To clarify,
$alarms = "off" is an assignment. Use
== to test for numeric equality or
eq to test for textual equality.
Always
use strict;
use warnings;
Although not related to your question, you are over-using
printf, which is (allegedly) slower than
print. Perl, and several other languages, has interpolation - when a scalar or array variable is enclosed inside double-quotes it translates to its value. This is one of the advantages of the $ and @ prefixes. So:
printf("%s : %s\n",
$alarmd,
$alarms
);
is better written as:
print "$alarmd : $alarms\n";
and error messages should really be routed to stderr:
print STDERR "ERROR: $error.\n";
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