How can I suppress warnings from a Perl function?

This feature of PHP is crazy and should be avoided whenever possible.

Perl has two kinds of exceptions: Fatal errors and warnings. Warnings may either be emitted by Perl itself, or by user code.

Inside a certain static/lexical scope, Perl's builtin warnings can be switched off like:

use warnings;

foo();

sub foo {
  no warnings 'uninitialized';  # recommended: only switch of specific categories
  warn "hello\n";
  1 + undef;  # Otherwise: Use of uninitialized value in addition (+)
}

Output: hello on STDERR.

(A list of all warnings categories can be found here )

But this can't be used to remove warnings from code you are calling (dynamic scope). This also doesn't silence user-defined warnings.

In this case, you can write a handler for the __WARN__ pseudo-signal:

use warnings;
{
  local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { };
  foo();
  print "bye\n";
}

sub foo {
  warn "hello\n";
  1 + undef;
}

Output: bye on STDOUT.

We can abstract that into a function muffle:

sub muffle {
  my $func = shift;
  local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { };
  return $func->(@_);
}

muffle(\&foo, 1, 2, 3); # foo(1, 2, 3)

However, this is an incredibly dumb thing to do:

  • Warnings point to potential problems and bugs. Fix those instead of ignoring them.
  • Don't activate built-in warnings in the first place for categories you aren't interested in. E.g. many people are perfectly happy that an undef value stringifies to the empty string, and don't want any warning for that.

The strategies outlined here do not handle fatal exceptions, use Try::Tiny instead.


You could also just run perl -X and disable all warnings.

I think there are perfectly valid reasons for doing this FWIW.