I thank those who have answered my request--let me see if I can summarize the recommendations:
David Wagner recommended that I reform the call using "cp": ..... "use File::Copy cp; $n=FileHandle->new("/dev/null","r"); cp($n,"x");' which is not what you are trying. You are trying to use an already open file and that I don't believe is the context of what I see in the doc. The group can correct me ( and they will) if I am wrong." ....... To which Rod Dixon replied that this suggestion would only read from a dev/null. Rod also added that I can't use the move command referencing a File Handle because (1) the File Handle's contents were still buffered and (2) this command can't succeed because I won't be able to delete a still open file handle using a move. (By the way, at this point in the program I hadn't written the file handle to a file with a close, else I wouldn't have tried this approach at all). Joseph Newton affirmed Dixon's point and essentially said that I was crazy to want to copy or move a file handle even if I could. What I thought I could do based on the documentation of File::Copy was copy OR move a file handle regardless of the "mode" used to open it originally or whether it'd been flushed---I had my reasons, including the intention to write the results of the program's standard error and some other history to a log file locally and to concatenate that local logfile into a separate consolidated log file. I thought using File::Copy would allow me to forego all the connection overhead associated with FTP --since all remote servers and the destination server are Win-based, plus allow me to send multiple files a la move without having to remove the files successfully copied. Whether this approach is good design or not, I'll reconsider based on the feedback, but there was a method to my madness. As I said originally, wheh I read this snippet from the File::Copy documentation, it appeared to me that it is possible to copy/move a FH--no one has told me exactly why file:copy with a FH isn't possible if it works as intended- : --File Copy doc snippet begins here----> " copy("file1","file2"); copy("Copy.pm",\*STDOUT);' move("/dev1/fileA","/dev2/fileB"); use POSIX; use File::Copy cp; $n = FileHandle->new("/a/file","r"); cp($n,"x");' DESCRIPTION The File::Copy module provides two basic functions, "copy" and "move", which are useful for getting the contents of a file from one place to another. * The "copy" function takes two parameters: a file to copy from and a file to copy to. Either argument may be a string, a FileHandle reference or a FileHandle glob. Obviously, if the first argument is a filehandle of some sort, it will be read from, and if it is a file *name* it will be opened for reading. Likewise, the second argument will be written to (and created if need be). Trying to copy a file on top of itself is a fatal error. .... end of quoted documentation.... So I thought that using a FileHandle was permissible as a move, copy or cp command. I wasn't trying to write to another File Handle so it looked "acceptable". I will forego this approach and close my log file, and use Net::FTP or File::Copy against the files created. Thanks all. Jeff Smith -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]