Perl 101: Trouble Shooting | WebReference

Perl 101: Trouble Shooting

Trouble Shooting

Perl 101

The best thing to do is to first try and determine where your error occurred. Did it occur when you tried to execute the script? If so, make sure that you transferred the file in ASCII or text format. Then check that you set the appropriate permissions for the script. Finally, see that the first line of your program points to your Perl interpreter. If the error occurred after you edited some variables, odds are that you made a typo or specified an invalid path.

Things to remember:

Common Server Errors and what they mean:

"403 Forbidden"
This is tells you that the file/directory permissions, are most likely, set incorrectly.

"404 File Not Found"
This means that you are trying to access a file that does not exist on the server. Double check your URL and where you put the file. Remember some servers are case sensitive (Unix).

"500 Server Error"
This is the bad one. This means that your program is producing output that your server cannot understand. Check your server’s log files to see if they help at all, and more importantly, look over your variables again to make sure that you did not make any typos.

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Scott Phillips is a founding partner and Chief Technology Officer for The Reflector Group, a New York City-based new media firm specializing in client services and original content programming. Mr. Phillips' responsibilities range from designing websites to developing innovative technology-based strategic solutions. He is a graduate of Hamilton College.

Comments are welcome


Revised: May 8, 1998

URL: https://webreference.com/programming/perl/101/trouble.html