Yeah I have tried all these things but unfortunately none of them
work. I am a bit suspicious of one thing though. I am running Red Hat 6.2
and I installed Mandrake RPM's for the latest version of perl. I am
beginning to suspect there was something wrong with that. Maybe I needed
to use RedHat RPM's instead, but I thought Mandrake would be compatible.
- Jme
On Fri, 9 Mar 2001, Troy Johnson wrote:
> You can find out easily by executing:
>
> which perl
>
> at the command line.
>
> If you are running Red Hat your Perl is probably /usr/bin/perl, but many programs (and I think the default install of Perl) choose /usr/local/bin/perl instead. If you would like to run those programs without modification you can make a symbolic link:
>
> ln -s /usr/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/perl
>
> as root.
>
> Good luck,
>
> Troy
>
> >>> ksm at dogbrain.com 03/08/01 10:11PM >>>
> Similar to what Yaron suggested, what is the first line of your
> perl script?
>
> It should be #!/usr/bin/perl or something very much like it. It
> should point to where perl is installed on your system.
>
> Regards
>
> - Karl
>
> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 10:03:09PM -0600, Jamie Ostrowski wrote:
> >
> >
> > No, the program actually is a download from a site off slashdot. It is
> > the mudshell program, if you are familiar with that, and I have only
> > opened it up on the server. Thanks for trying though.
>
> > > This is a long shot, but have you edited them on Windows? This happened
> > > to us when my wife edited perl files on Windows, and a ^M got added to the
> > > end of #! /usr/bin/perl.
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