Please ignore the post. It's a *lot* more complicated than this (I'm trying to hand credentials to WebSeal, the web security part of IBM's Tivoli, and their user-side docs approach zero as a limit....) Anyway, I was getting an idiot login, rather than the .rss I was expecting. mark, editing an installed .pm to find this out ---- Original message ---- >Date: Tue, 15 Jul 2008 12:37:06 -0400 (EDT) >From: <m.roth2006@xxxxxxx> >Subject: Looking for help with rss & perl >To: General Red Hat Linux discussion list <redhat-list@xxxxxxxxxx> > >More scripting than directly related to this group, but.... > >I found a tiny perl script that checks to see if the file is "well-formed"/syntactically correct. It found one bug, and I fixed that. So it reports it's a-ok. > >Then I run the actual scraper, and it complains of a non-well-formed token. If this thing is only reading the .rss file, it's pointing to a line *far* beyond EOF. If it's actually reading the .rss file, and then trying to parse the URLs that the .rss points to, it's less clear than mud. > >This is the only message I get back. I'm using XML::RSS: >not well-formed (invalid token) at line 1257, column 21, byte 30778 at /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.5/i386-linux-thread-multi/XML/Parser.pm line 187 > >Any ideas? > > mark > >-- >redhat-list mailing list >unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe >https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list