Temporary file and directory creator
npm install tmpA simple temporary file and directory creator for [node.js.][1]





This is a [widely used library][2] to create temporary files and directories
in a [node.js][1] environment.
Tmp offers both an asynchronous and a synchronous API. For all API calls, all
the parameters are optional. There also exists a promisified version of the
API, see [tmp-promise][5].
Tmp uses crypto for determining random file names, or, when using templates,
a six letter random identifier. And just in case that you do not have that much
entropy left on your system, Tmp will fall back to pseudo random numbers.
You can set whether you want to remove the temporary file on process exit or
not.
If you do not want to store your temporary directories and files in the
standard OS temporary directory, then you are free to override that as well.
All breaking changes that had been introduced, i.e.
- tmpdir must be located under the system defined tmpdir root.
- Spaces being collapsed into single spaces
- Removal of all single and double quote characters
have been reverted in v0.2.2 and tmp should now behave as it did before the
introduction of these breaking changes.
Other breaking changes, i.e.
- template must be relative to tmpdir
- name must be relative to tmpdir
- dir option must be relative to tmpdir
are still in place.
In order to override the system's tmpdir, you will have to use the newly
introduced tmpdir option.
See the CHANGELOG for more information.
- Node version <= 14.4 has been dropped.
- rimraf has been dropped from the dependencies
Since version 0.2.2, all support for node version <= 14 has been dropped.
Since version 0.1.0, all support for node versions < 0.10.0 has been dropped.
Most importantly, any support for earlier versions of node-tmp was also dropped.
If you still require node versions < 0.10.0, then you must limit your node-tmp
dependency to versions below 0.1.0.
Since version 0.0.33, all support for node versions < 0.8 has been dropped.
If you still require node version 0.8, then you must limit your node-tmp
dependency to version 0.0.33.
For node versions < 0.8 you must limit your node-tmp dependency to
versions < 0.0.33.
``bash`
npm install tmp
Please also check [API docs][4].
If graceful cleanup is set, tmp will remove all controlled temporary objects on process exit, otherwise the temporary objects will remain in place, waiting to be cleaned up on system restart or otherwise scheduled temporary object removal.
To enforce this, you can call the setGracefulCleanup() method:
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.setGracefulCleanup();
`
Simple temporary file creation, the file will be closed and unlinked on process exit.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.file(function _tempFileCreated(err, path, fd, cleanupCallback) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('File: ', path);
console.log('Filedescriptor: ', fd);
// If we don't need the file anymore we could manually call the cleanupCallback
// But that is not necessary if we didn't pass the keep option because the library
// will clean after itself.
cleanupCallback();
});
`
A synchronous version of the above.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
const tmpobj = tmp.fileSync();
console.log('File: ', tmpobj.name);
console.log('Filedescriptor: ', tmpobj.fd);
// If we don't need the file anymore we could manually call the removeCallback
// But that is not necessary if we didn't pass the keep option because the library
// will clean after itself.
tmpobj.removeCallback();
`
Note that this might throw an exception if either the maximum limit of retries
for creating a temporary name fails, or, in case that you do not have the permission
to write to the directory where the temporary file should be created in.
Simple temporary directory creation, it will be removed on process exit.
If the directory still contains items on process exit, then it won't be removed.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.dir(function _tempDirCreated(err, path, cleanupCallback) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('Dir: ', path);
// Manual cleanup
cleanupCallback();
});
`
If you want to cleanup the directory even when there are entries in it, then
you can pass the unsafeCleanup option when creating it.
A synchronous version of the above.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
const tmpobj = tmp.dirSync();
console.log('Dir: ', tmpobj.name);
// Manual cleanup
tmpobj.removeCallback();
`
Note that this might throw an exception if either the maximum limit of retries
for creating a temporary name fails, or, in case that you do not have the permission
to write to the directory where the temporary directory should be created in.
It is possible with this library to generate a unique filename in the specified
directory.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.tmpName(function _tempNameGenerated(err, path) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('Created temporary filename: ', path);
});
`
A synchronous version of the above.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
const name = tmp.tmpNameSync();
console.log('Created temporary filename: ', name);
`
Creates a file with mode 0644, prefix will be prefix- and postfix will be .txt.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.file({ mode: 0o644, prefix: 'prefix-', postfix: '.txt' }, function _tempFileCreated(err, path, fd) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('File: ', path);
console.log('Filedescriptor: ', fd);
});
`
A synchronous version of the above.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
const tmpobj = tmp.fileSync({ mode: 0o644, prefix: 'prefix-', postfix: '.txt' });
console.log('File: ', tmpobj.name);
console.log('Filedescriptor: ', tmpobj.fd);
`
As a side effect of creating a unique file tmp gets a file descriptor that isfd
returned to the user as the parameter. The descriptor may be used by theremoveCallback
application and is closed when the is invoked.
In some use cases the application does not need the descriptor, needs to close it
without removing the file, or needs to remove the file without closing the
descriptor. Two options control how the descriptor is managed:
* discardDescriptor - if true causes tmp to close the descriptor after the filefd
is created. In this case the parameter is undefined.detachDescriptor
* - if true causes tmp to return the descriptor in the fd
parameter, but it is the application's responsibility to close it when it is no
longer needed.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.file({ discardDescriptor: true }, function _tempFileCreated(err, path, fd, cleanupCallback) {
if (err) throw err;
// fd will be undefined, allowing application to use fs.createReadStream(path)
// without holding an unused descriptor open.
});
`
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.file({ detachDescriptor: true }, function _tempFileCreated(err, path, fd, cleanupCallback) {
if (err) throw err;
cleanupCallback();
// Application can store data through fd here; the space used will automatically
// be reclaimed by the operating system when the descriptor is closed or program
// terminates.
});
`
Creates a directory with mode 0755, prefix will be myTmpDir_.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.dir({ mode: 0o750, prefix: 'myTmpDir_' }, function _tempDirCreated(err, path) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('Dir: ', path);
});
`
Again, a synchronous version of the above.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
const tmpobj = tmp.dirSync({ mode: 0750, prefix: 'myTmpDir_' });
console.log('Dir: ', tmpobj.name);
`
Creates a new temporary directory with mode 0700 and filename like /tmp/tmp-nk2J1u.
IMPORTANT NOTE: template no longer accepts a path. Use the dir option instead if you
require tmp to create your temporary filesystem object in a different place than the
default tmp.tmpdir.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
tmp.dir({ template: 'tmp-XXXXXX' }, function _tempDirCreated(err, path) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('Dir: ', path);
});
`
This will behave similarly to the asynchronous version.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
const tmpobj = tmp.dirSync({ template: 'tmp-XXXXXX' });
console.log('Dir: ', tmpobj.name);
`
Using tmpName() you can create temporary file names asynchronously.prefix
The function accepts all standard options, e.g. , postfix, dir, and so on.
You can also leave out the options altogether and just call the function with a callback as first parameter.
`javascript
const tmp = require('tmp');
const options = {};
tmp.tmpName(options, function _tempNameGenerated(err, path) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log('Created temporary filename: ', path);
});
`
The tmpNameSync() function works similarly to tmpName().
Again, you can leave out the options altogether and just invoke the function without any parameters.
`javascript`
const tmp = require('tmp');
const options = {};
const tmpname = tmp.tmpNameSync(options);
console.log('Created temporary filename: ', tmpname);
All options are optional :)
* name: a fixed name that overrides random name generation, the name must be relative and must not contain path segmentsmode
* : the file mode to create with, falls back to 0o600 on file creation and 0o700 on directory creationprefix
* : the optional prefix, defaults to tmppostfix
* : the optional postfixtemplate
* : [mkstemp][3] like filename template, no default, must include XXXXXX once for random name generation, e.g.dir
'foo-bar-XXXXXX'.
* : the optional temporary directory that must be relative to the system's default temporary directory.tmpdir
absolute paths are fine as long as they point to a location under the system's default temporary directory.
Any directories along the so specified path must exist, otherwise a ENOENT error will be thrown upon access,
as tmp will not check the availability of the path, nor will it establish the requested path for you.
* : allows you to override the system's root tmp directorytries
* : how many times should the function try to get a unique filename before giving up, default 3keep
* : signals that the temporary file or directory should not be deleted on exit, default is falsecleanupCallback
* In order to clean up, you will have to call the provided function manually.unsafeCleanup
* : recursively removes the created temporary directory, even when it's not empty. default is falsedetachDescriptor
* : detaches the file descriptor, caller is responsible for closing the file, tmp will no longer try closing the file during garbage collectiondiscardDescriptor`: discards the file descriptor (closes file, fd is -1), tmp will no longer try closing the file during garbage collection
*
[1]: http://nodejs.org/
[2]: https://www.npmjs.com/browse/depended/tmp
[3]: http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/online/pages/man3/mkstemp.3.html
[4]: https://raszi.github.io/node-tmp/
[5]: https://github.com/benjamingr/tmp-promise