NAME
Taint - Perl extension to taint variables
SYNOPSIS
use Taint;
taint($taintvar[, $anothervar[, $yetmorevars]]);
$bool = tainted($vartocheck);
DESCRIPTION
taint()
marks its arguments as tainted.
tainted()
returns true if its argument is tainted, false otherwise
DIAGNOSTICS
Attempt to taint read-only value
You attempted to taint something untaintable, such as a constant or expression. taint()
only takes lvalues for arguments
Attempt to taint an array
A reference to an array was passed to taint
. You can only taint individual array items, not array itself.
Attempt to taint a hash
A reference to a hash was passed to taint
. You can only taint individual hash items, not the entire hash.
Attempt to taint code
You passed a coderef to taint
. You can't do that.
Attempt to taint a typeglob
You passed a typeglob to taint
. taint
only taints scalars, and a typeglob isn't one.
Attempt to taint a reference
You tried to taint a reference, which you just can't do.
Attempt to taint something unknown or undef
You tried taint
ing either a variable set to undef, or your version of perl has more types of variables than mine did when this module was written. Odds are, you're trying to taint a variable with an undef value like, for example, one that has been created (either explicitly or implicitly) but not had a value assigned.
Doing this:
my $foo;
taint($foo);
will trigger this error.
AUTHOR
Dan Sugalski <sugalskd@osshe.edu>
SEE ALSO
perl(1).