On 16 Sep, 19:04, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chas Owens) wrote:
> On 9/16/07, perllearner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On 16 Sep, 03:11, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Mumia W.)
> > wrote:
> > > On 09/15/2007 01:17 PM, perllearner wrote:
>
> > > > I am a little stumped as to what is happening, just a few hours ago, I
> > > > was able to use the same script at home, however on a university
> > > > wireless, the script just stalls, and even perl package manager gives
> > > > a error 500.  I am a little confused on where to go from here, or how
> > > > to circumvent this, I am using winxp professional with service pack
> > > > 2.  Does anyone know how I may be able to use a perl script with such
> > > > a restriction?
>
> > > Is Perl installed on the "university wireless"?
>
> > > If so, what Perl?
>
> > > In what context is the script executing? Standalone, CGI,
> > > IIS/PerlScript, Apache/Mod_perl?
>
> > > What is the script in question?
>
> > Perl is installed on my laptop, and worked just fine when at home, and
> > not using the university wireless network
> > I am on windowsxp sp2 with active perl 5.8.6
> > the script utilizes www::mechanize, however I notice scripts that do
> > not use the internet or internet  related modules work just fine
>
> snip
>
> Do you use a proxy on that network?  If you do then you need to tell
> Perl what that proxy is.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

I am connected via a wireless network, and in internet explorer it is
set to automatically detect settings for the LAN, when you say tell
perl what that proxy is, how would I go about doing this? first
finding the proxy, and the code to place it in my perl scripts


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