I think I've found a bug in *coreutils*, *env*. Linux debian 4.9.0-4-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.9.65-3+deb9u1 (2017-12-23) x86_64 GNU/Linux All my Perl scripts contain either of these shebangs: #!/usr/bin/env perl -w or #!/usr/bin/env perl -wd When I attempt to run a Perl script with either of these shebangs in debian I get: /usr/bin/env: ‘perl -w’: No such file or directory It is not perl that can't be found; it is either *env*'s or *bash*'s handling of the argument. If I remove the *-w* and/or the *-wd* arguments the scripts execute, but of course, without the benefit of those switches. The man page for *env* asserts that any command may take an argument. I have tried every way I can think of to quote the *-w* and the *-wd* but *env* is treating these perl command line arguments as filenames, and since they aren't files, renders that error message. I'm running the latest *coreutils* as in this apt-get fragment: Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information... Done coreutils is already the newest version (8.26-3). Both of these shebangs work correctly in macOS 10.13.3 with the native perl from Apple and perlbrew perl. That is where I do most of my perl work but now I need to move those scripts to debian, without changing the shebangs. Is this a bug in *env*, something in bash or pilot error? Regards, T.W. Schmidt