temporary-1.2.1.1: Portable temporary file and directory support
Safe HaskellSafe-Inferred
LanguageHaskell2010

System.IO.Temp

Description

Functions to create temporary files and directories.

Most functions come in two flavours: those that create files/directories under the system standard temporary directory and those that use the user-supplied directory.

The functions that create files/directories under the system standard temporary directory will return canonical absolute paths (see getCanonicalTemporaryDirectory). The functions use the user-supplied directory do not canonicalize the returned path.

The action inside withTempFile or withTempDirectory is allowed to remove the temporary file/directory if it needs to.

Templates and file names

The treatment of templates differs somewhat for files vs directories.

For files, the template has form name.ext, and a random number will be placed between between the name and the extension to yield a unique file name, e.g. name1804289383846930886.ext.

For directories, no extension is recognized, so a number will be simply appended to the end of the template. Moreover, the number will be smaller, as it is derived from the current process's PID (but the result is still a unique directory name). So, for instance, the directory template dir may result in a directory named dir30112.

Synopsis

Documentation

withSystemTempFile Source #

Arguments

:: (MonadIO m, MonadMask m) 
=> String

File name template

-> (FilePath -> Handle -> m a)

Callback that can use the file

-> m a 

Create, open, and use a temporary file in the system standard temporary directory.

The temp file is deleted after use.

Behaves exactly the same as withTempFile, except that the parent temporary directory will be that returned by getCanonicalTemporaryDirectory.

withSystemTempDirectory Source #

Arguments

:: (MonadIO m, MonadMask m) 
=> String

Directory name template

-> (FilePath -> m a)

Callback that can use the directory

-> m a 

Create and use a temporary directory in the system standard temporary directory.

Behaves exactly the same as withTempDirectory, except that the parent temporary directory will be that returned by getCanonicalTemporaryDirectory.

withTempFile Source #

Arguments

:: (MonadIO m, MonadMask m) 
=> FilePath

Parent directory to create the file in

-> String

File name template

-> (FilePath -> Handle -> m a)

Callback that can use the file

-> m a 

Create, open, and use a temporary file in the given directory.

The temp file is deleted after use.

withTempDirectory Source #

Arguments

:: (MonadMask m, MonadIO m) 
=> FilePath

Parent directory to create the directory in

-> String

Directory name template

-> (FilePath -> m a)

Callback that can use the directory

-> m a 

Create and use a temporary directory inside the given directory.

The directory is deleted after use.

openNewBinaryFile :: FilePath -> String -> IO (FilePath, Handle) Source #

Like openBinaryTempFile, but uses 666 rather than 600 for the permissions.

Equivalent to openBinaryTempFileWithDefaultPermissions.

createTempDirectory Source #

Arguments

:: FilePath

Parent directory to create the directory in

-> String

Directory name template

-> IO FilePath 

Create a temporary directory.

writeTempFile Source #

Arguments

:: FilePath

Parent directory to create the file in

-> String

File name template

-> String

Data to store in the file

-> IO FilePath

Path to the (written and closed) file

Create a unique new file, write (text mode) a given data string to it, and close the handle again. The file will not be deleted automatically, and only the current user will have permission to access the file.

Since: 1.2.1

writeSystemTempFile Source #

Arguments

:: String

File name template

-> String

Data to store in the file

-> IO FilePath

Path to the (written and closed) file

Like writeTempFile, but use the system directory for temporary files.

Since: 1.2.1

emptyTempFile Source #

Arguments

:: FilePath

Parent directory to create the file in

-> String

File name template

-> IO FilePath

Path to the (written and closed) file

Create a unique new empty file. (Equivalent to writeTempFile with empty data string.) This is useful if the actual content is provided by an external process.

Since: 1.2.1

emptySystemTempFile Source #

Arguments

:: String

File name template

-> IO FilePath

Path to the (written and closed) file

Like emptyTempFile, but use the system directory for temporary files.

Since: 1.2.1

Re-exports from System.IO

openTempFile #

Arguments

:: FilePath

Directory in which to create the file

-> String

File name template. If the template is "foo.ext" then the created file will be "fooXXX.ext" where XXX is some random number. Note that this should not contain any path separator characters. On Windows, the template prefix may be truncated to 3 chars, e.g. "foobar.ext" will be "fooXXX.ext".

-> IO (FilePath, Handle) 

The function creates a temporary file in ReadWrite mode. The created file isn't deleted automatically, so you need to delete it manually.

The file is created with permissions such that only the current user can read/write it.

With some exceptions (see below), the file will be created securely in the sense that an attacker should not be able to cause openTempFile to overwrite another file on the filesystem using your credentials, by putting symbolic links (on Unix) in the place where the temporary file is to be created. On Unix the O_CREAT and O_EXCL flags are used to prevent this attack, but note that O_EXCL is sometimes not supported on NFS filesystems, so if you rely on this behaviour it is best to use local filesystems only.

openBinaryTempFile :: FilePath -> String -> IO (FilePath, Handle) #

Like openTempFile, but opens the file in binary mode. See openBinaryFile for more comments.

Auxiliary functions

getCanonicalTemporaryDirectory :: IO FilePath Source #

Return the absolute and canonical path to the system temporary directory.

>>> setCurrentDirectory "/home/feuerbach/"
>>> setEnv "TMPDIR" "."
>>> getTemporaryDirectory
"."
>>> getCanonicalTemporaryDirectory
"/home/feuerbach"