If you need the PID you might want to look at fork and exec. fork will return the childs pid, you can then have the child exec the system call. As I understand it, this is what system() does at it's core. Check out perldoc -f fork and perldoc -f exec for examples and details. I wrote the following that seems to work, no error checking though.
use strict; use warnings; $SIG{CHLD} = '"IGNORE"'; my $child = fork(); if ($child) { print "I'm the parent, I think I'll wait for the child $child...\n +"; waitpid($child, 0); } else { exec ("ls"); }

Good Luck,
Ira.

"So... What do all these little arrows mean?"
~unknown


In reply to Re: How to get the PID of an invoked process by IraTarball
in thread How to get the PID of an invoked process by Anonymous Monk

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