Secure temporary file

Create a temporary file, securely and exclusively (opening it such that there are no possible race conditions).

Task
Secure temporary file
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
Task

It's fine assuming local filesystem semantics (NFS or other networking filesystems can have signficantly more complicated semantics for satisfying the "no race conditions" criteria).

The function should automatically resolve name collisions and should only fail in cases where permission is denied, the filesystem is read-only or full, or similar conditions exist (returning an error or raising an exception as appropriate to the language/environment).

Ada

Ada creates a temporary file whenever the create procedure is called without file name. That temporary file is automatically deleted at the end of the program creating the file.

This example creates a temporary file, writes to the file, then reads from the file.

with Ada.Text_Io; use Ada.Text_Io;

procedure Temp_File is
   Temp : File_Type;
   Contents : String(1..80);
   Length : Natural;
begin
   -- Create a temporary file
   Create(File => Temp);
   Put_Line(File => Temp, Item => "Hello World");
   Reset(File => Temp, Mode => In_File);
   Get_Line(File => Temp, Item => Contents, Last => Length);
   Put_Line(Contents(1..Length));  
end Temp_File;

BASIC

BBC BASIC

The file is automatically deleted when closed.

      file% = FNopentempfile
      IF file% = 0 ERROR 100, "Failed to open temp file"
      PRINT #file%, "Hello world!"
      PTR#file% = 0
      INPUT #file%, message$
      CLOSE #file%
      PRINT message$
      END
      
      DEF FNopentempfile
      LOCAL pname%, hfile%, chan%
      OPEN_EXISTING = 3
      FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE = &4000000
      GENERIC_READ = &80000000
      GENERIC_WRITE = &40000000
      INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE = -1
      DIM pname% LOCAL 260
      FOR chan% = 5 TO 12
        IF @hfile%(chan%) = 0 EXIT FOR
      NEXT
      IF chan% > 12 THEN = 0
      SYS "GetTempFileName", @tmp$, "BBC", 0, pname%
      SYS "CreateFile", $$pname%, GENERIC_READ OR GENERIC_WRITE, 0, 0, \
      \                 OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE, 0 TO hfile%
      IF hfile% = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE THEN = 0
      @hfile%(chan%) = hfile%
      = chan%

Output:

Hello world!

FreeBASIC

Translation of: BBC BASIC

The file is deleted when closed.

Dim As Long f
Dim As String message

f = Freefile
Open "temp.txt" For Output As #f
If Err > 0 Then Print "Failed to open temp"; f : End
Print #f, "Hello world!"
Close #f

Open "temp.txt" For Input As #f
Line Input #f, message
Close #f
Print message

Shell "del temp.txt"

Sleep

C

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>

int main(void)
{
  FILE *fh = tmpfile(); /* file is automatically deleted when program exits */
  /* do stuff with stream "fh" */
  fclose(fh);
  /* The C standard library also has a tmpnam() function to create a file
    for you to open later. But you should not use it because someone else might
    be able to open the file from the time it is created by this function to the
    time you open it. */
  return 0;
}

The following

Works with: POSIX
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>

int main(void)
{
  char filename[] = "/tmp/prefixXXXXXX";
  int fd = mkstemp(filename);
  puts(filename);
  /* do stuff with file descriptor "fd" */
  close(fd);
  return 0;
}

C#

using System;
using System.IO;

Console.WriteLine(Path.GetTempFileName());

==C# ==

C++

#include <cstdio>

int main() {
	// Creates and opens a temporary file with a unique auto-generated filename.
    // If the program closes the file, the file is automatically deleted.
	// The file is also automatically deleted if the program exits normally.
    std::FILE* temp_file_pointer = std::tmpfile();

    // Using functions which take a file pointer as an argument
    std::fputs("Hello world", temp_file_pointer);
    std::rewind(temp_file_pointer);
    char buffer[12];
    std::fgets(buffer, sizeof buffer, temp_file_pointer);
    printf(buffer);
}
Output:
Hello world

Clojure

It is good practice to explicitly delete temp files immediately once they've been used.

(let [temp-file (java.io.File/createTempFile "pre" ".suff")]
  ; insert logic here that would use temp-file
  (.delete temp-file))

D

Works with: Tango
module tempfile ;
import tango.io.TempFile, tango.io.Stdout ;

void main(char[][] args) {
  
  // create a temporary file that will be deleted automatically when out of scope
  auto tempTransient = new TempFile(TempFile.Transient) ;
  Stdout(tempTransient.path()).newline ;

  // create a temporary file, still persist after the TempFile object has been destroyed
  auto tempPermanent = new TempFile(TempFile.Permanent) ;
  Stdout(tempPermanent.path()).newline ;  

  // both can only be accessed by the current user (the program?). 
}

Delphi

program Secure_temporary_file;

{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}

uses
  System.SysUtils,
  System.IOUtils;

var
  FileName, buf: string;

begin
  FileName := TPath.GetTempFileName;
  with TFile.Open(FileName, TFileMode.fmCreate, TFileAccess.faReadWrite,
    Tfileshare.fsNone) do
  begin
    buf := 'This is a exclusive temp file';
    Write(buf[1], buf.Length * sizeof(char));
    Free;
  end;

  writeln(FileName);
  Readln;
end.

Emacs Lisp

make-temp-file creates a new empty temporary file, with perms "0700" so read-write to the current user only.

(make-temp-file "prefix")
;; => "/tmp/prefix25452LPe"

F#

printfn $"%s{System.IO.Path.GetTempFileName()}"
Output:
/tmp/tmpEuSgiY.tmp

For the cynical who may not believe the file has been created

nigel@nigel:/tmp$ ls *.tmp tmpEuSgiY.tmp


Fortran

Supposing F is an integer variable, whose value might be 10. This is the I/O unit number, and would be used in READ(F,etc. and WRITE(F,etc. statements.

        OPEN (F,STATUS = 'SCRATCH')   !Temporary disc storage.

Other attributes might be specified depending on the intended usage, but note that no file name is given. When the file is closed, its storage vanishes back to the file system.

Following the OPEN statement with INQUIRE (F,NAME = FNAME); WRITE (6,*) FNAME yields C:\DOCUME~1\Nicky\LOCALS~1\Temp\FOR57.tmp which is the DOS style short (8.3) file name for C:\Documents and Settings\Nicky\Local Settings\Temp\FOR57.tmp and the example's numerical value of 57 will be different on another run. Thus, the file could be interfered with, except that a file opened with WRITE access is exclusive-use, and there is no point in opening a SCRATCH file with READONLY (to allow sharing) because it cannot be a pre-existing disc file. However, the actual behaviour of a particular file system and compiler may or may not support such refinements as shared access as implied by non-standard keywords as READONLY, etc.

Go

Use ioutil.TempFile

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"io/ioutil"
	"log"
	"os"
)

func main() {
	f, err := ioutil.TempFile("", "foo")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer f.Close()

	// We need to make sure we remove the file
	// once it is no longer needed.
	defer os.Remove(f.Name())

	// … use the file via 'f' …
	fmt.Fprintln(f, "Using temporary file:", f.Name())
	f.Seek(0, 0)
	d, err := ioutil.ReadAll(f)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	fmt.Printf("Wrote and read: %s\n", d)

        // The defer statements above will close and remove the
        // temporary file here (or on any return of this function).
}
Output:
Wrote and read: Using temporary file: /tmp/foo054003078

Groovy

def file = File.createTempFile( "xxx", ".txt" )

// There is no requirement in the instructions to delete the file.
//file.deleteOnExit()

println file

Output:

C:\DOCUME~1\ROGER~1.GLO\LOCALS~1\Temp\xxx8918700806071036530.txt

Haskell

import System.IO

main = do (pathOfTempFile, h) <- openTempFile "." "prefix.suffix" -- first argument is path to directory where you want to put it
          -- do stuff with it here; "h" is the Handle to the opened file
          return ()

HicEst

! The "scratch" option opens a file exclusively for the current process.
! A scratch file is automatically deleted upon process termination.

OPEN( FIle='TemporaryAndExclusive', SCRatch, IOStat=ErrNr)
WRITE(FIle='TemporaryAndExclusive') "something"
WRITE(FIle='TemporaryAndExclusive', CLoSe=1) ! explicit "close" deletes file

! Without "scratch" access can be controlled by "denyread", "denywrite", "denyreadwrite" options.

OPEN( FIle='DenyForOthers', DenyREAdWRIte, IOStat=ErrNr)
WRITE(FIle='DenyForOthers') "something"
WRITE(FIle='DenyForOthers', DELETE=1)

Icon and Unicon

A posix-based solution that works in both languages:

procedure main()
    write("Creating: ",fName := !open("mktemp","rp"))
    write(f := open(fName,"w"),"Hello, world")
    close(f)
end

Java

import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;

public class CreateTempFile {
    public static void main(String[] args)  {
        try {
            //create a temp file
            File temp = File.createTempFile("temp-file-name", ".tmp");
            System.out.println("Temp file : " + temp.getAbsolutePath());
        }
        catch(IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
    	}
    }
}

Alternative example

import java.io.BufferedWriter;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.StandardOpenOption;

public final class SecureTemporaryFile {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException  {
        // Create a temporary file in the directory D:\.
        // We should use java.nio.file.Files instead of the old java.io.File, as it is more secure.
        // If the file cannot be created, it will throw an exception. 
        Path temporaryFilePath = Files.createTempFile(Path.of("D:/"), "example", ".tmp");

        // For uniqueness, the Java API will insert a random number between the given prefix
        // and the file extension. 
        System.out.println("Temporary file created: " + temporaryFilePath);

        // Opening it with the following option will cause the file to be deleted when it is closed.
        BufferedWriter tempFileWriter = Files.newBufferedWriter(
                temporaryFilePath, StandardOpenOption.DELETE_ON_CLOSE);
        // ... write to file, read it back in, close it...
    }

}
Output:
Temporary file created: D:\example12312088502442779987.tmp

Julia

Works with: Linux

On Unix systems, Julia calls mkstemp to securely open a temporary file. This is likely multi-thread safe, check your system documentation for verification. This code should also work on Windows, but I've not verified that.

msg = "Rosetta Code, Secure temporary file, implemented with Julia."

(fname, tio) = mktemp()
println(fname, " created as a temporary file.")
println(tio, msg)
close(tio)
println("\"", msg, "\" written to ", fname)

Files written to \tmp persist for the login session, and are thus truly temporary. If the environment variable TMPDIR is set, the temporary file is created in this directory. In this case, the file may not be properly temporary.

ENV["TMPDIR"] = pwd()
(fname, tio) = mktemp()
println(fname, " created as a \"temporary\" file.")
println(tio, msg)
close(tio)
println("\"", msg, "\" written to ", fname)
Output:
/tmp/tmphe0qlu created as a temporary file.
"Rosetta Code, Secure temporary file, implemented with Julia." written to /tmp/tmphe0qlu
/home/mike/rosetta/julia/tmpVNGK8D created as a "temporary" file.
"Rosetta Code, Secure temporary file, implemented with Julia." written to /home/joeb/rosetta/julia/tmpVNGK8D
$ cat /tmp/tmphe0qlu
Rosetta Code, Secure temporary file, implemented with Julia.
$ ls -l /tmp/tmphe0qlu
-rw------- 1 joeb joeb 61 Apr 13 13:18 /tmp/tmphe0qlu
$ cat tmpVNGK8D
Rosetta Code, Secure temporary file, implemented with Julia.
$ ls -l tmpVNGK8D
-rw------- 1 joeb jeob 61 Apr 13 13:18 tmpVNGK8D

Kotlin

import kotlin.io.path.createTempFile
import kotlin.io.path.deleteExisting

fun main() {
    val tempFilePath = createTempFile("example", ".tmp")
    println("Temporary file created: $tempFilePath")
    tempFilePath.deleteExisting()
}

Sample output:

Output:
Temporary file created: /tmp/example14437465325231438926.tmp

Lua

fp = io.tmpfile()

-- do some file operations

fp:close()

M2000 Interpreter

tmp files automatic deleted when Environment end (per running environment)

Module Checkit {
      \\ we get a tempname$ choosed  from Windows
      a$=tempname$
      Try ok  {
            \\ we can use wide to export in utf-16le
            \\ without wide we export as Ansi (set Local to desired language)
            Rem Locale 1033 ' when no use of wide
            Open a$ for wide output exclusive as #f
                  wait 10
                  \\ Notepad can't open, because we open it for exclusive use
                  Win "Notepad", a$     
                  Print  #f, "something"
                  Print "Press a key";Key$
            Close #f
      }
      If error or not ok then Print Error$
      Win "Notepad", a$
}
Checkit

Mathematica /Wolfram Language

tmp = OpenWrite[]
Close[tmp]

Nanoquery

import Nanoquery.IO

def guaranteedTempFile()
	// create a file object to generate temp file names
	$namegen = new(File)

	// generate a temp filename
	$tempname = $namegen.tempFileName()
	
	// file names are generated with uuids so they shouldn't repeat
	// in the case that they do, generate new ones until the generated
	// filename is unique
	$tempfile = new(File, $tempname)
	while ($tempfile.exists())
		$tempname = $namegen.tempFileName()
		$tempfile = new(File, $tempname)
	end

	// create the file and lock it from writing
	$tempfile.create()
	lock $tempfile.fullPath()

	// return the file reference
	return $tempfile
end

NetRexx

This example is incomplete. JVM Windows related bug workaround JDK-4715154 Please ensure that it meets all task requirements and remove this message.
/* NetRexx */
options replace format comments java crossref symbols binary

runSample(arg)
return

-- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
method makeTempFile(prefix = String, suffix = String null, startDir = String null) -
  public static signals IOException returns File
  if startDir \= null then fStartDir = File(startDir)
  else                     fStartDir = null
  ff = File.createTempFile(prefix, suffix, fStartDir)
  ff.deleteOnExit() -- make sure the file is deleted at termination
  return ff

-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
method runSample(arg) private static
  do
    tempFiles = [ -
      makeTempFile('rexx'), -
      makeTempFile('rexx', '.rex'), -
      makeTempFile('rexx', null, './tmp') -
    ]
    loop fFile over tempFiles
      fName = fFile.getCanonicalPath()
      say 'Temporary file:' fName
      end fFile
  catch ex = IOException
    ex.printStackTrace()
  end
  return

Nim

Works with: Nim version 1.6.0
import std/[os, tempfiles]

let (file, path) = createTempFile(prefix = "", suffix = "")
echo path, " created."
file.writeLine("This is a secure temporary file.")
file.close()
for line in path.lines:
  echo line
removeFile(path)
Output:
/tmp/th7lDdkH created.
This is a secure temporary file.

OCaml

From the module Filename, one can use the functions temp_file or open_temp_file

# Filename.temp_file "prefix." ".suffix" ;;
- : string = "/home/blue_prawn/tmp/prefix.301f82.suffix"

Octave

Octave has several related functions

  [FID, MSG] = tmpfile();    % Return the file ID corresponding to a new temporary 
  filename = tmpnam (...);   % generates temporary file name, but does not open file
  [FID, NAME, MSG] = mkstemp (TEMPLATE, DELETE);    % Return the file ID corresponding to a new temporary file with a unique name created from TEMPLATE.

Pascal

Works with: Free_Pascal
Library: SysUtils
Program TempFileDemo;

uses
  SysUtils;

var
  tempFile: text;

begin
  assign (Tempfile, GetTempFileName);
  rewrite (tempFile);
  writeln (tempFile, 5);
  close (tempFile);
end.

Perl

function interface:

use File::Temp qw(tempfile);
$fh = tempfile();
($fh2, $filename) = tempfile(); # this file stays around by default
print "$filename\n";
close $fh;
close $fh2;

object-oriented interface:

use File::Temp;
$fh = new File::Temp;
print $fh->filename, "\n";
close $fh;

Phix

The temp_file() function (see builtins/pfile.e) can be used for this:

without js -- (file i/o)
pp(temp_file())
{integer fn, string name} = temp_file("myapp/tmp","data","log","wb")
pp({fn,name})
close(fn)
{} = delete_file(name)
Output:
`C:\Users\Pete\AppData\Local\Temp\419750.tmp`
{3, `C:\Program Files (x86)\Phix\myapp\tmp\data408865.log`}

If you don't provide an open mode (one of "w", "wb", "a", or "ab") then there is a 1-in-a-million chance someone else will beat you to the punch; if you do provide one, it will open/loop for you.

PHP

$fh = tmpfile();
// do stuff with $fh
fclose($fh);
// file removed when closed

// or:
$filename = tempnam('/tmp', 'prefix');
echo "$filename\n";
// open $filename and do stuff with it

PicoLisp

The 'tmp' function returns temporary file names which are exclusively for the current process (based on the process ID). These files are automatically deleted upon process termination. Background tasks within a single PicoLisp process is always non-preemptive, therefore dedicated locks are usually not necessary. If they are (e.g. because such a file name is passed to a child process), explicit locks with the 'ctl' functions are possible.

: (out (tmp "foo") (println 123))         # Write tempfile
-> 123

: (in (tmp "foo") (read))                 # Read tempfile
-> 123

: (let F (tmp "foo")
   (ctl F                                 # Get exclusive lock
      (in F 
         (let N (read)                    # Atomic increment
            (out F (println (inc N))) ) ) ) )
-> 124

PowerShell

$tempFile = [System.IO.Path]::GetTempFileName()
Set-Content -Path $tempFile -Value "FileName = $tempFile"
Get-Content -Path $tempFile
Remove-Item -Path $tempFile
Output:
FileName = C:\Users\Owner\AppData\Local\Temp\tmpB68.tmp

PureBasic

Procedure.s TempFile()
  Protected a, Result$

  For a = 0 To 9999
    Result$ = GetTemporaryDirectory() + StringField(GetFilePart(ProgramFilename()),1,".")
    Result$ + "_" + Str(ElapsedMilliseconds()) + "_(" + RSet(Str(a),4,"0") + ").tmp"
    If FileSize(Result$) = -1                                      ;  -1 = File not found
      ProcedureReturn Result$
    EndIf
  Next

  ProcedureReturn ""
EndProcedure


Define File, File$

File$ = TempFile()
If File$ <> ""
  File = CreateFile(#PB_Any, File$)
  If File <> 0
    WriteString(File, "Some temporary data here...")
    CloseFile(File)
  EndIf
EndIf

Python

Works with: Python version 2.3+

In both cases, the temporary file will be deleted automatically when the file is closed. The invisible file will not be accessible on UNIX-like systems. You can use os.link to preserve the visible temporary file contents.


>>> import tempfile
>>> invisible = tempfile.TemporaryFile()
>>> invisible.name
'<fdopen>'
>>> visible = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile()
>>> visible.name
'/tmp/tmpZNfc_s'
>>> visible.close()
>>> invisible.close()


More low level way, if you have special needs. This was the only option before Python 2.3:


fd, path = tempfile.mkstemp()
try:
    # use the path or the file descriptor
finally:
    os.close(fd)

Racket

#lang racket
(make-temporary-file)

Raku

(formerly Perl 6)

Works with: Rakudo version 2017.09

This is something best done with a module which is heavily tested, tries to account for all corner cases and automatically cleans up after itself.

Almost verbatim from the synopsis:

use File::Temp;

# Generate a temp file in a temp dir
my ($filename0,$filehandle0) = tempfile;

# specify a template for the filename
#  * are replaced with random characters
my ($filename1,$filehandle1) = tempfile("******");

# Automatically unlink files at DESTROY (this is the default)
my ($filename2,$filehandle2) = tempfile("******", :unlink);

# Specify the directory where the tempfile will be created
my ($filename3,$filehandle3) = tempfile(:tempdir("/path/to/my/dir"));

# don't unlink this one
my ($filename4,$filehandle4) = tempfile(:tempdir('.'), :!unlink);

# specify a prefix, a suffix, or both for the filename
my ($filename5,$filehandle5) = tempfile(:prefix('foo'), :suffix(".txt"));

REXX

REXX uses the underlying OS to create and delete the file.

/*REXX pgm secures (a temporary file), writes to it, displays the file, then deletes it.*/
parse arg tFID # .                               /*obtain optional argument from the CL.*/
if tFID=='' | tFID==","  then tFID= 'TEMP.FILE'  /*Not specified?  Then use the default.*/
if    #=='' |    #==","  then    #= 6            /* "      "         "   "   "     "    */
call lineout tFID                                /*insure file is closed.               */
rc= 0
say '··· creating file: '  tFID
call lineout tFID,,1                             /*insure file is open and at record 1. */
if rc\==0  then call ser rc 'creating file' tFID /*issue error if can't open the file.  */
say '··· writing  file: '  tFID

    do j=1  for #                                /*write a half-dozen records to file.  */
    call lineout tFID, 'line' j                  /*write a  record  to the file.        */
    if rc\==0  then call ser rc 'writing file'  tFID    /*Have an error?  Issue err msg.*/
    end   /*j*/

call lineout tFID                                /*close the file.                      */
say '··· reading/display file: '  tFID

    do j=1  while lines(tFID)>0                  /*read the entire file and display it. */
    x= linein(tFID)                              /*read a record from the file.         */
    if rc\==0  then call ser rc 'reading file'  tFID    /*Have an error?  Issue err msg.*/
    say 'line ' j  " of file" tFID":"  x                /*display a record to the term. */
    end   /*j*/

call lineout tFID                                /*close the file.                      */
say '··· erasing file: '  tFID
'ERASE' tFID                                     /*erase the file.                      */
exit 0                                           /*stick a fork in it,  we're all done. */
/*──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/
ser: say; say '***error***' arg(1); say; exit 13 /*issue an error message to the term.  */
output   when using the default input:
··· creating file:  TEMP.FILE
··· writing  file:  TEMP.FILE
··· reading/display file:  TEMP.FILE
line  1  of file TEMP.FILE: line 1
line  2  of file TEMP.FILE: line 2
line  3  of file TEMP.FILE: line 3
line  4  of file TEMP.FILE: line 4
line  5  of file TEMP.FILE: line 5
line  6  of file TEMP.FILE: line 6
··· erasing file:  TEMP.FILE

Ruby

require 'tempfile'

f = Tempfile.new('foo')
f.path  # => "/tmp/foo20081226-307-10p746n-0"
f.close
f.unlink # => #<Tempfile: (closed)>

Rust

// 202100322 Rust programming solution

use tempfile::tempfile;

fn main() {

    let fh = tempfile();

    println!("{:?}", fh);
}
Output:
Ok(File { fd: 3, path: "/tmp/#37224506 (deleted)", read: true, write: true })

Scala

import java.io.{File, FileWriter, IOException}

  def writeStringToFile(file: File, data: String, appending: Boolean = false) =
    using(new FileWriter(file, appending))(_.write(data))

  def using[A <: {def close() : Unit}, B](resource: A)(f: A => B): B =
    try f(resource) finally resource.close()

  try {
    val file = File.createTempFile("_rosetta", ".passwd")
    // Just an example how you can fill a file
    using(new FileWriter(file))(writer => rawDataIter.foreach(line => writer.write(line)))
    scala.compat.Platform.collectGarbage() // JVM Windows related bug workaround JDK-4715154
    file.deleteOnExit()
    println(file)
  } catch {
    case e: IOException => println(s"Running Example failed: ${e.getMessage}")
  }

Sidef

var tmpfile = require('File::Temp');
var fh = tmpfile.new(UNLINK => 0);
say fh.filename;
fh.print("Hello, World!\n");
fh.close;

SparForte

As a structured script.

#!/usr/local/bin/spar
pragma annotate( summary, "tmpfile" );
pragma annotate( description, "Create a temporary file, securely and exclusively" );
pragma annotate( description, "(opening it such that there are no possible race" );
pragma annotate( description, "conditions). It's fine assuming local filesystem" );
pragma annotate( description, "semantics (NFS or other networking filesystems can" );
pragma annotate( description, "have signficantly more complicated semantics for" );
pragma annotate( description, "satisfying the 'no race conditions' criteria). The" );
pragma annotate( description, "function should automatically resolve name collisions" );
pragma annotate( description, "and should only fail in cases where permission is" );
pragma annotate( description, "denied, the filesystem is read-only or full, or similar" );
pragma annotate( description, "conditions exist (returning an error or raising an" );
pragma annotate( description, "exception as appropriate to the language/environment)." );
pragma annotate( see_also, "http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Secure_temporary_file" );
pragma annotate( author, "Ken O. Burtch" );
pragma license( unrestricted );

pragma restriction( no_external_commands );

procedure tmpfile is
   temp : file_type;
   contents : string;
begin
   ? "Creating a temporary file";
   create( temp );
   put_line( temp,  "Hello World");

   ? "Reading a temporary file";
   reset( temp, in_file);
   contents := get_line( temp );
   put_line( "File contains: " & contents );  

   ? "Discarding a temporary file";
   close( temp );
end tmpfile;

Standard ML

val filename = OS.FileSys.tmpName ();

Tcl

Works with: Tcl version 8.6

Will store the name of the file in the variable filenameVar and an open read-write channel on the file in the variable chan.

set chan [file tempfile filenameVar]

Note that because we're asking for the filename in the script, Tcl does not automatically clean the file. (There are cases where auto-cleaning would be really unwanted.) If we hadn't asked for it, the file would be automatically deleted (at a time that depends on platform constraints).

TUSCRIPT

$$ MODE TUSCRIPT
tmpfile="test.txt"
ERROR/STOP CREATE (tmpfile,seq-E,-std-)
text="hello world"
FILE $tmpfile = text
- tmpfile "test.txt" can only be accessed by one user an will be deleted upon programm termination

UNIX Shell

UNIX shell scripts cannot guarantee secure, race-free, exclusive access to an open file descriptor. The best approach to working around this limitation is to create a directory (the mkdir command is a wrapper around the atomic mkdir() system call) and then perform all temporary file operations thereunder.

RESTOREUMASK=$(umask)
TRY=0
while :; do
   TRY=$(( TRY + 1 ))
   umask 0077
   MYTMP=${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/$(basename $0).$$.$(date +%s).$TRY
   trap "rm -fr $MYTMP" EXIT
   mkdir "$MYTMP" 2>/dev/null && break
done
umask "$RESTOREUMASK"
cd "$MYTMP" || {
   echo "Temporary directory failure on $MYTMP" >&2
   exit 1; }

Note that the shell special variable $$ (the PID of the currently exec()-ed shell) is unique at any given moment on a UNIX system, and $(date +%s) gives the time represented as a number of seconds since the UNIX epoch (GNU date or any other with the %s extension). So any name collision here is most likely "enemy action." This code will loop, picking new names and resetting the trap (clean-up command) until it succeeds in making a directory. (Simple changes to the code could limit the number of attempts or implement a timeout).

Wren

Library: Wren-ioutil
Library: Wren-fmt
import "random" for Random
import "./ioutil" for File, FileUtil
import "./fmt" for Fmt

var rand = Random.new()

var createTempFile = Fn.new { |lines|
    var tmp
    while (true) {
        // create a name which includes a random 6 digit number
        tmp = "/tmp/temp%(Fmt.swrite("$06d", rand.int(1e6))).tmp"
        if (!File.exists(tmp)) break
    }
    FileUtil.writeLines(tmp, lines)
    return tmp
}

var lines = ["one", "two", "three"]
var tmp = createTempFile.call(lines)
System.print("Temporary file path: %(tmp)")
System.print("Original contents of temporary file:")
System.print(File.read(tmp))

// append some more lines
var lines2 = ["four", "five", "six"]
FileUtil.appendLines(tmp, lines2)
System.print("Updated contents of temporary file:")
System.print(File.read(tmp))
File.delete(tmp)
System.print("Temporary file deleted.")
Output:

Sample run:

Temporary file path: /tmp/temp574327.tmp
Original contents of temporary file:
one
two
three

Updated contents of temporary file:
one
two
three
four
five
six

Temporary file deleted.

zkl

zkl uses the underlying OS to create these files, mkstemp (POSIX), _mktemp_s (Windows). Not at all sure Windows is race free however.

Output:
zkl: File.mktmp()
File(zklTmpFile082p1V)