If you need to use a temporary file in your program, you can use the
tmpfile function to open it. Or you can use the tmpnam
(better: tmpnam_r) function make a name for a temporary file and
then open it in the usual way with fopen.
The tempnam function is like tmpnam but lets you choose
what directory temporary files will go in, and something about what
their file names will look like. Important for multi threaded programs
is that tempnam is reentrant while tmpnam is not since it
returns a pointer to a static buffer.
These facilities are declared in the header file `stdio.h'.
fopen with mode "wb+". The file is deleted
automatically when it is closed or when the program terminates. (On
some other ISO C systems the file may fail to be deleted if the program
terminates abnormally).
This function is reentrant.
L_tmpnam characters,
and the result is written into that array.
It is possible for tmpnam to fail if you call it too many times
without removing previously created files. This is because the fixed
length of a temporary file name gives room for only a finite number of
different names. If tmpnam fails, it returns a null pointer.
tmpnam function. But it
does not allow result to be a null pointer. In the later case a
null pointer is returned.
This function is reentrant because the non-reentrant situation of
tmpnam cannot happen here.
tmpnam function.
TMP_MAX is a lower bound for how many temporary names
you can create with tmpnam. You can rely on being able to call
tmpnam at least this many times before it might fail saying you
have made too many temporary file names.
With the GNU library, you can create a very large number of temporary
file names--if you actually create the files, you will probably run out
of disk space before you run out of names. Some other systems have a
fixed, small limit on the number of temporary files. The limit is never
less than 25.
malloc; you should release its storage with free when
it is no longer needed.
Because the string is dynamically allocated this function is reentrant.
The directory prefix for the temporary file name is determined by testing each of the following, in sequence. The directory must exist and be writable.
TMPDIR, if it is defined. For security
reasons this only happens if the program is not SUID or SGID enabled.
P_tmpdir macro.
This function is defined for SVID compatibility.
Older Unix systems did not have the functions just described. Instead
they used mktemp and mkstemp. Both of these functions
work by modifying a file name template string you pass. The last six
characters of this string must be `XXXXXX'. These six `X's
are replaced with six characters which make the whole string a unique
file name. Usually the template string is something like
`/tmp/prefixXXXXXX', and each program uses a unique prefix.
Note: Because mktemp and mkstemp modify the
template string, you must not pass string constants to them.
String constants are normally in read-only storage, so your program
would crash when mktemp or mkstemp tried to modify the
string.
mktemp function generates a unique file name by modifying
template as described above. If successful, it returns
template as modified. If mktemp cannot find a unique file
name, it makes template an empty string and returns that. If
template does not end with `XXXXXX', mktemp returns a
null pointer.
mkstemp function generates a unique file name just as
mktemp does, but it also opens the file for you with open
(see section Opening and Closing Files). If successful, it modifies
template in place and returns a file descriptor open on that file
for reading and writing. If mkstemp cannot create a
uniquely-named file, it makes template an empty string and returns
-1. If template does not end with `XXXXXX',
mkstemp returns -1 and does not modify template.
Unlike mktemp, mkstemp is actually guaranteed to create a
unique file that cannot possibly clash with any other program trying to
create a temporary file. This is because it works by calling
open with the O_EXCL flag bit, which says you want to
always create a new file, and get an error if the file already exists.
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