Each call to system spawns a new subprocess, each with its own environment, changes made to one won't affect the other. Also, you seem to be expecting system to return the output of the command, which it does not, it returns its exit code. If and only if the external command you want to run is always a fixed string, then one way to do what you want would be:

use IPC::System::Simple qw/capture/; my $output = capture('cd /server/setup && setenv.cmd && tmboot -y');

However, as I said, this is only a good idea for fixed strings, because otherwise you may introduce security issues! I wrote about the topic of running external commands at length here.

Update: Since I've added the cd to the command above, that change of working directory will not take effect for your script after the call returns. If you really want to change your working directory, then you should use Perl's chdir like you showed in your original code - perhaps just adding some error checking.


In reply to Re: how to execute 'tmboot -y' by haukex
in thread how to execute 'tmboot -y' by ytjPerl

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