For each hash element, you execute
if ($value =~ /$search/gi) {
$contains++;
}
$contains++ isn't in any kind of loop, so it gets executed at most once. So let's add the loop we need:
while ($value =~ /$search/gi) {
$contains++;
}
This is equivalent, yet simpler and faster:
++contains while $value =~ /$search/gi;
And this is faster yet (assuming $search contains no captures):
$contains += () = /$search/gi;
By the way, using m//g in scalar context outside of while condition is a bug.* This includes using it as an if condition.
* — Yes, this is a generalisation, but it's accurate for those don't know what makes the statement incomplete.
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