NAME¶
tmpnam, tmpnam_r - create a name for a temporary file
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <stdio.h>
char *tmpnam(char *s);
DESCRIPTION¶
Note: Avoid use of
tmpnam(); use
mkstemp(3) or
tmpfile(3) instead.
The
tmpnam() function returns a pointer to a string that is a valid
filename, and such that a file with this name did not exist at some point in
time, so that naive programmers may think it a suitable name for a temporary
file. If the argument
s is NULL, this name is generated in an internal
static buffer and may be overwritten by the next call to
tmpnam(). If
s is not NULL, the name is copied to the character array (of length at
least
L_tmpnam) pointed to by
s and the value
s is
returned in case of success.
The pathname that is created, has a directory prefix
P_tmpdir. (Both
L_tmpnam and
P_tmpdir are defined in
<stdio.h>,
just like the
TMP_MAX mentioned below.)
RETURN VALUE¶
The
tmpnam() function returns a pointer to a unique temporary filename,
or NULL if a unique name cannot be generated.
ERRORS¶
No errors are defined.
ATTRIBUTES¶
Multithreading (see pthreads(7))¶
The
tmpnam() function is thread-safe with exceptions. It is not
thread-safe if called with a NULL parameter.
The
tmpnam_r() function is thread-safe.
SVr4, 4.3BSD, C89, C99, POSIX.1-2001. POSIX.1-2008 marks
tmpnam() as
obsolete.
NOTES¶
The
tmpnam() function generates a different string each time it is
called, up to
TMP_MAX times. If it is called more than
TMP_MAX
times, the behavior is implementation defined.
Although
tmpnam() generates names that are difficult to guess, it is
nevertheless possible that between the time that
tmpnam() returns a
pathname, and the time that the program opens it, another program might create
that pathname using
open(2), or create it as a symbolic link. This can
lead to security holes. To avoid such possibilities, use the
open(2)
O_EXCL flag to open the pathname. Or better yet, use
mkstemp(3)
or
tmpfile(3).
Portable applications that use threads cannot call
tmpnam() with a NULL
argument if either
_POSIX_THREADS or
_POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS is defined.
A POSIX draft proposed to use a function
tmpnam_r() defined by
char *
tmpnam_r(char *s)
{
return s ? tmpnam(s) : NULL;
}
apparently as a warning not to use NULL. A few systems implement it. To get a
glibc prototype for this function from
<stdio.h>, define
_SVID_SOURCE or
_BSD_SOURCE (before including
any header
file).
BUGS¶
Never use this function. Use
mkstemp(3) or
tmpfile(3) instead.
SEE ALSO¶
mkstemp(3),
mktemp(3),
tempnam(3),
tmpfile(3)
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.74 of the Linux
man-pages project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest
version of this page, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.