In addition to what you said, there's also the problem that the output the OP wants likely is from the bash builtin "time".  Perl, however, is typically configured to call /bin/sh as the default shell (see perl -V:sh). And as sh doesn't know the time builtin (even if /bin/sh is just a link to /bin/bash — for compatibility reasons, the program name is what matters here), the shell will search for an external executable "time", which usually is /usr/bin/time. The latter produces a different output format, though.

To sum up, what the OP probably wants is

my $times = `/bin/bash -c "(time ls) 2>&1 >/dev/null"`;

Compare

#!/usr/bin/perl -l $times = `(time ls) 2>&1 >/dev/null`; print "/usr/bin/time:\n[$times]"; $times = `/bin/bash -c "(time ls) 2>&1 >/dev/null"`; print "bash builtin:\n[$times]"; __END__ /usr/bin/time: [0.00user 0.00system 0:00.00elapsed 114%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 0maxres +ident)k 0inputs+0outputs (0major+396minor)pagefaults 0swaps ] bash builtin: [ real 0m0.008s user 0m0.004s sys 0m0.004s ]

In reply to Re^4: Time command output is not stored into the variable. by almut
in thread Time command output is not stored into the variable. by ungalnanban

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