Just to toot my own horn, I'd like to mention that I wrote the System2 module, with an eye toward running commands, and getting isolated STDOUT/STDERR as well as exit values. Well, it makes me happy.
On Fri, Nov 30, 2001 at 03:45:23PM -0500, J. J. Horner wrote: > * Kairam, Raj ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [011130 15:10]: > > In my perl script I have a line like this. > > system( "'/usr/bin/lp -dhp4si /tmp/plotreq.txt' > /tmp/plotid.txt"); You've got these quotes wrong: you're executing a command (via Bourne shell) called '/usr/bin/lp -dhp4si /tmp/plotreq.txt', which I expect doesn't exist on your system. :) > > I have tried this also and did not work. > > @lplist = ("/usr/bin/lp", "-dhp4si /tmp/plotreq.txt"); > > system(@lplist); Here, you're passing an argument to 'lp'; the filename it's looking for is '-dhp4si /tmp/plotreq.txt'. Again, I doubt that exists on your system. :) > > > > hp4si is the destination printer. > > /tmp/plotreq.txt is small text file to be sent to the printer. > > /tmp/plotid.txt is the output of lp command ( just one line to indicate job > > id )to be saved. > > If I run the command /usr/bin/lp -dhp4si /tmp/plotreq.txt > /tmp/plotid.txt > > it is fine as a command line. Here, your shell is breaking out the commands/arguments on whitespace, which is what you were hoping for. You'd want something like (modulo shell metacharacters, etc.): system qw('/usr/bin/lp -dhp4si /tmp/plotreq.txt > /tmp/plotid.txt'); But this doesn't get you STDERR, if there was any sortr of problem. So, I do this: use System2; my @args = qw('/usr/bin/lp -dhp4si /tmp/plotreq.txt'); my ($out, $err) = system2(@args); You could now check $? for whether or not your invocation to lp failed: my ($exit_value, $signal_num, $dumped_core) = &System2::exit_status($?); warn "lp choked!: $err" if $exit_value; And, depending on the success/failure you have all of the output of lp in STDOUT or STDERR, as appropriate. > > This is the context. > > sub search { > > some code > > .... > > open(REQFILE, ">/tmp/plotreq.txt") || die "sorry, could not open > > /tmp/plotreq.txt"; You should use $! to print _why_ this failed. > > some more code to generate content for plotreq.txt > > ...... > > close(REQFILE); > > .... This is where I tried the above to send the file to the printer. > > } Note that you aren't making use of unique filenames. This is a CGI program; you could hypothetically have multiple instances of this code running at once. Hope this helps... > > Can somebody guide me to do it right ?. > > Thanks > > Raj kairam > -- > J. J. Horner > "H*","6a686f726e657240326a6e6574776f726b732e636f6d" > *************************************************** > "H*","6a6a686f726e65724062656c6c736f7574682e6e6574" > > Freedom is an all-or-nothing proposition: either we > are completely free, or we are subjects of a > tyrannical system. If we lose one freedom in a > thousand, we become completely subjugated. -- Brian 'you Bastard' Reichert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 37 Crystal Ave. #303 Daytime number: (603) 434-6842 Derry NH 03038-1713 USA Intel architecture: the left-hand path