I've got the following error in a script yesterday on a Debian 8 machine: sh: 1: exec: /home/vlefevre/bin/mymaple: File exists
where sh is dash. The command that led to this error is equivalent to: sh -c 'exec /home/vlefevre/bin/mymaple -q -s 2>&1' The "File exists" message corresponds to the EEXIST error: $ errno --search exists EEXIST 17 File exists But what does this error mean here? Which file exists and shouldn't? I've looked at the dash source, and the error seems to come from shellexec() in exec.c, and EEXIST is the errno from execve() in tryexec(). But EEXIST is not among the possible errors listed in the execve(2) man page. -------- A bit more details on the context. This comes from a Perl script that does: $pid = IPC::Open2::open2(\*RD, \*WR, "exec @maple 2>&1"); where @maple is ('/home/vlefevre/bin/mymaple', '-q', '-s'). So, what open2 does corresponds to: sh -c 'exec /home/vlefevre/bin/mymaple -q -s 2>&1' My home directory is under NFS. -- Vincent Lefèvre <vinc...@vinc17.net> - Web: <https://www.vinc17.net/> 100% accessible validated (X)HTML - Blog: <https://www.vinc17.net/blog/> Work: CR INRIA - computer arithmetic / AriC project (LIP, ENS-Lyon)