Even better would be to use
$0 as the parameter to
exec.
exec $0 unless $all_done;
That way the script can move around on the filesystem and you won't need to hand edit it.
A warning: the above doesn't work correctly under Windows. For some reason, exec $0 spawns another copy of your script in the background. If you write a small test program like:
print "hi!\n";
sleep 2;
exec $0;
and run it, you get the effect of:
H:\>test.pl
hi!
hi!
H:\>hi!
hi!
hi!
What exactly it is doing, I don't know :)
mr.nick ...
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