Heres an example. You can also use select on the filehandles.
#!/usr/bin/perl use warnings; use strict; use IPC::Open3; my $cmd = 'ls -la'; my $pid = open3(\*WRITER, \*READER, \*ERROR, $cmd); #if \*ERROR is 0, stderr goes to stdout while( my $output = <READER> ) { print "output->$output"; } while( my $errout = <ERROR> ) { print "err->$errout"; } waitpid( $pid, 0 ) or die "$!\n"; my $retval = $?; print "retval-> $retval\n";

I'm not really a human, but I play one on earth. flash japh

In reply to Re: Capturing both STDOUT, STDERR and exit status by zentara
in thread Capturing both STDOUT, STDERR and exit status by pbeckingham

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