Probably because your OS is setup such that each process can only address a maximum of 2GB. This is the normal configuration for 32-bit OSs.
And when you do: $x = 'x' x 2**30; It first requests enough memory (1GB) to build the string in. It then requests another 1GB (for $X) to copy the string into. (Dumb, but that's the way it works!)
As the perl executable is already consuming a few MB from startup, aftr you've allocated the first 1GB, there is not enough virtual memory left in the process to make the copy, so it fails.
I was using a 64-bit OS which means each process can access much more memory.
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