use vmsish; use vmsish 'status'; # or '$?' use vmsish 'exit'; use vmsish 'time'; use vmsish 'hushed'; no vmsish 'hushed'; vmsish::hushed($hush); use vmsish; no vmsish 'time';
If you're not running VMS, this module does nothing.
EXAMPLE:
$ perl -e``exit 44;'' Non-hushed error exit
%SYSTEM-F-ABORT, abort DCL message
$ show sym $STATUS
$STATUS == ``%X0000002C''
$ perl -e"use vmsish qw(hushed); exit 44;" Hushed error exit $ show sym $STATUS $STATUS == "%X1000002C"
The 'hushed' flag has a global scope during compilation: the exit() or die() commands that are compiled after 'vmsish hushed' will be hushed when they are executed. Doing a ``no vmsish 'hushed''' turns off the hushed flag.
The status of the hushed flag also affects output of VMS error messages from compilation errors. Again, you still get the Perl error message (and the code in $STATUS)
EXAMPLE:
use vmsish 'hushed'; # turn on hushed flag
use Carp; # Carp compiled hushed
exit 44; # will be hushed
croak('I die'); # will be hushed
no vmsish 'hushed'; # turn off hushed flag
exit 44; # will not be hushed
croak('I die2'): # WILL be hushed, croak was compiled hushed
You can also control the 'hushed' flag at run-time, using the built-in routine vmsish::hushed(). Without argument, it returns the hushed status. Since vmsish::hushed is built-in, you do not need to ``use vmsish'' to call it.
EXAMPLE:
if ($quiet_exit) {
vmsish::hushed(1);
}
print ``Sssshhhh...I'm hushed...\n'' if vmsish::hushed();
exit 44;
Note that an exit() or die() that is compiled 'hushed' because of ``use vmsish'' is not un-hushed by calling vmsish::hushed(0) at runtime.
The messages from error exits from inside the Perl core are generally more serious, and are not suppressed.
See ``Pragmatic Modules'' in perlmod.