start: '';
start: '
]])
-AT_CHECK([[perl -e "print 'start: \'';" >> empty.y || exit 77]])
+AT_CHECK([[$PERL -e "print 'start: \'';" >> empty.y || exit 77]])
AT_BISON_CHECK([empty.y], [1], [],
[[empty.y:2.8-9: warning: empty character literal [-Wother]
start: 'ab';
start: 'ab
]])
-AT_CHECK([[perl -e "print 'start: \'ab';" >> two.y || exit 77]])
+AT_CHECK([[$PERL -e "print 'start: \'ab';" >> two.y || exit 77]])
AT_BISON_CHECK([two.y], [1], [],
[[two.y:2.8-11: warning: extra characters in character literal [-Wother]
start: 'abc';
start: 'abc
]])
-AT_CHECK([[perl -e "print 'start: \'abc';" >> three.y || exit 77]])
+AT_CHECK([[$PERL -e "print 'start: \'abc';" >> three.y || exit 77]])
AT_BISON_CHECK([three.y], [1], [],
[[three.y:2.8-12: warning: extra characters in character literal [-Wother]
# Beside we cannot even expect "echo '\0'" to output two characters
# (well three with \n): at least Bash 3.2 converts the two-character
# sequence "\0" into a single NUL character.
-AT_CHECK([[perl -e 'print "start: \"\\\t\\\f\\\0\\\1\" ;";' >> input.y \
+AT_CHECK([[$PERL -e 'print "start: \"\\\t\\\f\\\0\\\1\" ;";' >> input.y \
|| exit 77]])
AT_BISON_CHECK([input.y], [1], [],