More than likely your version of perl was built with some version of sh and system uses that. Some versions of sh (bash) have a noclobber setting that prevents overwriting of existing files. I would check either the user's shell settings (~/.bashrc for bash) or the default system settings (/etc/bashrc) for a noclobber setting and reset appropriately.
If you cannot unset the noclobber setting, you will have to use the syntax appropriate for the shell being used by perl -- which for bash is the rather clumsy >|
In reply to Re^3: Using the bang(!) in perl system commands
by derby
in thread Using the bang(!) in perl system commands
by kettle
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