Next: File Name Completion, Previous: File Name Expansion, Up: File Names
Some programs need to write temporary files. Here is the usual way to construct a name for such a file:
(make-temp-file name-of-application)
The job of make-temp-file
is to prevent two different users or
two different jobs from trying to use the exact same file name.
This function creates a temporary file and returns its name. Emacs creates the temporary file's name by adding to prefix some random characters that are different in each Emacs job. The result is guaranteed to be a newly created empty file. On MS-DOS, this function can truncate the string prefix to fit into the 8+3 file-name limits. If prefix is a relative file name, it is expanded against
temporary-file-directory
.(make-temp-file "foo") ⇒ "/tmp/foo232J6v"When
make-temp-file
returns, the file has been created and is empty. At that point, you should write the intended contents into the file.If dir-flag is non-
nil
,make-temp-file
creates an empty directory instead of an empty file. It returns the file name, not the directory name, of that directory. See Directory Names.If suffix is non-
nil
,make-temp-file
adds it at the end of the file name.To prevent conflicts among different libraries running in the same Emacs, each Lisp program that uses
make-temp-file
should have its own prefix. The number added to the end of prefix distinguishes between the same application running in different Emacs jobs. Additional added characters permit a large number of distinct names even in one Emacs job.
The default directory for temporary files is controlled by the
variable temporary-file-directory
. This variable gives the user
a uniform way to specify the directory for all temporary files. Some
programs use small-temporary-file-directory
instead, if that is
non-nil
. To use it, you should expand the prefix against
the proper directory before calling make-temp-file
.
This variable specifies the directory name for creating temporary files. Its value should be a directory name (see Directory Names), but it is good for Lisp programs to cope if the value is a directory's file name instead. Using the value as the second argument to
expand-file-name
is a good way to achieve that.The default value is determined in a reasonable way for your operating system; it is based on the TMPDIR, TMP and TEMP environment variables, with a fall-back to a system-dependent name if none of these variables is defined.
Even if you do not use
make-temp-file
to create the temporary file, you should still use this variable to decide which directory to put the file in. However, if you expect the file to be small, you should usesmall-temporary-file-directory
first if that is non-nil
.
This variable specifies the directory name for creating certain temporary files, which are likely to be small.
If you want to write a temporary file which is likely to be small, you should compute the directory like this:
(make-temp-file (expand-file-name prefix (or small-temporary-file-directory temporary-file-directory)))
This function generates a string that can be used as a unique file name. The name starts with base-name, and has several random characters appended to it, which are different in each Emacs job. It is like
make-temp-file
except that (i) it just constructs a name, and does not create a file, and (ii) base-name should be an absolute file name (on MS-DOS, this function can truncate base-name to fit into the 8+3 file-name limits).Warning: In most cases, you should not use this function; use
make-temp-file
instead! This function is susceptible to a race condition, between themake-temp-name
call and the creation of the file, which in some cases may cause a security hole.