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Home/ Questions/Q 936181
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T21:16:20+00:00 2026-05-15T21:16:20+00:00

I am currently working on a project that involves crawling certain websites. However sometimes

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I am currently working on a project that involves crawling certain websites. However sometimes my Perl program will get “stuck” on a website for some reason (can’t figure out why) and the program will freeze for hours. To get around this I inserted some code to time out on the subroutine that crawls the webpage. The problem with this is that, lets say I set the alarm to 60 sec, most of the time the page will timeout correctly, but occasionally the program will not time out and just sit for hours on end (maybe forever since I usually kill the program).

On the really bad websites the Perl program will just eat through my memory, taking 2.3GB of RAM and 13GB of swap. Also the CPU usage will be high, and my computer will be sluggish. Luckily if it times out all the resources get released quickly.

Is this my code or a Perl issue?
What should I correct and why was it causing this problem?

Thanks

Here is my code:

eval {

    local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die("alarm\n") };

    alarm 60;
    &parsePageFunction();
    alarm 0;
};#eval

if($@) {

    if($@ eq "alarm\n") { print("Webpage Timed Out.\n\n"); }#if
    else { die($@."\n"); }#else
}#if
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T21:16:20+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:16 pm

    Depending on where exactly in the code it is getting stuck, you might be running into an issue with perl’s safe signals. See the perlipc documentation on workarounds (E.g. Perl::Unsafe::Signals).

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