I'm sorry. Perhaps using links to man pages [man://man] shouldn't be used anymore. rehash is part of (t)csh. While I could have checked the link PerlMonks uses for man pages. I think it's fair to say that you are out of line on this. Because when I type man rehash in my terminal/console, I receive

BUILTIN(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual BU +ILTIN(1) NAME builtin, !, %, ., :, @, [, {, }, alias, alloc, bg, bind, bindkey, + break, breaksw, builtins, case, cd, chdir, command, complete, continue, +default, dirs, do, done, echo, echotc, elif, else, end, endif, endsw, esac +, eval, exec, exit, export, false, fc, fg, filetest, fi, for, foreach, ge +topts, glob, goto, hash, hashstat, history, hup, if, jobid, jobs, kill, +limit, local, log, login, logout, ls-F, nice, nohup, notify, onintr, pop +d, printenv, pushd, pwd, read, readonly, rehash, repeat, return, sch +ed, set, setenv, settc, setty, setvar, shift, source, stop, suspend, switc +h, telltc, test, then, time, times, trap, true, type, ulimit, umask, unalias, uncomplete, unhash, unlimit, unset, unsetenv, until, wai +t, where, which, while -- shell built-in commands SYNOPSIS See the built-in command description in the appropriate shell man +ual page. DESCRIPTION Shell builtin commands are commands that can be executed within t +he run- ning shell's process. Note that, in the case of csh(1) builtin c +ommands, the command is executed in a subshell if it occurs as any compone +nt of a pipeline except the last. If a command specified to the shell contains a slash `/', the she +ll will not execute a builtin command, even if the last component of the +speci- fied command matches the name of a builtin command. Thus, while +specify- ing ``echo'' causes a builtin command to be executed under shells + that support the echo builtin command, specifying ``/bin/echo'' or ``. +/echo'' does not. While some builtin commands may exist in more than one shell, the +ir oper- ation may be different under each shell which supports them. Bel +ow is a table which lists shell builtin commands, the standard shells tha +t sup- port them and whether they exist as standalone utilities. Only builtin commands for the csh(1) and sh(1) shells are listed +here. Consult a shell's manual page for details on the operation its bu +iltin commands. Beware that the sh(1) manual page, at least, calls som +e of these commands ``built-in commands'' and some of them ``reserved +words''. Users of other shells may need to consult an info(1) page or othe +r sources of documentation. Commands marked ``No**'' under External do exist externally, but +are implemented as scripts using a builtin command of the same name. Command External csh(1) sh(1) ! No No Yes % No Yes No . No No Yes : No Yes Yes @ No Yes No [ Yes No Yes { No No Yes } No No Yes ...
So kindly point your -- more justly.

--Chris

#!/usr/bin/perl -Tw
use Perl::Always or die;
my $perl_version = (5.12.5);
print $perl_version;

In reply to Re^9: SNMPTT error by taint
in thread SNMPTT error by mvip

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