Expand description
Temporary files and directories.
- Use the
tempfile()
function for temporary files - Use the
tempdir()
function for temporary directories.
Design
This crate provides several approaches to creating temporary files and directories.
tempfile()
relies on the OS to remove the temporary file once the last handle is closed.
TempDir
and NamedTempFile
both rely on Rust destructors for cleanup.
When choosing between the temporary file variants, prefer tempfile
unless you either need to know the file’s path or to be able to persist it.
Resource Leaking
tempfile
will (almost) never fail to cleanup temporary resources. However TempDir
and NamedTempFile
will
fail if their destructors don’t run. This is because tempfile
relies on the OS to cleanup the
underlying file, while TempDir
and NamedTempFile
rely on rust destructors to do so.
Destructors may fail to run if the process exits through an unhandled signal interrupt (like SIGINT
),
or if the instance is declared statically (like with lazy_static
), among other possible
reasons.
Security
In the presence of pathological temporary file cleaner, relying on file paths is unsafe because a temporary file cleaner could delete the temporary file which an attacker could then replace.
tempfile
doesn’t rely on file paths so this isn’t an issue. However, NamedTempFile
does
rely on file paths for some operations. See the security documentation on
the NamedTempFile
type for more information.
Early drop pitfall
Because TempDir
and NamedTempFile
rely on their destructors for cleanup, this can lead
to an unexpected early removal of the directory/file, usually when working with APIs which are
generic over AsRef<Path>
. Consider the following example:
// Create a directory inside of `std::env::temp_dir()`.
let temp_dir = tempdir()?;
// Spawn the `touch` command inside the temporary directory and collect the exit status
// Note that `temp_dir` is **not** moved into `current_dir`, but passed as a reference
let exit_status = Command::new("touch").arg("tmp").current_dir(&temp_dir).status()?;
assert!(exit_status.success());
This works because a reference to temp_dir
is passed to current_dir
, resulting in the
destructor of temp_dir
being run after the Command
has finished execution. Moving the
TempDir
into the current_dir
call would result in the TempDir
being converted into
an internal representation, with the original value being dropped and the directory thus
being deleted, before the command can be executed.
The touch
command would fail with an No such file or directory
error.
Examples
Create a temporary file and write some data into it:
use tempfile::tempfile;
use std::io::{self, Write};
// Create a file inside of `std::env::temp_dir()`.
let mut file = tempfile()?;
writeln!(file, "Brian was here. Briefly.")?;
Create a named temporary file and open an independent file handle:
use tempfile::NamedTempFile;
use std::io::{self, Write, Read};
let text = "Brian was here. Briefly.";
// Create a file inside of `std::env::temp_dir()`.
let mut file1 = NamedTempFile::new()?;
// Re-open it.
let mut file2 = file1.reopen()?;
// Write some test data to the first handle.
file1.write_all(text.as_bytes())?;
// Read the test data using the second handle.
let mut buf = String::new();
file2.read_to_string(&mut buf)?;
assert_eq!(buf, text);
Create a temporary directory and add a file to it:
use tempfile::tempdir;
use std::fs::File;
use std::io::{self, Write};
// Create a directory inside of `std::env::temp_dir()`.
let dir = tempdir()?;
let file_path = dir.path().join("my-temporary-note.txt");
let mut file = File::create(file_path)?;
writeln!(file, "Brian was here. Briefly.")?;
// By closing the `TempDir` explicitly, we can check that it has
// been deleted successfully. If we don't close it explicitly,
// the directory will still be deleted when `dir` goes out
// of scope, but we won't know whether deleting the directory
// succeeded.
drop(file);
dir.close()?;
Structs
- Create a new temporary file or directory with custom parameters.
- A named temporary file.
- Error returned when persisting a temporary file path fails.
- Error returned when persisting a temporary file fails.
- An object that behaves like a regular temporary file, but keeps data in memory until it reaches a configured size, at which point the data is written to a temporary file on disk, and further operations use the file on disk.
- A directory in the filesystem that is automatically deleted when it goes out of scope.
- A path to a named temporary file without an open file handle.
Functions
- Create a new spooled temporary file.
- Create a new temporary directory.
- Create a new temporary directory in a specific directory.
- Create a new temporary file.
- Create a new temporary file in the specified directory.