Just append an ampersand to the commandline, as you would to put any process in the background in shell: perl script params &. Or launch it, hit Ctrl-Z to stop it and return to the shell, and restart it in the background by issuing bg.
If that's on a remote machine and you want to close the connection after starting the process, investigate nohup(1) and/or screen(1).
Makeshifts last the longest.
In reply to Re: Running a Perl Process
by Aristotle
in thread Running a Perl Process
by Anonymous Monk
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