I have a .pl
file and I want to execute that file in any system even though perl
is not installed. How can i achieve it?
Can any one let me
From perlfaq3's answer to How can I compile my Perl program into byte code or C?:
(contributed by brian d foy)
In general, you can't do this. There are some things that may work for your situation though. People usually ask this question because they want to distribute their works without giving away the source code, and most solutions trade disk space for convenience. You probably won't see much of a speed increase either, since most solutions simply bundle a Perl interpreter in the final product (but see How can I make my Perl program run faster?).
The Perl Archive Toolkit ( http://par.perl.org/ ) is Perl's analog to Java's JAR. It's freely available and on CPAN ( http://search.cpan.org/dist/PAR/ ).
There are also some commercial products that may work for you, although you have to buy a license for them.
The Perl Dev Kit ( http://www.activestate.com/Products/Perl_Dev_Kit/ ) from ActiveState can "Turn your Perl programs into ready-to-run executables for HP-UX, Linux, Solaris and Windows."
Perl2Exe ( http://www.indigostar.com/perl2exe.htm ) is a command line program for converting perl scripts to executable files. It targets both Windows and unix platforms.
On MaxOSX there may be perlcc. Type man perlcc. On my system (10.6.8) it's in /usr/bin. YMMV
See http://search.cpan.org/~nwclark/perl-5.8.9/utils/perlcc.PL
Cava Packager is great on the Windows ecosystem.
Install PAR::Packer. Example for *nix:
sudo cpan -i PAR::Packer
For Strawberry Perl for Windows or for ActivePerl and MSVC installed:
cpan -i PAR::Packer
Pack it with pp. It will create an executable named "example" or "example.exe" on Windows.
pp -o example example.pl
This would work only on the OS where it was built.
P.S. It is really hard to find a Unix clone without Perl. Did you mean Windows?
Perl files are scripts, not executable programs. Therefore, for them to 'run', they are going to need an interpreter.
So, you have two choices: 1) Have the interpreter on the machine that you wish to run the script, or 2) Have the script running on a networked (or Internet) machine that you remotely connect to (ie with a browser)
Note to Sinan and brian: perlfaq3 is still wrong.
See http://search.cpan.org/dist/B-C/perlcompile.pod