is not the same as
$var = 'myvar';
$sym = "mypack::$var";
- Bad plugin affecting keyword '%s'
- (F) An extension using the keyword plugin mechanism
violated the plugin API.
- Bad realloc() ignored
- (S malloc) An internal routine called realloc() on
something that had never been malloc()ed in the first place.
Mandatory, but can be disabled by setting the environment variable
"PERL_BADFREE" to 1.
- Bad symbol for array
- (P) An internal request asked to add an array entry to
something that wasn't a symbol table entry.
- Bad symbol for dirhandle
- (P) An internal request asked to add a dirhandle entry to
something that wasn't a symbol table entry.
- Bad symbol for filehandle
- (P) An internal request asked to add a filehandle entry to
something that wasn't a symbol table entry.
- Bad symbol for hash
- (P) An internal request asked to add a hash entry to
something that wasn't a symbol table entry.
- Bad symbol for scalar
- (P) An internal request asked to add a scalar entry to
something that wasn't a symbol table entry.
- Bareword found in conditional
- (W bareword) The compiler found a bareword where it
expected a conditional, which often indicates that an || or && was
parsed as part of the last argument of the previous construct, for
example:
open FOO || die;
It may also indicate a misspelled constant that has been interpreted as a
bareword:
use constant TYPO => 1;
if (TYOP) { print "foo" }
The "strict" pragma is useful in avoiding such errors.
- Bareword in require contains "%s"
- Bareword in require maps to disallowed filename
"%s"
- Bareword in require maps to empty filename
- (F) The bareword form of require has been invoked with a
filename which could not have been generated by a valid bareword permitted
by the parser. You shouldn't be able to get this error from Perl code, but
XS code may throw it if it passes an invalid module name to
"Perl_load_module".
- Bareword in require must not start with a double-colon:
"%s"
- (F) In "require Bare::Word", the bareword is not
allowed to start with a double-colon. Write "require ::Foo::Bar"
as "require Foo::Bar" instead.
- Bareword "%s" not allowed while "strict
subs" in use
- (F) With "strict subs" in use, a bareword is only
allowed as a subroutine identifier, in curly brackets or to the left of
the "=>" symbol. Perhaps you need to predeclare a
subroutine?
- Bareword "%s" refers to nonexistent package
- (W bareword) You used a qualified bareword of the form
"Foo::", but the compiler saw no other uses of that namespace
before that point. Perhaps you need to predeclare a package?
- Bareword filehandle "%s" not allowed under 'no
feature "bareword_filehandles"'
- (F) You attempted to use a bareword filehandle with the
"bareword_filehandles" feature disabled.
Only the built-in handles "STDIN", "STDOUT",
"STDERR", "ARGV", "ARGVOUT" and
"DATA" can be used with the "bareword_filehandles"
feature disabled.
- BEGIN failed--compilation aborted
- (F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing a
BEGIN subroutine. Compilation stops immediately and the interpreter is
exited.
- BEGIN not safe after errors--compilation aborted
- (F) Perl found a "BEGIN {}" subroutine (or a
"use" directive, which implies a "BEGIN {}") after one
or more compilation errors had already occurred. Since the intended
environment for the "BEGIN {}" could not be guaranteed (due to
the errors), and since subsequent code likely depends on its correct
operation, Perl just gave up.
- \%d better written as $%d
- (W syntax) Outside of patterns, backreferences live on as
variables. The use of backslashes is grandfathered on the right-hand side
of a substitution, but stylistically it's better to use the variable form
because other Perl programmers will expect it, and it works better if
there are more than 9 backreferences.
- Binary number > 0b11111111111111111111111111111111
non-portable
- (W portable) The binary number you specified is larger than
2**32-1 (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
perlport for more on portability concerns.
-
bind() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to do a bind on a closed socket. Did
you forget to check the return value of your socket() call? See
"bind" in perlfunc.
-
binmode() on closed filehandle %s
- (W unopened) You tried binmode() on a filehandle
that was never opened. Check your control flow and number of
arguments.
- Bit vector size > 32 non-portable
- (W portable) Using bit vector sizes larger than 32 is
non-portable.
- Bizarre copy of %s
- (P) Perl detected an attempt to copy an internal value that
is not copiable.
- Bizarre SvTYPE [%d]
- (P) When starting a new thread or returning values from a
thread, Perl encountered an invalid data type.
- Both or neither range ends should be Unicode in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) (only under
"use re 'strict'" or within "(?[...])")
In a bracketed character class in a regular expression pattern, you had a
range which has exactly one end of it specified using "\N{}",
and the other end is specified using a non-portable mechanism. Perl treats
the range as a Unicode range, that is, all the characters in it are
considered to be the Unicode characters, and which may be different code
points on some platforms Perl runs on. For example,
"[\N{U+06}-\x08]" is treated as if you had instead said
"[\N{U+06}-\N{U+08}]", that is it matches the characters whose
code points in Unicode are 6, 7, and 8. But that "\x08" might
indicate that you meant something different, so the warning gets
raised.
- Buffer overflow in prime_env_iter: %s
- (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. While Perl was
preparing to iterate over %ENV, it encountered a logical name or symbol
definition which was too long, so it was truncated to the string
shown.
- Built-in function '%s' is experimental
- (S experimental::builtin) A call is being made to a
function in the "builtin::" namespace, which is currently
experimental. The existence or nature of the function may be subject to
change in a future version of Perl.
- builtin::import can only be called at compile time
- (F) The "import" method of the
"builtin" package was invoked when no code is currently being
compiled. Since this method is used to introduce new lexical subroutines
into the scope currently being compiled, this is not going to have any
effect.
- Callback called exit
- (F) A subroutine invoked from an external package via
call_sv() exited by calling exit.
- %s() called too early to check prototype
- (W prototype) You've called a function that has a prototype
before the parser saw a definition or declaration for it, and Perl could
not check that the call conforms to the prototype. You need to either add
an early prototype declaration for the subroutine in question, or move the
subroutine definition ahead of the call to get proper prototype checking.
Alternatively, if you are certain that you're calling the function
correctly, you may put an ampersand before the name to avoid the warning.
See perlsub.
- Cannot chr %f
- (F) You passed an invalid number (like an infinity or
not-a-number) to "chr".
- Cannot complete in-place edit of %s: %s
- (F) Your perl script appears to have changed directory
while performing an in-place edit of a file specified by a relative path,
and your system doesn't include the directory relative POSIX functions
needed to handle that.
- Cannot compress %f in pack
- (F) You tried compressing an infinity or not-a-number as an
unsigned integer with BER, which makes no sense.
- Cannot compress integer in pack
- (F) An argument to pack("w",...) was too large to
compress. The BER compressed integer format can only be used with positive
integers, and you attempted to compress a very large number (> 1e308).
See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Cannot compress negative numbers in pack
- (F) An argument to pack("w",...) was negative.
The BER compressed integer format can only be used with positive integers.
See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Cannot convert a reference to %s to typeglob
- (F) You manipulated Perl's symbol table directly, stored a
reference in it, then tried to access that symbol via conventional Perl
syntax. The access triggers Perl to autovivify that typeglob, but it there
is no legal conversion from that type of reference to a typeglob.
- Cannot copy to %s
- (P) Perl detected an attempt to copy a value to an internal
type that cannot be directly assigned to.
- Cannot find encoding "%s"
- (S io) You tried to apply an encoding that did not exist to
a filehandle, either with open() or binmode().
- Cannot open %s as a dirhandle: it is already open as a
filehandle
- (F) You tried to use opendir() to associate a
dirhandle to a symbol (glob or scalar) that already holds a filehandle.
Since this idiom might render your code confusing, it was deprecated in
Perl 5.10. As of Perl 5.28, it is a fatal error.
- Cannot open %s as a filehandle: it is already open as a
dirhandle
- (F) You tried to use open() to associate a
filehandle to a symbol (glob or scalar) that already holds a dirhandle.
Since this idiom might render your code confusing, it was deprecated in
Perl 5.10. As of Perl 5.28, it is a fatal error.
- Cannot pack %f with '%c'
- (F) You tried converting an infinity or not-a-number to an
integer, which makes no sense.
- Cannot printf %f with '%c'
- (F) You tried printing an infinity or not-a-number as a
character (%c), which makes no sense. Maybe you meant '%s', or just
stringifying it?
- Cannot set tied @DB::args
- (F) "caller" tried to set @DB::args, but found it
tied. Tying @DB::args is not supported. (Before this error was added, it
used to crash.)
- Cannot tie unreifiable array
- (P) You somehow managed to call "tie" on an array
that does not keep a reference count on its arguments and cannot be made
to do so. Such arrays are not even supposed to be accessible to Perl code,
but are only used internally.
- Cannot yet reorder sv_vcatpvfn() arguments from
va_list
- (F) Some XS code tried to use "sv_vcatpvfn()" or
a related function with a format string that specifies explicit indexes
for some of the elements, and using a C-style variable-argument list (a
"va_list"). This is not currently supported. XS authors wanting
to do this must instead construct a C array of "SV*" scalars
containing the arguments.
- Can only compress unsigned integers in pack
- (F) An argument to pack("w",...) was not an
integer. The BER compressed integer format can only be used with positive
integers, and you attempted to compress something else. See
"pack" in perlfunc.
- Can't "%s" out of a "defer" block
- (F) An attempt was made to jump out of the scope of a
"defer" block by using a control-flow statement such as
"return", "goto" or a loop control. This is not
permitted.
- Can't "%s" out of a "finally"
block
- (F) Similar to above, but involving a "finally"
block at the end of a "try"/"catch" construction
rather than a "defer" block.
- Can't bless non-reference value
- (F) Only hard references may be blessed. This is how Perl
"enforces" encapsulation of objects. See perlobj.
- Can't "break" in a loop topicalizer
- (F) You called "break", but you're in a
"foreach" block rather than a "given" block. You
probably meant to use "next" or "last".
- Can't "break" outside a given block
- (F) You called "break", but you're not inside a
"given" block.
- Can't call method "%s" on an undefined value
- (F) You used the syntax of a method call, but the slot
filled by the object reference or package name contains an undefined
value. Something like this will reproduce the error:
$BADREF = undef;
process $BADREF 1,2,3;
$BADREF->process(1,2,3);
- Can't call method "%s" on unblessed
reference
- (F) A method call must know in what package it's supposed
to run. It ordinarily finds this out from the object reference you supply,
but you didn't supply an object reference in this case. A reference isn't
an object reference until it has been blessed. See perlobj.
- Can't call method "%s" without a package or
object reference
- (F) You used the syntax of a method call, but the slot
filled by the object reference or package name contains an expression that
returns a defined value which is neither an object reference nor a package
name. Something like this will reproduce the error:
$BADREF = 42;
process $BADREF 1,2,3;
$BADREF->process(1,2,3);
- Can't call mro_isa_changed_in() on anonymous symbol
table
- (P) Perl got confused as to whether a hash was a plain hash
or a symbol table hash when trying to update @ISA caches.
- Can't call mro_method_changed_in() on anonymous
symbol table
- (F) An XS module tried to call
"mro_method_changed_in" on a hash that was not attached to the
symbol table.
- Can't chdir to %s
- (F) You called "perl -x/foo/bar", but
/foo/bar is not a directory that you can chdir to, possibly because
it doesn't exist.
- Can't coerce %s to %s in %s
- (F) Certain types of SVs, in particular real symbol table
entries (typeglobs), can't be forced to stop being what they are. So you
can't say things like:
*foo += 1;
You CAN say
$foo = *foo;
$foo += 1;
but then $foo no longer contains a glob.
- Can't "continue" outside a when block
- (F) You called "continue", but you're not inside
a "when" or "default" block.
- Can't create pipe mailbox
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. The process is suffering from
exhausted quotas or other plumbing problems.
- Can't declare %s in "%s"
- (F) Only scalar, array, and hash variables may be declared
as "my", "our" or "state" variables. They
must have ordinary identifiers as names.
- Can't "default" outside a topicalizer
- (F) You have used a "default" block that is
neither inside a "foreach" loop nor a "given" block.
(Note that this error is issued on exit from the "default"
block, so you won't get the error if you use an explicit
"continue".)
- Can't determine class of operator %s, assuming BASEOP
- (S) This warning indicates something wrong in the internals
of perl. Perl was trying to find the class (e.g. LISTOP) of a particular
OP, and was unable to do so. This is likely to be due to a bug in the perl
internals, or due to a bug in XS code which manipulates perl optrees.
- Can't do inplace edit: %s is not a regular file
- (S inplace) You tried to use the -i switch on a
special file, such as a file in /dev, a FIFO or an uneditable directory.
The file was ignored.
- Can't do inplace edit on %s: %s
- (S inplace) The creation of the new file failed for the
indicated reason.
- Can't do inplace edit: %s would not be unique
- (S inplace) Your filesystem does not support filenames
longer than 14 characters and Perl was unable to create a unique filename
during inplace editing with the -i switch. The file was
ignored.
- Can't do %s("%s") on non-UTF-8 locale; resolved
to "%s".
- (W locale) You are 1) running under ""use
locale""; 2) the current locale is not a UTF-8 one; 3) you tried
to do the designated case-change operation on the specified Unicode
character; and 4) the result of this operation would mix Unicode and
locale rules, which likely conflict. Mixing of different rule types is
forbidden, so the operation was not done; instead the result is the
indicated value, which is the best available that uses entirely Unicode
rules. That turns out to almost always be the original character,
unchanged.
It is generally a bad idea to mix non-UTF-8 locales and Unicode, and this
issue is one of the reasons why. This warning is raised when Unicode rules
would normally cause the result of this operation to contain a character
that is in the range specified by the locale, 0..255, and hence is subject
to the locale's rules, not Unicode's.
If you are using locale purely for its characteristics related to things
like its numeric and time formatting (and not "LC_CTYPE"),
consider using a restricted form of the locale pragma (see "The
"use locale" pragma" in perllocale) like
""use locale ':not_characters'"".
Note that failed case-changing operations done as a result of
case-insensitive "/i" regular expression matching will show up
in this warning as having the "fc" operation (as that is what
the regular expression engine calls behind the scenes.)
- Can't do waitpid with flags
- (F) This machine doesn't have either waitpid() or
wait4(), so only waitpid() without flags is emulated.
- Can't emulate -%s on #! line
- (F) The #! line specifies a switch that doesn't make sense
at this point. For example, it'd be kind of silly to put a -x on
the #! line.
- Can't %s %s-endian %ss on this platform
- (F) Your platform's byte-order is neither big-endian nor
little-endian, or it has a very strange pointer size. Packing and
unpacking big- or little-endian floating point values and pointers may not
be possible. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Can't exec "%s": %s
- (W exec) A system(), exec(), or piped open
call could not execute the named program for the indicated reason. Typical
reasons include: the permissions were wrong on the file, the file wasn't
found in $ENV{PATH}, the executable in question was compiled for another
architecture, or the #! line in a script points to an interpreter that
can't be run for similar reasons. (Or maybe your system doesn't support #!
at all.)
- Can't exec %s
- (F) Perl was trying to execute the indicated program for
you because that's what the #! line said. If that's not what you wanted,
you may need to mention "perl" on the #! line somewhere.
- Can't execute %s
- (F) You used the -S switch, but the copies of the
script to execute found in the PATH did not have correct permissions.
- Can't find an opnumber for "%s"
- (F) A string of a form "CORE::word" was given to
prototype(), but there is no builtin with the name
"word".
- Can't find label %s
- (F) You said to goto a label that isn't mentioned anywhere
that it's possible for us to go to. See "goto" in perlfunc.
- Can't find %s on PATH
- (F) You used the -S switch, but the script to
execute could not be found in the PATH.
- Can't find %s on PATH, '.' not in PATH
- (F) You used the -S switch, but the script to
execute could not be found in the PATH, or at least not with the correct
permissions. The script exists in the current directory, but PATH
prohibits running it.
- Can't find string terminator %s anywhere before EOF
- (F) Perl strings can stretch over multiple lines. This
message means that the closing delimiter was omitted. Because bracketed
quotes count nesting levels, the following is missing its final
parenthesis:
print q(The character '(' starts a side comment.);
If you're getting this error from a here-document, you may have included
unseen whitespace before or after your closing tag or there may not be a
linebreak after it. A good programmer's editor will have a way to help you
find these characters (or lack of characters). See perlop for the full
details on here-documents.
- Can't find Unicode property definition "%s"
- Can't find Unicode property definition "%s" in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The named property which you specified via
"\p" or "\P" is not one known to Perl. Perhaps you
misspelled the name? See "Properties accessible through \p{} and
\P{}" in perluniprops for a complete list of available official
properties. If it is a user-defined property it must have been defined by
the time the regular expression is matched.
If you didn't mean to use a Unicode property, escape the "\p",
either by "\\p" (just the "\p") or by "\Q\p"
(the rest of the string, or until "\E").
- Can't fork: %s
- (F) A fatal error occurred while trying to fork while
opening a pipeline.
- Can't fork, trying again in 5 seconds
- (W pipe) A fork in a piped open failed with EAGAIN and will
be retried after five seconds.
- Can't get filespec - stale stat buffer?
- (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. This arises because of the
difference between access checks under VMS and under the Unix model Perl
assumes. Under VMS, access checks are done by filename, rather than by
bits in the stat buffer, so that ACLs and other protections can be taken
into account. Unfortunately, Perl assumes that the stat buffer contains
all the necessary information, and passes it, instead of the filespec, to
the access-checking routine. It will try to retrieve the filespec using
the device name and FID present in the stat buffer, but this works only if
you haven't made a subsequent call to the CRTL stat() routine,
because the device name is overwritten with each call. If this warning
appears, the name lookup failed, and the access-checking routine gave up
and returned FALSE, just to be conservative. (Note: The access-checking
routine knows about the Perl "stat" operator and file tests, so
you shouldn't ever see this warning in response to a Perl command; it
arises only if some internal code takes stat buffers lightly.)
- Can't get pipe mailbox device name
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. After creating a mailbox to
act as a pipe, Perl can't retrieve its name for later use.
- Can't get SYSGEN parameter value for MAXBUF
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl asked $GETSYI how big
you want your mailbox buffers to be, and didn't get an answer.
- Can't "goto" into a binary or list
expression
- (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into
the middle of a binary or list expression. You can't get there from here.
The reason for this restriction is that the interpreter would get confused
as to how many arguments there are, resulting in stack corruption or
crashes. This error occurs in cases such as these:
goto F;
print do { F: }; # Can't jump into the arguments to print
goto G;
$x + do { G: $y }; # How is + supposed to get its first operand?
- Can't "goto" into a "defer" block
- (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into
the scope of a "defer" block. This is not permitted.
- Can't "goto" into a "given" block
- (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into
the middle of a "given" block. You can't get there from here.
See "goto" in perlfunc.
- Can't "goto" into the middle of a foreach
loop
- (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump into
the middle of a foreach loop. You can't get there from here. See
"goto" in perlfunc.
- Can't "goto" out of a pseudo block
- (F) A "goto" statement was executed to jump out
of what might look like a block, except that it isn't a proper block. This
usually occurs if you tried to jump out of a sort() block or
subroutine, which is a no-no. See "goto" in perlfunc.
- Can't goto subroutine from an eval-%s
- (F) The "goto subroutine" call can't be used to
jump out of an eval "string" or block.
- Can't goto subroutine from a sort sub (or similar
callback)
- (F) The "goto subroutine" call can't be used to
jump out of the comparison sub for a sort(), or from a similar
callback (such as the reduce() function in List::Util).
- Can't goto subroutine outside a subroutine
- (F) The deeply magical "goto subroutine" call can
only replace one subroutine call for another. It can't manufacture one out
of whole cloth. In general you should be calling it out of only an
AUTOLOAD routine anyway. See "goto" in perlfunc.
- Can't ignore signal CHLD, forcing to default
- (W signal) Perl has detected that it is being run with the
SIGCHLD signal (sometimes known as SIGCLD) disabled. Since disabling this
signal will interfere with proper determination of exit status of child
processes, Perl has reset the signal to its default value. This situation
typically indicates that the parent program under which Perl may be
running (e.g. cron) is being very careless.
- Can't kill a non-numeric process ID
- (F) Process identifiers must be (signed) integers. It is a
fatal error to attempt to kill() an undefined, empty-string or
otherwise non-numeric process identifier.
- Can't "last" outside a loop block
- (F) A "last" statement was executed to break out
of the current block, except that there's this itty bitty problem called
there isn't a current block. Note that an "if" or
"else" block doesn't count as a "loopish" block, as
doesn't a block given to sort(), map() or grep(). You
can usually double the curlies to get the same effect though, because the
inner curlies will be considered a block that loops once. See
"last" in perlfunc.
- Can't linearize anonymous symbol table
- (F) Perl tried to calculate the method resolution order
(MRO) of a package, but failed because the package stash has no name.
- Can't load '%s' for module %s
- (F) The module you tried to load failed to load a dynamic
extension. This may either mean that you upgraded your version of perl to
one that is incompatible with your old dynamic extensions (which is known
to happen between major versions of perl), or (more likely) that your
dynamic extension was built against an older version of the library that
is installed on your system. You may need to rebuild your old dynamic
extensions.
- Can't localize lexical variable %s
- (F) You used local on a variable name that was previously
declared as a lexical variable using "my" or "state".
This is not allowed. If you want to localize a package variable of the
same name, qualify it with the package name.
- Can't localize through a reference
- (F) You said something like "local $$ref", which
Perl can't currently handle, because when it goes to restore the old value
of whatever $ref pointed to after the scope of the local() is
finished, it can't be sure that $ref will still be a reference.
- Can't locate %s
- (F) You said to "do" (or "require", or
"use") a file that couldn't be found. Perl looks for the file in
all the locations mentioned in @INC, unless the file name included the
full path to the file. Perhaps you need to set the PERL5LIB or PERL5OPT
environment variable to say where the extra library is, or maybe the
script needs to add the library name to @INC. Or maybe you just misspelled
the name of the file. See "require" in perlfunc and lib.
- Can't locate auto/%s.al in @INC
- (F) A function (or method) was called in a package which
allows autoload, but there is no function to autoload. Most probable
causes are a misprint in a function/method name or a failure to
"AutoSplit" the file, say, by doing "make
install".
- Can't locate loadable object for module %s in @INC
- (F) The module you loaded is trying to load an external
library, like for example, foo.so or bar.dll, but the
DynaLoader module was unable to locate this library. See DynaLoader.
- Can't locate object method "%s" via package
"%s"
- (F) You called a method correctly, and it correctly
indicated a package functioning as a class, but that package doesn't
define that particular method, nor does any of its base classes. See
perlobj.
- Can't locate object method "%s" via package
"%s" (perhaps you forgot to load "%s"?)
- (F) You called a method on a class that did not exist, and
the method could not be found in UNIVERSAL. This often means that a method
requires a package that has not been loaded.
- Can't locate package %s for @%s::ISA
- (W syntax) The @ISA array contained the name of another
package that doesn't seem to exist.
- Can't locate PerlIO%s
- (F) You tried to use in open() a PerlIO layer that
does not exist, e.g. open(FH, ">:nosuchlayer",
"somefile").
- Can't make list assignment to %ENV on this system
- (F) List assignment to %ENV is not supported on some
systems, notably VMS.
- Can't make loaded symbols global on this platform while
loading %s
- (S) A module passed the flag 0x01 to
DynaLoader::dl_load_file() to request that symbols from the stated
file are made available globally within the process, but that
functionality is not available on this platform. Whilst the module likely
will still work, this may prevent the perl interpreter from loading other
XS-based extensions which need to link directly to functions defined in
the C or XS code in the stated file.
- Can't modify %s in %s
- (F) You aren't allowed to assign to the item indicated, or
otherwise try to change it, such as with an auto-increment.
- Can't modify non-lvalue subroutine call of &%s
- Can't modify non-lvalue subroutine call of &%s in
%s
- (F) Subroutines meant to be used in lvalue context should
be declared as such. See "Lvalue subroutines" in perlsub.
- Can't modify reference to %s in %s assignment
- (F) Only a limited number of constructs can be used as the
argument to a reference constructor on the left-hand side of an
assignment, and what you used was not one of them. See "Assigning to
References" in perlref.
- Can't modify reference to localized parenthesized array in
list assignment
- (F) Assigning to "\local(@array)" or
"\(local @array)" is not supported, as it is not clear exactly
what it should do. If you meant to make @array refer to some other array,
use "\@array = \@other_array". If you want to make the elements
of @array aliases of the scalars referenced on the right-hand side, use
"\(@array) = @scalar_refs".
- Can't modify reference to parenthesized hash in list
assignment
- (F) Assigning to "\(%hash)" is not supported. If
you meant to make %hash refer to some other hash, use "\%hash =
\%other_hash". If you want to make the elements of %hash into aliases
of the scalars referenced on the right-hand side, use a hash slice:
"\@hash{@keys} = @those_scalar_refs".
- Can't msgrcv to read-only var
- (F) The target of a msgrcv must be modifiable to be used as
a receive buffer.
- Can't "next" outside a loop block
- (F) A "next" statement was executed to reiterate
the current block, but there isn't a current block. Note that an
"if" or "else" block doesn't count as a
"loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(),
map() or grep(). You can usually double the curlies to get
the same effect though, because the inner curlies will be considered a
block that loops once. See "next" in perlfunc.
- Can't open %s: %s
- (S inplace) The implicit opening of a file through use of
the "<>" filehandle, either implicitly under the
"-n" or "-p" command-line switches, or explicitly,
failed for the indicated reason. Usually this is because you don't have
read permission for a file which you named on the command line.
(F) You tried to call perl with the -e switch, but /dev/null
(or your operating system's equivalent) could not be opened.
- Can't open a reference
- (W io) You tried to open a scalar reference for reading or
writing, using the 3-arg open() syntax:
open FH, '>', $ref;
but your version of perl is compiled without perlio, and this form of open
is not supported.
- Can't open bidirectional pipe
- (W pipe) You tried to say "open(CMD,
"|cmd|")", which is not supported. You can try any of
several modules in the Perl library to do this, such as IPC::Open2.
Alternately, direct the pipe's output to a file using ">",
and then read it in under a different file handle.
- Can't open error file %s as stderr
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command
line redirection, and couldn't open the file specified after '2>' or
'2>>' on the command line for writing.
- Can't open input file %s as stdin
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command
line redirection, and couldn't open the file specified after '<' on the
command line for reading.
- Can't open output file %s as stdout
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command
line redirection, and couldn't open the file specified after '>' or
'>>' on the command line for writing.
- Can't open output pipe (name: %s)
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl does its own command
line redirection, and couldn't open the pipe into which to send data
destined for stdout.
- Can't open perl script "%s": %s
- (F) The script you specified can't be opened for the
indicated reason.
If you're debugging a script that uses #!, and normally relies on the
shell's $PATH search, the -S option causes perl to do that search, so you
don't have to type the path or "`which $scriptname`".
- Can't read CRTL environ
- (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read an
element of %ENV from the CRTL's internal environment array and discovered
the array was missing. You need to figure out where your CRTL misplaced
its environ or define PERL_ENV_TABLES (see perlvms) so that environ
is not searched.
- Can't redeclare "%s" in "%s"
- (F) A "my", "our" or "state"
declaration was found within another declaration, such as "my ($x,
my($y), $z)" or "our (my $x)".
- Can't "redo" outside a loop block
- (F) A "redo" statement was executed to restart
the current block, but there isn't a current block. Note that an
"if" or "else" block doesn't count as a
"loopish" block, as doesn't a block given to sort(),
map() or grep(). You can usually double the curlies to get
the same effect though, because the inner curlies will be considered a
block that loops once. See "redo" in perlfunc.
- Can't remove %s: %s, skipping file
- (S inplace) You requested an inplace edit without creating
a backup file. Perl was unable to remove the original file to replace it
with the modified file. The file was left unmodified.
- Can't rename in-place work file '%s' to '%s': %s
- (F) When closed implicitly, the temporary file for in-place
editing couldn't be renamed to the original filename.
- Can't rename %s to %s: %s, skipping file
- (F) The rename done by the -i switch failed for some
reason, probably because you don't have write permission to the
directory.
- Can't reopen input pipe (name: %s) in binary mode
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl thought stdin was a
pipe, and tried to reopen it to accept binary data. Alas, it failed.
- Can't represent character for Ox%X on this platform
- (F) There is a hard limit to how big a character code point
can be due to the fundamental properties of UTF-8, especially on EBCDIC
platforms. The given code point exceeds that. The only work-around is to
not use such a large code point.
- Can't reset %ENV on this system
- (F) You called "reset('E')" or similar, which
tried to reset all variables in the current package beginning with
"E". In the main package, that includes %ENV. Resetting %ENV is
not supported on some systems, notably VMS.
- Can't resolve method "%s" overloading
"%s" in package "%s"
- (F)(P) Error resolving overloading specified by a method
name (as opposed to a subroutine reference): no such method callable via
the package. If the method name is "???", this is an internal
error.
- Can't return %s from lvalue subroutine
- (F) Perl detected an attempt to return illegal lvalues
(such as temporary or readonly values) from a subroutine used as an
lvalue. This is not allowed.
- Can't return outside a subroutine
- (F) The return statement was executed in mainline code,
that is, where there was no subroutine call to return out of. See
perlsub.
- Can't return %s to lvalue scalar context
- (F) You tried to return a complete array or hash from an
lvalue subroutine, but you called the subroutine in a way that made Perl
think you meant to return only one value. You probably meant to write
parentheses around the call to the subroutine, which tell Perl that the
call should be in list context.
- Can't take log of %g
- (F) For ordinary real numbers, you can't take the logarithm
of a negative number or zero. There's a Math::Complex package that comes
standard with Perl, though, if you really want to do that for the negative
numbers.
- Can't take sqrt of %g
- (F) For ordinary real numbers, you can't take the square
root of a negative number. There's a Math::Complex package that comes
standard with Perl, though, if you really want to do that.
- Can't undef active subroutine
- (F) You can't undefine a routine that's currently running.
You can, however, redefine it while it's running, and you can even undef
the redefined subroutine while the old routine is running. Go figure.
- Can't unweaken a nonreference
- (F) You attempted to unweaken something that was not a
reference. Only references can be unweakened.
- Can't upgrade %s (%d) to %d
- (P) The internal sv_upgrade routine adds
"members" to an SV, making it into a more specialized kind of
SV. The top several SV types are so specialized, however, that they cannot
be interconverted. This message indicates that such a conversion was
attempted.
- Can't use '%c' after -mname
- (F) You tried to call perl with the -m switch, but
you put something other than "=" after the module name.
- Can't use a hash as a reference
- (F) You tried to use a hash as a reference, as in
"%foo->{"bar"}" or
"%$ref->{"hello"}". Versions of perl <= 5.22.0
used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't have. This was deprecated in perl
5.6.1.
- Can't use an array as a reference
- (F) You tried to use an array as a reference, as in
"@foo->[23]" or "@$ref->[99]". Versions of perl
<= 5.22.0 used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't have. This was
deprecated in perl 5.6.1.
- Can't use anonymous symbol table for method lookup
- (F) The internal routine that does method lookup was handed
a symbol table that doesn't have a name. Symbol tables can become
anonymous for example by undefining stashes: "undef
%Some::Package::".
- Can't use an undefined value as %s reference
- (F) A value used as either a hard reference or a symbolic
reference must be a defined value. This helps to delurk some insidious
errors.
- Can't use bareword ("%s") as %s ref while
"strict refs" in use
- (F) Only hard references are allowed by "strict
refs". Symbolic references are disallowed. See perlref.
- Can't use %! because Errno.pm is not available
- (F) The first time the "%!" hash is used, perl
automatically loads the Errno.pm module. The Errno module is expected to
tie the %! hash to provide symbolic names for $! errno values.
- Can't use both '<' and '>' after type '%c' in %s
- (F) A type cannot be forced to have both big-endian and
little-endian byte-order at the same time, so this combination of
modifiers is not allowed. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Can't use 'defined(@array)' (Maybe you should just omit the
defined()?)
- (F) defined() is not useful on arrays because it
checks for an undefined scalar value. If you want to see if the
array is empty, just use "if (@array) { # not empty }" for
example.
- Can't use 'defined(%hash)' (Maybe you should just omit the
defined()?)
- (F) "defined()" is not usually right on hashes.
Although "defined %hash" is false on a plain not-yet-used hash, it
becomes true in several non-obvious circumstances, including iterators,
weak references, stash names, even remaining true after "undef
%hash". These things make "defined %hash" fairly useless in
practice, so it now generates a fatal error.
If a check for non-empty is what you wanted then just put it in boolean
context (see "Scalar values" in perldata):
if (%hash) {
# not empty
}
If you had "defined %Foo::Bar::QUUX" to check whether such a
package variable exists then that's never really been reliable, and isn't
a good way to enquire about the features of a package, or whether it's
loaded, etc.
- Can't use %s for loop variable
- (P) The parser got confused when trying to parse a
"foreach" loop.
- Can't use global %s in %s
- (F) You tried to declare a magical variable as a lexical
variable. This is not allowed, because the magic can be tied to only one
location (namely the global variable) and it would be incredibly confusing
to have variables in your program that looked like magical variables but
weren't.
- Can't use '%c' in a group with different byte-order in
%s
- (F) You attempted to force a different byte-order on a type
that is already inside a group with a byte-order modifier. For example you
cannot force little-endianness on a type that is inside a big-endian
group.
- Can't use "my %s" in sort comparison
- (F) The global variables $a and $b are reserved for sort
comparisons. You mentioned $a or $b in the same line as the <=> or
cmp operator, and the variable had earlier been declared as a lexical
variable. Either qualify the sort variable with the package name, or
rename the lexical variable.
- Can't use %s ref as %s ref
- (F) You've mixed up your reference types. You have to
dereference a reference of the type needed. You can use the ref()
function to test the type of the reference, if need be.
- Can't use string ("%s") as %s ref while
"strict refs" in use
- Can't use string ("%s"...) as %s ref while
"strict refs" in use
- (F) You've told Perl to dereference a string, something
which "use strict" blocks to prevent it happening accidentally.
See "Symbolic references" in perlref. This can be triggered by
an "@" or "$" in a double-quoted string immediately
before interpolating a variable, for example in "user
@$twitter_id", which says to treat the contents of $twitter_id as an
array reference; use a "\" to have a literal "@"
symbol followed by the contents of $twitter_id: "user
\@$twitter_id".
- Can't use subscript on %s
- (F) The compiler tried to interpret a bracketed expression
as a subscript. But to the left of the brackets was an expression that
didn't look like a hash or array reference, or anything else
subscriptable.
- Can't use \%c to mean $%c in expression
- (W syntax) In an ordinary expression, backslash is a unary
operator that creates a reference to its argument. The use of backslash to
indicate a backreference to a matched substring is valid only as part of a
regular expression pattern. Trying to do this in ordinary Perl code
produces a value that prints out looking like SCALAR(0xdecaf). Use
the $1 form instead.
- Can't weaken a nonreference
- (F) You attempted to weaken something that was not a
reference. Only references can be weakened.
- Can't "when" outside a topicalizer
- (F) You have used a when() block that is neither
inside a "foreach" loop nor a "given" block. (Note
that this error is issued on exit from the "when" block, so you
won't get the error if the match fails, or if you use an explicit
"continue".)
- Can't x= to read-only value
- (F) You tried to repeat a constant value (often the
undefined value) with an assignment operator, which implies modifying the
value itself. Perhaps you need to copy the value to a temporary, and
repeat that.
- Character following "\c" must be printable
ASCII
- (F) In "\cX", X must be a printable
(non-control) ASCII character.
Note that ASCII characters that don't map to control characters are
discouraged, and will generate the warning (when enabled)
""\c%c" is more clearly written simply as
"%s"".
- Character following \%c must be '{' or a single-character
Unicode property name in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) (In the above the %c is replaced by either
"p" or "P".) You specified something that isn't a
legal Unicode property name. Most Unicode properties are specified by
"\p{...}". But if the name is a single character one, the braces
may be omitted.
- Character in 'C' format wrapped in pack
- (W pack) You said
pack("C", $x)
where $x is either less than 0 or more than 255; the "C" format is
only for encoding native operating system characters (ASCII, EBCDIC, and
so on) and not for Unicode characters, so Perl behaved as if you meant
pack("C", $x & 255)
If you actually want to pack Unicode codepoints, use the "U"
format instead.
- Character in 'c' format wrapped in pack
- (W pack) You said
pack("c", $x)
where $x is either less than -128 or more than 127; the "c" format
is only for encoding native operating system characters (ASCII, EBCDIC,
and so on) and not for Unicode characters, so Perl behaved as if you meant
pack("c", $x & 255);
If you actually want to pack Unicode codepoints, use the "U"
format instead.
- Character in '%c' format wrapped in unpack
- (W unpack) You tried something like
unpack("H", "\x{2a1}")
where the format expects to process a byte (a character with a value below
256), but a higher value was provided instead. Perl uses the value modulus
256 instead, as if you had provided:
unpack("H", "\x{a1}")
- Character in 'W' format wrapped in pack
- (W pack) You said
pack("U0W", $x)
where $x is either less than 0 or more than 255. However,
"U0"-mode expects all values to fall in the interval [0, 255],
so Perl behaved as if you meant:
pack("U0W", $x & 255)
- Character(s) in '%c' format wrapped in pack
- (W pack) You tried something like
pack("u", "\x{1f3}b")
where the format expects to process a sequence of bytes (character with a
value below 256), but some of the characters had a higher value. Perl uses
the character values modulus 256 instead, as if you had provided:
pack("u", "\x{f3}b")
- Character(s) in '%c' format wrapped in unpack
- (W unpack) You tried something like
unpack("s", "\x{1f3}b")
where the format expects to process a sequence of bytes (character with a
value below 256), but some of the characters had a higher value. Perl uses
the character values modulus 256 instead, as if you had provided:
unpack("s", "\x{f3}b")
- charnames alias definitions may not contain a sequence of
multiple spaces; marked by <-- HERE in %s
- (F) You defined a character name which had multiple space
characters in a row. Change them to single spaces. Usually these names are
defined in the ":alias" import argument to "use
charnames", but they could be defined by a translator installed into
$^H{charnames}. See "CUSTOM ALIASES" in charnames.
-
chdir() on unopened filehandle %s
- (W unopened) You tried chdir() on a filehandle that
was never opened.
- "\c%c" is more clearly written simply as
"%s"
- (W syntax) The "\cX" construct is intended
to be a way to specify non-printable characters. You used it for a
printable one, which is better written as simply itself, perhaps preceded
by a backslash for non-word characters. Doing it the way you did is not
portable between ASCII and EBCDIC platforms.
- Cloning substitution context is unimplemented
- (F) Creating a new thread inside the "s///"
operator is not supported.
-
closedir() attempted on invalid dirhandle %s
- (W io) The dirhandle you tried to close is either closed or
not really a dirhandle. Check your control flow.
-
close() on unopened filehandle %s
- (W unopened) You tried to close a filehandle that was never
opened.
- Closure prototype called
- (F) If a closure has attributes, the subroutine passed to
an attribute handler is the prototype that is cloned when a new closure is
created. This subroutine cannot be called.
- \C no longer supported in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The \C character class used to allow a match of single
byte within a multi-byte utf-8 character, but was removed in v5.24 as it
broke encapsulation and its implementation was extremely buggy. If you
really need to process the individual bytes, you probably want to convert
your string to one where each underlying byte is stored as a character,
with utf8::encode().
- Code missing after '/'
- (F) You had a (sub-)template that ends with a '/'. There
must be another template code following the slash. See "pack" in
perlfunc.
- Code point 0x%X is not Unicode, and not portable
- (S non_unicode portable) You had a code point that has
never been in any standard, so it is likely that languages other than Perl
will NOT understand it. This code point also will not fit in a 32-bit word
on ASCII platforms and therefore is non-portable between systems.
At one time, it was legal in some standards to have code points up to
0x7FFF_FFFF, but not higher, and this code point is higher.
Acceptance of these code points is a Perl extension, and you should expect
that nothing other than Perl can handle them; Perl itself on EBCDIC
platforms before v5.24 does not handle them.
Perl also makes no guarantees that the representation of these code points
won't change at some point in the future, say when machines become
available that have larger than a 64-bit word. At that time, files
containing any of these, written by an older Perl might require conversion
before being readable by a newer Perl.
- Code point 0x%X is not Unicode, may not be portable
- (S non_unicode) You had a code point above the Unicode
maximum of U+10FFFF.
Perl allows strings to contain a superset of Unicode code points, but these
may not be accepted by other languages/systems. Further, even if these
languages/systems accept these large code points, they may have chosen a
different representation for them than the UTF-8-like one that Perl has,
which would mean files are not exchangeable between them and Perl.
On EBCDIC platforms, code points above 0x3FFF_FFFF have a different
representation in Perl v5.24 than before, so any file containing these
that was written before that version will require conversion before being
readable by a later Perl.
- %s: Command not found
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through csh
or another shell instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your
script into Perl yourself. The #! line at the top of your file could look
like
#!/usr/bin/perl
- %s: command not found
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through bash
or another shell instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your
script into Perl yourself. The #! line at the top of your file could look
like
#!/usr/bin/perl
- %s: command not found: %s
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through zsh
or another shell instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your
script into Perl yourself. The #! line at the top of your file could look
like
#!/usr/bin/perl
- Compilation failed in require
- (F) Perl could not compile a file specified in a
"require" statement. Perl uses this generic message when none of
the errors that it encountered were severe enough to halt compilation
immediately.
- Complex regular subexpression recursion limit (%d)
exceeded
- (W regexp) The regular expression engine uses recursion in
complex situations where back-tracking is required. Recursion depth is
limited to 32766, or perhaps less in architectures where the stack cannot
grow arbitrarily. ("Simple" and "medium" situations
are handled without recursion and are not subject to a limit.) Try
shortening the string under examination; looping in Perl code (e.g. with
"while") rather than in the regular expression engine; or
rewriting the regular expression so that it is simpler or backtracks less.
(See perlfaq2 for information on Mastering Regular
Expressions.)
-
connect() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to do a connect on a closed socket.
Did you forget to check the return value of your socket() call? See
"connect" in perlfunc.
- Constant(%s): Call to &{$^H{%s}} did not return a
defined value
- (F) The subroutine registered to handle constant
overloading (see overload) or a custom charnames handler (see "CUSTOM
TRANSLATORS" in charnames) returned an undefined value.
- Constant(%s): $^H{%s} is not defined
- (F) The parser found inconsistencies while attempting to
define an overloaded constant. Perhaps you forgot to load the
corresponding overload pragma?
- Constant is not %s reference
- (F) A constant value (perhaps declared using the "use
constant" pragma) is being dereferenced, but it amounts to the wrong
type of reference. The message indicates the type of reference that was
expected. This usually indicates a syntax error in dereferencing the
constant value. See "Constant Functions" in perlsub and
constant.
- Constants from lexical variables potentially modified
elsewhere are no longer permitted
- (F) You wrote something like
my $var;
$sub = sub () { $var };
but $var is referenced elsewhere and could be modified after the
"sub" expression is evaluated. Either it is explicitly modified
elsewhere ("$var = 3") or it is passed to a subroutine or to an
operator like "printf" or "map", which may or may not
modify the variable.
Traditionally, Perl has captured the value of the variable at that point and
turned the subroutine into a constant eligible for inlining. In those
cases where the variable can be modified elsewhere, this breaks the
behavior of closures, in which the subroutine captures the variable
itself, rather than its value, so future changes to the variable are
reflected in the subroutine's return value.
This usage was deprecated, and as of Perl 5.32 is no longer allowed, making
it possible to change the behavior in the future.
If you intended for the subroutine to be eligible for inlining, then make
sure the variable is not referenced elsewhere, possibly by copying it:
my $var2 = $var;
$sub = sub () { $var2 };
If you do want this subroutine to be a closure that reflects future changes
to the variable that it closes over, add an explicit "return":
my $var;
$sub = sub () { return $var };
- Constant subroutine %s redefined
- (W redefine)(S) You redefined a subroutine which had
previously been eligible for inlining. See "Constant Functions"
in perlsub for commentary and workarounds.
- Constant subroutine %s undefined
- (W misc) You undefined a subroutine which had previously
been eligible for inlining. See "Constant Functions" in perlsub
for commentary and workarounds.
- Constant(%s) unknown
- (F) The parser found inconsistencies either while
attempting to define an overloaded constant, or when trying to find the
character name specified in the "\N{...}" escape. Perhaps you
forgot to load the corresponding overload pragma?
- :const is experimental
- (S experimental::const_attr) The "const"
attribute is experimental. If you want to use the feature, disable the
warning with "no warnings 'experimental::const_attr'", but know
that in doing so you are taking the risk that your code may break in a
future Perl version.
- :const is not permitted on named subroutines
- (F) The "const" attribute causes an anonymous
subroutine to be run and its value captured at the time that it is cloned.
Named subroutines are not cloned like this, so the attribute does not make
sense on them.
- Copy method did not return a reference
- (F) The method which overloads "=" is buggy. See
"Copy Constructor" in overload.
- &CORE::%s cannot be called directly
- (F) You tried to call a subroutine in the
"CORE::" namespace with &foo syntax or through a reference.
Some subroutines in this package cannot yet be called that way, but must
be called as barewords. Something like this will work:
BEGIN { *shove = \&CORE::push; }
shove @array, 1,2,3; # pushes on to @array
- CORE::%s is not a keyword
- (F) The CORE:: namespace is reserved for Perl
keywords.
- Corrupted regexp opcode %d > %d
- (P) This is either an error in Perl, or, if you're using
one, your custom regular expression engine. If not the latter, report the
problem to <https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues>.
- corrupted regexp pointers
- (P) The regular expression engine got confused by what the
regular expression compiler gave it.
- corrupted regexp program
- (P) The regular expression engine got passed a regexp
program without a valid magic number.
- Corrupt malloc ptr 0x%x at 0x%x
- (P) The malloc package that comes with Perl had an internal
failure.
- Count after length/code in unpack
- (F) You had an unpack template indicating a counted-length
string, but you have also specified an explicit size for the string. See
"pack" in perlfunc.
- Declaring references is experimental
- (S experimental::declared_refs) This warning is emitted if
you use a reference constructor on the right-hand side of "my",
"state", "our", or "local". Simply suppress
the warning if you want to use the feature, but know that in doing so you
are taking the risk of using an experimental feature which may change or
be removed in a future Perl version:
no warnings "experimental::declared_refs";
use feature "declared_refs";
$fooref = my \$foo;
- Deep recursion on anonymous subroutine
- Deep recursion on subroutine "%s"
- (W recursion) This subroutine has called itself (directly
or indirectly) 100 times more than it has returned. This probably
indicates an infinite recursion, unless you're writing strange benchmark
programs, in which case it indicates something else.
This threshold can be changed from 100, by recompiling the perl
binary, setting the C pre-processor macro "PERL_SUB_DEPTH_WARN"
to the desired value.
- (?(DEFINE)....) does not allow branches in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used something like "(?(DEFINE)...|..)"
which is illegal. The most likely cause of this error is that you left out
a parenthesis inside of the "...." part.
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered.
- %s defines neither package nor VERSION--version check
failed
- (F) You said something like "use Module 42" but
in the Module file there are neither package declarations nor a
$VERSION.
- delete argument is not a HASH or ARRAY element or
slice
- (F) The argument to "delete" must be either a
hash or array element, such as:
$foo{$bar}
$ref->{"susie"}[12]
or a hash or array slice, such as:
@foo[$bar, $baz, $xyzzy]
$ref->[12]->@{"susie", "queue"}
or a hash key/value or array index/value slice, such as:
%foo[$bar, $baz, $xyzzy]
$ref->[12]->%{"susie", "queue"}
- Delimiter for here document is too long
- (F) In a here document construct like
"<<FOO", the label "FOO" is too long for Perl to
handle. You have to be seriously twisted to write code that triggers this
error.
- DESTROY created new reference to dead object '%s'
- (F) A DESTROY() method created a new reference to
the object which is just being DESTROYed. Perl is confused, and prefers to
abort rather than to create a dangling reference.
- Did not produce a valid header
- See "500 Server error".
- %s did not return a true value
- (F) A required (or used) file must return a true value to
indicate that it compiled correctly and ran its initialization code
correctly. It's traditional to end such a file with a "1;",
though any true value would do. See "require" in perlfunc.
- (Did you mean &%s instead?)
- (W misc) You probably referred to an imported subroutine
&FOO as $FOO or some such.
- (Did you mean "local" instead of
"our"?)
- (W shadow) Remember that "our" does not localize
the declared global variable. You have declared it again in the same
lexical scope, which seems superfluous.
- (Did you mean $ or @ instead of %?)
- (W) You probably said %hash{$key} when you meant
$hash{$key} or @hash{@keys}. On the other hand, maybe you just meant %hash
and got carried away.
- Died
- (F) You passed die() an empty string (the equivalent
of "die """) or you called it with no args and $@ was
empty.
- Document contains no data
- See "500 Server error".
- %s does not define %s::VERSION--version check failed
- (F) You said something like "use Module 42" but
the Module did not define a $VERSION.
- '/' does not take a repeat count in %s
- (F) You cannot put a repeat count of any kind right after
the '/' code. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- do "%s" failed, '.' is no longer in @INC; did you
mean do "./%s"?
- (D deprecated) Previously " do "somefile";
" would search the current directory for the specified file. Since
perl v5.26.0, . has been removed from @INC by default, so this is
no longer true. To search the current directory (and only the current
directory) you can write " do "./somefile"; ".
- Don't know how to get file name
- (P) "PerlIO_getname", a perl internal I/O
function specific to VMS, was somehow called on another platform. This
should not happen.
- Don't know how to handle magic of type \%o
- (P) The internal handling of magical variables has been
cursed.
- Downgrading a use VERSION declaration to below v5.11 is
deprecated
- (S deprecated) This warning is emitted on a "use
VERSION" statement that requests a version below v5.11 (when the
effects of "use strict" would be disabled), after a previous
declaration of one having a larger number (which would have enabled these
effects). Because of a change to the way that "use VERSION"
interacts with the strictness flags, this is no longer supported.
- (Do you need to predeclare %s?)
- (S syntax) This is an educated guess made in conjunction
with the message "%s found where operator expected". It often
means a subroutine or module name is being referenced that hasn't been
declared yet. This may be because of ordering problems in your file, or
because of a missing "sub", "package",
"require", or "use" statement. If you're referencing
something that isn't defined yet, you don't actually have to define the
subroutine or package before the current location. You can use an empty
"sub foo;" or "package FOO;" to enter a
"forward" declaration.
-
dump() must be written as CORE::dump() as of
Perl 5.30
- (F) You used the obsolete "dump()" built-in
function. That was deprecated in Perl 5.8.0. As of Perl 5.30 it must be
written in fully qualified format: "CORE::dump()".
See "dump" in perlfunc.
- dump is not supported
- (F) Your machine doesn't support dump/undump.
- Duplicate free() ignored
- (S malloc) An internal routine called free() on
something that had already been freed.
- Duplicate modifier '%c' after '%c' in %s
- (W unpack) You have applied the same modifier more than
once after a type in a pack template. See "pack" in
perlfunc.
- each on anonymous %s will always start from the
beginning
- (W syntax) You called each on an anonymous hash or array.
Since a new hash or array is created each time, each() will restart
iterating over your hash or array every time.
- elseif should be elsif
- (S syntax) There is no keyword "elseif" in Perl
because Larry thinks it's ugly. Your code will be interpreted as an
attempt to call a method named "elseif" for the class returned
by the following block. This is unlikely to be what you want.
- Empty \%c in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- Empty \%c{}
- Empty \%c{} in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) You used something like "\b{}",
"\B{}", "\o{}", "\p", "\P", or
"\x" without specifying anything for it to operate on.
Unfortunately, for backwards compatibility reasons, an empty "\x"
is legal outside "use re 'strict'" and expands to
a NUL character.
- Empty (?) without any modifiers in regex; marked by <--
HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) (only under
"use re 'strict'") "(?)" does nothing,
so perhaps this is a typo.
- ${^ENCODING} is no longer supported
- (F) The special variable "${^ENCODING}", formerly
used to implement the "encoding" pragma, is no longer supported
as of Perl 5.26.0.
Setting it to anything other than "undef" is a fatal error as of
Perl 5.28.
- entering effective %s failed
- (F) While under the "use filetest" pragma,
switching the real and effective uids or gids failed.
- %ENV is aliased to %s
- (F) You're running under taint mode, and the %ENV variable
has been aliased to another hash, so it doesn't reflect anymore the state
of the program's environment. This is potentially insecure.
- Error converting file specification %s
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Because Perl may have to deal
with file specifications in either VMS or Unix syntax, it converts them to
a single form when it must operate on them directly. Either you've passed
an invalid file specification to Perl, or you've found a case the
conversion routines don't handle. Drat.
- Error %s in expansion of %s
- (F) An error was encountered in handling a user-defined
property ("User-Defined Character Properties" in perlunicode).
These are programmer written subroutines, hence subject to errors that may
prevent them from compiling or running. The calls to these subs are
"eval"'d, and if there is a failure, this message is raised,
using the contents of $@ from the failed "eval".
Another possibility is that tainted data was encountered somewhere in the
chain of expanding the property. If so, the message wording will indicate
that this is the problem. See "Insecure user-defined property
%s".
- Eval-group in insecure regular expression
- (F) Perl detected tainted data when trying to compile a
regular expression that contains the "(?{ ... })" zero-width
assertion, which is unsafe. See "(?{ code })" in perlre, and
perlsec.
- Eval-group not allowed at runtime, use re 'eval' in regex
m/%s/
- (F) Perl tried to compile a regular expression containing
the "(?{ ... })" zero-width assertion at run time, as it would
when the pattern contains interpolated values. Since that is a security
risk, it is not allowed. If you insist, you may still do this by using the
"re 'eval'" pragma or by explicitly building the pattern from an
interpolated string at run time and using that in an eval(). See
"(?{ code })" in perlre.
- Eval-group not allowed, use re 'eval' in regex m/%s/
- (F) A regular expression contained the "(?{ ...
})" zero-width assertion, but that construct is only allowed when the
"use re 'eval'" pragma is in effect. See "(?{ code })"
in perlre.
- EVAL without pos change exceeded limit in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a pattern that nested too many EVAL calls
without consuming any text. Restructure the pattern so that text is
consumed.
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered.
- Excessively long <> operator
- (F) The contents of a <> operator may not exceed the
maximum size of a Perl identifier. If you're just trying to glob a long
list of filenames, try using the glob() operator, or put the
filenames into a variable and glob that.
- exec? I'm not *that* kind of operating system
- (F) The "exec" function is not implemented on
some systems, e.g. Catamount. See perlport.
- %sExecution of %s aborted due to compilation errors.
- (F) The final summary message when a Perl compilation
fails.
- exists argument is not a HASH or ARRAY element or a
subroutine
- (F) The argument to "exists" must be a hash or
array element or a subroutine with an ampersand, such as:
$foo{$bar}
$ref->{"susie"}[12]
&do_something
- exists argument is not a subroutine name
- (F) The argument to "exists" for "exists
&sub" must be a subroutine name, and not a subroutine call.
"exists &sub()" will generate this error.
- Exiting eval via %s
- (W exiting) You are exiting an eval by unconventional
means, such as a goto, or a loop control statement.
- Exiting format via %s
- (W exiting) You are exiting a format by unconventional
means, such as a goto, or a loop control statement.
- Exiting pseudo-block via %s
- (W exiting) You are exiting a rather special block
construct (like a sort block or subroutine) by unconventional means, such
as a goto, or a loop control statement. See "sort" in
perlfunc.
- Exiting subroutine via %s
- (W exiting) You are exiting a subroutine by unconventional
means, such as a goto, or a loop control statement.
- Exiting substitution via %s
- (W exiting) You are exiting a substitution by
unconventional means, such as a return, a goto, or a loop control
statement.
- Expecting close bracket in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You wrote something like
(?13
to denote a capturing group of the form "(? PARNO)", but
omitted the ")".
- Expecting interpolated extended charclass in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) It looked like you were attempting to interpolate an
already-compiled extended character class, like so:
my $thai_or_lao = qr/(?[ \p{Thai} + \p{Lao} ])/;
...
qr/(?[ \p{Digit} & $thai_or_lao ])/;
But the marked code isn't syntactically correct to be such an interpolated
class.
- Experimental aliasing via reference not enabled
- (F) To do aliasing via references, you must first enable
the feature:
no warnings "experimental::refaliasing";
use feature "refaliasing";
\$x = \$y;
- Experimental %s on scalar is now forbidden
- (F) An experimental feature added in Perl 5.14 allowed
"each", "keys", "push", "pop",
"shift", "splice", "unshift", and
"values" to be called with a scalar argument. This experiment is
considered unsuccessful, and has been removed. The "postderef"
feature may meet your needs better.
- Experimental subroutine signatures not enabled
- (F) To use subroutine signatures, you must first enable
them:
use feature "signatures";
sub foo ($left, $right) { ... }
- Explicit blessing to '' (assuming package main)
- (W misc) You are blessing a reference to a zero length
string. This has the effect of blessing the reference into the package
main. This is usually not what you want. Consider providing a default
target package, e.g. bless($ref, $p || 'MyPackage');
- %s: Expression syntax
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through csh
instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl
yourself.
- %s failed--call queue aborted
- (F) An untrapped exception was raised while executing a
UNITCHECK, CHECK, INIT, or END subroutine. Processing of the remainder of
the queue of such routines has been prematurely ended.
- Failed to close in-place work file %s: %s
- (F) Closing an output file from in-place editing, as with
the "-i" command-line switch, failed.
- False [] range "%s" in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp)(F) A character class range must start and end at
a literal character, not another character class like "\d" or
"[:alpha:]". The "-" in your false range is
interpreted as a literal "-". In a "(?[...])"
construct, this is an error, rather than a warning. Consider quoting the
"-", "\-". The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in
the regular expression the problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Fatal VMS error (status=%d) at %s, line %d
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Something untoward happened
in a VMS system service or RTL routine; Perl's exit status should provide
more details. The filename in "at %s" and the line number in
"line %d" tell you which section of the Perl source code is
distressed.
- fcntl is not implemented
- (F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement
fcntl(). What is this, a PDP-11 or something?
- FETCHSIZE returned a negative value
- (F) A tied array claimed to have a negative number of
elements, which is not possible.
- Field too wide in 'u' format in pack
- (W pack) Each line in an uuencoded string starts with a
length indicator which can't encode values above 63. So there is no point
in asking for a line length bigger than that. Perl will behave as if you
specified "u63" as the format.
- Filehandle %s opened only for input
- (W io) You tried to write on a read-only filehandle. If you
intended it to be a read-write filehandle, you needed to open it with
"+<" or "+>" or "+>>" instead of
with "<" or nothing. If you intended only to write the file,
use ">" or ">>". See "open" in
perlfunc.
- Filehandle %s opened only for output
- (W io) You tried to read from a filehandle opened only for
writing, If you intended it to be a read/write filehandle, you needed to
open it with "+<" or "+>" or
"+>>" instead of with ">". If you intended
only to read from the file, use "<". See "open" in
perlfunc. Another possibility is that you attempted to open filedescriptor
0 (also known as STDIN) for output (maybe you closed STDIN earlier?).
- Filehandle %s reopened as %s only for input
- (W io) You opened for reading a filehandle that got the
same filehandle id as STDOUT or STDERR. This occurred because you closed
STDOUT or STDERR previously.
- Filehandle STDIN reopened as %s only for output
- (W io) You opened for writing a filehandle that got the
same filehandle id as STDIN. This occurred because you closed STDIN
previously.
- Final $ should be \$ or $name
- (F) You must now decide whether the final $ in a string was
meant to be a literal dollar sign, or was meant to introduce a variable
name that happens to be missing. So you have to put either the backslash
or the name.
- defer is experimental
- (S experimental::defer) The "defer" block
modifier is experimental. If you want to use the feature, disable the
warning with "no warnings 'experimental::defer'", but know that
in doing so you are taking the risk that your code may break in a future
Perl version.
-
flock() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) The filehandle you're attempting to
flock() got itself closed some time before now. Check your control
flow. flock() operates on filehandles. Are you attempting to call
flock() on a dirhandle by the same name?
- for my (...) is experimental
- (S experimental::for_list) This warning is emitted if you
use "for" to iterate multiple values at a time. This syntax is
currently experimental and its behaviour may change in future releases of
Perl.
- Format not terminated
- (F) A format must be terminated by a line with a solitary
dot. Perl got to the end of your file without finding such a line.
- Format %s redefined
- (W redefine) You redefined a format. To suppress this
warning, say
{
no warnings 'redefine';
eval "format NAME =...";
}
- Found = in conditional, should be ==
- (W syntax) You said
if ($foo = 123)
when you meant
if ($foo == 123)
(or something like that).
- %s found where operator expected
- (S syntax) The Perl lexer knows whether to expect a term or
an operator. If it sees what it knows to be a term when it was expecting
to see an operator, it gives you this warning. Usually it indicates that
an operator or delimiter was omitted, such as a semicolon.
- gdbm store returned %d, errno %d, key "%s"
- (S) A warning from the GDBM_File extension that a store
failed.
- gethostent not implemented
- (F) Your C library apparently doesn't implement
gethostent(), probably because if it did, it'd feel morally
obligated to return every hostname on the Internet.
- get%sname() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to get a socket or peer socket name on
a closed socket. Did you forget to check the return value of your
socket() call?
- getpwnam returned invalid UIC %#o for user
"%s"
- (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. The call to
"sys$getuai" underlying the "getpwnam" operator
returned an invalid UIC.
-
getsockopt() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to get a socket option on a closed
socket. Did you forget to check the return value of your socket()
call? See "getsockopt" in perlfunc.
- given is experimental
- (S experimental::smartmatch) "given" depends on
smartmatch, which is experimental, so its behavior may change or even be
removed in any future release of perl. See the explanation under
"Experimental Details on given and when" in perlsyn.
- Global symbol "%s" requires explicit package name
(did you forget to declare "my %s"?)
- (F) You've said "use strict" or "use strict
vars", which indicates that all variables must either be lexically
scoped (using "my" or "state"), declared beforehand
using "our", or explicitly qualified to say which package the
global variable is in (using "::").
- glob failed (%s)
- (S glob) Something went wrong with the external program(s)
used for "glob" and "<*.c>". Usually, this means
that you supplied a "glob" pattern that caused the external
program to fail and exit with a nonzero status. If the message indicates
that the abnormal exit resulted in a coredump, this may also mean that
your csh (C shell) is broken. If so, you should change all of the
csh-related variables in config.sh: If you have tcsh, make the variables
refer to it as if it were csh (e.g. "full_csh='/usr/bin/tcsh'");
otherwise, make them all empty (except that "d_csh" should be
'undef') so that Perl will think csh is missing. In either case, after
editing config.sh, run "./Configure -S" and rebuild Perl.
- Glob not terminated
- (F) The lexer saw a left angle bracket in a place where it
was expecting a term, so it's looking for the corresponding right angle
bracket, and not finding it. Chances are you left some needed parentheses
out earlier in the line, and you really meant a "less
than".
- gmtime(%f) failed
- (W overflow) You called "gmtime" with a number
that it could not handle: too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value
is "undef".
- gmtime(%f) too large
- (W overflow) You called "gmtime" with a number
that was larger than it can reliably handle and "gmtime"
probably returned the wrong date. This warning is also triggered with NaN
(the special not-a-number value).
- gmtime(%f) too small
- (W overflow) You called "gmtime" with a number
that was smaller than it can reliably handle and "gmtime"
probably returned the wrong date.
- Got an error from DosAllocMem
- (P) An error peculiar to OS/2. Most probably you're using
an obsolete version of Perl, and this should not happen anyway.
- goto must have label
- (F) Unlike with "next" or "last",
you're not allowed to goto an unspecified destination. See
"goto" in perlfunc.
- Goto undefined subroutine%s
- (F) You tried to call a subroutine with "goto
&sub" syntax, but the indicated subroutine hasn't been defined,
or if it was, it has since been undefined.
- Group name must start with a non-digit word character in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Group names must follow the rules for perl identifiers,
meaning they must start with a non-digit word character. A common cause of
this error is using (?&0) instead of (?0). See perlre.
- ()-group starts with a count
- (F) A ()-group started with a count. A count is supposed to
follow something: a template character or a ()-group. See "pack"
in perlfunc.
- %s had compilation errors.
- (F) The final summary message when a "perl -c"
fails.
- Had to create %s unexpectedly
- (S internal) A routine asked for a symbol from a symbol
table that ought to have existed already, but for some reason it didn't,
and had to be created on an emergency basis to prevent a core dump.
- %s has too many errors
- (F) The parser has given up trying to parse the program
after 10 errors. Further error messages would likely be
uninformative.
- Hexadecimal float: exponent overflow
- (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has a larger
exponent than the floating point supports.
- Hexadecimal float: exponent underflow
- (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point has a smaller
exponent than the floating point supports. With the IEEE 754 floating
point, this may also mean that the subnormals (formerly known as
denormals) are being used, which may or may not be an error.
- Hexadecimal float: internal error (%s)
- (F) Something went horribly bad in hexadecimal float
handling.
- Hexadecimal float: mantissa overflow
- (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point literal had
more bits in the mantissa (the part between the 0x and the exponent, also
known as the fraction or the significand) than the floating point
supports.
- Hexadecimal float: precision loss
- (W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point had internally
more digits than could be output. This can be caused by unsupported long
double formats, or by 64-bit integers not being available (needed to
retrieve the digits under some configurations).
- Hexadecimal float: unsupported long double format
- (F) You have configured Perl to use long doubles but the
internals of the long double format are unknown; therefore the hexadecimal
float output is impossible.
- Hexadecimal number > 0xffffffff non-portable
- (W portable) The hexadecimal number you specified is larger
than 2**32-1 (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
perlport for more on portability concerns.
- Identifier too long
- (F) Perl limits identifiers (names for variables,
functions, etc.) to about 250 characters for simple names, and somewhat
more for compound names (like $A::B). You've exceeded Perl's limits.
Future versions of Perl are likely to eliminate these arbitrary
limitations.
- Ignoring zero length \N{} in character class in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) Named Unicode character escapes
("\N{...}") may return a zero-length sequence. When such an
escape is used in a character class its behavior is not well defined.
Check that the correct escape has been used, and the correct charname
handler is in scope.
- Illegal %s digit '%c' ignored
- (W digit) Here %s is one of "binary",
"octal", or "hex". You may have tried to use a digit
other than one that is legal for the given type, such as only 0 and 1 for
binary. For octals, this is raised only if the illegal character is an '8'
or '9'. For hex, 'A' - 'F' and 'a' - 'f' are legal. Interpretation of the
number stopped just before the offending digit or character.
- Illegal binary digit '%c'
- (F) You used a digit other than 0 or 1 in a binary
number.
- Illegal character after '_' in prototype for %s : %s
- (W illegalproto) An illegal character was found in a
prototype declaration. The '_' in a prototype must be followed by a ';',
indicating the rest of the parameters are optional, or one of '@' or '%',
since those two will accept 0 or more final parameters.
- Illegal character \%o (carriage return)
- (F) Perl normally treats carriage returns in the program
text as it would any other whitespace, which means you should never see
this error when Perl was built using standard options. For some reason,
your version of Perl appears to have been built without this support. Talk
to your Perl administrator.
- Illegal character following sigil in a subroutine
signature
- (F) A parameter in a subroutine signature contained an
unexpected character following the "$", "@" or
"%" sigil character. Normally the sigil should be followed by
the variable name or "=" etc. Perhaps you are trying use a
prototype while in the scope of "use feature 'signatures'"? For
example:
sub foo ($$) {} # legal - a prototype
use feature 'signatures;
sub foo ($$) {} # illegal - was expecting a signature
sub foo ($a, $b)
:prototype($$) {} # legal
- Illegal character in prototype for %s : %s
- (W illegalproto) An illegal character was found in a
prototype declaration. Legal characters in prototypes are $, @, %, *, ;,
[, ], &, \, and +. Perhaps you were trying to write a subroutine
signature but didn't enable that feature first ("use feature
'signatures'"), so your signature was instead interpreted as a bad
prototype.
- Illegal declaration of anonymous subroutine
- (F) When using the "sub" keyword to construct an
anonymous subroutine, you must always specify a block of code. See
perlsub.
- Illegal declaration of subroutine %s
- (F) A subroutine was not declared correctly. See
perlsub.
- Illegal division by zero
- (F) You tried to divide a number by 0. Either something was
wrong in your logic, or you need to put a conditional in to guard against
meaningless input.
- Illegal modulus zero
- (F) You tried to divide a number by 0 to get the remainder.
Most numbers don't take to this kindly.
- Illegal number of bits in vec
- (F) The number of bits in vec() (the third argument)
must be a power of two from 1 to 32 (or 64, if your platform supports
that).
- Illegal octal digit '%c'
- (F) You used an 8 or 9 in an octal number.
- Illegal operator following parameter in a subroutine
signature
- (F) A parameter in a subroutine signature, was followed by
something other than "=" introducing a default, "," or
")".
use feature 'signatures';
sub foo ($=1) {} # legal
sub foo ($a = 1) {} # legal
sub foo ($a += 1) {} # illegal
sub foo ($a == 1) {} # illegal
- Illegal pattern in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) You wrote something like
(?+foo)
The "+" is valid only when followed by digits, indicating a
capturing group. See "(? PARNO)".
- Illegal suidscript
- (F) The script run under suidperl was somehow illegal.
- Illegal switch in PERL5OPT: -%c
- (X) The PERL5OPT environment variable may only be used to
set the following switches: -[CDIMUdmtw].
- Illegal user-defined property name
- (F) You specified a Unicode-like property name in a regular
expression pattern (using "\p{}" or "\P{}") that Perl
knows isn't an official Unicode property, and was likely meant to be a
user-defined property name, but it can't be one of those, as they must
begin with either "In" or "Is". Check the spelling.
See also "Can't find Unicode property definition
"%s"".
- Ill-formed CRTL environ value "%s"
- (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read
the CRTL's internal environ array, and encountered an element without the
"=" delimiter used to separate keys from values. The element is
ignored.
- Ill-formed message in prime_env_iter: |%s|
- (W internal) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read
a logical name or CLI symbol definition when preparing to iterate over
%ENV, and didn't see the expected delimiter between key and value, so the
line was ignored.
- (in cleanup) %s
- (W misc) This prefix usually indicates that a
DESTROY() method raised the indicated exception. Since destructors
are usually called by the system at arbitrary points during execution, and
often a vast number of times, the warning is issued only once for any
number of failures that would otherwise result in the same message being
repeated.
Failure of user callbacks dispatched using the "G_KEEPERR" flag
could also result in this warning. See "G_KEEPERR" in
perlcall.
- Implicit use of @_ in %s with signatured subroutine is
experimental
- (S experimental::args_array_with_signatures) An expression
that implicitly involves the @_ arguments array was found in a subroutine
that uses a signature. This is experimental because the interaction
between the arguments array and parameter handling via signatures is not
guaranteed to remain stable in any future version of Perl, and such code
should be avoided.
- Incomplete expression within '(?[ ])' in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) There was a syntax error within the "(?[ ])".
This can happen if the expression inside the construct was completely
empty, or if there are too many or few operands for the number of
operators. Perl is not smart enough to give you a more precise indication
as to what is wrong.
- Inconsistent hierarchy during C3 merge of class '%s':
merging failed on parent '%s'
- (F) The method resolution order (MRO) of the given class is
not C3-consistent, and you have enabled the C3 MRO for this class. See the
C3 documentation in mro for more information.
- Indentation on line %d of here-doc doesn't match
delimiter
- (F) You have an indented here-document where one or more of
its lines have whitespace at the beginning that does not match the closing
delimiter.
For example, line 2 below is wrong because it does not have at least 2
spaces, but lines 1 and 3 are fine because they have at least 2:
if ($something) {
print <<~EOF;
Line 1
Line 2 not
Line 3
EOF
}
Note that tabs and spaces are compared strictly, meaning 1 tab will not
match 8 spaces.
- Infinite recursion in regex
- (F) You used a pattern that references itself without
consuming any input text. You should check the pattern to ensure that
recursive patterns either consume text or fail.
- Infinite recursion in user-defined property
- (F) A user-defined property ("User-Defined Character
Properties" in perlunicode) can depend on the definitions of other
user-defined properties. If the chain of dependencies leads back to this
property, infinite recursion would occur, were it not for the check that
raised this error.
Restructure your property definitions to avoid this.
- Infinite recursion via empty pattern
- (F) You tried to use the empty pattern inside of a regex
code block, for instance "/(?{ s!!! })/", which resulted in
re-executing the same pattern, which is an infinite loop which is broken
by throwing an exception.
- Initialization of state variables in list currently
forbidden
- (F) "state" only permits initializing a single
variable, specified without parentheses. So "state $a = 42" and
"state @a = qw(a b c)" are allowed, but not "state ($a) =
42" or "(state $a) = 42". To initialize more than one
"state" variable, initialize them one at a time.
- %%s[%s] in scalar context better written as $%s[%s]
- (W syntax) In scalar context, you've used an array
index/value slice (indicated by %) to select a single element of an array.
Generally it's better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $). The
difference is that $foo[&bar] always behaves like a scalar, both in
the value it returns and when evaluating its argument, while
%foo[&bar] provides a list context to its subscript, which can do
weird things if you're expecting only one subscript. When called in list
context, it also returns the index (what &bar returns) in addition to
the value.
- %%s{%s} in scalar context better written as $%s{%s}
- (W syntax) In scalar context, you've used a hash key/value
slice (indicated by %) to select a single element of a hash. Generally
it's better to ask for a scalar value (indicated by $). The difference is
that $foo{&bar} always behaves like a scalar, both in the value it
returns and when evaluating its argument, while @foo{&bar} and
provides a list context to its subscript, which can do weird things if
you're expecting only one subscript. When called in list context, it also
returns the key in addition to the value.
- Insecure dependency in %s
- (F) You tried to do something that the tainting mechanism
didn't like. The tainting mechanism is turned on when you're running
setuid or setgid, or when you specify -T to turn it on explicitly.
The tainting mechanism labels all data that's derived directly or
indirectly from the user, who is considered to be unworthy of your trust.
If any such data is used in a "dangerous" operation, you get
this error. See perlsec for more information.
- Insecure directory in %s
- (F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a
piped open in a setuid or setgid script if $ENV{PATH} contains a directory
that is writable by the world. Also, the PATH must not contain any
relative directory. See perlsec.
- Insecure $ENV{%s} while running %s
- (F) You can't use system(), exec(), or a
piped open in a setuid or setgid script if any of $ENV{PATH}, $ENV{IFS},
$ENV{CDPATH}, $ENV{ENV}, $ENV{BASH_ENV} or $ENV{TERM} are derived from
data supplied (or potentially supplied) by the user. The script must set
the path to a known value, using trustworthy data. See perlsec.
- Insecure user-defined property %s
- (F) Perl detected tainted data when trying to compile a
regular expression that contains a call to a user-defined character
property function, i.e. "\p{IsFoo}" or "\p{InFoo}".
See "User-Defined Character Properties" in perlunicode and
perlsec.
- Integer overflow in format string for %s
- (F) The indexes and widths specified in the format string
of "printf()" or "sprintf()" are too large. The
numbers must not overflow the size of integers for your architecture.
- Integer overflow in %s number
- (S overflow) The hexadecimal, octal or binary number you
have specified either as a literal or as an argument to hex() or
oct() is too big for your architecture, and has been converted to a
floating point number. On a 32-bit architecture the largest hexadecimal,
octal or binary number representable without overflow is 0xFFFFFFFF,
037777777777, or 0b11111111111111111111111111111111 respectively. Note
that Perl transparently promotes all numbers to a floating point
representation internally--subject to loss of precision errors in
subsequent operations.
- Integer overflow in srand
- (S overflow) The number you have passed to srand is too big
to fit in your architecture's integer representation. The number has been
replaced with the largest integer supported (0xFFFFFFFF on 32-bit
architectures). This means you may be getting less randomness than you
expect, because different random seeds above the maximum will return the
same sequence of random numbers.
- Integer overflow in version
- Integer overflow in version %d
- (W overflow) Some portion of a version initialization is
too large for the size of integers for your architecture. This is not a
warning because there is no rational reason for a version to try and use
an element larger than typically 2**32. This is usually caused by trying
to use some odd mathematical operation as a version, like 100/9.
- Internal disaster in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (P) Something went badly wrong in the regular expression
parser. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression
the problem was discovered.
- Internal inconsistency in tracking vforks
- (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl keeps track of the
number of times you've called "fork" and "exec", to
determine whether the current call to "exec" should affect the
current script or a subprocess (see "exec LIST" in perlvms).
Somehow, this count has become scrambled, so Perl is making a guess and
treating this "exec" as a request to terminate the Perl script
and execute the specified command.
- internal %<num>p might conflict with future printf
extensions
- (S internal) Perl's internal routine that handles
"printf" and "sprintf" formatting follows a slightly
different set of rules when called from C or XS code. Specifically,
formats consisting of digits followed by "p" (e.g.,
"%7p") are reserved for future use. If you see this message,
then an XS module tried to call that routine with one such reserved
format.
- Internal urp in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (P) Something went badly awry in the regular expression
parser. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression
the problem was discovered.
- %s (...) interpreted as function
- (W syntax) You've run afoul of the rule that says that any
list operator followed by parentheses turns into a function, with all the
list operators arguments found inside the parentheses. See "Terms and
List Operators (Leftward)" in perlop.
- In '(?...)', the '(' and '?' must be adjacent in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The two-character sequence "(?" in this
context in a regular expression pattern should be an indivisible token,
with nothing intervening between the "(" and the "?",
but you separated them with whitespace.
- In '(*...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The two-character sequence "(*" in this
context in a regular expression pattern should be an indivisible token,
with nothing intervening between the "(" and the "*",
but you separated them. Fix the pattern and retry.
- Invalid %s attribute: %s
- (F) The indicated attribute for a subroutine or variable
was not recognized by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See
attributes.
- Invalid %s attributes: %s
- (F) The indicated attributes for a subroutine or variable
were not recognized by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See
attributes.
- Invalid character in charnames alias definition; marked by
<-- HERE in '%s
- (F) You tried to create a custom alias for a character
name, with the ":alias" option to "use charnames" and
the specified character in the indicated name isn't valid. See
"CUSTOM ALIASES" in charnames.
- Invalid \0 character in %s for %s: %s\0%s
- (W syscalls) Embedded \0 characters in pathnames or other
system call arguments produce a warning as of 5.20. The parts after the \0
were formerly ignored by system calls.
- Invalid character in \N{...}; marked by <-- HERE
in \N{%s}
- (F) Only certain characters are valid for character names.
The indicated one isn't. See "CUSTOM ALIASES" in charnames.
- Invalid conversion in %s: "%s"
- (W printf) Perl does not understand the given format
conversion. See "sprintf" in perlfunc.
- Invalid escape in the specified encoding in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp)(F) The numeric escape (for example
"\xHH") of value < 256 didn't correspond to a single
character through the conversion from the encoding specified by the
encoding pragma. The escape was replaced with REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
(U+FFFD) instead, except within "(?[ ])",
where it is a fatal error. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the
regular expression the escape was discovered.
- Invalid hexadecimal number in \N{U+...}
- Invalid hexadecimal number in \N{U+...} in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The character constant represented by "..."
is not a valid hexadecimal number. Either it is empty, or you tried to use
a character other than 0 - 9 or A - F, a - f in a hexadecimal number.
- Invalid module name %s with -%c option: contains single
':'
- (F) The module argument to perl's -m and -M
command-line options cannot contain single colons in the module name, but
only in the arguments after "=". In other words,
-MFoo::Bar=:baz is ok, but -MFoo:Bar=baz is not.
- Invalid mro name: '%s'
- (F) You tried to "mro::set_mro("classname",
"foo")" or "use mro 'foo'", where "foo"
is not a valid method resolution order (MRO). Currently, the only valid
ones supported are "dfs" and "c3", unless you have
loaded a module that is a MRO plugin. See mro and perlmroapi.
- Invalid negative number (%s) in chr
- (W utf8) You passed a negative number to "chr".
Negative numbers are not valid character numbers, so it returns the
Unicode replacement character (U+FFFD).
- Invalid number '%s' for -C option.
- (F) You supplied a number to the -C option that either has
extra leading zeroes or overflows perl's unsigned integer
representation.
- invalid option -D%c, use -D'' to see choices
- (S debugging) Perl was called with invalid debugger flags.
Call perl with the -D option with no flags to see the list of
acceptable values. See also "-Dletters" in perlrun.
- Invalid quantifier in {,} in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The pattern looks like a {min,max} quantifier, but the
min or max could not be parsed as a valid number - either it has leading
zeroes, or it represents too big a number to cope with. The
<-- HERE shows where in the regular expression the problem was
discovered. See perlre.
- Invalid [] range "%s" in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The range specified in a character class had a minimum
character greater than the maximum character. One possibility is that you
forgot the "{}" from your ending "\x{}" -
"\x" without the curly braces can go only up to "ff".
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Invalid range "%s" in transliteration
operator
- (F) The range specified in the tr/// or y/// operator had a
minimum character greater than the maximum character. See perlop.
- Invalid reference to group in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The capture group you specified can't possibly exist
because the number you used is not within the legal range of possible
values for this machine.
- Invalid separator character %s in attribute list
- (F) Something other than a colon or whitespace was seen
between the elements of an attribute list. If the previous attribute had a
parenthesised parameter list, perhaps that list was terminated too soon.
See attributes.
- Invalid separator character %s in PerlIO layer
specification %s
- (W layer) When pushing layers onto the Perl I/O system,
something other than a colon or whitespace was seen between the elements
of a layer list. If the previous attribute had a parenthesised parameter
list, perhaps that list was terminated too soon.
- Invalid strict version format (%s)
- (F) A version number did not meet the "strict"
criteria for versions. A "strict" version number is a positive
decimal number (integer or decimal-fraction) without exponentiation or
else a dotted-decimal v-string with a leading 'v' character and at least
three components. The parenthesized text indicates which criteria were not
met. See the version module for more details on allowed version
formats.
- Invalid type '%s' in %s
- (F) The given character is not a valid pack or unpack type.
See "pack" in perlfunc.
(W) The given character is not a valid pack or unpack type but used to be
silently ignored.
- Invalid version format (%s)
- (F) A version number did not meet the "lax"
criteria for versions. A "lax" version number is a positive
decimal number (integer or decimal-fraction) without exponentiation or
else a dotted-decimal v-string. If the v-string has fewer than three
components, it must have a leading 'v' character. Otherwise, the leading
'v' is optional. Both decimal and dotted-decimal versions may have a
trailing "alpha" component separated by an underscore character
after a fractional or dotted-decimal component. The parenthesized text
indicates which criteria were not met. See the version module for more
details on allowed version formats.
- Invalid version object
- (F) The internal structure of the version object was
invalid. Perhaps the internals were modified directly in some way or an
arbitrary reference was blessed into the "version" class.
- In '(*VERB...)', the '(' and '*' must be adjacent in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- Inverting a character class which contains a
multi-character sequence is illegal in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) You wrote something like
qr/\P{name=KATAKANA LETTER AINU P}/
qr/[^\p{name=KATAKANA LETTER AINU P}]/
This name actually evaluates to a sequence of two Katakana characters, not
just a single one, and it is illegal to try to take the complement of a
sequence. (Mathematically it would mean any sequence of characters from 0
to infinity in length that weren't these two in a row, and that is likely
not of any real use.)
(F) The two-character sequence "(*" in this context in a regular
expression pattern should be an indivisible token, with nothing
intervening between the "(" and the "*", but you
separated them.
- ioctl is not implemented
- (F) Your machine apparently doesn't implement
ioctl(), which is pretty strange for a machine that supports
C.
-
ioctl() on unopened %s
- (W unopened) You tried ioctl() on a filehandle that
was never opened. Check your control flow and number of arguments.
- IO layers (like '%s') unavailable
- (F) Your Perl has not been configured to have PerlIO, and
therefore you cannot use IO layers. To have PerlIO, Perl must be
configured with 'useperlio'.
- IO::Socket::atmark not implemented on this
architecture
- (F) Your machine doesn't implement the sockatmark()
functionality, neither as a system call nor an ioctl call
(SIOCATMARK).
- '%s' is an unknown bound type in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used "\b{...}" or "\B{...}" and
the "..." is not known to Perl. The current valid ones are given
in "\b{}, \b, \B{}, \B" in perlrebackslash.
- %s is forbidden - matches null string many times in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The pattern you've specified might cause the regular
expression to infinite loop so it is forbidden. The <-- HERE
shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was discovered.
See perlre.
- %s() isn't allowed on :utf8 handles
- (F) The sysread(), recv(), syswrite()
and send() operators are not allowed on handles that have the
":utf8" layer, either explicitly, or implicitly, eg., with the
":encoding(UTF-16LE)" layer.
Previously sysread() and recv() currently use only the
":utf8" flag for the stream, ignoring the actual layers. Since
sysread() and recv() did no UTF-8 validation they can end up
creating invalidly encoded scalars.
Similarly, syswrite() and send() used only the
":utf8" flag, otherwise ignoring any layers. If the flag is set,
both wrote the value UTF-8 encoded, even if the layer is some different
encoding, such as the example above.
Ideally, all of these operators would completely ignore the
":utf8" state, working only with bytes, but this would result in
silently breaking existing code.
- "%s" is more clearly written simply as
"%s" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) (only under
"use re 'strict'" or within "(?[...])")
You specified a character that has the given plainer way of writing it, and
which is also portable to platforms running with different character
sets.
- $* is no longer supported as of Perl 5.30
- (F) The special variable $*, deprecated in older perls, was
removed in 5.10.0, is no longer supported and is a fatal error as of Perl
5.30. In previous versions of perl the use of $* enabled or disabled
multi-line matching within a string.
Instead of using $* you should use the "/m" (and maybe
"/s") regexp modifiers. You can enable "/m" for a
lexical scope (even a whole file) with "use re '/m'". (In older
versions: when $* was set to a true value then all regular expressions
behaved as if they were written using "/m".)
Use of this variable will be a fatal error in Perl 5.30.
- $# is no longer supported as of Perl 5.30
- (F) The special variable $#, deprecated in older perls, was
removed as of 5.10.0, is no longer supported and is a fatal error as of
Perl 5.30. You should use the printf/sprintf functions instead.
- '%s' is not a code reference
- (W overload) The second (fourth, sixth, ...) argument of
overload::constant needs to be a code reference. Either an anonymous
subroutine, or a reference to a subroutine.
- '%s' is not an overloadable type
- (W overload) You tried to overload a constant type the
overload package is unaware of.
- '%s' is not recognised as a builtin function
- (F) An attempt was made to "use" the builtin
pragma module to create a lexical alias for an unknown function name.
- -i used with no filenames on the command line, reading from
STDIN
- (S inplace) The "-i" option was passed on the
command line, indicating that the script is intended to edit files in
place, but no files were given. This is usually a mistake, since editing
STDIN in place doesn't make sense, and can be confusing because it can
make perl look like it is hanging when it is really just trying to read
from STDIN. You should either pass a filename to edit, or remove
"-i" from the command line. See perlrun for more details.
- Junk on end of regexp in regex m/%s/
- (P) The regular expression parser is confused.
- \K not permitted in lookahead/lookbehind in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Your regular expression used "\K" in a
lookahead or lookbehind assertion, which currently isn't permitted.
This may change in the future, see Support \K in lookarounds
<https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues/18134>.
- Label not found for "last %s"
- (F) You named a loop to break out of, but you're not
currently in a loop of that name, not even if you count where you were
called from. See "last" in perlfunc.
- Label not found for "next %s"
- (F) You named a loop to continue, but you're not currently
in a loop of that name, not even if you count where you were called from.
See "last" in perlfunc.
- Label not found for "redo %s"
- (F) You named a loop to restart, but you're not currently
in a loop of that name, not even if you count where you were called from.
See "last" in perlfunc.
- leaving effective %s failed
- (F) While under the "use filetest" pragma,
switching the real and effective uids or gids failed.
- length/code after end of string in unpack
- (F) While unpacking, the string buffer was already used up
when an unpack length/code combination tried to obtain more data. This
results in an undefined value for the length. See "pack" in
perlfunc.
-
length() used on %s (did you mean
"scalar(%s)"?)
- (W syntax) You used length() on either an array or a
hash when you probably wanted a count of the items.
Array size can be obtained by doing:
scalar(@array);
The number of items in a hash can be obtained by doing:
scalar(keys %hash);
- Lexing code attempted to stuff non-Latin-1 character into
Latin-1 input
- (F) An extension is attempting to insert text into the
current parse (using lex_stuff_pvn or similar), but tried to insert a
character that couldn't be part of the current input. This is an inherent
pitfall of the stuffing mechanism, and one of the reasons to avoid it.
Where it is necessary to stuff, stuffing only plain ASCII is
recommended.
- Lexing code internal error (%s)
- (F) Lexing code supplied by an extension violated the
lexer's API in a detectable way.
-
listen() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to do a listen on a closed socket. Did
you forget to check the return value of your socket() call? See
"listen" in perlfunc.
- List form of piped open not implemented
- (F) On some platforms, notably Windows, the
three-or-more-arguments form of "open" does not support pipes,
such as "open($pipe, '|-', @args)". Use the two-argument
"open($pipe, '|prog arg1 arg2...')" form instead.
- Literal vertical space in [] is illegal except under /x in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) (only under "use re 'strict'"
or within "(?[...])")
Likely you forgot the "/x" modifier or there was a typo in the
pattern. For example, did you really mean to match a form-feed? If so, all
the ASCII vertical space control characters are representable by escape
sequences which won't present such a jarring appearance as your pattern
does when displayed.
\r carriage return
\f form feed
\n line feed
\cK vertical tab
- %s: loadable library and perl binaries are mismatched (got
%s handshake key %p, needed %p)
- (P) A dynamic loading library ".so" or
".dll" was being loaded into the process that was built against
a different build of perl than the said library was compiled against.
Reinstalling the XS module will likely fix this error.
- Locale '%s' contains (at least) the following characters
which have unexpected meanings: %s The Perl program will use the expected
meanings
- (W locale) You are using the named UTF-8 locale. UTF-8
locales are expected to have very particular behavior, which most do. This
message arises when perl found some departures from the expectations, and
is notifying you that the expected behavior overrides these differences.
In some cases the differences are caused by the locale definition being
defective, but the most common causes of this warning are when there are
ambiguities and conflicts in following the Standard, and the locale has
chosen an approach that differs from Perl's.
One of these is because that, contrary to the claims, Unicode is not
completely locale insensitive. Turkish and some related languages have two
types of "I" characters. One is dotted in both upper- and
lowercase, and the other is dotless in both cases. Unicode allows a locale
to use either the Turkish rules, or the rules used in all other instances,
where there is only one type of "I", which is dotless in the
uppercase, and dotted in the lower. The perl core does not (yet) handle
the Turkish case, and this message warns you of that. Instead, the
Unicode::Casing module allows you to mostly implement the Turkish casing
rules.
The other common cause is for the characters
$ + < = > ^ ` | ~
These are problematic. The C standard says that these should be considered
punctuation in the C locale (and the POSIX standard defers to the C
standard), and Unicode is generally considered a superset of the C locale.
But Unicode has added an extra category, "Symbol", and
classifies these particular characters as being symbols. Most UTF-8
locales have them treated as punctuation, so that ispunct(2)
returns non-zero for them. But a few locales have it return 0. Perl takes
the first approach, not using "ispunct()" at all (see Note [5]
in perlrecharclass), and this message is raised to notify you that you are
getting Perl's approach, not the locale's.
- Locale '%s' may not work well.%s
- (W locale) You are using the named locale, which is a
non-UTF-8 one, and which perl has determined is not fully compatible with
what it can handle. The second %s gives a reason.
By far the most common reason is that the locale has characters in it that
are represented by more than one byte. The only such locales that Perl can
handle are the UTF-8 locales. Most likely the specified locale is a
non-UTF-8 one for an East Asian language such as Chinese or Japanese. If
the locale is a superset of ASCII, the ASCII portion of it may work in
Perl.
Some essentially obsolete locales that aren't supersets of ASCII, mainly
those in ISO 646 or other 7-bit locales, such as ASMO 449, can also have
problems, depending on what portions of the ASCII character set get
changed by the locale and are also used by the program. The warning
message lists the determinable conflicting characters.
Note that not all incompatibilities are found.
If this happens to you, there's not much you can do except switch to use a
different locale or use Encode to translate from the locale into UTF-8; if
that's impracticable, you have been warned that some things may break.
This message is output once each time a bad locale is switched into within
the scope of "use locale", or on the first
possibly-affected operation if the "use locale" inherits
a bad one. It is not raised for any operations from the POSIX module.
- localtime(%f) failed
- (W overflow) You called "localtime" with a number
that it could not handle: too large, too small, or NaN. The returned value
is "undef".
- localtime(%f) too large
- (W overflow) You called "localtime" with a number
that was larger than it can reliably handle and "localtime"
probably returned the wrong date. This warning is also triggered with NaN
(the special not-a-number value).
- localtime(%f) too small
- (W overflow) You called "localtime" with a number
that was smaller than it can reliably handle and "localtime"
probably returned the wrong date.
- Lookbehind longer than %d not implemented in regex
m/%s/
- (F) There is currently a limit on the length of string
which lookbehind can handle. This restriction may be eased in a future
release.
- Lost precision when %s %f by 1
- (W imprecision) You attempted to increment or decrement a
value by one, but the result is too large for the underlying floating
point representation to store accurately. Hence, the target of
"++" or "--" is increased or decreased by quite
different value than one, such as zero ( i.e. the target is
unchanged) or two, due to rounding. Perl issues this warning because it
has already switched from integers to floating point when values are too
large for integers, and now even floating point is insufficient. You may
wish to switch to using Math::BigInt explicitly.
-
lstat() on filehandle%s
- (W io) You tried to do an lstat on a filehandle. What did
you mean by that? lstat() makes sense only on filenames. (Perl did
a fstat() instead on the filehandle.)
- lvalue attribute %s already-defined subroutine
- (W misc) Although attributes.pm allows this, turning the
lvalue attribute on or off on a Perl subroutine that is already defined
does not always work properly. It may or may not do what you want,
depending on what code is inside the subroutine, with exact details
subject to change between Perl versions. Only do this if you really know
what you are doing.
- lvalue attribute ignored after the subroutine has been
defined
- (W misc) Using the ":lvalue" declarative syntax
to make a Perl subroutine an lvalue subroutine after it has been defined
is not permitted. To make the subroutine an lvalue subroutine, add the
lvalue attribute to the definition, or put the "sub foo
:lvalue;" declaration before the definition.
See also attributes.pm.
- Magical list constants are not supported
- (F) You assigned a magical array to a stash element, and
then tried to use the subroutine from the same slot. You are asking Perl
to do something it cannot do, details subject to change between Perl
versions.
- Malformed integer in [] in pack
- (F) Between the brackets enclosing a numeric repeat count
only digits are permitted. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Malformed integer in [] in unpack
- (F) Between the brackets enclosing a numeric repeat count
only digits are permitted. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Malformed PERLLIB_PREFIX
- (F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERLLIB_PREFIX should be of
the form
prefix1;prefix2
or
prefix1 prefix2
with nonempty prefix1 and prefix2. If "prefix1" is indeed a prefix
of a builtin library search path, prefix2 is substituted. The error may
appear if components are not found, or are too long. See
"PERLLIB_PREFIX" in perlos2.
- Malformed prototype for %s: %s
- (F) You tried to use a function with a malformed prototype.
The syntax of function prototypes is given a brief compile-time check for
obvious errors like invalid characters. A more rigorous check is run when
the function is called. Perhaps the function's author was trying to write
a subroutine signature but didn't enable that feature first ("use
feature 'signatures'"), so the signature was instead interpreted as a
bad prototype.
- Malformed UTF-8 character%s
- (S utf8)(F) Perl detected a string that should be UTF-8,
but didn't comply with UTF-8 encoding rules, or represents a code point
whose ordinal integer value doesn't fit into the word size of the current
platform (overflows). Details as to the exact malformation are given in
the variable, %s, part of the message.
One possible cause is that you set the UTF8 flag yourself for data that you
thought to be in UTF-8 but it wasn't (it was for example legacy 8-bit
data). To guard against this, you can use "Encode::decode('UTF-8',
...)".
If you use the ":encoding(UTF-8)" PerlIO layer for input, invalid
byte sequences are handled gracefully, but if you use ":utf8",
the flag is set without validating the data, possibly resulting in this
error message.
See also "Handling Malformed Data" in Encode.
- Malformed UTF-8 returned by \N{%s} immediately after
'%s'
- (F) The charnames handler returned malformed UTF-8.
- Malformed UTF-8 string in "%s"
- (F) This message indicates a bug either in the Perl core or
in XS code. Such code was trying to find out if a character, allegedly
stored internally encoded as UTF-8, was of a given type, such as being
punctuation or a digit. But the character was not encoded in legal UTF-8.
The %s is replaced by a string that can be used by knowledgeable people to
determine what the type being checked against was.
Passing malformed strings was deprecated in Perl 5.18, and became fatal in
Perl 5.26.
- Malformed UTF-8 string in '%c' format in unpack
- (F) You tried to unpack something that didn't comply with
UTF-8 encoding rules and perl was unable to guess how to make more
progress.
- Malformed UTF-8 string in pack
- (F) You tried to pack something that didn't comply with
UTF-8 encoding rules and perl was unable to guess how to make more
progress.
- Malformed UTF-8 string in unpack
- (F) You tried to unpack something that didn't comply with
UTF-8 encoding rules and perl was unable to guess how to make more
progress.
- Malformed UTF-16 surrogate
- (F) Perl thought it was reading UTF-16 encoded character
data but while doing it Perl met a malformed Unicode surrogate.
- Mandatory parameter follows optional parameter
- (F) In a subroutine signature, you wrote something like
"$a = undef, $b", making an earlier parameter optional and a
later one mandatory. Parameters are filled from left to right, so it's
impossible for the caller to omit an earlier one and pass a later one. If
you want to act as if the parameters are filled from right to left,
declare the rightmost optional and then shuffle the parameters around in
the subroutine's body.
- Matched non-Unicode code point 0x%X against Unicode
property; may not be portable
- (S non_unicode) Perl allows strings to contain a superset
of Unicode code points; each code point may be as large as what is
storable in a signed integer on your system, but these may not be accepted
by other languages/systems. This message occurs when you matched a string
containing such a code point against a regular expression pattern, and the
code point was matched against a Unicode property, "\p{...}" or
"\P{...}". Unicode properties are only defined on Unicode code
points, so the result of this match is undefined by Unicode, but Perl
(starting in v5.20) treats non-Unicode code points as if they were typical
unassigned Unicode ones, and matched this one accordingly. Whether a given
property matches these code points or not is specified in "Properties
accessible through \p{} and \P{}" in perluniprops.
This message is suppressed (unless it has been made fatal) if it is
immaterial to the results of the match if the code point is Unicode or
not. For example, the property "\p{ASCII_Hex_Digit}" only can
match the 22 characters "[0-9A-Fa-f]", so obviously all other
code points, Unicode or not, won't match it. (And
"\P{ASCII_Hex_Digit}" will match every code point except these
22.)
Getting this message indicates that the outcome of the match arguably should
have been the opposite of what actually happened. If you think that is the
case, you may wish to make the "non_unicode" warnings category
fatal; if you agree with Perl's decision, you may wish to turn off this
category.
See "Beyond Unicode code points" in perlunicode for more
information.
- %s matches null string many times in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) The pattern you've specified would be an
infinite loop if the regular expression engine didn't specifically check
for that. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular
expression the problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Maximal count of pending signals (%u) exceeded
- (F) Perl aborted due to too high a number of signals
pending. This usually indicates that your operating system tried to
deliver signals too fast (with a very high priority), starving the perl
process from resources it would need to reach a point where it can process
signals safely. (See "Deferred Signals (Safe Signals)" in
perlipc.)
- "%s" may clash with future reserved word
- (W) This warning may be due to running a perl5 script
through a perl4 interpreter, especially if the word that is being warned
about is "use" or "my".
- '%' may not be used in pack
- (F) You can't pack a string by supplying a checksum,
because the checksumming process loses information, and you can't go the
other way. See "unpack" in perlfunc.
- Method for operation %s not found in package %s during
blessing
- (F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an
overloading table that doesn't resolve to a valid subroutine. See
overload.
- Method %s not permitted
- See "500 Server error".
- Might be a runaway multi-line %s string starting on line
%d
- (S) An advisory indicating that the previous error may have
been caused by a missing delimiter on a string or pattern, because it
eventually ended earlier on the current line.
- Misplaced _ in number
- (W syntax) An underscore (underbar) in a numeric constant
did not separate two digits.
- Missing argument for %n in %s
- (F) A %n was used in a format string with no corresponding
argument for perl to write the current string length to.
- Missing argument in %s
- (W missing) You called a function with fewer arguments than
other arguments you supplied indicated would be needed.
Currently only emitted when a printf-type format required more arguments
than were supplied, but might be used in the future for other cases where
we can statically determine that arguments to functions are missing, e.g.
for the "pack" in perlfunc function.
- Missing argument to -%c
- (F) The argument to the indicated command line switch must
follow immediately after the switch, without intervening spaces.
- Missing braces on \N{}
- Missing braces on \N{} in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Wrong syntax of character name literal
"\N{charname}" within double-quotish context. This can also
happen when there is a space (or comment) between the "\N" and
the "{" in a regex with the "/x" modifier. This
modifier does not change the requirement that the brace immediately follow
the "\N".
- Missing braces on \o{}
- (F) A "\o" must be followed immediately by a
"{" in double-quotish context.
- Missing comma after first argument to %s function
- (F) While certain functions allow you to specify a
filehandle or an "indirect object" before the argument list,
this ain't one of them.
- Missing command in piped open
- (W pipe) You used the "open(FH, "|
command")" or "open(FH, "command |")"
construction, but the command was missing or blank.
- Missing control char name in \c
- (F) A double-quoted string ended with "\c",
without the required control character name.
- Missing ']' in prototype for %s : %s
- (W illegalproto) A grouping was started with "["
but never closed with "]".
- Missing name in "%s sub"
- (F) The syntax for lexically scoped subroutines requires
that they have a name with which they can be found.
- Missing $ on loop variable
- (F) Apparently you've been programming in csh too
much. Variables are always mentioned with the $ in Perl, unlike in the
shells, where it can vary from one line to the next.
- (Missing operator before %s?)
- (S syntax) This is an educated guess made in conjunction
with the message "%s found where operator expected". Often the
missing operator is a comma.
- Missing or undefined argument to %s
- (F) You tried to call require or do with no argument or
with an undefined value as an argument. Require expects either a package
name or a file-specification as an argument; do expects a filename. See
"require EXPR" in perlfunc and "do EXPR" in
perlfunc.
- Missing right brace on \%c{} in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Missing right brace in "\x{...}",
"\p{...}", "\P{...}", or "\N{...}".
- Missing right brace on \N{}
- Missing right brace on \N{} or unescaped left brace after
\N
- (F) "\N" has two meanings.
The traditional one has it followed by a name enclosed in braces, meaning
the character (or sequence of characters) given by that name. Thus
"\N{ASTERISK}" is another way of writing "*", valid in
both double-quoted strings and regular expression patterns. In patterns,
it doesn't have the meaning an unescaped "*" does.
Starting in Perl 5.12.0, "\N" also can have an additional meaning
(only) in patterns, namely to match a non-newline character. (This is
short for "[^\n]", and like "." but is not affected by
the "/s" regex modifier.)
This can lead to some ambiguities. When "\N" is not followed
immediately by a left brace, Perl assumes the "[^\n]" meaning.
Also, if the braces form a valid quantifier such as "\N{3}" or
"\N{5,}", Perl assumes that this means to match the given
quantity of non-newlines (in these examples, 3; and 5 or more,
respectively). In all other case, where there is a "\N{" and a
matching "}", Perl assumes that a character name is desired.
However, if there is no matching "}", Perl doesn't know if it was
mistakenly omitted, or if "[^\n]{" was desired, and raises this
error. If you meant the former, add the right brace; if you meant the
latter, escape the brace with a backslash, like so: "\N\{"
- Missing right curly or square bracket
- (F) The lexer counted more opening curly or square brackets
than closing ones. As a general rule, you'll find it's missing near the
place you were last editing.
- (Missing semicolon on previous line?)
- (S syntax) This is an educated guess made in conjunction
with the message "%s found where operator expected". Don't
automatically put a semicolon on the previous line just because you saw
this message.
- Modification of a read-only value attempted
- (F) You tried, directly or indirectly, to change the value
of a constant. You didn't, of course, try "2 = 1", because the
compiler catches that. But an easy way to do the same thing is:
sub mod { $_[0] = 1 }
mod(2);
Another way is to assign to a substr() that's off the end of the
string.
Yet another way is to assign to a "foreach" loop VAR when
VAR is aliased to a constant in the look LIST:
$x = 1;
foreach my $n ($x, 2) {
$n *= 2; # modifies the $x, but fails on attempt to
} # modify the 2
PerlIO::scalar will also produce this message as a warning if you attempt to
open a read-only scalar for writing.
- Modification of non-creatable array value attempted,
%s
- (F) You tried to make an array value spring into existence,
and the subscript was probably negative, even counting from end of the
array backwards.
- Modification of non-creatable hash value attempted, %s
- (P) You tried to make a hash value spring into existence,
and it couldn't be created for some peculiar reason.
- Module name must be constant
- (F) Only a bare module name is allowed as the first
argument to a "use".
- Module name required with -%c option
- (F) The "-M" or "-m" options say that
Perl should load some module, but you omitted the name of the module.
Consult perlrun for full details about "-M" and
"-m".
- More than one argument to '%s' open
- (F) The "open" function has been asked to open
multiple files. This can happen if you are trying to open a pipe to a
command that takes a list of arguments, but have forgotten to specify a
piped open mode. See "open" in perlfunc for details.
- mprotect for COW string %p %u failed with %d
- (S) You compiled perl with -DPERL_DEBUG_READONLY_COW
(see "Copy on Write" in perlguts), but a shared string buffer
could not be made read-only.
- mprotect for %p %u failed with %d
- (S) You compiled perl with -DPERL_DEBUG_READONLY_OPS
(see perlhacktips), but an op tree could not be made read-only.
- mprotect RW for COW string %p %u failed with %d
- (S) You compiled perl with -DPERL_DEBUG_READONLY_COW
(see "Copy on Write" in perlguts), but a read-only shared string
buffer could not be made mutable.
- mprotect RW for %p %u failed with %d
- (S) You compiled perl with -DPERL_DEBUG_READONLY_OPS
(see perlhacktips), but a read-only op tree could not be made mutable
before freeing the ops.
- msg%s not implemented
- (F) You don't have System V message IPC on your
system.
- Multidimensional hash lookup is disabled
- (F) You supplied a list of subscripts to a hash lookup
under "no feature "multidimensional";", eg:
$z = $foo{$x, $y};
which by default acts like:
$z = $foo{join($;, $x, $y)};
- Multidimensional syntax %s not supported
- (W syntax) Multidimensional arrays aren't written like
$foo[1,2,3]. They're written like $foo[1][2][3], as in C.
- Multiple slurpy parameters not allowed
- (F) In subroutine signatures, a slurpy parameter
("@" or "%") must be the last parameter, and there
must not be more than one of them; for example:
sub foo ($a, @b) {} # legal
sub foo ($a, @b, %) {} # invalid
- '/' must follow a numeric type in unpack
- (F) You had an unpack template that contained a '/', but
this did not follow some unpack specification producing a numeric value.
See "pack" in perlfunc.
- %s must not be a named sequence in transliteration
operator
- (F) Transliteration ("tr///" and
"y///") transliterates individual characters. But a named
sequence by definition is more than an individual character, and hence
doing this operation on it doesn't make sense.
- "my sub" not yet implemented
- (F) Lexically scoped subroutines are not yet implemented.
Don't try that yet.
- "my" subroutine %s can't be in a package
- (F) Lexically scoped subroutines aren't in a package, so it
doesn't make sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the
front.
- "my %s" used in sort comparison
- (W syntax) The package variables $a and $b are used for
sort comparisons. You used $a or $b in as an operand to the
"<=>" or "cmp" operator inside a sort comparison
block, and the variable had earlier been declared as a lexical variable.
Either qualify the sort variable with the package name, or rename the
lexical variable.
- "my" variable %s can't be in a package
- (F) Lexically scoped variables aren't in a package, so it
doesn't make sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the
front. Use local() if you want to localize a package variable.
- Name "%s::%s" used only once: possible typo
- (W once) Typographical errors often show up as unique
variable names. If you had a good reason for having a unique name, then
just mention it again somehow to suppress the message. The "our"
declaration is also provided for this purpose.
NOTE: This warning detects package symbols that have been used only once.
This means lexical variables will never trigger this warning. It also
means that all of the package variables $c, @c, %c, as well as *c, &c,
sub c{}, c(), and c (the filehandle or format) are considered the same; if
a program uses $c only once but also uses any of the others it will not
trigger this warning. Symbols beginning with an underscore and symbols
using special identifiers (q.v. perldata) are exempt from this
warning.
- Need exactly 3 octal digits in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Within "(?[ ])", all
constants interpreted as octal need to be exactly 3 digits long. This
helps catch some ambiguities. If your constant is too short, add leading
zeros, like
(?[ [ \078 ] ]) # Syntax error!
(?[ [ \0078 ] ]) # Works
(?[ [ \007 8 ] ]) # Clearer
The maximum number this construct can express is "\777". If you
need a larger one, you need to use \o{} instead. If you meant two separate
things, you need to separate them:
(?[ [ \7776 ] ]) # Syntax error!
(?[ [ \o{7776} ] ]) # One meaning
(?[ [ \777 6 ] ]) # Another meaning
(?[ [ \777 \006 ] ]) # Still another
- Negative '/' count in unpack
- (F) The length count obtained from a length/code unpack
operation was negative. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Negative length
- (F) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv operation with a
buffer length that is less than 0. This is difficult to imagine.
- Negative offset to vec in lvalue context
- (F) When "vec" is called in an lvalue context,
the second argument must be greater than or equal to zero.
- Negative repeat count does nothing
- (W numeric) You tried to execute the "x"
repetition operator fewer than 0 times, which doesn't make sense.
- Nested quantifiers in regex; marked by <-- HERE
in m/%s/
- (F) You can't quantify a quantifier without intervening
parentheses. So things like ** or +* or ?* are illegal. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem
was discovered.
Note that the minimal matching quantifiers, "*?", "+?",
and "??" appear to be nested quantifiers, but aren't. See
perlre.
- %s never introduced
- (S internal) The symbol in question was declared but
somehow went out of scope before it could possibly have been used.
- next::method/next::can/maybe::next::method cannot find
enclosing method
- (F) "next::method" needs to be called within the
context of a real method in a real package, and it could not find such a
context. See mro.
- \N in a character class must be a named character: \N{...}
in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The new (as of Perl 5.12) meaning of "\N" as
"[^\n]" is not valid in a bracketed character class, for the
same reason that "." in a character class loses its specialness:
it matches almost everything, which is probably not what you want.
- \N{} here is restricted to one character in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Named Unicode character escapes ("\N{...}")
may return a multi-character sequence. Even though a character class is
supposed to match just one character of input, perl will match the whole
thing correctly, except under certain conditions. These currently are
- When the class is inverted ("[^...]")
- The mathematically logical behavior for what matches when
inverting is very different from what people expect, so we have decided to
forbid it.
- The escape is the beginning or final end point of a
range
- Similarly unclear is what should be generated when the
"\N{...}" is used as one of the end points of the range, such as
in
[\x{41}-\N{ARABIC SEQUENCE YEH WITH HAMZA ABOVE WITH AE}]
What is meant here is unclear, as the "\N{...}" escape is a
sequence of code points, so this is made an error.
- In a regex set
- The syntax "(?[ ])" in a
regular expression yields a list of single code points, none can be a
sequence.
- No %s allowed while running setuid
- (F) Certain operations are deemed to be too insecure for a
setuid or setgid script to even be allowed to attempt. Generally speaking
there will be another way to do what you want that is, if not secure, at
least securable. See perlsec.
- No code specified for -%c
- (F) Perl's -e and -E command-line options
require an argument. If you want to run an empty program, pass the empty
string as a separate argument or run a program consisting of a single 0 or
1:
perl -e ""
perl -e0
perl -e1
- No comma allowed after %s
- (F) A list operator that has a filehandle or "indirect
object" is not allowed to have a comma between that and the following
arguments. Otherwise it'd be just another one of the arguments.
One possible cause for this is that you expected to have imported a constant
to your name space with use or import while no such
importing took place, it may for example be that your operating system
does not support that particular constant. Hopefully you did use an
explicit import list for the constants you expect to see; please see
"use" in perlfunc and "import" in perlfunc. While an
explicit import list would probably have caught this error earlier it
naturally does not remedy the fact that your operating system still does
not support that constant. Maybe you have a typo in the constants of the
symbol import list of use or import or in the constant name
at the line where this error was triggered?
- No command into which to pipe on command line
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command
line redirection, and found a '|' at the end of the command line, so it
doesn't know where you want to pipe the output from this command.
- No DB::DB routine defined
- (F) The currently executing code was compiled with the
-d switch, but for some reason the current debugger (e.g.
perl5db.pl or a "Devel::" module) didn't define a routine
to be called at the beginning of each statement.
- No dbm on this machine
- (P) This is counted as an internal error, because every
machine should supply dbm nowadays, because Perl comes with SDBM. See
SDBM_File.
- No DB::sub routine defined
- (F) The currently executing code was compiled with the
-d switch, but for some reason the current debugger (e.g.
perl5db.pl or a "Devel::" module) didn't define a
"DB::sub" routine to be called at the beginning of each ordinary
subroutine call.
- No digits found for %s literal
- (F) No hexadecimal digits were found following
"0x" or no binary digits were found following
"0b".
- No directory specified for -I
- (F) The -I command-line switch requires a directory
name as part of the same argument. Use -Ilib, for instance.
-I lib won't work.
- No error file after 2> or 2>> on command line
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command
line redirection, and found a '2>' or a '2>>' on the command
line, but can't find the name of the file to which to write data destined
for stderr.
- No group ending character '%c' found in template
- (F) A pack or unpack template has an opening '(' or '['
without its matching counterpart. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- No input file after < on command line
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command
line redirection, and found a '<' on the command line, but can't find
the name of the file from which to read data for stdin.
- No next::method '%s' found for %s
- (F) "next::method" found no further instances of
this method name in the remaining packages of the MRO of this class. If
you don't want it throwing an exception, use
"maybe::next::method" or "next::can". See mro.
- Non-finite repeat count does nothing
- (W numeric) You tried to execute the "x"
repetition operator "Inf" (or "-Inf") or
"NaN" times, which doesn't make sense.
- Non-hex character in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) In a regular expression, there was a non-hexadecimal
character where a hex one was expected, like
(?[ [ \xDG ] ])
(?[ [ \x{DEKA} ] ])
- Non-hex character '%c' terminates \x early. Resolved as
"%s"
- (W digit) In parsing a hexadecimal numeric constant, a
character was unexpectedly encountered that isn't hexadecimal. The
resulting value is as indicated.
Note that, within braces, every character starting with the first
non-hexadecimal up to the ending brace is ignored.
- Non-octal character in regex; marked by <-- HERE
in m/%s/
- (F) In a regular expression, there was a non-octal
character where an octal one was expected, like
(?[ [ \o{1278} ] ])
- Non-octal character '%c' terminates \o early. Resolved as
"%s"
- (W digit) In parsing an octal numeric constant, a character
was unexpectedly encountered that isn't octal. The resulting value is as
indicated.
When not using "\o{...}", you wrote something like
"\08", or "\179" in a double-quotish string. The
resolution is as indicated, with all but the last digit treated as a
single character, specified in octal. The last digit is the next character
in the string. To tell Perl that this is indeed what you want, you can use
the "\o{ }" syntax, or use exactly three digits to specify the
octal for the character.
Note that, within braces, every character starting with the first non-octal
up to the ending brace is ignored.
- "no" not allowed in expression
- (F) The "no" keyword is recognized and executed
at compile time, and returns no useful value. See perlmod.
- Non-string passed as bitmask
- (W misc) A number has been passed as a bitmask argument to
select(). Use the vec() function to construct the file
descriptor bitmasks for select. See "select" in perlfunc.
- No output file after > on command line
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command
line redirection, and found a lone '>' at the end of the command line,
so it doesn't know where you wanted to redirect stdout.
- No output file after > or >> on command line
- (F) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl handles its own command
line redirection, and found a '>' or a '>>' on the command line,
but can't find the name of the file to which to write data destined for
stdout.
- No package name allowed for subroutine %s in
"our"
- No package name allowed for variable %s in
"our"
- (F) Fully qualified subroutine and variable names are not
allowed in "our" declarations, because that doesn't make much
sense under existing rules. Such syntax is reserved for future
extensions.
- No Perl script found in input
- (F) You called "perl -x", but no line was found
in the file beginning with #! and containing the word
"perl".
- No setregid available
- (F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the
setregid() call for your system.
- No setreuid available
- (F) Configure didn't find anything resembling the
setreuid() call for your system.
- No such class %s
- (F) You provided a class qualifier in a "my",
"our" or "state" declaration, but this class doesn't
exist at this point in your program.
- No such class field "%s" in variable %s of type
%s
- (F) You tried to access a key from a hash through the
indicated typed variable but that key is not allowed by the package of the
same type. The indicated package has restricted the set of allowed keys
using the fields pragma.
- No such hook: %s
- (F) You specified a signal hook that was not recognized by
Perl. Currently, Perl accepts "__DIE__" and "__WARN__"
as valid signal hooks.
- No such pipe open
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. The internal routine
my_pclose() tried to close a pipe which hadn't been opened. This
should have been caught earlier as an attempt to close an unopened
filehandle.
- No such signal: SIG%s
- (W signal) You specified a signal name as a subscript to
%SIG that was not recognized. Say "kill -l" in your shell to see
the valid signal names on your system.
- No Unicode property value wildcard matches:
- (W regexp) You specified a wildcard for a Unicode property
value, but there is no property value in the current Unicode release that
matches it. Check your spelling.
- Not a CODE reference
- (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value
(that is, a subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead.
You can use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it
really was. See also perlref.
- Not a GLOB reference
- (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a
"typeglob" (that is, a symbol table entry that looks like *foo),
but found a reference to something else instead. You can use the
ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See
perlref.
- Not a HASH reference
- (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a hash
value, but found a reference to something else instead. You can use the
ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See
perlref.
- '#' not allowed immediately following a sigil in a
subroutine signature
- (F) In a subroutine signature definition, a comment
following a sigil ("$", "@" or "%"), needs
to be separated by whitespace or a comma etc., in particular to avoid
confusion with the $# variable. For example:
# bad
sub f ($# ignore first arg
, $b) {}
# good
sub f ($, # ignore first arg
$b) {}
- Not an ARRAY reference
- (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to an array
value, but found a reference to something else instead. You can use the
ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See
perlref.
- Not a SCALAR reference
- (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a scalar
value, but found a reference to something else instead. You can use the
ref() function to find out what kind of ref it really was. See
perlref.
- Not a subroutine reference
- (F) Perl was trying to evaluate a reference to a code value
(that is, a subroutine), but found a reference to something else instead.
You can use the ref() function to find out what kind of ref it
really was. See also perlref.
- Not a subroutine reference in overload table
- (F) An attempt was made to specify an entry in an
overloading table that doesn't somehow point to a valid subroutine. See
overload.
- Not enough arguments for %s
- (F) The function requires more arguments than you
specified.
- Not enough format arguments
- (W syntax) A format specified more picture fields than the
next line supplied. See perlform.
- %s: not found
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through the Bourne
shell instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script
into Perl yourself.
- no UTC offset information; assuming local time is UTC
- (S) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl was unable to find the
local timezone offset, so it's assuming that local system time is
equivalent to UTC. If it's not, define the logical name
SYS$TIMEZONE_DIFFERENTIAL to translate to the number of seconds
which need to be added to UTC to get local time.
- NULL OP IN RUN
- (S debugging) Some internal routine called run()
with a null opcode pointer.
- Null picture in formline
- (F) The first argument to formline must be a valid format
picture specification. It was found to be empty, which probably means you
supplied it an uninitialized value. See perlform.
- NULL regexp parameter
- (P) The internal pattern matching routines are out of their
gourd.
- Number too long
- (F) Perl limits the representation of decimal numbers in
programs to about 250 characters. You've exceeded that length. Future
versions of Perl are likely to eliminate this arbitrary limitation. In the
meantime, try using scientific notation (e.g. "1e6" instead of
"1_000_000").
- Number with no digits
- (F) Perl was looking for a number but found nothing that
looked like a number. This happens, for example with "\o{}",
with no number between the braces.
- Numeric format result too large
- (F) The length of the result of a numeric format supplied
to sprintf() or printf() would have been too large for the
underlying C function to report. This limit is typically 2GB.
- Numeric variables with more than one digit may not start
with '0'
- (F) The only numeric variable which is allowed to start
with a 0 is $0, and you mentioned a variable that starts with 0 that has
more than one digit. You probably want to remove the leading 0, or if the
intent was to express a variable name in octal you should convert to
decimal.
- Octal number > 037777777777 non-portable
- (W portable) The octal number you specified is larger than
2**32-1 (4294967295) and therefore non-portable between systems. See
perlport for more on portability concerns.
- Odd name/value argument for subroutine '%s'
- (F) A subroutine using a slurpy hash parameter in its
signature received an odd number of arguments to populate the hash. It
requires the arguments to be paired, with the same number of keys as
values. The caller of the subroutine is presumably at fault.
The message attempts to include the name of the called subroutine. If the
subroutine has been aliased, the subroutine's original name will be shown,
regardless of what name the caller used.
- Odd number of arguments for overload::constant
- (W overload) The call to overload::constant contained an
odd number of arguments. The arguments should come in pairs.
- Odd number of elements in anonymous hash
- (W misc) You specified an odd number of elements to
initialize a hash, which is odd, because hashes come in key/value
pairs.
- Odd number of elements in hash assignment
- (W misc) You specified an odd number of elements to
initialize a hash, which is odd, because hashes come in key/value
pairs.
- Offset outside string
- (F)(W layer) You tried to do a read/write/send/recv/seek
operation with an offset pointing outside the buffer. This is difficult to
imagine. The sole exceptions to this are that zero padding will take place
when going past the end of the string when either "sysread()"ing
a file, or when seeking past the end of a scalar opened for I/O (in
anticipation of future reads and to imitate the behavior with real
files).
- Old package separator used in string
- (W syntax) You used the old package separator,
"'", in a variable named inside a double-quoted string; e.g.,
"In $name's house". This is equivalent to "In $name::s
house". If you meant the former, put a backslash before the
apostrophe ("In $name\'s house").
- %s() on unopened %s
- (W unopened) An I/O operation was attempted on a filehandle
that was never initialized. You need to do an open(), a
sysopen(), or a socket() call, or call a constructor from
the FileHandle package.
- -%s on unopened filehandle %s
- (W unopened) You tried to invoke a file test operator on a
filehandle that isn't open. Check your control flow. See also
"-X" in perlfunc.
- oops: oopsAV
- (S internal) An internal warning that the grammar is
screwed up.
- oops: oopsHV
- (S internal) An internal warning that the grammar is
screwed up.
- Operand with no preceding operator in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You wrote something like
(?[ \p{Digit} \p{Thai} ])
There are two operands, but no operator giving how you want to combine
them.
- Operation "%s": no method found, %s
- (F) An attempt was made to perform an overloaded operation
for which no handler was defined. While some handlers can be autogenerated
in terms of other handlers, there is no default handler for any operation,
unless the "fallback" overloading key is specified to be true.
See overload.
- Operation "%s" returns its argument for
non-Unicode code point 0x%X
- (S non_unicode) You performed an operation requiring
Unicode rules on a code point that is not in Unicode, so what it should do
is not defined. Perl has chosen to have it do nothing, and warn you.
If the operation shown is "ToFold", it means that case-insensitive
matching in a regular expression was done on the code point.
If you know what you are doing you can turn off this warning by "no
warnings 'non_unicode';".
- Operation "%s" returns its argument for UTF-16
surrogate U+%X
- (S surrogate) You performed an operation requiring Unicode
rules on a Unicode surrogate. Unicode frowns upon the use of surrogates
for anything but storing strings in UTF-16, but rules are (reluctantly)
defined for the surrogates, and they are to do nothing for this operation.
Because the use of surrogates can be dangerous, Perl warns.
If the operation shown is "ToFold", it means that case-insensitive
matching in a regular expression was done on the code point.
If you know what you are doing you can turn off this warning by "no
warnings 'surrogate';".
- Operator or semicolon missing before %s
- (S ambiguous) You used a variable or subroutine call where
the parser was expecting an operator. The parser has assumed you really
meant to use an operator, but this is highly likely to be incorrect. For
example, if you say "*foo *foo" it will be interpreted as if you
said "*foo * 'foo'".
- Optional parameter lacks default expression
- (F) In a subroutine signature, you wrote something like
"$a =", making a named optional parameter without a default
value. A nameless optional parameter is permitted to have no default
value, but a named one must have a specific default. You probably want
"$a = undef".
- "our" variable %s redeclared
- (W shadow) You seem to have already declared the same
global once before in the current lexical scope.
- Out of memory!
- (X) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating
there was insufficient remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the
request. Perl has no option but to exit immediately.
At least in Unix you may be able to get past this by increasing your process
datasize limits: in csh/tcsh use "limit" and "limit
datasize n" (where "n" is the number of kilobytes) to check
the current limits and change them, and in ksh/bash/zsh use "ulimit
-a" and "ulimit -d n", respectively.
- Out of memory during %s extend
- (X) An attempt was made to extend an array, a list, or a
string beyond the largest possible memory allocation.
- Out of memory during "large" request for %s
- (F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating
there was insufficient remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the
request. However, the request was judged large enough (compile-time
default is 64K), so a possibility to shut down by trapping this error is
granted.
- Out of memory during request for %s
- (X)(F) The malloc() function returned 0, indicating
there was insufficient remaining memory (or virtual memory) to satisfy the
request.
The request was judged to be small, so the possibility to trap it depends on
the way perl was compiled. By default it is not trappable. However, if
compiled for this, Perl may use the contents of $^M as an emergency pool
after die()ing with this message. In this case the error is
trappable once, and the error message will include the line and
file where the failed request happened.
- Out of memory during ridiculously large request
- (F) You can't allocate more than 2^31+"small
amount" bytes. This error is most likely to be caused by a typo in
the Perl program. e.g., $arr[time] instead of $arr[$time].
- Out of memory for yacc stack
- (F) The yacc parser wanted to grow its stack so it could
continue parsing, but realloc() wouldn't give it more memory,
virtual or otherwise.
- '.' outside of string in pack
- (F) The argument to a '.' in your template tried to move
the working position to before the start of the packed string being
built.
- '@' outside of string in unpack
- (F) You had a template that specified an absolute position
outside the string being unpacked. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- '@' outside of string with malformed UTF-8 in unpack
- (F) You had a template that specified an absolute position
outside the string being unpacked. The string being unpacked was also
invalid UTF-8. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- overload arg '%s' is invalid
- (W overload) The overload pragma was passed an argument it
did not recognize. Did you mistype an operator?
- Overloaded dereference did not return a reference
- (F) An object with an overloaded dereference operator was
dereferenced, but the overloaded operation did not return a reference. See
overload.
- Overloaded qr did not return a REGEXP
- (F) An object with a "qr" overload was used as
part of a match, but the overloaded operation didn't return a compiled
regexp. See overload.
- %s package attribute may clash with future reserved word:
%s
- (W reserved) A lowercase attribute name was used that had a
package-specific handler. That name might have a meaning to Perl itself
some day, even though it doesn't yet. Perhaps you should use a mixed-case
attribute name, instead. See attributes.
- pack/unpack repeat count overflow
- (F) You can't specify a repeat count so large that it
overflows your signed integers. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- page overflow
- (W io) A single call to write() produced more lines
than can fit on a page. See perlform.
- panic: %s
- (P) An internal error.
- panic: attempt to call %s in %s
- (P) One of the file test operators entered a code branch
that calls an ACL related-function, but that function is not available on
this platform. Earlier checks mean that it should not be possible to enter
this branch on this platform.
- panic: child pseudo-process was never scheduled
- (P) A child pseudo-process in the ithreads implementation
on Windows was not scheduled within the time period allowed and therefore
was not able to initialize properly.
- panic: ck_grep, type=%u
- (P) Failed an internal consistency check trying to compile
a grep.
- panic: corrupt saved stack index %ld
- (P) The savestack was requested to restore more localized
values than there are in the savestack.
- panic: del_backref
- (P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to
reset a weak reference.
- panic: fold_constants JMPENV_PUSH returned %d
- (P) While attempting folding constants an exception other
than an "eval" failure was caught.
- panic: frexp: %f
- (P) The library function frexp() failed, making
printf("%f") impossible.
- panic: goto, type=%u, ix=%ld
- (P) We popped the context stack to a context with the
specified label, and then discovered it wasn't a context we know how to do
a goto in.
- panic: gp_free failed to free glob pointer
- (P) The internal routine used to clear a typeglob's entries
tried repeatedly, but each time something re-created entries in the glob.
Most likely the glob contains an object with a reference back to the glob
and a destructor that adds a new object to the glob.
- panic: INTERPCASEMOD, %s
- (P) The lexer got into a bad state at a case modifier.
- panic: INTERPCONCAT, %s
- (P) The lexer got into a bad state parsing a string with
brackets.
- panic: kid popen errno read
- (F) A forked child returned an incomprehensible message
about its errno.
- panic: leave_scope inconsistency %u
- (P) The savestack probably got out of sync. At least, there
was an invalid enum on the top of it.
- panic: magic_killbackrefs
- (P) Failed an internal consistency check while trying to
reset all weak references to an object.
- panic: malloc, %s
- (P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of
malloc.
- panic: memory wrap
- (P) Something tried to allocate either more memory than
possible or a negative amount.
- panic: newFORLOOP, %s
- (P) The parser failed an internal consistency check while
trying to parse a "foreach" loop.
- panic: pad_alloc, %p!=%p
- (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it
was allocating and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
- panic: pad_free curpad, %p!=%p
- (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it
was allocating and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
- panic: pad_free po
- (P) A zero scratch pad offset was detected internally. An
attempt was made to free a target that had not been allocated to begin
with.
- panic: pad_reset curpad, %p!=%p
- (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it
was allocating and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
- panic: pad_sv po
- (P) A zero scratch pad offset was detected internally. Most
likely an operator needed a target but that target had not been allocated
for whatever reason.
- panic: pad_swipe curpad, %p!=%p
- (P) The compiler got confused about which scratch pad it
was allocating and freeing temporaries and lexicals from.
- panic: pad_swipe po
- (P) An invalid scratch pad offset was detected
internally.
- panic: pp_iter, type=%u
- (P) The foreach iterator got called in a non-loop context
frame.
- panic: pp_match%s
- (P) The internal pp_match() routine was called with
invalid operational data.
- panic: realloc, %s
- (P) Something requested a negative number of bytes of
realloc.
- panic: reference miscount on nsv in sv_replace() (%d
!= 1)
- (P) The internal sv_replace() function was handed a
new SV with a reference count other than 1.
- panic: restartop in %s
- (P) Some internal routine requested a goto (or something
like it), and didn't supply the destination.
- panic: return, type=%u
- (P) We popped the context stack to a subroutine or eval
context, and then discovered it wasn't a subroutine or eval context.
- panic: scan_num, %s
- (P) scan_num() got called on something that wasn't a
number.
- panic: Sequence (?{...}): no code block found in regex
m/%s/
- (P) While compiling a pattern that has embedded (?{}) or
(??{}) code blocks, perl couldn't locate the code block that should have
already been seen and compiled by perl before control passed to the regex
compiler.
- panic: sv_chop %s
- (P) The sv_chop() routine was passed a position that
is not within the scalar's string buffer.
- panic: sv_insert, midend=%p, bigend=%p
- (P) The sv_insert() routine was told to remove more
string than there was string.
- panic: top_env
- (P) The compiler attempted to do a goto, or something weird
like that.
- panic: unexpected constant lvalue entersub entry via
type/targ %d:%d
- (P) When compiling a subroutine call in lvalue context,
Perl failed an internal consistency check. It encountered a malformed op
tree.
- panic: unimplemented op %s (#%d) called
- (P) The compiler is screwed up and attempted to use an op
that isn't permitted at run time.
- panic: unknown OA_*: %x
- (P) The internal routine that handles arguments to
"&CORE::foo()" subroutine calls was unable to determine what
type of arguments were expected.
- panic: utf16_to_utf8: odd bytelen
- (P) Something tried to call utf16_to_utf8 with an odd (as
opposed to even) byte length.
- panic: utf16_to_utf8_reversed: odd bytelen
- (P) Something tried to call utf16_to_utf8_reversed with an
odd (as opposed to even) byte length.
- panic: yylex, %s
- (P) The lexer got into a bad state while processing a case
modifier.
- Parentheses missing around "%s" list
- (W parenthesis) You said something like
my $foo, $bar = @_;
when you meant
my ($foo, $bar) = @_;
Remember that "my", "our", "local" and
"state" bind tighter than comma.
- Parsing code internal error (%s)
- (F) Parsing code supplied by an extension violated the
parser's API in a detectable way.
- Pattern subroutine nesting without pos change exceeded
limit in regex
- (F) You used a pattern that uses too many nested subpattern
calls without consuming any text. Restructure the pattern so text is
consumed before the nesting limit is exceeded.
- "-p" destination: %s
- (F) An error occurred during the implicit output invoked by
the "-p" command-line switch. (This output goes to STDOUT unless
you've redirected it with select().)
- Perl API version %s of %s does not match %s
- (F) The XS module in question was compiled against a
different incompatible version of Perl than the one that has loaded the XS
module.
- Perl folding rules are not up-to-date for 0x%X; please use
the perlbug utility to report; in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (S regexp) You used a regular expression with
case-insensitive matching, and there is a bug in Perl in which the
built-in regular expression folding rules are not accurate. This may lead
to incorrect results. Please report this as a bug to
<https://github.com/Perl/perl5/issues>.
- Perl_my_%s() not available
- (F) Your platform has very uncommon byte-order and integer
size, so it was not possible to set up some or all fixed-width byte-order
conversion functions. This is only a problem when you're using the '<'
or '>' modifiers in (un)pack templates. See "pack" in
perlfunc.
- Perl %s required (did you mean %s?)--this is only %s,
stopped
- (F) The code you are trying to run has asked for a newer
version of Perl than you are running. Perhaps "use 5.10" was
written instead of "use 5.010" or "use v5.10". Without
the leading "v", the number is interpreted as a decimal, with
every three digits after the decimal point representing a part of the
version number. So 5.10 is equivalent to v5.100.
- Perl %s required--this is only %s, stopped
- (F) The module in question uses features of a version of
Perl more recent than the currently running version. How long has it been
since you upgraded, anyway? See "require" in perlfunc.
- PERL_SH_DIR too long
- (F) An error peculiar to OS/2. PERL_SH_DIR is the directory
to find the "sh"-shell in. See "PERL_SH_DIR" in
perlos2.
- PERL_SIGNALS illegal: "%s"
- (X) See "PERL_SIGNALS" in perlrun for legal
values.
- Perls since %s too modern--this is %s, stopped
- (F) The code you are trying to run claims it will not run
on the version of Perl you are using because it is too new. Maybe the code
needs to be updated, or maybe it is simply wrong and the version check
should just be removed.
- perl: warning: Non hex character in '$ENV{PERL_HASH_SEED}',
seed only partially set
- (S) PERL_HASH_SEED should match
/^\s*(?:0x)?[0-9a-fA-F]+\s*\z/ but it contained a non hex character. This
could mean you are not using the hash seed you think you are.
- perl: warning: Setting locale failed.
- (S) The whole warning message will look something like:
perl: warning: Setting locale failed.
perl: warning: Please check that your locale settings:
LC_ALL = "En_US",
LANG = (unset)
are supported and installed on your system.
perl: warning: Falling back to the standard locale ("C").
Exactly what were the failed locale settings varies. In the above the
settings were that the LC_ALL was "En_US" and the LANG had no
value. This error means that Perl detected that you and/or your operating
system supplier and/or system administrator have set up the so-called
locale system but Perl could not use those settings. This was not dead
serious, fortunately: there is a "default locale" called
"C" that Perl can and will use, and the script will be run.
Before you really fix the problem, however, you will get the same error
message each time you run Perl. How to really fix the problem can be found
in perllocale section LOCALE PROBLEMS.
- perl: warning: strange setting in
'$ENV{PERL_PERTURB_KEYS}': '%s'
- (S) Perl was run with the environment variable
PERL_PERTURB_KEYS defined but containing an unexpected value. The legal
values of this setting are as follows.
Numeric | String | Result
--------+---------------+-----------------------------------------
0 | NO | Disables key traversal randomization
1 | RANDOM | Enables full key traversal randomization
2 | DETERMINISTIC | Enables repeatable key traversal
| | randomization
Both numeric and string values are accepted, but note that string values are
case sensitive. The default for this setting is "RANDOM" or
1.
- pid %x not a child
- (W exec) A warning peculiar to VMS. Waitpid() was
asked to wait for a process which isn't a subprocess of the current
process. While this is fine from VMS' perspective, it's probably not what
you intended.
- 'P' must have an explicit size in unpack
- (F) The unpack format P must have an explicit size, not
"*".
- POSIX class [:%s:] unknown in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The class in the character class [: :] syntax is
unknown. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular
expression the problem was discovered. Note that the POSIX character
classes do not have the "is" prefix the corresponding C
interfaces have: in other words, it's "[[:print:]]", not
"isprint". See perlre.
- POSIX getpgrp can't take an argument
- (F) Your system has POSIX getpgrp(), which takes no
argument, unlike the BSD version, which takes a pid.
- POSIX syntax [%c %c] belongs inside character classes%s in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) Perl thinks that you intended to write a POSIX
character class, but didn't use enough brackets. These POSIX class
constructs [: :], [= =], and [. .] go inside character classes, the
[] are part of the construct, for example:
"qr/[012[:alpha:]345]/". What the regular expression pattern
compiled to is probably not what you were intending. For example,
"qr/[:alpha:]/" compiles to a regular bracketed character class
consisting of the four characters ":", "a",
"l", "h", and "p". To specify the POSIX
class, it should have been written "qr/[[:alpha:]]/".
Note that [= =] and [. .] are not currently implemented; they are simply
placeholders for future extensions and will cause fatal errors. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem
was discovered. See perlre.
If the specification of the class was not completely valid, the message
indicates that.
- POSIX syntax [. .] is reserved for future extensions in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Within regular expression character classes ([]) the
syntax beginning with "[." and ending with ".]" is
reserved for future extensions. If you need to represent those character
sequences inside a regular expression character class, just quote the
square brackets with the backslash: "\[." and ".\]".
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- POSIX syntax [= =] is reserved for future extensions in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Within regular expression character classes ([]) the
syntax beginning with "[=" and ending with "=]" is
reserved for future extensions. If you need to represent those character
sequences inside a regular expression character class, just quote the
square brackets with the backslash: "\[=" and "=\]".
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Possible attempt to put comments in qw() list
- (W qw) qw() lists contain items separated by
whitespace; as with literal strings, comment characters are not ignored,
but are instead treated as literal data. (You may have used different
delimiters than the parentheses shown here; braces are also frequently
used.)
You probably wrote something like this:
@list = qw(
a # a comment
b # another comment
);
when you should have written this:
@list = qw(
a
b
);
If you really want comments, build your list the old-fashioned way, with
quotes and commas:
@list = (
'a', # a comment
'b', # another comment
);
- Possible attempt to separate words with commas
- (W qw) qw() lists contain items separated by
whitespace; therefore commas aren't needed to separate the items. (You may
have used different delimiters than the parentheses shown here; braces are
also frequently used.)
You probably wrote something like this:
qw! a, b, c !;
which puts literal commas into some of the list items. Write it without
commas if you don't want them to appear in your data:
qw! a b c !;
- Possible memory corruption: %s overflowed 3rd argument
- (F) An ioctl() or fcntl() returned more than
Perl was bargaining for. Perl guesses a reasonable buffer size, but puts a
sentinel byte at the end of the buffer just in case. This sentinel byte
got clobbered, and Perl assumes that memory is now corrupted. See
"ioctl" in perlfunc.
- Possible precedence issue with control flow operator
- (W syntax) There is a possible problem with the mixing of a
control flow operator (e.g. "return") and a low-precedence
operator like "or". Consider:
sub { return $a or $b; }
This is parsed as:
sub { (return $a) or $b; }
Which is effectively just:
sub { return $a; }
Either use parentheses or the high-precedence variant of the operator.
Note this may be also triggered for constructs like:
sub { 1 if die; }
- Possible precedence problem on bitwise %s operator
- (W precedence) Your program uses a bitwise logical operator
in conjunction with a numeric comparison operator, like this :
if ($x & $y == 0) { ... }
This expression is actually equivalent to "$x & ($y == 0)",
due to the higher precedence of "==". This is probably not what
you want. (If you really meant to write this, disable the warning, or,
better, put the parentheses explicitly and write "$x & ($y ==
0)").
- Possible unintended interpolation of $\ in regex
- (W ambiguous) You said something like "m/$\/" in
a regex. The regex "m/foo$\s+bar/m" translates to: match the
word 'foo', the output record separator (see "$\" in perlvar)
and the letter 's' (one time or more) followed by the word 'bar'.
If this is what you intended then you can silence the warning by using
"m/${\}/" (for example: "m/foo${\}s+bar/").
If instead you intended to match the word 'foo' at the end of the line
followed by whitespace and the word 'bar' on the next line then you can
use "m/$(?)\/" (for example: "m/foo$(?)\s+bar/").
- Possible unintended interpolation of %s in string
- (W ambiguous) You said something like '@foo' in a
double-quoted string but there was no array @foo in scope at the time. If
you wanted a literal @foo, then write it as \@foo; otherwise find out what
happened to the array you apparently lost track of.
- Precedence problem: open %s should be open(%s)
- (S precedence) The old irregular construct
open FOO || die;
is now misinterpreted as
open(FOO || die);
because of the strict regularization of Perl 5's grammar into unary and list
operators. (The old open was a little of both.) You must put parentheses
around the filehandle, or use the new "or" operator instead of
"||".
- Premature end of script headers
- See "500 Server error".
-
printf() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) The filehandle you're writing to got itself
closed sometime before now. Check your control flow.
-
print() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) The filehandle you're printing on got itself
closed sometime before now. Check your control flow.
- Process terminated by SIG%s
- (W) This is a standard message issued by OS/2 applications,
while *nix applications die in silence. It is considered a feature of the
OS/2 port. One can easily disable this by appropriate sighandlers, see
"Signals" in perlipc. See also "Process terminated by
SIGTERM/SIGINT" in perlos2.
- Prototype after '%c' for %s : %s
- (W illegalproto) A character follows % or @ in a prototype.
This is useless, since % and @ gobble the rest of the subroutine
arguments.
- Prototype mismatch: %s vs %s
- (S prototype) The subroutine being declared or defined had
previously been declared or defined with a different function
prototype.
- Prototype not terminated
- (F) You've omitted the closing parenthesis in a function
prototype definition.
- Prototype '%s' overridden by attribute 'prototype(%s)' in
%s
- (W prototype) A prototype was declared in both the
parentheses after the sub name and via the prototype attribute. The
prototype in parentheses is useless, since it will be replaced by the
prototype from the attribute before it's ever used.
- Quantifier follows nothing in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You started a regular expression with a quantifier.
Backslash it if you meant it literally. The <-- HERE shows
whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was discovered. See
perlre.
- Quantifier in {,} bigger than %d in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) There is currently a limit to the size of the min and
max values of the {min,max} construct. The <-- HERE shows
whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was discovered. See
perlre.
- Quantifier {n,m} with n > m can't match in regex
- Quantifier {n,m} with n > m can't match in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) Minima should be less than or equal to maxima.
If you really want your regexp to match something 0 times, just put
{0}.
- Quantifier unexpected on zero-length expression in regex
m/%s/
- (W regexp) You applied a regular expression quantifier in a
place where it makes no sense, such as on a zero-width assertion. Try
putting the quantifier inside the assertion instead. For example, the way
to match "abc" provided that it is followed by three repetitions
of "xyz" is "/abc(?=(?:xyz){3})/", not
"/abc(?=xyz){3}/".
- Range iterator outside integer range
- (F) One (or both) of the numeric arguments to the range
operator ".." are outside the range which can be represented by
integers internally. One possible workaround is to force Perl to use
magical string increment by prepending "0" to your numbers.
- Ranges of ASCII printables should be some subset of
"0-9", "A-Z", or "a-z" in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) (only under
"use re 'strict'" or within "(?[...])")
Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. Perhaps you didn't even
intend a range here, if the "-" was meant to be some other
character, or should have been escaped (like "\-"). If you did
intend a range, the one that was used is not portable between ASCII and
EBCDIC platforms, and doesn't have an obvious meaning to a casual reader.
[3-7] # OK; Obvious and portable
[d-g] # OK; Obvious and portable
[A-Y] # OK; Obvious and portable
[A-z] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant
[a-Z] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant
[%-.] # WRONG; Not portable; not clear what is meant
[\x41-Z] # WRONG; Not portable; not obvious to non-geek
(You can force portability by specifying a Unicode range, which means that
the endpoints are specified by "\N{...}", but the meaning may
still not be obvious.) The stricter rules require that ranges that start
or stop with an ASCII character that is not a control have all their
endpoints be the literal character, and not some escape sequence (like
"\x41"), and the ranges must be all digits, or all uppercase
letters, or all lowercase letters.
- Ranges of digits should be from the same group in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) (only under
"use re 'strict'" or within "(?[...])")
Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. You included a range,
and at least one of the end points is a decimal digit. Under the stricter
rules, when this happens, both end points should be digits in the same
group of 10 consecutive digits.
-
readdir() attempted on invalid dirhandle %s
- (W io) The dirhandle you're reading from is either closed
or not really a dirhandle. Check your control flow.
-
readline() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) The filehandle you're reading from got itself
closed sometime before now. Check your control flow.
-
readline() on unopened filehandle %s
- (W unopened) The filehandle you're reading from was never
opened. Check your control flow.
-
read() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) You tried to read from a closed filehandle.
-
read() on unopened filehandle %s
- (W unopened) You tried to read from a filehandle that was
never opened.
-
realloc() of freed memory ignored
- (S malloc) An internal routine called realloc() on
something that had already been freed.
- Recompile perl with -DDEBUGGING to use -D
switch
- (S debugging) You can't use the -D option unless the
code to produce the desired output is compiled into Perl, which entails
some overhead, which is why it's currently left out of your copy.
- Recursive call to Perl_load_module in
PerlIO_find_layer
- (P) It is currently not permitted to load modules when
creating a filehandle inside an %INC hook. This can happen with "open
my $fh, '<', \$scalar", which implicitly loads PerlIO::scalar. Try
loading PerlIO::scalar explicitly first.
- Recursive inheritance detected in package '%s'
- (F) While calculating the method resolution order (MRO) of
a package, Perl believes it found an infinite loop in the @ISA hierarchy.
This is a crude check that bails out after 100 levels of @ISA depth.
- Redundant argument in %s
- (W redundant) You called a function with more arguments
than other arguments you supplied indicated would be needed. Currently
only emitted when a printf-type format required fewer arguments than were
supplied, but might be used in the future for e.g. "pack" in
perlfunc.
- refcnt_dec: fd %d%s
- refcnt: fd %d%s
- refcnt_inc: fd %d%s
- (P) Perl's I/O implementation failed an internal
consistency check. If you see this message, something is very wrong.
- Reference found where even-sized list expected
- (W misc) You gave a single reference where Perl was
expecting a list with an even number of elements (for assignment to a
hash). This usually means that you used the anon hash constructor when you
meant to use parens. In any case, a hash requires key/value pairs.
%hash = { one => 1, two => 2, }; # WRONG
%hash = [ qw/ an anon array / ]; # WRONG
%hash = ( one => 1, two => 2, ); # right
%hash = qw( one 1 two 2 ); # also fine
- Reference is already weak
- (W misc) You have attempted to weaken a reference that is
already weak. Doing so has no effect.
- Reference is not weak
- (W misc) You have attempted to unweaken a reference that is
not weak. Doing so has no effect.
- Reference to invalid group 0 in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used "\g0" or similar in a regular
expression. You may refer to capturing parentheses only with strictly
positive integers (normal backreferences) or with strictly negative
integers (relative backreferences). Using 0 does not make sense.
- Reference to nonexistent group in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used something like "\7" in your regular
expression, but there are not at least seven sets of capturing parentheses
in the expression. If you wanted to have the character with ordinal 7
inserted into the regular expression, prepend zeroes to make it three
digits long: "\007"
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered.
- Reference to nonexistent named group in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used something like "\k'NAME'" or
"\k<NAME>" in your regular expression, but there is no
corresponding named capturing parentheses such as "(?'NAME'...)"
or "(?<NAME>...)". Check if the name has been spelled
correctly both in the backreference and the declaration.
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered.
- Reference to nonexistent or unclosed group in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used something like "\g{-7}" in your
regular expression, but there are not at least seven sets of closed
capturing parentheses in the expression before where the
"\g{-7}" was located.
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered.
- regexp memory corruption
- (P) The regular expression engine got confused by what the
regular expression compiler gave it.
- Regexp modifier "/%c" may appear a maximum of
twice
- Regexp modifier "%c" may appear a maximum of
twice in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The regular expression pattern had too many occurrences
of the specified modifier. Remove the extraneous ones.
- Regexp modifier "%c" may not appear after the
"-" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) Turning off the given modifier has the side effect of
turning on another one. Perl currently doesn't allow this. Reword the
regular expression to use the modifier you want to turn on (and place it
before the minus), instead of the one you want to turn off.
- Regexp modifier "/%c" may not appear twice
- Regexp modifier "%c" may not appear twice in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The regular expression pattern had too many occurrences
of the specified modifier. Remove the extraneous ones.
- Regexp modifiers "/%c" and "/%c" are
mutually exclusive
- Regexp modifiers "%c" and "%c" are
mutually exclusive in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The regular expression pattern had more than one of
these mutually exclusive modifiers. Retain only the modifier that is
supposed to be there.
- Regexp out of space in regex m/%s/
- (P) A "can't happen" error, because
safemalloc() should have caught it earlier.
- Repeated format line will never terminate (~~ and @#)
- (F) Your format contains the ~~ repeat-until-blank sequence
and a numeric field that will never go blank so that the repetition never
terminates. You might use ^# instead. See perlform.
- Replacement list is longer than search list
- (W misc) You have used a replacement list that is longer
than the search list. So the additional elements in the replacement list
are meaningless.
- '(*%s' requires a terminating ':' in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a construct that needs a colon and pattern
argument. Supply these or check that you are using the right
construct.
- '%s' resolved to '\o{%s}%d'
- As of Perl 5.32, this message is no longer generated.
Instead, see "Non-octal character '%c' terminates \o early. Resolved
as "%s"". (W misc, regexp) You wrote something like
"\08", or "\179" in a double-quotish string. All but
the last digit is treated as a single character, specified in octal. The
last digit is the next character in the string. To tell Perl that this is
indeed what you want, you can use the "\o{ }" syntax, or use
exactly three digits to specify the octal for the character.
- Reversed %s= operator
- (W syntax) You wrote your assignment operator backwards.
The = must always come last, to avoid ambiguity with subsequent unary
operators.
-
rewinddir() attempted on invalid dirhandle %s
- (W io) The dirhandle you tried to do a rewinddir()
on is either closed or not really a dirhandle. Check your control
flow.
- Scalars leaked: %d
- (S internal) Something went wrong in Perl's internal
bookkeeping of scalars: not all scalar variables were deallocated by the
time Perl exited. What this usually indicates is a memory leak, which is
of course bad, especially if the Perl program is intended to be
long-running.
- Scalar value @%s[%s] better written as $%s[%s]
- (W syntax) You've used an array slice (indicated by @) to
select a single element of an array. Generally it's better to ask for a
scalar value (indicated by $). The difference is that $foo[&bar]
always behaves like a scalar, both when assigning to it and when
evaluating its argument, while @foo[&bar] behaves like a list when you
assign to it, and provides a list context to its subscript, which can do
weird things if you're expecting only one subscript.
On the other hand, if you were actually hoping to treat the array element as
a list, you need to look into how references work, because Perl will not
magically convert between scalars and lists for you. See perlref.
- Scalar value @%s{%s} better written as $%s{%s}
- (W syntax) You've used a hash slice (indicated by @) to
select a single element of a hash. Generally it's better to ask for a
scalar value (indicated by $). The difference is that $foo{&bar}
always behaves like a scalar, both when assigning to it and when
evaluating its argument, while @foo{&bar} behaves like a list when you
assign to it, and provides a list context to its subscript, which can do
weird things if you're expecting only one subscript.
On the other hand, if you were actually hoping to treat the hash element as
a list, you need to look into how references work, because Perl will not
magically convert between scalars and lists for you. See perlref.
- Search pattern not terminated
- (F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a // or
m{} construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting level.
Missing the leading "$" from a variable $m may cause this error.
Note that since Perl 5.10.0 a // can also be the defined-or
construct, not just the empty search pattern. Therefore code written in
Perl 5.10.0 or later that uses the // as the defined-or can be
misparsed by pre-5.10.0 Perls as a non-terminated search pattern.
-
seekdir() attempted on invalid dirhandle %s
- (W io) The dirhandle you are doing a seekdir() on is
either closed or not really a dirhandle. Check your control flow.
- %sseek() on unopened filehandle
- (W unopened) You tried to use the seek() or
sysseek() function on a filehandle that was either never opened or
has since been closed.
- select not implemented
- (F) This machine doesn't implement the select()
system call.
- Self-ties of arrays and hashes are not supported
- (F) Self-ties are of arrays and hashes are not supported in
the current implementation.
- Semicolon seems to be missing
- (W semicolon) A nearby syntax error was probably caused by
a missing semicolon, or possibly some other missing operator, such as a
comma.
- semi-panic: attempt to dup freed string
- (S internal) The internal newSVsv() routine was
called to duplicate a scalar that had previously been marked as free.
- sem%s not implemented
- (F) You don't have System V semaphore IPC on your
system.
-
send() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) The socket you're sending to got itself closed
sometime before now. Check your control flow.
- Sequence "\c{" invalid
- (F) These three characters may not appear in sequence in a
double-quotish context. This message is raised only on non-ASCII platforms
(a different error message is output on ASCII ones). If you were intending
to specify a control character with this sequence, you'll have to use a
different way to specify it.
- Sequence (? incomplete in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A regular expression ended with an incomplete extension
(?. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Sequence (?%c...) not implemented in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A proposed regular expression extension has the
character reserved but has not yet been written. The <-- HERE
shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was discovered.
See perlre.
- Sequence (?%s...) not recognized in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a regular expression extension that doesn't
make sense. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular
expression the problem was discovered. This may happen when using the
"(?^...)" construct to tell Perl to use the default regular
expression modifiers, and you redundantly specify a default modifier. For
other causes, see perlre.
- Sequence (?#... not terminated in regex m/%s/
- (F) A regular expression comment must be terminated by a
closing parenthesis. Embedded parentheses aren't allowed. See perlre.
- Sequence (?&... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A named reference of the form "(?&...)"
was missing the final closing parenthesis after the name. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem
was discovered.
- Sequence (?%c... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A named group of the form "(?'...')" or
"(?<...>)" was missing the final closing quote or angle
bracket. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular
expression the problem was discovered.
- Sequence (%s... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A lookahead assertion "(?=...)" or
"(?!...)" or lookbehind assertion "(?<=...)" or
"(?<!...)" was missing the final closing parenthesis. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem
was discovered.
- Sequence (?(%c... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A named reference of the form "(?('...')...)"
or "(?(<...>)...)" was missing the final closing quote or
angle bracket after the name. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in
the regular expression the problem was discovered.
- Sequence (?... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) There was no matching closing parenthesis for the '('.
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered.
- Sequence \%s... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The regular expression expects a mandatory argument
following the escape sequence and this has been omitted or incorrectly
written.
- Sequence (?{...}) not terminated with ')'
- (F) The end of the perl code contained within the {...}
must be followed immediately by a ')'.
- Sequence (?P>... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A named reference of the form "(?P>...)"
was missing the final closing parenthesis after the name. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem
was discovered.
- Sequence (?P<... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A named group of the form "(?P<...>')"
was missing the final closing angle bracket. The <-- HERE shows
whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was discovered.
- Sequence ?P=... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A named reference of the form "(?P=...)" was
missing the final closing parenthesis after the name. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem
was discovered.
- Sequence (?R) not terminated in regex m/%s/
- (F) An "(?R)" or "(?0)" sequence in a
regular expression was missing the final parenthesis.
- 500 Server error
- (A) This is the error message generally seen in a browser
window when trying to run a CGI program (including SSI) over the web. The
actual error text varies widely from server to server. The most
frequently-seen variants are "500 Server error", "Method
(something) not permitted", "Document contains no data",
"Premature end of script headers", and "Did not produce a
valid header".
This is a CGI error, not a Perl error.
You need to make sure your script is executable, is accessible by the user
CGI is running the script under (which is probably not the user account
you tested it under), does not rely on any environment variables (like
PATH) from the user it isn't running under, and isn't in a location where
the CGI server can't find it, basically, more or less. Please see the
following for more information:
https://www.perl.org/CGI_MetaFAQ.html
http://www.htmlhelp.org/faq/cgifaq.html
http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/
You should also look at perlfaq9.
-
setegid() not implemented
- (F) You tried to assign to $), and your operating system
doesn't support the setegid() system call (or equivalent), or at
least Configure didn't think so.
-
seteuid() not implemented
- (F) You tried to assign to $>, and your operating system
doesn't support the seteuid() system call (or equivalent), or at
least Configure didn't think so.
- setpgrp can't take arguments
- (F) Your system has the setpgrp() from BSD 4.2,
which takes no arguments, unlike POSIX setpgid(), which takes a
process ID and process group ID.
-
setrgid() not implemented
- (F) You tried to assign to $(, and your operating system
doesn't support the setrgid() system call (or equivalent), or at
least Configure didn't think so.
-
setruid() not implemented
- (F) You tried to assign to $<, and your operating system
doesn't support the setruid() system call (or equivalent), or at
least Configure didn't think so.
-
setsockopt() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to set a socket option on a closed
socket. Did you forget to check the return value of your socket()
call? See "setsockopt" in perlfunc.
- Setting $/ to a reference to %s is forbidden
- (F) You assigned a reference to a scalar to $/ where the
referenced item is not a positive integer. In older perls this
appeared to work the same as setting it to "undef" but
was in fact internally different, less efficient and with very bad luck
could have resulted in your file being split by a stringified form of the
reference.
In Perl 5.20.0 this was changed so that it would be exactly the same
as setting $/ to undef, with the exception that this warning would be
thrown.
You are recommended to change your code to set $/ to "undef"
explicitly if you wish to slurp the file. As of Perl 5.28 assigning $/ to
a reference to an integer which isn't positive is a fatal error.
- Setting $/ to %s reference is forbidden
- (F) You tried to assign a reference to a non integer to $/.
In older Perls this would have behaved similarly to setting it to a
reference to a positive integer, where the integer was the address of the
reference. As of Perl 5.20.0 this is a fatal error, to allow future
versions of Perl to use non-integer refs for more interesting
purposes.
- shm%s not implemented
- (F) You don't have System V shared memory IPC on your
system.
- !=~ should be !~
- (W syntax) The non-matching operator is !~, not !=~. !=~
will be interpreted as the != (numeric not equal) and ~ (1's complement)
operators: probably not what you intended.
- /%s/ should probably be written as "%s"
- (W syntax) You have used a pattern where Perl expected to
find a string, as in the first argument to "join". Perl will
treat the true or false result of matching the pattern against $_ as the
string, which is probably not what you had in mind.
-
shutdown() on closed socket %s
- (W closed) You tried to do a shutdown on a closed socket.
Seems a bit superfluous.
- SIG%s handler "%s" not defined
- (W signal) The signal handler named in %SIG doesn't, in
fact, exist. Perhaps you put it into the wrong package?
- Slab leaked from cv %p
- (S) If you see this message, then something is seriously
wrong with the internal bookkeeping of op trees. An op tree needed to be
freed after a compilation error, but could not be found, so it was leaked
instead.
- sleep(%u) too large
- (W overflow) You called "sleep" with a number
that was larger than it can reliably handle and "sleep" probably
slept for less time than requested.
- Slurpy parameter not last
- (F) In a subroutine signature, you put something after a
slurpy (array or hash) parameter. The slurpy parameter takes all the
available arguments, so there can't be any left to fill later
parameters.
- Smart matching a non-overloaded object breaks
encapsulation
- (F) You should not use the "~~" operator on an
object that does not overload it: Perl refuses to use the object's
underlying structure for the smart match.
- Smartmatch is experimental
- (S experimental::smartmatch) This warning is emitted if you
use the smartmatch ("~~") operator. This is currently an
experimental feature, and its details are subject to change in future
releases of Perl. Particularly, its current behavior is noticed for being
unnecessarily complex and unintuitive, and is very likely to be
overhauled.
- Sorry, hash keys must be smaller than 2**31 bytes
- (F) You tried to create a hash containing a very large key,
where "very large" means that it needs at least 2 gigabytes to
store. Unfortunately, Perl doesn't yet handle such large hash keys. You
should reconsider your design to avoid hashing such a long string
directly.
- sort is now a reserved word
- (F) An ancient error message that almost nobody ever runs
into anymore. But before sort was a keyword, people sometimes used it as a
filehandle.
- Source filters apply only to byte streams
- (F) You tried to activate a source filter (usually by
loading a source filter module) within a string passed to
"eval". This is not permitted under the "unicode_eval"
feature. Consider using "evalbytes" instead. See feature.
-
splice() offset past end of array
- (W misc) You attempted to specify an offset that was past
the end of the array passed to splice(). Splicing will instead
commence at the end of the array, rather than past it. If this isn't what
you want, try explicitly pre-extending the array by assigning $#array =
$offset. See "splice" in perlfunc.
- Split loop
- (P) The split was looping infinitely. (Obviously, a split
shouldn't iterate more times than there are characters of input, which is
what happened.) See "split" in perlfunc.
- Statement unlikely to be reached
- (W exec) You did an exec() with some statement after
it other than a die(). This is almost always an error, because
exec() never returns unless there was a failure. You probably
wanted to use system() instead, which does return. To suppress this
warning, put the exec() in a block by itself.
- "state" subroutine %s can't be in a package
- (F) Lexically scoped subroutines aren't in a package, so it
doesn't make sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the
front.
- "state %s" used in sort comparison
- (W syntax) The package variables $a and $b are used for
sort comparisons. You used $a or $b in as an operand to the
"<=>" or "cmp" operator inside a sort comparison
block, and the variable had earlier been declared as a lexical variable.
Either qualify the sort variable with the package name, or rename the
lexical variable.
- "state" variable %s can't be in a package
- (F) Lexically scoped variables aren't in a package, so it
doesn't make sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the
front. Use local() if you want to localize a package variable.
-
stat() on unopened filehandle %s
- (W unopened) You tried to use the stat() function on
a filehandle that was either never opened or has since been closed.
- Strings with code points over 0xFF may not be mapped into
in-memory file handles
- (W utf8) You tried to open a reference to a scalar for read
or append where the scalar contained code points over 0xFF. In-memory
files model on-disk files and can only contain bytes.
- Stub found while resolving method "%s"
overloading "%s" in package "%s"
- (P) Overloading resolution over @ISA tree may be broken by
importation stubs. Stubs should never be implicitly created, but explicit
calls to "can" may break this.
- Subroutine attributes must come before the signature
- (F) When subroutine signatures are enabled, any subroutine
attributes must come before the signature. Note that this order was the
opposite in versions 5.22..5.26. So:
sub foo :lvalue ($a, $b) { ... } # 5.20 and 5.28 +
sub foo ($a, $b) :lvalue { ... } # 5.22 .. 5.26
- Subroutine "&%s" is not available
- (W closure) During compilation, an inner named subroutine
or eval is attempting to capture an outer lexical subroutine that is not
currently available. This can happen for one of two reasons. First, the
lexical subroutine may be declared in an outer anonymous subroutine that
has not yet been created. (Remember that named subs are created at compile
time, while anonymous subs are created at run-time.) For example,
sub { my sub a {...} sub f { \&a } }
At the time that f is created, it can't capture the current "a"
sub, since the anonymous subroutine hasn't been created yet. Conversely,
the following won't give a warning since the anonymous subroutine has by
now been created and is live:
sub { my sub a {...} eval 'sub f { \&a }' }->();
The second situation is caused by an eval accessing a lexical subroutine
that has gone out of scope, for example,
sub f {
my sub a {...}
sub { eval '\&a' }
}
f()->();
Here, when the '\&a' in the eval is being compiled, f() is not currently
being executed, so its &a is not available for capture.
- "%s" subroutine &%s masks earlier declaration
in same %s
- (W shadow) A "my" or "state" subroutine
has been redeclared in the current scope or statement, effectively
eliminating all access to the previous instance. This is almost always a
typographical error. Note that the earlier subroutine will still exist
until the end of the scope or until all closure references to it are
destroyed.
- Subroutine %s redefined
- (W redefine) You redefined a subroutine. To suppress this
warning, say
{
no warnings 'redefine';
eval "sub name { ... }";
}
- Subroutine "%s" will not stay shared
- (W closure) An inner (nested) named subroutine is
referencing a "my" subroutine defined in an outer named
subroutine.
When the inner subroutine is called, it will see the value of the outer
subroutine's lexical subroutine as it was before and during the *first*
call to the outer subroutine; in this case, after the first call to the
outer subroutine is complete, the inner and outer subroutines will no
longer share a common value for the lexical subroutine. In other words, it
will no longer be shared. This will especially make a difference if the
lexical subroutines accesses lexical variables declared in its surrounding
scope.
This problem can usually be solved by making the inner subroutine anonymous,
using the "sub {}" syntax. When inner anonymous subs that
reference lexical subroutines in outer subroutines are created, they are
automatically rebound to the current values of such lexical subs.
- Substitution loop
- (P) The substitution was looping infinitely. (Obviously, a
substitution shouldn't iterate more times than there are characters of
input, which is what happened.) See the discussion of substitution in
"Regexp Quote-Like Operators" in perlop.
- Substitution pattern not terminated
- (F) The lexer couldn't find the interior delimiter of an
s/// or s{}{} construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting
level. Missing the leading "$" from variable $s may cause this
error.
- Substitution replacement not terminated
- (F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of an s///
or s{}{} construct. Remember that bracketing delimiters count nesting
level. Missing the leading "$" from variable $s may cause this
error.
- substr outside of string
- (W substr)(F) You tried to reference a substr() that
pointed outside of a string. That is, the absolute value of the offset was
larger than the length of the string. See "substr" in perlfunc.
This warning is fatal if substr is used in an lvalue context (as the left
hand side of an assignment or as a subroutine argument for example).
- sv_upgrade from type %d down to type %d
- (P) Perl tried to force the upgrade of an SV to a type
which was actually inferior to its current type.
- Switch (?(condition)... contains too many branches in
regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A (?(condition)if-clause|else-clause) construct can
have at most two branches (the if-clause and the else-clause). If you want
one or both to contain alternation, such as using
"this|that|other", enclose it in clustering parentheses:
(?(condition)(?:this|that|other)|else-clause)
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Switch condition not recognized in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The condition part of a
(?(condition)if-clause|else-clause) construct is not known. The condition
must be one of the following:
(1) (2) ... true if 1st, 2nd, etc., capture matched
(<NAME>) ('NAME') true if named capture matched
(?=...) (?<=...) true if subpattern matches
(?!...) (?<!...) true if subpattern fails to match
(?{ CODE }) true if code returns a true value
(R) true if evaluating inside recursion
(R1) (R2) ... true if directly inside capture group 1, 2, etc.
(R&NAME) true if directly inside named capture
(DEFINE) always false; for defining named subpatterns
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Switch (?(condition)... not terminated in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You omitted to close a (?(condition)...) block
somewhere in the pattern. Add a closing parenthesis in the appropriate
position. See perlre.
- switching effective %s is not implemented
- (F) While under the "use filetest" pragma, we
cannot switch the real and effective uids or gids.
- syntax error
- (F) Probably means you had a syntax error. Common reasons
include:
A keyword is misspelled.
A semicolon is missing.
A comma is missing.
An opening or closing parenthesis is missing.
An opening or closing brace is missing.
A closing quote is missing.
Often there will be another error message associated with the syntax error
giving more information. (Sometimes it helps to turn on -w.) The
error message itself often tells you where it was in the line when it
decided to give up. Sometimes the actual error is several tokens before
this, because Perl is good at understanding random input. Occasionally the
line number may be misleading, and once in a blue moon the only way to
figure out what's triggering the error is to call "perl -c"
repeatedly, chopping away half the program each time to see if the error
went away. Sort of the cybernetic version of 20 questions.
- syntax error at line %d: '%s' unexpected
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through the Bourne
shell instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script
into Perl yourself.
- syntax error in file %s at line %d, next 2 tokens
"%s"
- (F) This error is likely to occur if you run a perl5 script
through a perl4 interpreter, especially if the next 2 tokens are "use
strict" or "my $var" or "our $var".
- Syntax error in (?[...]) in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) Perl could not figure out what you meant inside this
construct; this notifies you that it is giving up trying.
- %s syntax OK
- (F) The final summary message when a "perl -c"
succeeds.
-
sysread() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) You tried to read from a closed filehandle.
-
sysread() on unopened filehandle %s
- (W unopened) You tried to read from a filehandle that was
never opened.
- System V %s is not implemented on this machine
- (F) You tried to do something with a function beginning
with "sem", "shm", or "msg" but that System
V IPC is not implemented in your machine. In some machines the
functionality can exist but be unconfigured. Consult your system
support.
-
syswrite() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) The filehandle you're writing to got itself
closed sometime before now. Check your control flow.
- "-T" and "-B" not implemented on
filehandles
- (F) Perl can't peek at the stdio buffer of filehandles when
it doesn't know about your kind of stdio. You'll have to use a filename
instead.
- Target of goto is too deeply nested
- (F) You tried to use "goto" to reach a label that
was too deeply nested for Perl to reach. Perl is doing you a favor by
refusing.
-
telldir() attempted on invalid dirhandle %s
- (W io) The dirhandle you tried to telldir() is
either closed or not really a dirhandle. Check your control flow.
-
tell() on unopened filehandle
- (W unopened) You tried to use the tell() function on
a filehandle that was either never opened or has since been closed.
- The crypt() function is unimplemented due to
excessive paranoia.
- (F) Configure couldn't find the crypt() function on
your machine, probably because your vendor didn't supply it, probably
because they think the U.S. Government thinks it's a secret, or at least
that they will continue to pretend that it is. And if you quote me on
that, I will deny it.
- The experimental declared_refs feature is not enabled
- (F) To declare references to variables, as in "my
\%x", you must first enable the feature:
no warnings "experimental::declared_refs";
use feature "declared_refs";
- The %s function is unimplemented
- (F) The function indicated isn't implemented on this
architecture, according to the probings of Configure.
- The private_use feature is experimental
- (S experimental::private_use) This feature is actually a
hook for future use.
- The stat preceding %s wasn't an lstat
- (F) It makes no sense to test the current stat buffer for
symbolic linkhood if the last stat that wrote to the stat buffer already
went past the symlink to get to the real file. Use an actual filename
instead.
- The Unicode property wildcards feature is experimental
- (S experimental::uniprop_wildcards) This feature is
experimental and its behavior may in any future release of perl. See
"Wildcards in Property Values" in perlunicode.
- The 'unique' attribute may only be applied to 'our'
variables
- (F) This attribute was never supported on "my" or
"sub" declarations.
- This Perl can't reset CRTL environ elements (%s)
- This Perl can't set CRTL environ elements (%s=%s)
- (W internal) Warnings peculiar to VMS. You tried to change
or delete an element of the CRTL's internal environ array, but your copy
of Perl wasn't built with a CRTL that contained the setenv()
function. You'll need to rebuild Perl with a CRTL that does, or redefine
PERL_ENV_TABLES (see perlvms) so that the environ array isn't the
target of the change to %ENV which produced the warning.
- This Perl has not been built with support for randomized
hash key traversal but something called Perl_hv_rand_set().
- (F) Something has attempted to use an internal API call
which depends on Perl being compiled with the default support for
randomized hash key traversal, but this Perl has been compiled without it.
You should report this warning to the relevant upstream party, or
recompile perl with default options.
- This use of my() in false conditional is no longer
allowed
- (F) You used a declaration similar to "my $x if
0". There has been a long-standing bug in Perl that causes a lexical
variable not to be cleared at scope exit when its declaration includes a
false conditional. Some people have exploited this bug to achieve a kind
of static variable. Since we intend to fix this bug, we don't want people
relying on this behavior. You can achieve a similar static effect by
declaring the variable in a separate block outside the function, eg
sub f { my $x if 0; return $x++ }
becomes
{ my $x; sub f { return $x++ } }
Beginning with perl 5.10.0, you can also use "state" variables to
have lexicals that are initialized only once (see feature):
sub f { state $x; return $x++ }
This use of "my()" in a false conditional was deprecated beginning
in Perl 5.10 and became a fatal error in Perl 5.30.
- Timeout waiting for another thread to define \p{%s}
- (F) The first time a user-defined property
("User-Defined Character Properties" in perlunicode) is used,
its definition is looked up and converted into an internal form for more
efficient handling in subsequent uses. There could be a race if two or
more threads tried to do this processing nearly simultaneously. Instead, a
critical section is created around this task, locking out all but one
thread from doing it. This message indicates that the thread that is doing
the conversion is taking an unexpectedly long time. The timeout exists
solely to prevent deadlock; it's long enough that the system was likely
thrashing and about to crash. There is no real remedy but rebooting.
- times not implemented
- (F) Your version of the C library apparently doesn't do
times(). I suspect you're not running on Unix.
- "-T" is on the #! line, it must also be used on
the command line
- (X) The #! line (or local equivalent) in a Perl script
contains the -T option (or the -t option), but Perl was not
invoked with -T in its command line. This is an error because, by
the time Perl discovers a -T in a script, it's too late to properly
taint everything from the environment. So Perl gives up.
If the Perl script is being executed as a command using the #! mechanism (or
its local equivalent), this error can usually be fixed by editing the #!
line so that the -%c option is a part of Perl's first argument:
e.g. change "perl -n -%c" to "perl -%c -n".
If the Perl script is being executed as "perl scriptname", then
the -%c option must appear on the command line: "perl -%c
scriptname".
- To%s: illegal mapping '%s'
- (F) You tried to define a customized To-mapping for
lc(), lcfirst, uc(), or ucfirst() (or their
string-inlined versions), but you specified an illegal mapping. See
"User-Defined Character Properties" in perlunicode.
- Too deeply nested ()-groups
- (F) Your template contains ()-groups with a ridiculously
deep nesting level.
- Too few args to syscall
- (F) There has to be at least one argument to
syscall() to specify the system call to call, silly dilly.
- Too few arguments for subroutine '%s' (got %d; expected
%d)
- (F) A subroutine using a signature fewer arguments than
required by the signature. The caller of the subroutine is presumably at
fault.
The message attempts to include the name of the called subroutine. If the
subroutine has been aliased, the subroutine's original name will be shown,
regardless of what name the caller used. It will also indicate the number
of arguments given and the number expected.
- Too few arguments for subroutine '%s' (got %d; expected at
least %d)
- Similar to the previous message but for subroutines that
accept a variable number of arguments.
- Too late for "-%s" option
- (X) The #! line (or local equivalent) in a Perl script
contains the -M, -m or -C option.
In the case of -M and -m, this is an error because those
options are not intended for use inside scripts. Use the "use"
pragma instead.
The -C option only works if it is specified on the command line as
well (with the same sequence of letters or numbers following). Either
specify this option on the command line, or, if your system supports it,
make your script executable and run it directly instead of passing it to
perl.
- Too late to run %s block
- (W void) A CHECK or INIT block is being defined during run
time proper, when the opportunity to run them has already passed. Perhaps
you are loading a file with "require" or "do" when you
should be using "use" instead. Or perhaps you should put the
"require" or "do" inside a BEGIN block.
- Too many args to syscall
- (F) Perl supports a maximum of only 14 args to
syscall().
- Too many arguments for %s
- (F) The function requires fewer arguments than you
specified.
- Too many arguments for subroutine '%s' (got %d; expected
%d)
- (F) A subroutine using a signature received more arguments
than permitted by the signature. The caller of the subroutine is
presumably at fault.
The message attempts to include the name of the called subroutine. If the
subroutine has been aliased, the subroutine's original name will be shown,
regardless of what name the caller used. It will also indicate the number
of arguments given and the number expected.
- Too many arguments for subroutine '%s' (got %d; expected at
most %d)
- Similar to the previous message but for subroutines that
accept a variable number of arguments.
- Too many nested open parens in regex; marked by <-- HERE
in m/%s/
- (F) You have exceeded the number of open "("
parentheses that haven't been matched by corresponding closing ones. This
limit prevents eating up too much memory. It is initially set to 1000, but
may be changed by setting "${^RE_COMPILE_RECURSION_LIMIT}" to
some other value. This may need to be done in a BEGIN block before the
regular expression pattern is compiled.
- Too many )'s
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through csh
instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl
yourself.
- Too many ('s
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through csh
instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl
yourself.
- Trailing \ in regex m/%s/
- (F) The regular expression ends with an unbackslashed
backslash. Backslash it. See perlre.
- Transliteration pattern not terminated
- (F) The lexer couldn't find the interior delimiter of a
tr/// or tr[][] or y/// or y[][] construct. Missing the leading
"$" from variables $tr or $y may cause this error.
- Transliteration replacement not terminated
- (F) The lexer couldn't find the final delimiter of a tr///,
tr[][], y/// or y[][] construct.
- '%s' trapped by operation mask
- (F) You tried to use an operator from a Safe compartment in
which it's disallowed. See Safe.
- truncate not implemented
- (F) Your machine doesn't implement a file truncation
mechanism that Configure knows about.
- try/catch is experimental
- (S experimental::try) This warning is emitted if you use
the "try" and "catch" syntax. This syntax is currently
experimental and its behaviour may change in future releases of Perl.
- try/catch/finally is experimental
- (S experimental::try) This warning is emitted if you use
the "try" and "catch" syntax with a
"finally" block. This syntax is currently experimental and its
behaviour may change in future releases of Perl.
- Type of arg %d to &CORE::%s must be %s
- (F) The subroutine in question in the CORE package requires
its argument to be a hard reference to data of the specified type.
Overloading is ignored, so a reference to an object that is not the
specified type, but nonetheless has overloading to handle it, will still
not be accepted.
- Type of arg %d to %s must be %s (not %s)
- (F) This function requires the argument in that position to
be of a certain type. Arrays must be @NAME or "@{EXPR}". Hashes
must be %NAME or "%{EXPR}". No implicit dereferencing is
allowed--use the {EXPR} forms as an explicit dereference. See
perlref.
- umask not implemented
- (F) Your machine doesn't implement the umask function and
you tried to use it to restrict permissions for yourself (EXPR &
0700).
- Unbalanced context: %d more PUSHes than POPs
- (S internal) The exit code detected an internal
inconsistency in how many execution contexts were entered and left.
- Unbalanced saves: %d more saves than restores
- (S internal) The exit code detected an internal
inconsistency in how many values were temporarily localized.
- Unbalanced scopes: %d more ENTERs than LEAVEs
- (S internal) The exit code detected an internal
inconsistency in how many blocks were entered and left.
- Unbalanced string table refcount: (%d) for
"%s"
- (S internal) On exit, Perl found some strings remaining in
the shared string table used for copy on write and for hash keys. The
entries should have been freed, so this indicates a bug somewhere.
- Unbalanced tmps: %d more allocs than frees
- (S internal) The exit code detected an internal
inconsistency in how many mortal scalars were allocated and freed.
- Undefined format "%s" called
- (F) The format indicated doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps
it's really in another package? See perlform.
- Undefined sort subroutine "%s" called
- (F) The sort comparison routine specified doesn't seem to
exist. Perhaps it's in a different package? See "sort" in
perlfunc.
- Undefined subroutine &%s called
- (F) The subroutine indicated hasn't been defined, or if it
was, it has since been undefined.
- Undefined subroutine called
- (F) The anonymous subroutine you're trying to call hasn't
been defined, or if it was, it has since been undefined.
- Undefined subroutine in sort
- (F) The sort comparison routine specified is declared but
doesn't seem to have been defined yet. See "sort" in
perlfunc.
- Undefined top format "%s" called
- (F) The format indicated doesn't seem to exist. Perhaps
it's really in another package? See perlform.
- Undefined value assigned to typeglob
- (W misc) An undefined value was assigned to a typeglob, a
la "*foo = undef". This does nothing. It's possible that you
really mean "undef *foo".
- %s: Undefined variable
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through csh
instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl
yourself.
- Unescaped left brace in regex is illegal here in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The simple rule to remember, if you want to match a
literal "{" character (U+007B "LEFT CURLY BRACKET") in
a regular expression pattern, is to escape each literal instance of it in
some way. Generally easiest is to precede it with a backslash, like
"\{" or enclose it in square brackets ("[{]"). If the
pattern delimiters are also braces, any matching right brace
("}") should also be escaped to avoid confusing the parser, for
example,
qr{abc\{def\}ghi}
Forcing literal "{" characters to be escaped enables the Perl
language to be extended in various ways in future releases. To avoid
needlessly breaking existing code, the restriction is not enforced in
contexts where there are unlikely to ever be extensions that could
conflict with the use there of "{" as a literal. Those that are
not potentially ambiguous do not warn; those that are do raise a
non-deprecation warning.
The contexts where no warnings or errors are raised are:
- •
- as the first character in a pattern, or following
"^" indicating to anchor the match to the beginning of a
line.
- •
- as the first character following a "|" indicating
alternation.
- •
- as the first character in a parenthesized grouping like
/foo({bar)/
/foo(?:{bar)/
- •
- as the first character following a quantifier
/\s*{/
- Unescaped left brace in regex is passed through in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) The simple rule to remember, if you want to
match a literal "{" character (U+007B "LEFT CURLY
BRACKET") in a regular expression pattern, is to escape each literal
instance of it in some way. Generally easiest is to precede it with a
backslash, like "\{" or enclose it in square brackets
("[{]"). If the pattern delimiters are also braces, any matching
right brace ("}") should also be escaped to avoid confusing the
parser, for example,
qr{abc\{def\}ghi}
Forcing literal "{" characters to be escaped enables the Perl
language to be extended in various ways in future releases. To avoid
needlessly breaking existing code, the restriction is not enforced in
contexts where there are unlikely to ever be extensions that could
conflict with the use there of "{" as a literal. Those that are
not potentially ambiguous do not warn; those that are raise this warning.
This makes sure that an inadvertent typo doesn't silently cause the
pattern to compile to something unintended.
The contexts where no warnings or errors are raised are:
- •
- as the first character in a pattern, or following
"^" indicating to anchor the match to the beginning of a
line.
- •
- as the first character following a "|" indicating
alternation.
- •
- as the first character in a parenthesized grouping like
/foo({bar)/
/foo(?:{bar)/
- •
- as the first character following a quantifier
/\s*{/
- Unescaped literal '%c' in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (W regexp) (only under
"use re 'strict'")
Within the scope of "use re 'strict'" in a regular
expression pattern, you included an unescaped "}" or
"]" which was interpreted literally. These two characters are
sometimes metacharacters, and sometimes literals, depending on what
precedes them in the pattern. This is unlike the similar ")"
which is always a metacharacter unless escaped.
This action at a distance, perhaps a large distance, can lead to Perl
silently misinterpreting what you meant, so when you specify that you want
extra checking by "use re 'strict'", this warning
is generated. If you meant the character as a literal, simply confirm that
to Perl by preceding the character with a backslash, or make it into a
bracketed character class (like "[}]"). If you meant it as
closing a corresponding "[" or "{", you'll need to
look back through the pattern to find out why that isn't happening.
- unexec of %s into %s failed!
- (F) The unexec() routine failed for some reason. See
your local FSF representative, who probably put it there in the first
place.
- Unexpected binary operator '%c' with no preceding operand
in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You had something like this:
(?[ | \p{Digit} ])
where the "|" is a binary operator with an operand on the right,
but no operand on the left.
- Unexpected character in regex; marked by <-- HERE
in m/%s/
- (F) You had something like this:
(?[ z ])
Within "(?[ ])", no literal characters are allowed unless they are
within an inner pair of square brackets, like
(?[ [ z ] ])
Another possibility is that you forgot a backslash. Perl isn't smart enough
to figure out what you really meant.
- Unexpected exit %u
- (S) exit() was called or the script otherwise
finished gracefully when "PERL_EXIT_WARN" was set in
"PL_exit_flags".
- Unexpected exit failure %d
- (S) An uncaught die() was called when
"PERL_EXIT_WARN" was set in "PL_exit_flags".
- Unexpected ')' in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) You had something like this:
(?[ ( \p{Digit} + ) ])
The ")" is out-of-place. Something apparently was supposed to be
combined with the digits, or the "+" shouldn't be there, or
something like that. Perl can't figure out what was intended.
- Unexpected ']' with no following ')' in (?[... in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) While parsing an extended character class a ']'
character was encountered at a point in the definition where the only
legal use of ']' is to close the character class definition as part of a
'])', you may have forgotten the close paren, or otherwise confused the
parser.
- Unexpected '(' with no preceding operator in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You had something like this:
(?[ \p{Digit} ( \p{Lao} + \p{Thai} ) ])
There should be an operator before the "(", as there's no
indication as to how the digits are to be combined with the characters in
the Lao and Thai scripts.
- Unicode non-character U+%X is not recommended for open
interchange
- (S nonchar) Certain codepoints, such as U+FFFE and U+FFFF,
are defined by the Unicode standard to be non-characters. Those are legal
codepoints, but are reserved for internal use; so, applications shouldn't
attempt to exchange them. An application may not be expecting any of these
characters at all, and receiving them may lead to bugs. If you know what
you are doing you can turn off this warning by "no warnings
'nonchar';".
This is not really a "severe" error, but it is supposed to be
raised by default even if warnings are not enabled, and currently the only
way to do that in Perl is to mark it as serious.
- Unicode property wildcard not terminated
- (F) A Unicode property wildcard looks like a delimited
regular expression pattern (all within the braces of the enclosing
"\p{...}". The closing delimtter to match the opening one was
not found. If the opening one is escaped by preceding it with a backslash,
the closing one must also be so escaped.
- Unicode string properties are not implemented in (?[...])
in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) A Unicode string property is one which expands to a
sequence of multiple characters. An example is "\p{name=KATAKANA
LETTER AINU P}", which is comprised of the sequence "\N{KATAKANA
LETTER SMALL H}" followed by "\N{COMBINING KATAKANA-HIRAGANA
SEMI-VOICED SOUND MARK}". Extended character classes,
"(?[...])" currently cannot handle these.
- Unicode surrogate U+%X is illegal in UTF-8
- (S surrogate) You had a UTF-16 surrogate in a context where
they are not considered acceptable. These code points, between U+D800 and
U+DFFF (inclusive), are used by Unicode only for UTF-16. However, Perl
internally allows all unsigned integer code points (up to the size limit
available on your platform), including surrogates. But these can cause
problems when being input or output, which is likely where this message
came from. If you really really know what you are doing you can turn off
this warning by "no warnings 'surrogate';".
- Unknown charname '%s'
- (F) The name you used inside "\N{}" is unknown to
Perl. Check the spelling. You can say "use charnames
":loose"" to not have to be so precise about spaces,
hyphens, and capitalization on standard Unicode names. (Any custom aliases
that have been created must be specified exactly, regardless of whether
":loose" is used or not.) This error may also happen if the
"\N{}" is not in the scope of the corresponding
"use charnames".
- Unknown '(*...)' construct '%s' in regex; marked by <--
HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The "(*" was followed by something that the
regular expression compiler does not recognize. Check your spelling.
- Unknown error
- (P) Perl was about to print an error message in $@, but the
$@ variable did not exist, even after an attempt to create it.
- Unknown locale category %d; can't set it to %s
- (W locale) You used a locale category that perl doesn't
recognize, so it cannot carry out your request. Check that you are using a
valid category. If so, see "Multi-threaded" in perllocale for
advice on reporting this as a bug, and for modifying perl locally to
accommodate your needs.
- Unknown open() mode '%s'
- (F) The second argument of 3-argument open() is not
among the list of valid modes: "<", ">",
">>", "+<", "+>",
"+>>", "-|", "|-",
"<&", ">&".
- Unknown PerlIO layer "%s"
- (W layer) An attempt was made to push an unknown layer onto
the Perl I/O system. (Layers take care of transforming data between
external and internal representations.) Note that some layers, such as
"mmap", are not supported in all environments. If your program
didn't explicitly request the failing operation, it may be the result of
the value of the environment variable PERLIO.
- Unknown process %x sent message to prime_env_iter: %s
- (P) An error peculiar to VMS. Perl was reading values for
%ENV before iterating over it, and someone else stuck a message in the
stream of data Perl expected. Someone's very confused, or perhaps trying
to subvert Perl's population of %ENV for nefarious purposes.
- Unknown regexp modifier "/%s"
- (F) Alphanumerics immediately following the closing
delimiter of a regular expression pattern are interpreted by Perl as
modifier flags for the regex. One of the ones you specified is invalid.
One way this can happen is if you didn't put in white space between the
end of the regex and a following alphanumeric operator:
if ($a =~ /foo/and $bar == 3) { ... }
The "a" is a valid modifier flag, but the "n" is not,
and raises this error. Likely what was meant instead was:
if ($a =~ /foo/ and $bar == 3) { ... }
- Unknown "re" subpragma '%s' (known ones are:
%s)
- (W) You tried to use an unknown subpragma of the
"re" pragma.
- Unknown switch condition (?(...)) in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) The condition part of a
(?(condition)if-clause|else-clause) construct is not known. The condition
must be one of the following:
(1) (2) ... true if 1st, 2nd, etc., capture matched
(<NAME>) ('NAME') true if named capture matched
(?=...) (?<=...) true if subpattern matches
(*pla:...) (*plb:...) true if subpattern matches; also
(*positive_lookahead:...)
(*positive_lookbehind:...)
(*nla:...) (*nlb:...) true if subpattern fails to match; also
(*negative_lookahead:...)
(*negative_lookbehind:...)
(?{ CODE }) true if code returns a true value
(R) true if evaluating inside recursion
(R1) (R2) ... true if directly inside capture group 1, 2,
etc.
(R&NAME) true if directly inside named capture
(DEFINE) always false; for defining named subpatterns
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Unknown Unicode option letter '%c'
- (F) You specified an unknown Unicode option. See perlrun
documentation of the "-C" switch for the list of known
options.
- Unknown Unicode option value %d
- (F) You specified an unknown Unicode option. See perlrun
documentation of the "-C" switch for the list of known
options.
- Unknown user-defined property name \p{%s}
- (F) You specified to use a property within the
"\p{...}" which was a syntactically valid user-defined property,
but no definition was found for it by the time one was required to
proceed. Check your spelling. See "User-Defined Character
Properties" in perlunicode.
- Unknown verb pattern '%s' in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You either made a typo or have incorrectly put a
"*" quantifier after an open brace in your pattern. Check the
pattern and review perlre for details on legal verb patterns.
- Unknown warnings category '%s'
- (F) An error issued by the "warnings" pragma. You
specified a warnings category that is unknown to perl at this point.
Note that if you want to enable a warnings category registered by a module
(e.g. "use warnings 'File::Find'"), you must have loaded this
module first.
- Unmatched [ in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) The brackets around a character class must match. If
you wish to include a closing bracket in a character class, backslash it
or put it first. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular
expression the problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Unmatched ( in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- Unmatched ) in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) Unbackslashed parentheses must always be balanced in
regular expressions. If you're a vi user, the % key is valuable for
finding the matching parenthesis. The <-- HERE shows whereabouts
in the regular expression the problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Unmatched right %s bracket
- (F) The lexer counted more closing curly or square brackets
than opening ones, so you're probably missing a matching opening bracket.
As a general rule, you'll find the missing one (so to speak) near the
place you were last editing.
- Unquoted string "%s" may clash with future
reserved word
- (W reserved) You used a bareword that might someday be
claimed as a reserved word. It's best to put such a word in quotes, or
capitalize it somehow, or insert an underbar into it. You might also
declare it as a subroutine.
- Unrecognized character %s; marked by <-- HERE
after %s near column %d
- (F) The Perl parser has no idea what to do with the
specified character in your Perl script (or eval) near the specified
column. Perhaps you tried to run a compressed script, a binary program, or
a directory as a Perl program.
- Unrecognized escape \%c in character class in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a backslash-character combination which is not
recognized by Perl inside character classes. This is a fatal error when
the character class is used within "(?[ ])".
- Unrecognized escape \%c in character class passed through
in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) You used a backslash-character combination which
is not recognized by Perl inside character classes. The character was
understood literally, but this may change in a future version of Perl. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the escape
was discovered.
- Unrecognized escape \%c passed through
- (W misc) You used a backslash-character combination which
is not recognized by Perl. The character was understood literally, but
this may change in a future version of Perl.
- Unrecognized escape \%s passed through in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) You used a backslash-character combination which
is not recognized by Perl. The character(s) were understood literally, but
this may change in a future version of Perl. The <-- HERE shows
whereabouts in the regular expression the escape was discovered.
- Unrecognized signal name "%s"
- (F) You specified a signal name to the kill()
function that was not recognized. Say "kill -l" in your shell to
see the valid signal names on your system.
- Unrecognized switch: -%s (-h will show valid options)
- (F) You specified an illegal option to Perl. Don't do that.
(If you think you didn't do that, check the #! line to see if it's
supplying the bad switch on your behalf.)
- Unsuccessful %s on filename containing newline
- (W newline) A file operation was attempted on a filename,
and that operation failed, PROBABLY because the filename contained a
newline, PROBABLY because you forgot to chomp() it off. See
"chomp" in perlfunc.
- Unsupported directory function "%s" called
- (F) Your machine doesn't support opendir() and
readdir().
- Unsupported function %s
- (F) This machine doesn't implement the indicated function,
apparently. At least, Configure doesn't think so.
- Unsupported function fork
- (F) Your version of executable does not support forking.
Note that under some systems, like OS/2, there may be different flavors of
Perl executables, some of which may support fork, some not. Try changing
the name you call Perl by to "perl_", "perl__", and so
on.
- Unsupported script encoding %s
- (F) Your program file begins with a Unicode Byte Order Mark
(BOM) which declares it to be in a Unicode encoding that Perl cannot
read.
- Unsupported socket function "%s" called
- (F) Your machine doesn't support the Berkeley socket
mechanism, or at least that's what Configure thought.
- Unterminated '(*...' argument in regex; marked by <--
HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a pattern of the form "(*...:...)"
but did not terminate the pattern with a ")". Fix the pattern
and retry.
- Unterminated attribute list
- (F) The lexer found something other than a simple
identifier at the start of an attribute, and it wasn't a semicolon or the
start of a block. Perhaps you terminated the parameter list of the
previous attribute too soon. See attributes.
- Unterminated attribute parameter in attribute list
- (F) The lexer saw an opening (left) parenthesis character
while parsing an attribute list, but the matching closing (right)
parenthesis character was not found. You may need to add (or remove) a
backslash character to get your parentheses to balance. See
attributes.
- Unterminated compressed integer
- (F) An argument to unpack("w",...) was
incompatible with the BER compressed integer format and could not be
converted to an integer. See "pack" in perlfunc.
- Unterminated '(*...' construct in regex; marked by <--
HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a pattern of the form "(*...)" but
did not terminate the pattern with a ")". Fix the pattern and
retry.
- Unterminated delimiter for here document
- (F) This message occurs when a here document label has an
initial quotation mark but the final quotation mark is missing. Perhaps
you wrote:
<<"foo
instead of:
<<"foo"
- Unterminated \g... pattern in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- Unterminated \g{...} pattern in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) In a regular expression, you had a "\g" that
wasn't followed by a proper group reference. In the case of
"\g{", the closing brace is missing; otherwise the
"\g" must be followed by an integer. Fix the pattern and
retry.
- Unterminated <> operator
- (F) The lexer saw a left angle bracket in a place where it
was expecting a term, so it's looking for the corresponding right angle
bracket, and not finding it. Chances are you left some needed parentheses
out earlier in the line, and you really meant a "less
than".
- Unterminated verb pattern argument in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a pattern of the form "(*VERB:ARG)"
but did not terminate the pattern with a ")". Fix the pattern
and retry.
- Unterminated verb pattern in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a pattern of the form "(*VERB)" but
did not terminate the pattern with a ")". Fix the pattern and
retry.
- untie attempted while %d inner references still exist
- (W untie) A copy of the object returned from
"tie" (or "tied") was still valid when
"untie" was called.
- Usage: POSIX::%s(%s)
- (F) You called a POSIX function with incorrect arguments.
See "FUNCTIONS" in POSIX for more information.
- Usage: Win32::%s(%s)
- (F) You called a Win32 function with incorrect arguments.
See Win32 for more information.
- $[ used in %s (did you mean $] ?)
- (W syntax) You used $[ in a comparison, such as:
if ($[ > 5.006) {
...
}
You probably meant to use $] instead. $[ is the base for indexing arrays. $]
is the Perl version number in decimal.
- Use "%s" instead of "%s"
- (F) The second listed construct is no longer legal. Use the
first one instead.
- Useless assignment to a temporary
- (W misc) You assigned to an lvalue subroutine, but what the
subroutine returned was a temporary scalar about to be discarded, so the
assignment had no effect.
- Useless (?-%s) - don't use /%s modifier in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) You have used an internal modifier such as (?-o)
that has no meaning unless removed from the entire regexp:
if ($string =~ /(?-o)$pattern/o) { ... }
must be written as
if ($string =~ /$pattern/) { ... }
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Useless localization of %s
- (W syntax) The localization of lvalues such as
"local($x=10)" is legal, but in fact the local()
currently has no effect. This may change at some point in the future, but
in the meantime such code is discouraged.
- Useless (?%s) - use /%s modifier in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) You have used an internal modifier such as (?o)
that has no meaning unless applied to the entire regexp:
if ($string =~ /(?o)$pattern/) { ... }
must be written as
if ($string =~ /$pattern/o) { ... }
The <-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the
problem was discovered. See perlre.
- Useless use of attribute "const"
- (W misc) The "const" attribute has no effect
except on anonymous closure prototypes. You applied it to a subroutine via
attributes.pm. This is only useful inside an attribute handler for an
anonymous subroutine.
- Useless use of /d modifier in transliteration operator
- (W misc) You have used the /d modifier where the searchlist
has the same length as the replacelist. See perlop for more information
about the /d modifier.
- Useless use of \E
- (W misc) You have a \E in a double-quotish string without a
"\U", "\L" or "\Q" preceding it.
- Useless use of greediness modifier '%c' in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) You specified something like these:
qr/a{3}?/
qr/b{1,1}+/
The "?" and "+" don't have any effect, as they modify
whether to match more or fewer when there is a choice, and by specifying
to match exactly a given number, there is no room left for a choice.
- Useless use of %s in scalar context
- (W scalar) You did something whose only interesting return
value is a list without a side effect in scalar context, which does not
accept a list.
For example
my $x = sort @y;
This is not very useful, and perl currently optimizes this away.
- Useless use of %s in void context
- (W void) You did something without a side effect in a
context that does nothing with the return value, such as a statement that
doesn't return a value from a block, or the left side of a scalar comma
operator. Very often this points not to stupidity on your part, but a
failure of Perl to parse your program the way you thought it would. For
example, you'd get this if you mixed up your C precedence with Python
precedence and said
$one, $two = 1, 2;
when you meant to say
($one, $two) = (1, 2);
Another common error is to use ordinary parentheses to construct a list
reference when you should be using square or curly brackets, for example,
if you say
$array = (1,2);
when you should have said
$array = [1,2];
The square brackets explicitly turn a list value into a scalar value, while
parentheses do not. So when a parenthesized list is evaluated in a scalar
context, the comma is treated like C's comma operator, which throws away
the left argument, which is not what you want. See perlref for more on
this.
This warning will not be issued for numerical constants equal to 0 or 1
since they are often used in statements like
1 while sub_with_side_effects();
String constants that would normally evaluate to 0 or 1 are warned
about.
- Useless use of (?-p) in regex; marked by <-- HERE
in m/%s/
- (W regexp) The "p" modifier cannot be turned off
once set. Trying to do so is futile.
- Useless use of "re" pragma
- (W) You did "use re;" without any arguments. That
isn't very useful.
- Useless use of %s with no values
- (W syntax) You used the push() or unshift()
function with no arguments apart from the array, like "push(@x)"
or "unshift(@foo)". That won't usually have any effect on the
array, so is completely useless. It's possible in principle that
push(@tied_array) could have some effect if the array is tied to a class
which implements a PUSH method. If so, you can write it as
"push(@tied_array,())" to avoid this warning.
- "use" not allowed in expression
- (F) The "use" keyword is recognized and executed
at compile time, and returns no useful value. See perlmod.
- Use of @_ in %s with signatured subroutine is
experimental
- (S experimental::args_array_with_signatures) An expression
involving the @_ arguments array was found in a subroutine that uses a
signature. This is experimental because the interaction between the
arguments array and parameter handling via signatures is not guaranteed to
remain stable in any future version of Perl, and such code should be
avoided.
- Use of bare << to mean <<"" is
forbidden
- (F) You are now required to use the explicitly quoted form
if you wish to use an empty line as the terminator of the here-document.
Use of a bare terminator was deprecated in Perl 5.000, and is a fatal error
as of Perl 5.28.
- Use of /c modifier is meaningless in s///
- (W regexp) You used the /c modifier in a substitution. The
/c modifier is not presently meaningful in substitutions.
- Use of /c modifier is meaningless without /g
- (W regexp) You used the /c modifier with a regex operand,
but didn't use the /g modifier. Currently, /c is meaningful only when /g
is used. (This may change in the future.)
- Use of code point 0x%s is not allowed; the permissible max
is 0x%X
- Use of code point 0x%s is not allowed; the permissible max
is 0x%X in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a code point that is not allowed, because it
is too large. Unicode only allows code points up to 0x10FFFF, but Perl
allows much larger ones. Earlier versions of Perl allowed code points
above IV_MAX (0x7FFFFFF on 32-bit platforms, 0x7FFFFFFFFFFFFFFF on 64-bit
platforms), however, this could possibly break the perl interpreter in
some constructs, including causing it to hang in a few cases.
If your code is to run on various platforms, keep in mind that the upper
limit depends on the platform. It is much larger on 64-bit word sizes than
32-bit ones.
The use of out of range code points was deprecated in Perl 5.24, and became
a fatal error in Perl 5.28.
- Use of each() on hash after insertion without
resetting hash iterator results in undefined behavior
- (S internal) The behavior of "each()" after
insertion is undefined; it may skip items, or visit items more than once.
Consider using "keys()" instead of "each()".
- Use of := for an empty attribute list is not allowed
- (F) The construction "my $x := 42" used to parse
as equivalent to "my $x : = 42" (applying an empty attribute
list to $x). This construct was deprecated in 5.12.0, and has now been
made a syntax error, so ":=" can be reclaimed as a new operator
in the future.
If you need an empty attribute list, for example in a code generator, add a
space before the "=".
- Use of %s for non-UTF-8 locale is wrong. Assuming a UTF-8
locale
- (W locale) You are matching a regular expression using
locale rules, and the specified construct was encountered. This construct
is only valid for UTF-8 locales, which the current locale isn't. This
doesn't make sense. Perl will continue, assuming a Unicode (UTF-8) locale,
but the results are likely to be wrong.
- Use of freed value in iteration
- (F) Perhaps you modified the iterated array within the
loop? This error is typically caused by code like the following:
@a = (3,4);
@a = () for (1,2,@a);
You are not supposed to modify arrays while they are being iterated over.
For speed and efficiency reasons, Perl internally does not do full
reference-counting of iterated items, hence deleting such an item in the
middle of an iteration causes Perl to see a freed value.
- Use of /g modifier is meaningless in split
- (W regexp) You used the /g modifier on the pattern for a
"split" operator. Since "split" always tries to match
the pattern repeatedly, the "/g" has no effect.
- Use of "goto" to jump into a construct is
deprecated
- (D deprecated) Using "goto" to jump from an outer
scope into an inner scope is deprecated and should be avoided.
This was deprecated in Perl 5.12.
- Use of '%s' in \p{} or \P{} is deprecated because: %s
- (D deprecated) Certain properties are deprecated by
Unicode, and may eventually be removed from the Standard, at which time
Perl will follow along. In the meantime, this message is raised to notify
you.
- Use of inherited AUTOLOAD for non-method %s::%s() is no
longer allowed
- (F) As an accidental feature, "AUTOLOAD"
subroutines were looked up as methods (using the @ISA hierarchy), even
when the subroutines to be autoloaded were called as plain functions (e.g.
"Foo::bar()"), not as methods (e.g. "Foo->bar()" or
"$obj->bar()").
This was deprecated in Perl 5.004, and was made fatal in Perl 5.28.
- Use of %s in printf format not supported
- (F) You attempted to use a feature of printf that is
accessible from only C. This usually means there's a better way to do it
in Perl.
- Use of '%s' is deprecated as a string delimiter
- (D deprecated) You used the given character as a starting
delimiter of a string outside the scope of
"use feature 'extra_paired_delimiters'". This
character is the mirror image of another Unicode character; within the
scope of that feature, the two are considered a pair for delimitting
strings. It is planned to make that feature the default, at which point
this usage would become illegal; hence this warning.
For now, you may live with this warning, or turn it off, but this code will
no longer compile in a future version of Perl. Or you can turn on
"use feature 'extra_paired_delimiters'" and use
the character that is the mirror image of this one for the closing string
delimiter.
- Use of '%s' is experimental as a string delimiter
- (S experimental::extra_paired_delimiters) This warning is
emitted if you use as a string delimiter one of the non-ASCII mirror image
ones enabled by
"use feature 'extra_paired_delimiters'". Simply
suppress the warning if you want to use the feature, but know that in
doing so you are taking the risk of using an experimental feature which
may change or be removed in a future Perl version:
- Use of %s is not allowed in Unicode property wildcard
subpatterns in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You were using a wildcard subpattern a Unicode property
value, and the subpattern contained something that is illegal. Not all
regular expression capabilities are legal in such subpatterns, and this is
one. Rewrite your subppattern to not use the offending construct. See
"Wildcards in Property Values" in perlunicode.
- Use of -l on filehandle%s
- (W io) A filehandle represents an opened file, and when you
opened the file it already went past any symlink you are presumably trying
to look for. The operation returned "undef". Use a filename
instead.
- Use of reference "%s" as array index
- (W misc) You tried to use a reference as an array index;
this probably isn't what you mean, because references in numerical context
tend to be huge numbers, and so usually indicates programmer error.
If you really do mean it, explicitly numify your reference, like so:
$array[0+$ref]. This warning is not given for overloaded objects, however,
because you can overload the numification and stringification operators
and then you presumably know what you are doing.
- Use of strings with code points over 0xFF as arguments to
%s operator is not allowed
- (F) You tried to use one of the string bitwise operators
("&" or "|" or "^" or "~") on
a string containing a code point over 0xFF. The string bitwise operators
treat their operands as strings of bytes, and values beyond 0xFF are
nonsensical in this context.
Certain instances became fatal in Perl 5.28; others in perl 5.32.
- Use of strings with code points over 0xFF as arguments to
vec is forbidden
- (F) You tried to use "vec" on a string containing
a code point over 0xFF, which is nonsensical here.
This became fatal in Perl 5.32.
- Use of tainted arguments in %s is deprecated
- (W taint, deprecated) You have supplied
"system()" or "exec()" with multiple arguments and at
least one of them is tainted. This used to be allowed but will become a
fatal error in a future version of perl. Untaint your arguments. See
perlsec.
- Use of unassigned code point or non-standalone grapheme for
a delimiter is not allowed
- (F) A grapheme is what appears to a native-speaker of a
language to be a character. In Unicode (and hence Perl) a grapheme may
actually be several adjacent characters that together form a complete
grapheme. For example, there can be a base character, like "R"
and an accent, like a circumflex "^", that appear when displayed
to be a single character with the circumflex hovering over the
"R". Perl currently allows things like that circumflex to be
delimiters of strings, patterns, etc. When displayed, the
circumflex would look like it belongs to the character just to the left of
it. In order to move the language to be able to accept graphemes as
delimiters, we cannot allow the use of delimiters which aren't graphemes
by themselves. Also, a delimiter must already be assigned (or known to be
never going to be assigned) to try to future-proof code, for otherwise
code that works today would fail to compile if the currently unassigned
delimiter ends up being something that isn't a stand-alone grapheme.
Because Unicode is never going to assign non-character code points, nor
code points that are above the legal Unicode maximum, those can be
delimiters, and their use is legal.
- Use of uninitialized value%s
- (W uninitialized) An undefined value was used as if it were
already defined. It was interpreted as a "" or a 0, but maybe it
was a mistake. To suppress this warning assign a defined value to your
variables.
To help you figure out what was undefined, perl will try to tell you the
name of the variable (if any) that was undefined. In some cases it cannot
do this, so it also tells you what operation you used the undefined value
in. Note, however, that perl optimizes your program and the operation
displayed in the warning may not necessarily appear literally in your
program. For example, "that $foo" is usually optimized into
""that " . $foo", and the warning will refer to the
"concatenation (.)" operator, even though there is no
"." in your program.
- "use re 'strict'" is experimental
- (S experimental::re_strict) The things that are different
when a regular expression pattern is compiled under 'strict' are subject
to change in future Perl releases in incompatible ways. This means that a
pattern that compiles today may not in a future Perl release. This warning
is to alert you to that risk.
- Use \x{...} for more than two hex characters in regex;
marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) In a regular expression, you said something like
(?[ [ \xBEEF ] ])
Perl isn't sure if you meant this
(?[ [ \x{BEEF} ] ])
or if you meant this
(?[ [ \x{BE} E F ] ])
You need to add either braces or blanks to disambiguate.
- Using just the first character returned by \N{} in
character class in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) Named Unicode character escapes
"(\N{...})" may return a multi-character sequence. Even though a
character class is supposed to match just one character of input, perl
will match the whole thing correctly, except when the class is inverted
("[^...]"), or the escape is the beginning or final end point of
a range. For these, what should happen isn't clear at all. In these
circumstances, Perl discards all but the first character of the returned
sequence, which is not likely what you want.
- Using just the single character results returned by \p{} in
(?[...]) in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) Extended character classes currently cannot
handle operands that evaluate to more than one character. These are
removed from the results of the expansion of the "\p{}".
This situation can happen, for example, in
(?[ \p{name=/KATAKANA/} ])
"KATAKANA LETTER AINU P" is a legal Unicode name (technically a
"named sequence"), but it is actually two characters. The above
expression with match only the Unicode names containing KATAKANA that
represent single characters.
- Using /u for '%s' instead of /%s in regex; marked by
<-- HERE in m/%s/
- (W regexp) You used a Unicode boundary ("\b{...}"
or "\B{...}") in a portion of a regular expression where the
character set modifiers "/a" or "/aa" are in effect.
These two modifiers indicate an ASCII interpretation, and this doesn't
make sense for a Unicode definition. The generated regular expression will
compile so that the boundary uses all of Unicode. No other portion of the
regular expression is affected.
- Using !~ with %s doesn't make sense
- (F) Using the "!~" operator with
"s///r", "tr///r" or "y///r" is currently
reserved for future use, as the exact behavior has not been decided.
(Simply returning the boolean opposite of the modified string is usually
not particularly useful.)
- UTF-16 surrogate U+%X
- (S surrogate) You had a UTF-16 surrogate in a context where
they are not considered acceptable. These code points, between U+D800 and
U+DFFF (inclusive), are used by Unicode only for UTF-16. However, Perl
internally allows all unsigned integer code points (up to the size limit
available on your platform), including surrogates. But these can cause
problems when being input or output, which is likely where this message
came from. If you really really know what you are doing you can turn off
this warning by "no warnings 'surrogate';".
- Value of %s can be "0"; test with
defined()
- (W misc) In a conditional expression, you used
<HANDLE>, <*> (glob), "each()", or
"readdir()" as a boolean value. Each of these constructs can
return a value of "0"; that would make the conditional
expression false, which is probably not what you intended. When using
these constructs in conditional expressions, test their values with the
"defined" operator.
- Value of CLI symbol "%s" too long
- (W misc) A warning peculiar to VMS. Perl tried to read the
value of an %ENV element from a CLI symbol table, and found a resultant
string longer than 1024 characters. The return value has been truncated to
1024 characters.
- Variable "%s" is not available
- (W closure) During compilation, an inner named subroutine
or eval is attempting to capture an outer lexical that is not currently
available. This can happen for one of two reasons. First, the outer
lexical may be declared in an outer anonymous subroutine that has not yet
been created. (Remember that named subs are created at compile time, while
anonymous subs are created at run-time.) For example,
sub { my $a; sub f { $a } }
At the time that f is created, it can't capture the current value of $a,
since the anonymous subroutine hasn't been created yet. Conversely, the
following won't give a warning since the anonymous subroutine has by now
been created and is live:
sub { my $a; eval 'sub f { $a }' }->();
The second situation is caused by an eval accessing a variable that has gone
out of scope, for example,
sub f {
my $a;
sub { eval '$a' }
}
f()->();
Here, when the '$a' in the eval is being compiled, f() is not currently
being executed, so its $a is not available for capture.
- Variable "%s" is not imported%s
- (S misc) With "use strict" in effect, you
referred to a global variable that you apparently thought was imported
from another module, because something else of the same name (usually a
subroutine) is exported by that module. It usually means you put the wrong
funny character on the front of your variable. It is also possible you
used an "our" variable whose scope has ended.
- Variable length lookbehind not implemented in regex
m/%s/
- (F) This message no longer should be raised as of Perl
5.30. It is retained in this document as a convenience for people
using an earlier Perl version.
In Perl 5.30 and earlier, lookbehind is allowed only for subexpressions
whose length is fixed and known at compile time. For positive lookbehind,
you can use the "\K" regex construct as a way to get the
equivalent functionality. See (?<=pattern) and \K in perlre.
Starting in Perl 5.18, there are non-obvious Unicode rules under
"/i" that can match variably, but which you might not think
could. For example, the substring "ss" can match the single
character LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S. Here's a complete list of the
current ones affecting ASCII characters:
ASCII
sequence Matches single letter under /i
FF U+FB00 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FF
FFI U+FB03 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFI
FFL U+FB04 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFL
FI U+FB01 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FI
FL U+FB02 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FL
SS U+00DF LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S
U+1E9E LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S
ST U+FB06 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE ST
U+FB05 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE LONG S T
This list is subject to change, but is quite unlikely to. Each ASCII
sequence can be any combination of upper- and lowercase.
You can avoid this by using a bracketed character class in the lookbehind
assertion, like
(?<![sS]t)
(?<![fF]f[iI])
This fools Perl into not matching the ligatures.
Another option for Perls starting with 5.16, if you only care about ASCII
matches, is to add the "/aa" modifier to the regex. This will
exclude all these non-obvious matches, thus getting rid of this message.
You can also say
use if $] ge 5.016, re => '/aa';
to apply "/aa" to all regular expressions compiled within its
scope. See re.
- Variable length positive lookbehind with capturing is
experimental in regex m/%s/
- (W) Variable length positive lookbehind with capturing is
not well defined. This warning alerts you to the fact that you are using a
construct which may change in a future version of perl. See the
documentation of Positive Lookbehind in perlre for details. You may
silence this warning with the following:
no warnings 'experimental::vlb';
- Variable length negative lookbehind with capturing is
experimental in regex m/%s/
- (W) Variable length negative lookbehind with capturing is
not well defined. This warning alerts you to the fact that you are using a
construct which may change in a future version of perl. See the
documentation of Negative Lookbehind in perlre for details. You may
silence this warning with the following:
no warnings 'experimental::vlb';
- "%s" variable %s masks earlier declaration in
same %s
- (W shadow) A "my", "our" or
"state" variable has been redeclared in the current scope or
statement, effectively eliminating all access to the previous instance.
This is almost always a typographical error. Note that the earlier
variable will still exist until the end of the scope or until all closure
references to it are destroyed.
- Variable syntax
- (A) You've accidentally run your script through csh
instead of Perl. Check the #! line, or manually feed your script into Perl
yourself.
- Variable "%s" will not stay shared
- (W closure) An inner (nested) named subroutine is
referencing a lexical variable defined in an outer named subroutine.
When the inner subroutine is called, it will see the value of the outer
subroutine's variable as it was before and during the *first* call to the
outer subroutine; in this case, after the first call to the outer
subroutine is complete, the inner and outer subroutines will no longer
share a common value for the variable. In other words, the variable will
no longer be shared.
This problem can usually be solved by making the inner subroutine anonymous,
using the "sub {}" syntax. When inner anonymous subs that
reference variables in outer subroutines are created, they are
automatically rebound to the current values of such variables.
- vector argument not supported with alpha versions
- (S printf) The %vd (s)printf format does not support
version objects with alpha parts.
- Verb pattern '%s' has a mandatory argument in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a verb pattern that requires an argument.
Supply an argument or check that you are using the right verb.
- Verb pattern '%s' may not have an argument in regex; marked
by <-- HERE in m/%s/
- (F) You used a verb pattern that is not allowed an
argument. Remove the argument or check that you are using the right
verb.
- Version control conflict marker
- (F) The parser found a line starting with
"<<<<<<<",
">>>>>>>", or "=======". These
may be left by a version control system to mark conflicts after a failed
merge operation.
- Version number must be a constant number
- (P) The attempt to translate a "use Module n.n
LIST" statement into its equivalent "BEGIN" block found an
internal inconsistency with the version number.
- Version string '%s' contains invalid data; ignoring:
'%s'
- (W misc) The version string contains invalid characters at
the end, which are being ignored.
- Warning: something's wrong
- (W) You passed warn() an empty string (the
equivalent of "warn """) or you called it with no args
and $@ was empty.
- Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly
- (S) The implicit close() done by an open()
got an error indication on the close(). This usually indicates your
file system ran out of disk space.
- Warning: unable to close filehandle properly: %s
- Warning: unable to close filehandle %s properly: %s
- (S io) There were errors during the implicit close()
done on a filehandle when its reference count reached zero while it was
still open, e.g.:
{
open my $fh, '>', $file or die "open: '$file': $!\n";
print $fh $data or die "print: $!";
} # implicit close here
Because various errors may only be detected by close() (e.g.
buffering could allow the "print" in this example to return true
even when the disk is full), it is dangerous to ignore its result. So when
it happens implicitly, perl will signal errors by warning.
Prior to version 5.22.0, perl ignored such errors, so the common
idiom shown above was liable to cause silent data loss.
- Warning: Use of "%s" without parentheses is
ambiguous
- (S ambiguous) You wrote a unary operator followed by
something that looks like a binary operator that could also have been
interpreted as a term or unary operator. For instance, if you know that
the rand function has a default argument of 1.0, and you write
rand + 5;
you may THINK you wrote the same thing as
rand() + 5;
but in actual fact, you got
rand(+5);
So put in parentheses to say what you really mean.
- when is experimental
- (S experimental::smartmatch) "when" depends on
smartmatch, which is experimental. Additionally, it has several special
cases that may not be immediately obvious, and their behavior may change
or even be removed in any future release of perl. See the explanation
under "Experimental Details on given and when" in perlsyn.
- Wide character in %s
- (S utf8) Perl met a wide character (ordinal >255) when
it wasn't expecting one. This warning is by default on for I/O (like
print).
If this warning does come from I/O, the easiest way to quiet it is simply to
add the ":utf8" layer, e.g.,
"binmode STDOUT, ':utf8'". Another way to turn off
the warning is to add "no warnings 'utf8';" but
that is often closer to cheating. In general, you are supposed to
explicitly mark the filehandle with an encoding, see open and
"binmode" in perlfunc.
If the warning comes from other than I/O, this diagnostic probably indicates
that incorrect results are being obtained. You should examine your code to
determine how a wide character is getting to an operation that doesn't
handle them.
- Wide character (U+%X) in %s
- (W locale) While in a single-byte locale (i.e., a
non-UTF-8 one), a multi-byte character was encountered. Perl considers
this character to be the specified Unicode code point. Combining non-UTF-8
locales and Unicode is dangerous. Almost certainly some characters will
have two different representations. For example, in the ISO 8859-7 (Greek)
locale, the code point 0xC3 represents a Capital Gamma. But so also does
0x393. This will make string comparisons unreliable.
You likely need to figure out how this multi-byte character got mixed up
with your single-byte locale (or perhaps you thought you had a UTF-8
locale, but Perl disagrees).
- Within []-length '%c' not allowed
- (F) The count in the (un)pack template may be replaced by
"[TEMPLATE]" only if "TEMPLATE" always matches the
same amount of packed bytes that can be determined from the template
alone. This is not possible if it contains any of the codes @, /, U, u, w
or a *-length. Redesign the template.
- While trying to resolve method call %s->%s() can not
locate package "%s" yet it is mentioned in @%s::ISA (perhaps you
forgot to load "%s"?)
- (W syntax) It is possible that the @ISA contains a
misspelled or never loaded package name, which can result in perl choosing
an unexpected parent class's method to resolve the method call. If this is
deliberate you can do something like
@Missing::Package::ISA = ();
to silence the warnings, otherwise you should correct the package name, or
ensure that the package is loaded prior to the method call.
- %s() with negative argument
- (S misc) Certain operations make no sense with negative
arguments. Warning is given and the operation is not done.
-
write() on closed filehandle %s
- (W closed) The filehandle you're writing to got itself
closed sometime before now. Check your control flow.
- %s "\x%X" does not map to Unicode
- (S utf8) When reading in different encodings, Perl tries to
map everything into Unicode characters. The bytes you read in are not
legal in this encoding. For example
utf8 "\xE4" does not map to Unicode
if you try to read in the a-diaereses Latin-1 as UTF-8.
- 'X' outside of string
- (F) You had a (un)pack template that specified a relative
position before the beginning of the string being (un)packed. See
"pack" in perlfunc.
- 'x' outside of string in unpack
- (F) You had a pack template that specified a relative
position after the end of the string being unpacked. See "pack"
in perlfunc.
- YOU HAVEN'T DISABLED SET-ID SCRIPTS IN THE KERNEL YET!
- (F) And you probably never will, because you probably don't
have the sources to your kernel, and your vendor probably doesn't give a
rip about what you want. There is a vulnerability anywhere that you have a
set-id script, and to close it you need to remove the set-id bit from the
script that you're attempting to run. To actually run the script set-id,
your best bet is to put a set-id C wrapper around your script.
- You need to quote "%s"
- (W syntax) You assigned a bareword as a signal handler
name. Unfortunately, you already have a subroutine of that name declared,
which means that Perl 5 will try to call the subroutine when the
assignment is executed, which is probably not what you want. (If it IS
what you want, put an & in front.)
- Your random numbers are not that random
- (F) When trying to initialize the random seed for hashes,
Perl could not get any randomness out of your system. This usually
indicates Something Very Wrong.
- Zero length \N{} in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
m/%s/
- (F) Named Unicode character escapes ("\N{...}")
may return a zero-length sequence. Such an escape was used in an extended
character class, i.e. "(?[...])", or under "use re
'strict'", which is not permitted. Check that the correct escape has
been used, and the correct charnames handler is in scope. The
<-- HERE shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem
was discovered.
warnings, diagnostics.