It sounds like it could be an interaction with external process that is on that system but not the others. I've seen issues with file cleaners deleting some of the contents of the PAR temp dir during execution, and antivirus programs can quarantine files, so something like that might be the culprit.
Sprinkling feedback throughout the program (e.g. printing @INC at startup and completion) to narrow down the point of failure would also be worthwhile.
In reply to Re^7: Pelr packer pp with -C fails else ok
by swl
in thread Pelr packer pp with -C fails else ok
by dkhosla1
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