#! perl -slw use strict; use Win32::Socketpair qw[ winopen2_5 ]; ## Open a pipe to perl.exe -c ## Retrieving the pid and the socket handle my( $pid, $sock ) = winopen2_5( 'perl.exe', '-c' ); ## Print a short script to it for syntax checking print $sock <<'EOP'; my $x = 365.25**3; my $y = qx[ perl -c -e"say 'boo'"; ]; my $z = sub { print $sock <<; my $x = 365.25**3; my $y = qx[ perl -c -e"say 'boo'"; ]; my $z = sub { print $sock <<; my $x = 365.25**3; my $y = qx[ perl -c -e"say 'boo'"; ]; my $z = sub { 1; }; }; }; EOP ## Tell the socket that we have finsihed writing to it ## Has the effect of allowing the pelr process to know ## that no more data is coming, so it can process the script shutdown $sock, 1; ## Read back all the output from the perl process ## -- stdout & stderr -- and display on terminal print while <$sock>; ## Close the socket close $sock; ## Start another copy of perl with a one liner argument ## that outputs to both stdout and stderr ( $pid, $sock ) = winopen2_5( 'perl.exe', q[-E"say 'hello'; warn; die;"] ); ## Tell the socket we've finished writing shutdown $sock, 1; ## print teh retrieved output to the terminal print while <$sock>; ## and done close $sock; ## The output produced is below __END__ C:\test>winopen2_5 - syntax OK Warning: something's wrong at -e line 1. Died at -e line 1. hello