Revert "Roll NDK to r11c and extract it into its own repository."
[android_tools.git] / ndk / prebuilt / linux-x86_64 / lib / perl5 / 5.16.2 / File / Temp.pm
bloba2d4ae0759f537243f7d3f501eabca51b12e15d9
1 package File::Temp;
3 =head1 NAME
5 File::Temp - return name and handle of a temporary file safely
7 =begin __INTERNALS
9 =head1 PORTABILITY
11 This section is at the top in order to provide easier access to
12 porters. It is not expected to be rendered by a standard pod
13 formatting tool. Please skip straight to the SYNOPSIS section if you
14 are not trying to port this module to a new platform.
16 This module is designed to be portable across operating systems and it
17 currently supports Unix, VMS, DOS, OS/2, Windows and Mac OS
18 (Classic). When porting to a new OS there are generally three main
19 issues that have to be solved:
21 =over 4
23 =item *
25 Can the OS unlink an open file? If it can not then the
26 C<_can_unlink_opened_file> method should be modified.
28 =item *
30 Are the return values from C<stat> reliable? By default all the
31 return values from C<stat> are compared when unlinking a temporary
32 file using the filename and the handle. Operating systems other than
33 unix do not always have valid entries in all fields. If C<unlink0> fails
34 then the C<stat> comparison should be modified accordingly.
36 =item *
38 Security. Systems that can not support a test for the sticky bit
39 on a directory can not use the MEDIUM and HIGH security tests.
40 The C<_can_do_level> method should be modified accordingly.
42 =back
44 =end __INTERNALS
46 =head1 SYNOPSIS
48 use File::Temp qw/ tempfile tempdir /;
50 $fh = tempfile();
51 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile();
53 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile( $template, DIR => $dir);
54 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile( $template, SUFFIX => '.dat');
55 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile( $template, TMPDIR => 1 );
57 binmode( $fh, ":utf8" );
59 $dir = tempdir( CLEANUP => 1 );
60 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile( DIR => $dir );
62 Object interface:
64 require File::Temp;
65 use File::Temp ();
66 use File::Temp qw/ :seekable /;
68 $fh = File::Temp->new();
69 $fname = $fh->filename;
71 $fh = File::Temp->new(TEMPLATE => $template);
72 $fname = $fh->filename;
74 $tmp = File::Temp->new( UNLINK => 0, SUFFIX => '.dat' );
75 print $tmp "Some data\n";
76 print "Filename is $tmp\n";
77 $tmp->seek( 0, SEEK_END );
79 The following interfaces are provided for compatibility with
80 existing APIs. They should not be used in new code.
82 MkTemp family:
84 use File::Temp qw/ :mktemp /;
86 ($fh, $file) = mkstemp( "tmpfileXXXXX" );
87 ($fh, $file) = mkstemps( "tmpfileXXXXXX", $suffix);
89 $tmpdir = mkdtemp( $template );
91 $unopened_file = mktemp( $template );
93 POSIX functions:
95 use File::Temp qw/ :POSIX /;
97 $file = tmpnam();
98 $fh = tmpfile();
100 ($fh, $file) = tmpnam();
102 Compatibility functions:
104 $unopened_file = File::Temp::tempnam( $dir, $pfx );
106 =head1 DESCRIPTION
108 C<File::Temp> can be used to create and open temporary files in a safe
109 way. There is both a function interface and an object-oriented
110 interface. The File::Temp constructor or the tempfile() function can
111 be used to return the name and the open filehandle of a temporary
112 file. The tempdir() function can be used to create a temporary
113 directory.
115 The security aspect of temporary file creation is emphasized such that
116 a filehandle and filename are returned together. This helps guarantee
117 that a race condition can not occur where the temporary file is
118 created by another process between checking for the existence of the
119 file and its opening. Additional security levels are provided to
120 check, for example, that the sticky bit is set on world writable
121 directories. See L<"safe_level"> for more information.
123 For compatibility with popular C library functions, Perl implementations of
124 the mkstemp() family of functions are provided. These are, mkstemp(),
125 mkstemps(), mkdtemp() and mktemp().
127 Additionally, implementations of the standard L<POSIX|POSIX>
128 tmpnam() and tmpfile() functions are provided if required.
130 Implementations of mktemp(), tmpnam(), and tempnam() are provided,
131 but should be used with caution since they return only a filename
132 that was valid when function was called, so cannot guarantee
133 that the file will not exist by the time the caller opens the filename.
135 Filehandles returned by these functions support the seekable methods.
137 =cut
139 # 5.6.0 gives us S_IWOTH, S_IWGRP, our and auto-vivifying filehandls
140 # People would like a version on 5.004 so give them what they want :-)
141 use 5.004;
142 use strict;
143 use Carp;
144 use File::Spec 0.8;
145 use File::Path qw/ rmtree /;
146 use Fcntl 1.03;
147 use IO::Seekable; # For SEEK_*
148 use Errno;
149 require VMS::Stdio if $^O eq 'VMS';
151 # pre-emptively load Carp::Heavy. If we don't when we run out of file
152 # handles and attempt to call croak() we get an error message telling
153 # us that Carp::Heavy won't load rather than an error telling us we
154 # have run out of file handles. We either preload croak() or we
155 # switch the calls to croak from _gettemp() to use die.
156 eval { require Carp::Heavy; };
158 # Need the Symbol package if we are running older perl
159 require Symbol if $] < 5.006;
161 ### For the OO interface
162 use base qw/ IO::Handle IO::Seekable /;
163 use overload '""' => "STRINGIFY", fallback => 1;
165 # use 'our' on v5.6.0
166 use vars qw($VERSION @EXPORT_OK %EXPORT_TAGS $DEBUG $KEEP_ALL);
168 $DEBUG = 0;
169 $KEEP_ALL = 0;
171 # We are exporting functions
173 use base qw/Exporter/;
175 # Export list - to allow fine tuning of export table
177 @EXPORT_OK = qw{
178 tempfile
179 tempdir
180 tmpnam
181 tmpfile
182 mktemp
183 mkstemp
184 mkstemps
185 mkdtemp
186 unlink0
187 cleanup
188 SEEK_SET
189 SEEK_CUR
190 SEEK_END
193 # Groups of functions for export
195 %EXPORT_TAGS = (
196 'POSIX' => [qw/ tmpnam tmpfile /],
197 'mktemp' => [qw/ mktemp mkstemp mkstemps mkdtemp/],
198 'seekable' => [qw/ SEEK_SET SEEK_CUR SEEK_END /],
201 # add contents of these tags to @EXPORT
202 Exporter::export_tags('POSIX','mktemp','seekable');
204 # Version number
206 $VERSION = '0.22';
208 # This is a list of characters that can be used in random filenames
210 my @CHARS = (qw/ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
211 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
212 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 _
215 # Maximum number of tries to make a temp file before failing
217 use constant MAX_TRIES => 1000;
219 # Minimum number of X characters that should be in a template
220 use constant MINX => 4;
222 # Default template when no template supplied
224 use constant TEMPXXX => 'X' x 10;
226 # Constants for the security level
228 use constant STANDARD => 0;
229 use constant MEDIUM => 1;
230 use constant HIGH => 2;
232 # OPENFLAGS. If we defined the flag to use with Sysopen here this gives
233 # us an optimisation when many temporary files are requested
235 my $OPENFLAGS = O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_RDWR;
236 my $LOCKFLAG;
238 unless ($^O eq 'MacOS') {
239 for my $oflag (qw/ NOFOLLOW BINARY LARGEFILE NOINHERIT /) {
240 my ($bit, $func) = (0, "Fcntl::O_" . $oflag);
241 no strict 'refs';
242 $OPENFLAGS |= $bit if eval {
243 # Make sure that redefined die handlers do not cause problems
244 # e.g. CGI::Carp
245 local $SIG{__DIE__} = sub {};
246 local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {};
247 $bit = &$func();
251 # Special case O_EXLOCK
252 $LOCKFLAG = eval {
253 local $SIG{__DIE__} = sub {};
254 local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {};
255 &Fcntl::O_EXLOCK();
259 # On some systems the O_TEMPORARY flag can be used to tell the OS
260 # to automatically remove the file when it is closed. This is fine
261 # in most cases but not if tempfile is called with UNLINK=>0 and
262 # the filename is requested -- in the case where the filename is to
263 # be passed to another routine. This happens on windows. We overcome
264 # this by using a second open flags variable
266 my $OPENTEMPFLAGS = $OPENFLAGS;
267 unless ($^O eq 'MacOS') {
268 for my $oflag (qw/ TEMPORARY /) {
269 my ($bit, $func) = (0, "Fcntl::O_" . $oflag);
270 local($@);
271 no strict 'refs';
272 $OPENTEMPFLAGS |= $bit if eval {
273 # Make sure that redefined die handlers do not cause problems
274 # e.g. CGI::Carp
275 local $SIG{__DIE__} = sub {};
276 local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {};
277 $bit = &$func();
283 # Private hash tracking which files have been created by each process id via the OO interface
284 my %FILES_CREATED_BY_OBJECT;
286 # INTERNAL ROUTINES - not to be used outside of package
288 # Generic routine for getting a temporary filename
289 # modelled on OpenBSD _gettemp() in mktemp.c
291 # The template must contain X's that are to be replaced
292 # with the random values
294 # Arguments:
296 # TEMPLATE - string containing the XXXXX's that is converted
297 # to a random filename and opened if required
299 # Optionally, a hash can also be supplied containing specific options
300 # "open" => if true open the temp file, else just return the name
301 # default is 0
302 # "mkdir"=> if true, we are creating a temp directory rather than tempfile
303 # default is 0
304 # "suffixlen" => number of characters at end of PATH to be ignored.
305 # default is 0.
306 # "unlink_on_close" => indicates that, if possible, the OS should remove
307 # the file as soon as it is closed. Usually indicates
308 # use of the O_TEMPORARY flag to sysopen.
309 # Usually irrelevant on unix
310 # "use_exlock" => Indicates that O_EXLOCK should be used. Default is true.
312 # Optionally a reference to a scalar can be passed into the function
313 # On error this will be used to store the reason for the error
314 # "ErrStr" => \$errstr
316 # "open" and "mkdir" can not both be true
317 # "unlink_on_close" is not used when "mkdir" is true.
319 # The default options are equivalent to mktemp().
321 # Returns:
322 # filehandle - open file handle (if called with doopen=1, else undef)
323 # temp name - name of the temp file or directory
325 # For example:
326 # ($fh, $name) = _gettemp($template, "open" => 1);
328 # for the current version, failures are associated with
329 # stored in an error string and returned to give the reason whilst debugging
330 # This routine is not called by any external function
331 sub _gettemp {
333 croak 'Usage: ($fh, $name) = _gettemp($template, OPTIONS);'
334 unless scalar(@_) >= 1;
336 # the internal error string - expect it to be overridden
337 # Need this in case the caller decides not to supply us a value
338 # need an anonymous scalar
339 my $tempErrStr;
341 # Default options
342 my %options = (
343 "open" => 0,
344 "mkdir" => 0,
345 "suffixlen" => 0,
346 "unlink_on_close" => 0,
347 "use_exlock" => 1,
348 "ErrStr" => \$tempErrStr,
351 # Read the template
352 my $template = shift;
353 if (ref($template)) {
354 # Use a warning here since we have not yet merged ErrStr
355 carp "File::Temp::_gettemp: template must not be a reference";
356 return ();
359 # Check that the number of entries on stack are even
360 if (scalar(@_) % 2 != 0) {
361 # Use a warning here since we have not yet merged ErrStr
362 carp "File::Temp::_gettemp: Must have even number of options";
363 return ();
366 # Read the options and merge with defaults
367 %options = (%options, @_) if @_;
369 # Make sure the error string is set to undef
370 ${$options{ErrStr}} = undef;
372 # Can not open the file and make a directory in a single call
373 if ($options{"open"} && $options{"mkdir"}) {
374 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "doopen and domkdir can not both be true\n";
375 return ();
378 # Find the start of the end of the Xs (position of last X)
379 # Substr starts from 0
380 my $start = length($template) - 1 - $options{"suffixlen"};
382 # Check that we have at least MINX x X (e.g. 'XXXX") at the end of the string
383 # (taking suffixlen into account). Any fewer is insecure.
385 # Do it using substr - no reason to use a pattern match since
386 # we know where we are looking and what we are looking for
388 if (substr($template, $start - MINX + 1, MINX) ne 'X' x MINX) {
389 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "The template must end with at least ".
390 MINX . " 'X' characters\n";
391 return ();
394 # Replace all the X at the end of the substring with a
395 # random character or just all the XX at the end of a full string.
396 # Do it as an if, since the suffix adjusts which section to replace
397 # and suffixlen=0 returns nothing if used in the substr directly
398 # and generate a full path from the template
400 my $path = _replace_XX($template, $options{"suffixlen"});
403 # Split the path into constituent parts - eventually we need to check
404 # whether the directory exists
405 # We need to know whether we are making a temp directory
406 # or a tempfile
408 my ($volume, $directories, $file);
409 my $parent; # parent directory
410 if ($options{"mkdir"}) {
411 # There is no filename at the end
412 ($volume, $directories, $file) = File::Spec->splitpath( $path, 1);
414 # The parent is then $directories without the last directory
415 # Split the directory and put it back together again
416 my @dirs = File::Spec->splitdir($directories);
418 # If @dirs only has one entry (i.e. the directory template) that means
419 # we are in the current directory
420 if ($#dirs == 0) {
421 $parent = File::Spec->curdir;
422 } else {
424 if ($^O eq 'VMS') { # need volume to avoid relative dir spec
425 $parent = File::Spec->catdir($volume, @dirs[0..$#dirs-1]);
426 $parent = 'sys$disk:[]' if $parent eq '';
427 } else {
429 # Put it back together without the last one
430 $parent = File::Spec->catdir(@dirs[0..$#dirs-1]);
432 # ...and attach the volume (no filename)
433 $parent = File::Spec->catpath($volume, $parent, '');
438 } else {
440 # Get rid of the last filename (use File::Basename for this?)
441 ($volume, $directories, $file) = File::Spec->splitpath( $path );
443 # Join up without the file part
444 $parent = File::Spec->catpath($volume,$directories,'');
446 # If $parent is empty replace with curdir
447 $parent = File::Spec->curdir
448 unless $directories ne '';
452 # Check that the parent directories exist
453 # Do this even for the case where we are simply returning a name
454 # not a file -- no point returning a name that includes a directory
455 # that does not exist or is not writable
457 unless (-e $parent) {
458 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "Parent directory ($parent) does not exist";
459 return ();
461 unless (-d $parent) {
462 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "Parent directory ($parent) is not a directory";
463 return ();
466 # Check the stickiness of the directory and chown giveaway if required
467 # If the directory is world writable the sticky bit
468 # must be set
470 if (File::Temp->safe_level == MEDIUM) {
471 my $safeerr;
472 unless (_is_safe($parent,\$safeerr)) {
473 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "Parent directory ($parent) is not safe ($safeerr)";
474 return ();
476 } elsif (File::Temp->safe_level == HIGH) {
477 my $safeerr;
478 unless (_is_verysafe($parent, \$safeerr)) {
479 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "Parent directory ($parent) is not safe ($safeerr)";
480 return ();
485 # Now try MAX_TRIES time to open the file
486 for (my $i = 0; $i < MAX_TRIES; $i++) {
488 # Try to open the file if requested
489 if ($options{"open"}) {
490 my $fh;
492 # If we are running before perl5.6.0 we can not auto-vivify
493 if ($] < 5.006) {
494 $fh = &Symbol::gensym;
497 # Try to make sure this will be marked close-on-exec
498 # XXX: Win32 doesn't respect this, nor the proper fcntl,
499 # but may have O_NOINHERIT. This may or may not be in Fcntl.
500 local $^F = 2;
502 # Attempt to open the file
503 my $open_success = undef;
504 if ( $^O eq 'VMS' and $options{"unlink_on_close"} && !$KEEP_ALL) {
505 # make it auto delete on close by setting FAB$V_DLT bit
506 $fh = VMS::Stdio::vmssysopen($path, $OPENFLAGS, 0600, 'fop=dlt');
507 $open_success = $fh;
508 } else {
509 my $flags = ( ($options{"unlink_on_close"} && !$KEEP_ALL) ?
510 $OPENTEMPFLAGS :
511 $OPENFLAGS );
512 $flags |= $LOCKFLAG if (defined $LOCKFLAG && $options{use_exlock});
513 $open_success = sysopen($fh, $path, $flags, 0600);
515 if ( $open_success ) {
517 # in case of odd umask force rw
518 chmod(0600, $path);
520 # Opened successfully - return file handle and name
521 return ($fh, $path);
523 } else {
525 # Error opening file - abort with error
526 # if the reason was anything but EEXIST
527 unless ($!{EEXIST}) {
528 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "Could not create temp file $path: $!";
529 return ();
532 # Loop round for another try
535 } elsif ($options{"mkdir"}) {
537 # Open the temp directory
538 if (mkdir( $path, 0700)) {
539 # in case of odd umask
540 chmod(0700, $path);
542 return undef, $path;
543 } else {
545 # Abort with error if the reason for failure was anything
546 # except EEXIST
547 unless ($!{EEXIST}) {
548 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "Could not create directory $path: $!";
549 return ();
552 # Loop round for another try
556 } else {
558 # Return true if the file can not be found
559 # Directory has been checked previously
561 return (undef, $path) unless -e $path;
563 # Try again until MAX_TRIES
567 # Did not successfully open the tempfile/dir
568 # so try again with a different set of random letters
569 # No point in trying to increment unless we have only
570 # 1 X say and the randomness could come up with the same
571 # file MAX_TRIES in a row.
573 # Store current attempt - in principal this implies that the
574 # 3rd time around the open attempt that the first temp file
575 # name could be generated again. Probably should store each
576 # attempt and make sure that none are repeated
578 my $original = $path;
579 my $counter = 0; # Stop infinite loop
580 my $MAX_GUESS = 50;
582 do {
584 # Generate new name from original template
585 $path = _replace_XX($template, $options{"suffixlen"});
587 $counter++;
589 } until ($path ne $original || $counter > $MAX_GUESS);
591 # Check for out of control looping
592 if ($counter > $MAX_GUESS) {
593 ${$options{ErrStr}} = "Tried to get a new temp name different to the previous value $MAX_GUESS times.\nSomething wrong with template?? ($template)";
594 return ();
599 # If we get here, we have run out of tries
600 ${ $options{ErrStr} } = "Have exceeded the maximum number of attempts ("
601 . MAX_TRIES . ") to open temp file/dir";
603 return ();
607 # Internal routine to replace the XXXX... with random characters
608 # This has to be done by _gettemp() every time it fails to
609 # open a temp file/dir
611 # Arguments: $template (the template with XXX),
612 # $ignore (number of characters at end to ignore)
614 # Returns: modified template
616 sub _replace_XX {
618 croak 'Usage: _replace_XX($template, $ignore)'
619 unless scalar(@_) == 2;
621 my ($path, $ignore) = @_;
623 # Do it as an if, since the suffix adjusts which section to replace
624 # and suffixlen=0 returns nothing if used in the substr directly
625 # Alternatively, could simply set $ignore to length($path)-1
626 # Don't want to always use substr when not required though.
627 my $end = ( $] >= 5.006 ? "\\z" : "\\Z" );
629 if ($ignore) {
630 substr($path, 0, - $ignore) =~ s/X(?=X*$end)/$CHARS[ int( rand( @CHARS ) ) ]/ge;
631 } else {
632 $path =~ s/X(?=X*$end)/$CHARS[ int( rand( @CHARS ) ) ]/ge;
634 return $path;
637 # Internal routine to force a temp file to be writable after
638 # it is created so that we can unlink it. Windows seems to occassionally
639 # force a file to be readonly when written to certain temp locations
640 sub _force_writable {
641 my $file = shift;
642 chmod 0600, $file;
646 # internal routine to check to see if the directory is safe
647 # First checks to see if the directory is not owned by the
648 # current user or root. Then checks to see if anyone else
649 # can write to the directory and if so, checks to see if
650 # it has the sticky bit set
652 # Will not work on systems that do not support sticky bit
654 #Args: directory path to check
655 # Optionally: reference to scalar to contain error message
656 # Returns true if the path is safe and false otherwise.
657 # Returns undef if can not even run stat() on the path
659 # This routine based on version written by Tom Christiansen
661 # Presumably, by the time we actually attempt to create the
662 # file or directory in this directory, it may not be safe
663 # anymore... Have to run _is_safe directly after the open.
665 sub _is_safe {
667 my $path = shift;
668 my $err_ref = shift;
670 # Stat path
671 my @info = stat($path);
672 unless (scalar(@info)) {
673 $$err_ref = "stat(path) returned no values";
674 return 0;
677 return 1 if $^O eq 'VMS'; # owner delete control at file level
679 # Check to see whether owner is neither superuser (or a system uid) nor me
680 # Use the effective uid from the $> variable
681 # UID is in [4]
682 if ($info[4] > File::Temp->top_system_uid() && $info[4] != $>) {
684 Carp::cluck(sprintf "uid=$info[4] topuid=%s euid=$> path='$path'",
685 File::Temp->top_system_uid());
687 $$err_ref = "Directory owned neither by root nor the current user"
688 if ref($err_ref);
689 return 0;
692 # check whether group or other can write file
693 # use 066 to detect either reading or writing
694 # use 022 to check writability
695 # Do it with S_IWOTH and S_IWGRP for portability (maybe)
696 # mode is in info[2]
697 if (($info[2] & &Fcntl::S_IWGRP) || # Is group writable?
698 ($info[2] & &Fcntl::S_IWOTH) ) { # Is world writable?
699 # Must be a directory
700 unless (-d $path) {
701 $$err_ref = "Path ($path) is not a directory"
702 if ref($err_ref);
703 return 0;
705 # Must have sticky bit set
706 unless (-k $path) {
707 $$err_ref = "Sticky bit not set on $path when dir is group|world writable"
708 if ref($err_ref);
709 return 0;
713 return 1;
716 # Internal routine to check whether a directory is safe
717 # for temp files. Safer than _is_safe since it checks for
718 # the possibility of chown giveaway and if that is a possibility
719 # checks each directory in the path to see if it is safe (with _is_safe)
721 # If _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED is not set, does the full test of each
722 # directory anyway.
724 # Takes optional second arg as scalar ref to error reason
726 sub _is_verysafe {
728 # Need POSIX - but only want to bother if really necessary due to overhead
729 require POSIX;
731 my $path = shift;
732 print "_is_verysafe testing $path\n" if $DEBUG;
733 return 1 if $^O eq 'VMS'; # owner delete control at file level
735 my $err_ref = shift;
737 # Should Get the value of _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED if it is defined
738 # and If it is not there do the extensive test
739 local($@);
740 my $chown_restricted;
741 $chown_restricted = &POSIX::_PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED()
742 if eval { &POSIX::_PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED(); 1};
744 # If chown_resticted is set to some value we should test it
745 if (defined $chown_restricted) {
747 # Return if the current directory is safe
748 return _is_safe($path,$err_ref) if POSIX::sysconf( $chown_restricted );
752 # To reach this point either, the _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED symbol
753 # was not avialable or the symbol was there but chown giveaway
754 # is allowed. Either way, we now have to test the entire tree for
755 # safety.
757 # Convert path to an absolute directory if required
758 unless (File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($path)) {
759 $path = File::Spec->rel2abs($path);
762 # Split directory into components - assume no file
763 my ($volume, $directories, undef) = File::Spec->splitpath( $path, 1);
765 # Slightly less efficient than having a function in File::Spec
766 # to chop off the end of a directory or even a function that
767 # can handle ../ in a directory tree
768 # Sometimes splitdir() returns a blank at the end
769 # so we will probably check the bottom directory twice in some cases
770 my @dirs = File::Spec->splitdir($directories);
772 # Concatenate one less directory each time around
773 foreach my $pos (0.. $#dirs) {
774 # Get a directory name
775 my $dir = File::Spec->catpath($volume,
776 File::Spec->catdir(@dirs[0.. $#dirs - $pos]),
780 print "TESTING DIR $dir\n" if $DEBUG;
782 # Check the directory
783 return 0 unless _is_safe($dir,$err_ref);
787 return 1;
792 # internal routine to determine whether unlink works on this
793 # platform for files that are currently open.
794 # Returns true if we can, false otherwise.
796 # Currently WinNT, OS/2 and VMS can not unlink an opened file
797 # On VMS this is because the O_EXCL flag is used to open the
798 # temporary file. Currently I do not know enough about the issues
799 # on VMS to decide whether O_EXCL is a requirement.
801 sub _can_unlink_opened_file {
803 if ($^O eq 'MSWin32' || $^O eq 'os2' || $^O eq 'VMS' || $^O eq 'dos' || $^O eq 'MacOS') {
804 return 0;
805 } else {
806 return 1;
811 # internal routine to decide which security levels are allowed
812 # see safe_level() for more information on this
814 # Controls whether the supplied security level is allowed
816 # $cando = _can_do_level( $level )
818 sub _can_do_level {
820 # Get security level
821 my $level = shift;
823 # Always have to be able to do STANDARD
824 return 1 if $level == STANDARD;
826 # Currently, the systems that can do HIGH or MEDIUM are identical
827 if ( $^O eq 'MSWin32' || $^O eq 'os2' || $^O eq 'cygwin' || $^O eq 'dos' || $^O eq 'MacOS' || $^O eq 'mpeix') {
828 return 0;
829 } else {
830 return 1;
835 # This routine sets up a deferred unlinking of a specified
836 # filename and filehandle. It is used in the following cases:
837 # - Called by unlink0 if an opened file can not be unlinked
838 # - Called by tempfile() if files are to be removed on shutdown
839 # - Called by tempdir() if directories are to be removed on shutdown
841 # Arguments:
842 # _deferred_unlink( $fh, $fname, $isdir );
844 # - filehandle (so that it can be expclicitly closed if open
845 # - filename (the thing we want to remove)
846 # - isdir (flag to indicate that we are being given a directory)
847 # [and hence no filehandle]
849 # Status is not referred to since all the magic is done with an END block
852 # Will set up two lexical variables to contain all the files to be
853 # removed. One array for files, another for directories They will
854 # only exist in this block.
856 # This means we only have to set up a single END block to remove
857 # all files.
859 # in order to prevent child processes inadvertently deleting the parent
860 # temp files we use a hash to store the temp files and directories
861 # created by a particular process id.
863 # %files_to_unlink contains values that are references to an array of
864 # array references containing the filehandle and filename associated with
865 # the temp file.
866 my (%files_to_unlink, %dirs_to_unlink);
868 # Set up an end block to use these arrays
869 END {
870 local($., $@, $!, $^E, $?);
871 cleanup();
874 # Cleanup function. Always triggered on END but can be invoked
875 # manually.
876 sub cleanup {
877 if (!$KEEP_ALL) {
878 # Files
879 my @files = (exists $files_to_unlink{$$} ?
880 @{ $files_to_unlink{$$} } : () );
881 foreach my $file (@files) {
882 # close the filehandle without checking its state
883 # in order to make real sure that this is closed
884 # if its already closed then I dont care about the answer
885 # probably a better way to do this
886 close($file->[0]); # file handle is [0]
888 if (-f $file->[1]) { # file name is [1]
889 _force_writable( $file->[1] ); # for windows
890 unlink $file->[1] or warn "Error removing ".$file->[1];
893 # Dirs
894 my @dirs = (exists $dirs_to_unlink{$$} ?
895 @{ $dirs_to_unlink{$$} } : () );
896 foreach my $dir (@dirs) {
897 if (-d $dir) {
898 # Some versions of rmtree will abort if you attempt to remove
899 # the directory you are sitting in. We protect that and turn it
900 # into a warning. We do this because this occurs during
901 # cleanup and so can not be caught by the user.
902 eval { rmtree($dir, $DEBUG, 0); };
903 warn $@ if ($@ && $^W);
907 # clear the arrays
908 @{ $files_to_unlink{$$} } = ()
909 if exists $files_to_unlink{$$};
910 @{ $dirs_to_unlink{$$} } = ()
911 if exists $dirs_to_unlink{$$};
916 # This is the sub called to register a file for deferred unlinking
917 # This could simply store the input parameters and defer everything
918 # until the END block. For now we do a bit of checking at this
919 # point in order to make sure that (1) we have a file/dir to delete
920 # and (2) we have been called with the correct arguments.
921 sub _deferred_unlink {
923 croak 'Usage: _deferred_unlink($fh, $fname, $isdir)'
924 unless scalar(@_) == 3;
926 my ($fh, $fname, $isdir) = @_;
928 warn "Setting up deferred removal of $fname\n"
929 if $DEBUG;
931 # If we have a directory, check that it is a directory
932 if ($isdir) {
934 if (-d $fname) {
936 # Directory exists so store it
937 # first on VMS turn []foo into [.foo] for rmtree
938 $fname = VMS::Filespec::vmspath($fname) if $^O eq 'VMS';
939 $dirs_to_unlink{$$} = []
940 unless exists $dirs_to_unlink{$$};
941 push (@{ $dirs_to_unlink{$$} }, $fname);
943 } else {
944 carp "Request to remove directory $fname could not be completed since it does not exist!\n" if $^W;
947 } else {
949 if (-f $fname) {
951 # file exists so store handle and name for later removal
952 $files_to_unlink{$$} = []
953 unless exists $files_to_unlink{$$};
954 push(@{ $files_to_unlink{$$} }, [$fh, $fname]);
956 } else {
957 carp "Request to remove file $fname could not be completed since it is not there!\n" if $^W;
967 =head1 OBJECT-ORIENTED INTERFACE
969 This is the primary interface for interacting with
970 C<File::Temp>. Using the OO interface a temporary file can be created
971 when the object is constructed and the file can be removed when the
972 object is no longer required.
974 Note that there is no method to obtain the filehandle from the
975 C<File::Temp> object. The object itself acts as a filehandle. Also,
976 the object is configured such that it stringifies to the name of the
977 temporary file, and can be compared to a filename directly. The object
978 isa C<IO::Handle> and isa C<IO::Seekable> so all those methods are
979 available.
981 =over 4
983 =item B<new>
985 Create a temporary file object.
987 my $tmp = File::Temp->new();
989 by default the object is constructed as if C<tempfile>
990 was called without options, but with the additional behaviour
991 that the temporary file is removed by the object destructor
992 if UNLINK is set to true (the default).
994 Supported arguments are the same as for C<tempfile>: UNLINK
995 (defaulting to true), DIR, EXLOCK and SUFFIX. Additionally, the filename
996 template is specified using the TEMPLATE option. The OPEN option
997 is not supported (the file is always opened).
999 $tmp = File::Temp->new( TEMPLATE => 'tempXXXXX',
1000 DIR => 'mydir',
1001 SUFFIX => '.dat');
1003 Arguments are case insensitive.
1005 Can call croak() if an error occurs.
1007 =cut
1009 sub new {
1010 my $proto = shift;
1011 my $class = ref($proto) || $proto;
1013 # read arguments and convert keys to upper case
1014 my %args = @_;
1015 %args = map { uc($_), $args{$_} } keys %args;
1017 # see if they are unlinking (defaulting to yes)
1018 my $unlink = (exists $args{UNLINK} ? $args{UNLINK} : 1 );
1019 delete $args{UNLINK};
1021 # template (store it in an array so that it will
1022 # disappear from the arg list of tempfile)
1023 my @template = ( exists $args{TEMPLATE} ? $args{TEMPLATE} : () );
1024 delete $args{TEMPLATE};
1026 # Protect OPEN
1027 delete $args{OPEN};
1029 # Open the file and retain file handle and file name
1030 my ($fh, $path) = tempfile( @template, %args );
1032 print "Tmp: $fh - $path\n" if $DEBUG;
1034 # Store the filename in the scalar slot
1035 ${*$fh} = $path;
1037 # Cache the filename by pid so that the destructor can decide whether to remove it
1038 $FILES_CREATED_BY_OBJECT{$$}{$path} = 1;
1040 # Store unlink information in hash slot (plus other constructor info)
1041 %{*$fh} = %args;
1043 # create the object
1044 bless $fh, $class;
1046 # final method-based configuration
1047 $fh->unlink_on_destroy( $unlink );
1049 return $fh;
1052 =item B<newdir>
1054 Create a temporary directory using an object oriented interface.
1056 $dir = File::Temp->newdir();
1058 By default the directory is deleted when the object goes out of scope.
1060 Supports the same options as the C<tempdir> function. Note that directories
1061 created with this method default to CLEANUP => 1.
1063 $dir = File::Temp->newdir( $template, %options );
1065 =cut
1067 sub newdir {
1068 my $self = shift;
1070 # need to handle args as in tempdir because we have to force CLEANUP
1071 # default without passing CLEANUP to tempdir
1072 my $template = (scalar(@_) % 2 == 1 ? shift(@_) : undef );
1073 my %options = @_;
1074 my $cleanup = (exists $options{CLEANUP} ? $options{CLEANUP} : 1 );
1076 delete $options{CLEANUP};
1078 my $tempdir;
1079 if (defined $template) {
1080 $tempdir = tempdir( $template, %options );
1081 } else {
1082 $tempdir = tempdir( %options );
1084 return bless { DIRNAME => $tempdir,
1085 CLEANUP => $cleanup,
1086 LAUNCHPID => $$,
1087 }, "File::Temp::Dir";
1090 =item B<filename>
1092 Return the name of the temporary file associated with this object
1093 (if the object was created using the "new" constructor).
1095 $filename = $tmp->filename;
1097 This method is called automatically when the object is used as
1098 a string.
1100 =cut
1102 sub filename {
1103 my $self = shift;
1104 return ${*$self};
1107 sub STRINGIFY {
1108 my $self = shift;
1109 return $self->filename;
1112 =item B<dirname>
1114 Return the name of the temporary directory associated with this
1115 object (if the object was created using the "newdir" constructor).
1117 $dirname = $tmpdir->dirname;
1119 This method is called automatically when the object is used in string context.
1121 =item B<unlink_on_destroy>
1123 Control whether the file is unlinked when the object goes out of scope.
1124 The file is removed if this value is true and $KEEP_ALL is not.
1126 $fh->unlink_on_destroy( 1 );
1128 Default is for the file to be removed.
1130 =cut
1132 sub unlink_on_destroy {
1133 my $self = shift;
1134 if (@_) {
1135 ${*$self}{UNLINK} = shift;
1137 return ${*$self}{UNLINK};
1140 =item B<DESTROY>
1142 When the object goes out of scope, the destructor is called. This
1143 destructor will attempt to unlink the file (using C<unlink1>)
1144 if the constructor was called with UNLINK set to 1 (the default state
1145 if UNLINK is not specified).
1147 No error is given if the unlink fails.
1149 If the object has been passed to a child process during a fork, the
1150 file will be deleted when the object goes out of scope in the parent.
1152 For a temporary directory object the directory will be removed
1153 unless the CLEANUP argument was used in the constructor (and set to
1154 false) or C<unlink_on_destroy> was modified after creation.
1156 If the global variable $KEEP_ALL is true, the file or directory
1157 will not be removed.
1159 =cut
1161 sub DESTROY {
1162 local($., $@, $!, $^E, $?);
1163 my $self = shift;
1165 # Make sure we always remove the file from the global hash
1166 # on destruction. This prevents the hash from growing uncontrollably
1167 # and post-destruction there is no reason to know about the file.
1168 my $file = $self->filename;
1169 my $was_created_by_proc;
1170 if (exists $FILES_CREATED_BY_OBJECT{$$}{$file}) {
1171 $was_created_by_proc = 1;
1172 delete $FILES_CREATED_BY_OBJECT{$$}{$file};
1175 if (${*$self}{UNLINK} && !$KEEP_ALL) {
1176 print "# ---------> Unlinking $self\n" if $DEBUG;
1178 # only delete if this process created it
1179 return unless $was_created_by_proc;
1181 # The unlink1 may fail if the file has been closed
1182 # by the caller. This leaves us with the decision
1183 # of whether to refuse to remove the file or simply
1184 # do an unlink without test. Seems to be silly
1185 # to do this when we are trying to be careful
1186 # about security
1187 _force_writable( $file ); # for windows
1188 unlink1( $self, $file )
1189 or unlink($file);
1193 =back
1195 =head1 FUNCTIONS
1197 This section describes the recommended interface for generating
1198 temporary files and directories.
1200 =over 4
1202 =item B<tempfile>
1204 This is the basic function to generate temporary files.
1205 The behaviour of the file can be changed using various options:
1207 $fh = tempfile();
1208 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile();
1210 Create a temporary file in the directory specified for temporary
1211 files, as specified by the tmpdir() function in L<File::Spec>.
1213 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile($template);
1215 Create a temporary file in the current directory using the supplied
1216 template. Trailing `X' characters are replaced with random letters to
1217 generate the filename. At least four `X' characters must be present
1218 at the end of the template.
1220 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile($template, SUFFIX => $suffix)
1222 Same as previously, except that a suffix is added to the template
1223 after the `X' translation. Useful for ensuring that a temporary
1224 filename has a particular extension when needed by other applications.
1225 But see the WARNING at the end.
1227 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile($template, DIR => $dir);
1229 Translates the template as before except that a directory name
1230 is specified.
1232 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile($template, TMPDIR => 1);
1234 Equivalent to specifying a DIR of "File::Spec->tmpdir", writing the file
1235 into the same temporary directory as would be used if no template was
1236 specified at all.
1238 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile($template, UNLINK => 1);
1240 Return the filename and filehandle as before except that the file is
1241 automatically removed when the program exits (dependent on
1242 $KEEP_ALL). Default is for the file to be removed if a file handle is
1243 requested and to be kept if the filename is requested. In a scalar
1244 context (where no filename is returned) the file is always deleted
1245 either (depending on the operating system) on exit or when it is
1246 closed (unless $KEEP_ALL is true when the temp file is created).
1248 Use the object-oriented interface if fine-grained control of when
1249 a file is removed is required.
1251 If the template is not specified, a template is always
1252 automatically generated. This temporary file is placed in tmpdir()
1253 (L<File::Spec>) unless a directory is specified explicitly with the
1254 DIR option.
1256 $fh = tempfile( DIR => $dir );
1258 If called in scalar context, only the filehandle is returned and the
1259 file will automatically be deleted when closed on operating systems
1260 that support this (see the description of tmpfile() elsewhere in this
1261 document). This is the preferred mode of operation, as if you only
1262 have a filehandle, you can never create a race condition by fumbling
1263 with the filename. On systems that can not unlink an open file or can
1264 not mark a file as temporary when it is opened (for example, Windows
1265 NT uses the C<O_TEMPORARY> flag) the file is marked for deletion when
1266 the program ends (equivalent to setting UNLINK to 1). The C<UNLINK>
1267 flag is ignored if present.
1269 (undef, $filename) = tempfile($template, OPEN => 0);
1271 This will return the filename based on the template but
1272 will not open this file. Cannot be used in conjunction with
1273 UNLINK set to true. Default is to always open the file
1274 to protect from possible race conditions. A warning is issued
1275 if warnings are turned on. Consider using the tmpnam()
1276 and mktemp() functions described elsewhere in this document
1277 if opening the file is not required.
1279 If the operating system supports it (for example BSD derived systems), the
1280 filehandle will be opened with O_EXLOCK (open with exclusive file lock).
1281 This can sometimes cause problems if the intention is to pass the filename
1282 to another system that expects to take an exclusive lock itself (such as
1283 DBD::SQLite) whilst ensuring that the tempfile is not reused. In this
1284 situation the "EXLOCK" option can be passed to tempfile. By default EXLOCK
1285 will be true (this retains compatibility with earlier releases).
1287 ($fh, $filename) = tempfile($template, EXLOCK => 0);
1289 Options can be combined as required.
1291 Will croak() if there is an error.
1293 =cut
1295 sub tempfile {
1297 # Can not check for argument count since we can have any
1298 # number of args
1300 # Default options
1301 my %options = (
1302 "DIR" => undef, # Directory prefix
1303 "SUFFIX" => '', # Template suffix
1304 "UNLINK" => 0, # Do not unlink file on exit
1305 "OPEN" => 1, # Open file
1306 "TMPDIR" => 0, # Place tempfile in tempdir if template specified
1307 "EXLOCK" => 1, # Open file with O_EXLOCK
1310 # Check to see whether we have an odd or even number of arguments
1311 my $template = (scalar(@_) % 2 == 1 ? shift(@_) : undef);
1313 # Read the options and merge with defaults
1314 %options = (%options, @_) if @_;
1316 # First decision is whether or not to open the file
1317 if (! $options{"OPEN"}) {
1319 warn "tempfile(): temporary filename requested but not opened.\nPossibly unsafe, consider using tempfile() with OPEN set to true\n"
1320 if $^W;
1324 if ($options{"DIR"} and $^O eq 'VMS') {
1326 # on VMS turn []foo into [.foo] for concatenation
1327 $options{"DIR"} = VMS::Filespec::vmspath($options{"DIR"});
1330 # Construct the template
1332 # Have a choice of trying to work around the mkstemp/mktemp/tmpnam etc
1333 # functions or simply constructing a template and using _gettemp()
1334 # explicitly. Go for the latter
1336 # First generate a template if not defined and prefix the directory
1337 # If no template must prefix the temp directory
1338 if (defined $template) {
1339 # End up with current directory if neither DIR not TMPDIR are set
1340 if ($options{"DIR"}) {
1342 $template = File::Spec->catfile($options{"DIR"}, $template);
1344 } elsif ($options{TMPDIR}) {
1346 $template = File::Spec->catfile(File::Spec->tmpdir, $template );
1350 } else {
1352 if ($options{"DIR"}) {
1354 $template = File::Spec->catfile($options{"DIR"}, TEMPXXX);
1356 } else {
1358 $template = File::Spec->catfile(File::Spec->tmpdir, TEMPXXX);
1364 # Now add a suffix
1365 $template .= $options{"SUFFIX"};
1367 # Determine whether we should tell _gettemp to unlink the file
1368 # On unix this is irrelevant and can be worked out after the file is
1369 # opened (simply by unlinking the open filehandle). On Windows or VMS
1370 # we have to indicate temporary-ness when we open the file. In general
1371 # we only want a true temporary file if we are returning just the
1372 # filehandle - if the user wants the filename they probably do not
1373 # want the file to disappear as soon as they close it (which may be
1374 # important if they want a child process to use the file)
1375 # For this reason, tie unlink_on_close to the return context regardless
1376 # of OS.
1377 my $unlink_on_close = ( wantarray ? 0 : 1);
1379 # Create the file
1380 my ($fh, $path, $errstr);
1381 croak "Error in tempfile() using $template: $errstr"
1382 unless (($fh, $path) = _gettemp($template,
1383 "open" => $options{'OPEN'},
1384 "mkdir"=> 0 ,
1385 "unlink_on_close" => $unlink_on_close,
1386 "suffixlen" => length($options{'SUFFIX'}),
1387 "ErrStr" => \$errstr,
1388 "use_exlock" => $options{EXLOCK},
1389 ) );
1391 # Set up an exit handler that can do whatever is right for the
1392 # system. This removes files at exit when requested explicitly or when
1393 # system is asked to unlink_on_close but is unable to do so because
1394 # of OS limitations.
1395 # The latter should be achieved by using a tied filehandle.
1396 # Do not check return status since this is all done with END blocks.
1397 _deferred_unlink($fh, $path, 0) if $options{"UNLINK"};
1399 # Return
1400 if (wantarray()) {
1402 if ($options{'OPEN'}) {
1403 return ($fh, $path);
1404 } else {
1405 return (undef, $path);
1408 } else {
1410 # Unlink the file. It is up to unlink0 to decide what to do with
1411 # this (whether to unlink now or to defer until later)
1412 unlink0($fh, $path) or croak "Error unlinking file $path using unlink0";
1414 # Return just the filehandle.
1415 return $fh;
1421 =item B<tempdir>
1423 This is the recommended interface for creation of temporary
1424 directories. By default the directory will not be removed on exit
1425 (that is, it won't be temporary; this behaviour can not be changed
1426 because of issues with backwards compatibility). To enable removal
1427 either use the CLEANUP option which will trigger removal on program
1428 exit, or consider using the "newdir" method in the object interface which
1429 will allow the directory to be cleaned up when the object goes out of
1430 scope.
1432 The behaviour of the function depends on the arguments:
1434 $tempdir = tempdir();
1436 Create a directory in tmpdir() (see L<File::Spec|File::Spec>).
1438 $tempdir = tempdir( $template );
1440 Create a directory from the supplied template. This template is
1441 similar to that described for tempfile(). `X' characters at the end
1442 of the template are replaced with random letters to construct the
1443 directory name. At least four `X' characters must be in the template.
1445 $tempdir = tempdir ( DIR => $dir );
1447 Specifies the directory to use for the temporary directory.
1448 The temporary directory name is derived from an internal template.
1450 $tempdir = tempdir ( $template, DIR => $dir );
1452 Prepend the supplied directory name to the template. The template
1453 should not include parent directory specifications itself. Any parent
1454 directory specifications are removed from the template before
1455 prepending the supplied directory.
1457 $tempdir = tempdir ( $template, TMPDIR => 1 );
1459 Using the supplied template, create the temporary directory in
1460 a standard location for temporary files. Equivalent to doing
1462 $tempdir = tempdir ( $template, DIR => File::Spec->tmpdir);
1464 but shorter. Parent directory specifications are stripped from the
1465 template itself. The C<TMPDIR> option is ignored if C<DIR> is set
1466 explicitly. Additionally, C<TMPDIR> is implied if neither a template
1467 nor a directory are supplied.
1469 $tempdir = tempdir( $template, CLEANUP => 1);
1471 Create a temporary directory using the supplied template, but
1472 attempt to remove it (and all files inside it) when the program
1473 exits. Note that an attempt will be made to remove all files from
1474 the directory even if they were not created by this module (otherwise
1475 why ask to clean it up?). The directory removal is made with
1476 the rmtree() function from the L<File::Path|File::Path> module.
1477 Of course, if the template is not specified, the temporary directory
1478 will be created in tmpdir() and will also be removed at program exit.
1480 Will croak() if there is an error.
1482 =cut
1486 sub tempdir {
1488 # Can not check for argument count since we can have any
1489 # number of args
1491 # Default options
1492 my %options = (
1493 "CLEANUP" => 0, # Remove directory on exit
1494 "DIR" => '', # Root directory
1495 "TMPDIR" => 0, # Use tempdir with template
1498 # Check to see whether we have an odd or even number of arguments
1499 my $template = (scalar(@_) % 2 == 1 ? shift(@_) : undef );
1501 # Read the options and merge with defaults
1502 %options = (%options, @_) if @_;
1504 # Modify or generate the template
1506 # Deal with the DIR and TMPDIR options
1507 if (defined $template) {
1509 # Need to strip directory path if using DIR or TMPDIR
1510 if ($options{'TMPDIR'} || $options{'DIR'}) {
1512 # Strip parent directory from the filename
1514 # There is no filename at the end
1515 $template = VMS::Filespec::vmspath($template) if $^O eq 'VMS';
1516 my ($volume, $directories, undef) = File::Spec->splitpath( $template, 1);
1518 # Last directory is then our template
1519 $template = (File::Spec->splitdir($directories))[-1];
1521 # Prepend the supplied directory or temp dir
1522 if ($options{"DIR"}) {
1524 $template = File::Spec->catdir($options{"DIR"}, $template);
1526 } elsif ($options{TMPDIR}) {
1528 # Prepend tmpdir
1529 $template = File::Spec->catdir(File::Spec->tmpdir, $template);
1535 } else {
1537 if ($options{"DIR"}) {
1539 $template = File::Spec->catdir($options{"DIR"}, TEMPXXX);
1541 } else {
1543 $template = File::Spec->catdir(File::Spec->tmpdir, TEMPXXX);
1549 # Create the directory
1550 my $tempdir;
1551 my $suffixlen = 0;
1552 if ($^O eq 'VMS') { # dir names can end in delimiters
1553 $template =~ m/([\.\]:>]+)$/;
1554 $suffixlen = length($1);
1556 if ( ($^O eq 'MacOS') && (substr($template, -1) eq ':') ) {
1557 # dir name has a trailing ':'
1558 ++$suffixlen;
1561 my $errstr;
1562 croak "Error in tempdir() using $template: $errstr"
1563 unless ((undef, $tempdir) = _gettemp($template,
1564 "open" => 0,
1565 "mkdir"=> 1 ,
1566 "suffixlen" => $suffixlen,
1567 "ErrStr" => \$errstr,
1568 ) );
1570 # Install exit handler; must be dynamic to get lexical
1571 if ( $options{'CLEANUP'} && -d $tempdir) {
1572 _deferred_unlink(undef, $tempdir, 1);
1575 # Return the dir name
1576 return $tempdir;
1580 =back
1582 =head1 MKTEMP FUNCTIONS
1584 The following functions are Perl implementations of the
1585 mktemp() family of temp file generation system calls.
1587 =over 4
1589 =item B<mkstemp>
1591 Given a template, returns a filehandle to the temporary file and the name
1592 of the file.
1594 ($fh, $name) = mkstemp( $template );
1596 In scalar context, just the filehandle is returned.
1598 The template may be any filename with some number of X's appended
1599 to it, for example F</tmp/temp.XXXX>. The trailing X's are replaced
1600 with unique alphanumeric combinations.
1602 Will croak() if there is an error.
1604 =cut
1608 sub mkstemp {
1610 croak "Usage: mkstemp(template)"
1611 if scalar(@_) != 1;
1613 my $template = shift;
1615 my ($fh, $path, $errstr);
1616 croak "Error in mkstemp using $template: $errstr"
1617 unless (($fh, $path) = _gettemp($template,
1618 "open" => 1,
1619 "mkdir"=> 0 ,
1620 "suffixlen" => 0,
1621 "ErrStr" => \$errstr,
1622 ) );
1624 if (wantarray()) {
1625 return ($fh, $path);
1626 } else {
1627 return $fh;
1633 =item B<mkstemps>
1635 Similar to mkstemp(), except that an extra argument can be supplied
1636 with a suffix to be appended to the template.
1638 ($fh, $name) = mkstemps( $template, $suffix );
1640 For example a template of C<testXXXXXX> and suffix of C<.dat>
1641 would generate a file similar to F<testhGji_w.dat>.
1643 Returns just the filehandle alone when called in scalar context.
1645 Will croak() if there is an error.
1647 =cut
1649 sub mkstemps {
1651 croak "Usage: mkstemps(template, suffix)"
1652 if scalar(@_) != 2;
1655 my $template = shift;
1656 my $suffix = shift;
1658 $template .= $suffix;
1660 my ($fh, $path, $errstr);
1661 croak "Error in mkstemps using $template: $errstr"
1662 unless (($fh, $path) = _gettemp($template,
1663 "open" => 1,
1664 "mkdir"=> 0 ,
1665 "suffixlen" => length($suffix),
1666 "ErrStr" => \$errstr,
1667 ) );
1669 if (wantarray()) {
1670 return ($fh, $path);
1671 } else {
1672 return $fh;
1677 =item B<mkdtemp>
1679 Create a directory from a template. The template must end in
1680 X's that are replaced by the routine.
1682 $tmpdir_name = mkdtemp($template);
1684 Returns the name of the temporary directory created.
1686 Directory must be removed by the caller.
1688 Will croak() if there is an error.
1690 =cut
1692 #' # for emacs
1694 sub mkdtemp {
1696 croak "Usage: mkdtemp(template)"
1697 if scalar(@_) != 1;
1699 my $template = shift;
1700 my $suffixlen = 0;
1701 if ($^O eq 'VMS') { # dir names can end in delimiters
1702 $template =~ m/([\.\]:>]+)$/;
1703 $suffixlen = length($1);
1705 if ( ($^O eq 'MacOS') && (substr($template, -1) eq ':') ) {
1706 # dir name has a trailing ':'
1707 ++$suffixlen;
1709 my ($junk, $tmpdir, $errstr);
1710 croak "Error creating temp directory from template $template\: $errstr"
1711 unless (($junk, $tmpdir) = _gettemp($template,
1712 "open" => 0,
1713 "mkdir"=> 1 ,
1714 "suffixlen" => $suffixlen,
1715 "ErrStr" => \$errstr,
1716 ) );
1718 return $tmpdir;
1722 =item B<mktemp>
1724 Returns a valid temporary filename but does not guarantee
1725 that the file will not be opened by someone else.
1727 $unopened_file = mktemp($template);
1729 Template is the same as that required by mkstemp().
1731 Will croak() if there is an error.
1733 =cut
1735 sub mktemp {
1737 croak "Usage: mktemp(template)"
1738 if scalar(@_) != 1;
1740 my $template = shift;
1742 my ($tmpname, $junk, $errstr);
1743 croak "Error getting name to temp file from template $template: $errstr"
1744 unless (($junk, $tmpname) = _gettemp($template,
1745 "open" => 0,
1746 "mkdir"=> 0 ,
1747 "suffixlen" => 0,
1748 "ErrStr" => \$errstr,
1749 ) );
1751 return $tmpname;
1754 =back
1756 =head1 POSIX FUNCTIONS
1758 This section describes the re-implementation of the tmpnam()
1759 and tmpfile() functions described in L<POSIX>
1760 using the mkstemp() from this module.
1762 Unlike the L<POSIX|POSIX> implementations, the directory used
1763 for the temporary file is not specified in a system include
1764 file (C<P_tmpdir>) but simply depends on the choice of tmpdir()
1765 returned by L<File::Spec|File::Spec>. On some implementations this
1766 location can be set using the C<TMPDIR> environment variable, which
1767 may not be secure.
1768 If this is a problem, simply use mkstemp() and specify a template.
1770 =over 4
1772 =item B<tmpnam>
1774 When called in scalar context, returns the full name (including path)
1775 of a temporary file (uses mktemp()). The only check is that the file does
1776 not already exist, but there is no guarantee that that condition will
1777 continue to apply.
1779 $file = tmpnam();
1781 When called in list context, a filehandle to the open file and
1782 a filename are returned. This is achieved by calling mkstemp()
1783 after constructing a suitable template.
1785 ($fh, $file) = tmpnam();
1787 If possible, this form should be used to prevent possible
1788 race conditions.
1790 See L<File::Spec/tmpdir> for information on the choice of temporary
1791 directory for a particular operating system.
1793 Will croak() if there is an error.
1795 =cut
1797 sub tmpnam {
1799 # Retrieve the temporary directory name
1800 my $tmpdir = File::Spec->tmpdir;
1802 croak "Error temporary directory is not writable"
1803 if $tmpdir eq '';
1805 # Use a ten character template and append to tmpdir
1806 my $template = File::Spec->catfile($tmpdir, TEMPXXX);
1808 if (wantarray() ) {
1809 return mkstemp($template);
1810 } else {
1811 return mktemp($template);
1816 =item B<tmpfile>
1818 Returns the filehandle of a temporary file.
1820 $fh = tmpfile();
1822 The file is removed when the filehandle is closed or when the program
1823 exits. No access to the filename is provided.
1825 If the temporary file can not be created undef is returned.
1826 Currently this command will probably not work when the temporary
1827 directory is on an NFS file system.
1829 Will croak() if there is an error.
1831 =cut
1833 sub tmpfile {
1835 # Simply call tmpnam() in a list context
1836 my ($fh, $file) = tmpnam();
1838 # Make sure file is removed when filehandle is closed
1839 # This will fail on NFS
1840 unlink0($fh, $file)
1841 or return undef;
1843 return $fh;
1847 =back
1849 =head1 ADDITIONAL FUNCTIONS
1851 These functions are provided for backwards compatibility
1852 with common tempfile generation C library functions.
1854 They are not exported and must be addressed using the full package
1855 name.
1857 =over 4
1859 =item B<tempnam>
1861 Return the name of a temporary file in the specified directory
1862 using a prefix. The file is guaranteed not to exist at the time
1863 the function was called, but such guarantees are good for one
1864 clock tick only. Always use the proper form of C<sysopen>
1865 with C<O_CREAT | O_EXCL> if you must open such a filename.
1867 $filename = File::Temp::tempnam( $dir, $prefix );
1869 Equivalent to running mktemp() with $dir/$prefixXXXXXXXX
1870 (using unix file convention as an example)
1872 Because this function uses mktemp(), it can suffer from race conditions.
1874 Will croak() if there is an error.
1876 =cut
1878 sub tempnam {
1880 croak 'Usage tempnam($dir, $prefix)' unless scalar(@_) == 2;
1882 my ($dir, $prefix) = @_;
1884 # Add a string to the prefix
1885 $prefix .= 'XXXXXXXX';
1887 # Concatenate the directory to the file
1888 my $template = File::Spec->catfile($dir, $prefix);
1890 return mktemp($template);
1894 =back
1896 =head1 UTILITY FUNCTIONS
1898 Useful functions for dealing with the filehandle and filename.
1900 =over 4
1902 =item B<unlink0>
1904 Given an open filehandle and the associated filename, make a safe
1905 unlink. This is achieved by first checking that the filename and
1906 filehandle initially point to the same file and that the number of
1907 links to the file is 1 (all fields returned by stat() are compared).
1908 Then the filename is unlinked and the filehandle checked once again to
1909 verify that the number of links on that file is now 0. This is the
1910 closest you can come to making sure that the filename unlinked was the
1911 same as the file whose descriptor you hold.
1913 unlink0($fh, $path)
1914 or die "Error unlinking file $path safely";
1916 Returns false on error but croaks() if there is a security
1917 anomaly. The filehandle is not closed since on some occasions this is
1918 not required.
1920 On some platforms, for example Windows NT, it is not possible to
1921 unlink an open file (the file must be closed first). On those
1922 platforms, the actual unlinking is deferred until the program ends and
1923 good status is returned. A check is still performed to make sure that
1924 the filehandle and filename are pointing to the same thing (but not at
1925 the time the end block is executed since the deferred removal may not
1926 have access to the filehandle).
1928 Additionally, on Windows NT not all the fields returned by stat() can
1929 be compared. For example, the C<dev> and C<rdev> fields seem to be
1930 different. Also, it seems that the size of the file returned by stat()
1931 does not always agree, with C<stat(FH)> being more accurate than
1932 C<stat(filename)>, presumably because of caching issues even when
1933 using autoflush (this is usually overcome by waiting a while after
1934 writing to the tempfile before attempting to C<unlink0> it).
1936 Finally, on NFS file systems the link count of the file handle does
1937 not always go to zero immediately after unlinking. Currently, this
1938 command is expected to fail on NFS disks.
1940 This function is disabled if the global variable $KEEP_ALL is true
1941 and an unlink on open file is supported. If the unlink is to be deferred
1942 to the END block, the file is still registered for removal.
1944 This function should not be called if you are using the object oriented
1945 interface since the it will interfere with the object destructor deleting
1946 the file.
1948 =cut
1950 sub unlink0 {
1952 croak 'Usage: unlink0(filehandle, filename)'
1953 unless scalar(@_) == 2;
1955 # Read args
1956 my ($fh, $path) = @_;
1958 cmpstat($fh, $path) or return 0;
1960 # attempt remove the file (does not work on some platforms)
1961 if (_can_unlink_opened_file()) {
1963 # return early (Without unlink) if we have been instructed to retain files.
1964 return 1 if $KEEP_ALL;
1966 # XXX: do *not* call this on a directory; possible race
1967 # resulting in recursive removal
1968 croak "unlink0: $path has become a directory!" if -d $path;
1969 unlink($path) or return 0;
1971 # Stat the filehandle
1972 my @fh = stat $fh;
1974 print "Link count = $fh[3] \n" if $DEBUG;
1976 # Make sure that the link count is zero
1977 # - Cygwin provides deferred unlinking, however,
1978 # on Win9x the link count remains 1
1979 # On NFS the link count may still be 1 but we cant know that
1980 # we are on NFS
1981 return ( $fh[3] == 0 or $^O eq 'cygwin' ? 1 : 0);
1983 } else {
1984 _deferred_unlink($fh, $path, 0);
1985 return 1;
1990 =item B<cmpstat>
1992 Compare C<stat> of filehandle with C<stat> of provided filename. This
1993 can be used to check that the filename and filehandle initially point
1994 to the same file and that the number of links to the file is 1 (all
1995 fields returned by stat() are compared).
1997 cmpstat($fh, $path)
1998 or die "Error comparing handle with file";
2000 Returns false if the stat information differs or if the link count is
2001 greater than 1. Calls croak if there is a security anomaly.
2003 On certain platforms, for example Windows, not all the fields returned by stat()
2004 can be compared. For example, the C<dev> and C<rdev> fields seem to be
2005 different in Windows. Also, it seems that the size of the file
2006 returned by stat() does not always agree, with C<stat(FH)> being more
2007 accurate than C<stat(filename)>, presumably because of caching issues
2008 even when using autoflush (this is usually overcome by waiting a while
2009 after writing to the tempfile before attempting to C<unlink0> it).
2011 Not exported by default.
2013 =cut
2015 sub cmpstat {
2017 croak 'Usage: cmpstat(filehandle, filename)'
2018 unless scalar(@_) == 2;
2020 # Read args
2021 my ($fh, $path) = @_;
2023 warn "Comparing stat\n"
2024 if $DEBUG;
2026 # Stat the filehandle - which may be closed if someone has manually
2027 # closed the file. Can not turn off warnings without using $^W
2028 # unless we upgrade to 5.006 minimum requirement
2029 my @fh;
2031 local ($^W) = 0;
2032 @fh = stat $fh;
2034 return unless @fh;
2036 if ($fh[3] > 1 && $^W) {
2037 carp "unlink0: fstat found too many links; SB=@fh" if $^W;
2040 # Stat the path
2041 my @path = stat $path;
2043 unless (@path) {
2044 carp "unlink0: $path is gone already" if $^W;
2045 return;
2048 # this is no longer a file, but may be a directory, or worse
2049 unless (-f $path) {
2050 confess "panic: $path is no longer a file: SB=@fh";
2053 # Do comparison of each member of the array
2054 # On WinNT dev and rdev seem to be different
2055 # depending on whether it is a file or a handle.
2056 # Cannot simply compare all members of the stat return
2057 # Select the ones we can use
2058 my @okstat = (0..$#fh); # Use all by default
2059 if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') {
2060 @okstat = (1,2,3,4,5,7,8,9,10);
2061 } elsif ($^O eq 'os2') {
2062 @okstat = (0, 2..$#fh);
2063 } elsif ($^O eq 'VMS') { # device and file ID are sufficient
2064 @okstat = (0, 1);
2065 } elsif ($^O eq 'dos') {
2066 @okstat = (0,2..7,11..$#fh);
2067 } elsif ($^O eq 'mpeix') {
2068 @okstat = (0..4,8..10);
2071 # Now compare each entry explicitly by number
2072 for (@okstat) {
2073 print "Comparing: $_ : $fh[$_] and $path[$_]\n" if $DEBUG;
2074 # Use eq rather than == since rdev, blksize, and blocks (6, 11,
2075 # and 12) will be '' on platforms that do not support them. This
2076 # is fine since we are only comparing integers.
2077 unless ($fh[$_] eq $path[$_]) {
2078 warn "Did not match $_ element of stat\n" if $DEBUG;
2079 return 0;
2083 return 1;
2086 =item B<unlink1>
2088 Similar to C<unlink0> except after file comparison using cmpstat, the
2089 filehandle is closed prior to attempting to unlink the file. This
2090 allows the file to be removed without using an END block, but does
2091 mean that the post-unlink comparison of the filehandle state provided
2092 by C<unlink0> is not available.
2094 unlink1($fh, $path)
2095 or die "Error closing and unlinking file";
2097 Usually called from the object destructor when using the OO interface.
2099 Not exported by default.
2101 This function is disabled if the global variable $KEEP_ALL is true.
2103 Can call croak() if there is a security anomaly during the stat()
2104 comparison.
2106 =cut
2108 sub unlink1 {
2109 croak 'Usage: unlink1(filehandle, filename)'
2110 unless scalar(@_) == 2;
2112 # Read args
2113 my ($fh, $path) = @_;
2115 cmpstat($fh, $path) or return 0;
2117 # Close the file
2118 close( $fh ) or return 0;
2120 # Make sure the file is writable (for windows)
2121 _force_writable( $path );
2123 # return early (without unlink) if we have been instructed to retain files.
2124 return 1 if $KEEP_ALL;
2126 # remove the file
2127 return unlink($path);
2130 =item B<cleanup>
2132 Calling this function will cause any temp files or temp directories
2133 that are registered for removal to be removed. This happens automatically
2134 when the process exits but can be triggered manually if the caller is sure
2135 that none of the temp files are required. This method can be registered as
2136 an Apache callback.
2138 On OSes where temp files are automatically removed when the temp file
2139 is closed, calling this function will have no effect other than to remove
2140 temporary directories (which may include temporary files).
2142 File::Temp::cleanup();
2144 Not exported by default.
2146 =back
2148 =head1 PACKAGE VARIABLES
2150 These functions control the global state of the package.
2152 =over 4
2154 =item B<safe_level>
2156 Controls the lengths to which the module will go to check the safety of the
2157 temporary file or directory before proceeding.
2158 Options are:
2160 =over 8
2162 =item STANDARD
2164 Do the basic security measures to ensure the directory exists and is
2165 writable, that temporary files are opened only if they do not already
2166 exist, and that possible race conditions are avoided. Finally the
2167 L<unlink0|"unlink0"> function is used to remove files safely.
2169 =item MEDIUM
2171 In addition to the STANDARD security, the output directory is checked
2172 to make sure that it is owned either by root or the user running the
2173 program. If the directory is writable by group or by other, it is then
2174 checked to make sure that the sticky bit is set.
2176 Will not work on platforms that do not support the C<-k> test
2177 for sticky bit.
2179 =item HIGH
2181 In addition to the MEDIUM security checks, also check for the
2182 possibility of ``chown() giveaway'' using the L<POSIX|POSIX>
2183 sysconf() function. If this is a possibility, each directory in the
2184 path is checked in turn for safeness, recursively walking back to the
2185 root directory.
2187 For platforms that do not support the L<POSIX|POSIX>
2188 C<_PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED> symbol (for example, Windows NT) it is
2189 assumed that ``chown() giveaway'' is possible and the recursive test
2190 is performed.
2192 =back
2194 The level can be changed as follows:
2196 File::Temp->safe_level( File::Temp::HIGH );
2198 The level constants are not exported by the module.
2200 Currently, you must be running at least perl v5.6.0 in order to
2201 run with MEDIUM or HIGH security. This is simply because the
2202 safety tests use functions from L<Fcntl|Fcntl> that are not
2203 available in older versions of perl. The problem is that the version
2204 number for Fcntl is the same in perl 5.6.0 and in 5.005_03 even though
2205 they are different versions.
2207 On systems that do not support the HIGH or MEDIUM safety levels
2208 (for example Win NT or OS/2) any attempt to change the level will
2209 be ignored. The decision to ignore rather than raise an exception
2210 allows portable programs to be written with high security in mind
2211 for the systems that can support this without those programs failing
2212 on systems where the extra tests are irrelevant.
2214 If you really need to see whether the change has been accepted
2215 simply examine the return value of C<safe_level>.
2217 $newlevel = File::Temp->safe_level( File::Temp::HIGH );
2218 die "Could not change to high security"
2219 if $newlevel != File::Temp::HIGH;
2221 =cut
2224 # protect from using the variable itself
2225 my $LEVEL = STANDARD;
2226 sub safe_level {
2227 my $self = shift;
2228 if (@_) {
2229 my $level = shift;
2230 if (($level != STANDARD) && ($level != MEDIUM) && ($level != HIGH)) {
2231 carp "safe_level: Specified level ($level) not STANDARD, MEDIUM or HIGH - ignoring\n" if $^W;
2232 } else {
2233 # Dont allow this on perl 5.005 or earlier
2234 if ($] < 5.006 && $level != STANDARD) {
2235 # Cant do MEDIUM or HIGH checks
2236 croak "Currently requires perl 5.006 or newer to do the safe checks";
2238 # Check that we are allowed to change level
2239 # Silently ignore if we can not.
2240 $LEVEL = $level if _can_do_level($level);
2243 return $LEVEL;
2247 =item TopSystemUID
2249 This is the highest UID on the current system that refers to a root
2250 UID. This is used to make sure that the temporary directory is
2251 owned by a system UID (C<root>, C<bin>, C<sys> etc) rather than
2252 simply by root.
2254 This is required since on many unix systems C</tmp> is not owned
2255 by root.
2257 Default is to assume that any UID less than or equal to 10 is a root
2258 UID.
2260 File::Temp->top_system_uid(10);
2261 my $topid = File::Temp->top_system_uid;
2263 This value can be adjusted to reduce security checking if required.
2264 The value is only relevant when C<safe_level> is set to MEDIUM or higher.
2266 =cut
2269 my $TopSystemUID = 10;
2270 $TopSystemUID = 197108 if $^O eq 'interix'; # "Administrator"
2271 sub top_system_uid {
2272 my $self = shift;
2273 if (@_) {
2274 my $newuid = shift;
2275 croak "top_system_uid: UIDs should be numeric"
2276 unless $newuid =~ /^\d+$/s;
2277 $TopSystemUID = $newuid;
2279 return $TopSystemUID;
2283 =item B<$KEEP_ALL>
2285 Controls whether temporary files and directories should be retained
2286 regardless of any instructions in the program to remove them
2287 automatically. This is useful for debugging but should not be used in
2288 production code.
2290 $File::Temp::KEEP_ALL = 1;
2292 Default is for files to be removed as requested by the caller.
2294 In some cases, files will only be retained if this variable is true
2295 when the file is created. This means that you can not create a temporary
2296 file, set this variable and expect the temp file to still be around
2297 when the program exits.
2299 =item B<$DEBUG>
2301 Controls whether debugging messages should be enabled.
2303 $File::Temp::DEBUG = 1;
2305 Default is for debugging mode to be disabled.
2307 =back
2309 =head1 WARNING
2311 For maximum security, endeavour always to avoid ever looking at,
2312 touching, or even imputing the existence of the filename. You do not
2313 know that that filename is connected to the same file as the handle
2314 you have, and attempts to check this can only trigger more race
2315 conditions. It's far more secure to use the filehandle alone and
2316 dispense with the filename altogether.
2318 If you need to pass the handle to something that expects a filename
2319 then, on a unix system, use C<"/dev/fd/" . fileno($fh)> for arbitrary
2320 programs, or more generally C<< "+<=&" . fileno($fh) >> for Perl
2321 programs. You will have to clear the close-on-exec bit on that file
2322 descriptor before passing it to another process.
2324 use Fcntl qw/F_SETFD F_GETFD/;
2325 fcntl($tmpfh, F_SETFD, 0)
2326 or die "Can't clear close-on-exec flag on temp fh: $!\n";
2328 =head2 Temporary files and NFS
2330 Some problems are associated with using temporary files that reside
2331 on NFS file systems and it is recommended that a local filesystem
2332 is used whenever possible. Some of the security tests will most probably
2333 fail when the temp file is not local. Additionally, be aware that
2334 the performance of I/O operations over NFS will not be as good as for
2335 a local disk.
2337 =head2 Forking
2339 In some cases files created by File::Temp are removed from within an
2340 END block. Since END blocks are triggered when a child process exits
2341 (unless C<POSIX::_exit()> is used by the child) File::Temp takes care
2342 to only remove those temp files created by a particular process ID. This
2343 means that a child will not attempt to remove temp files created by the
2344 parent process.
2346 If you are forking many processes in parallel that are all creating
2347 temporary files, you may need to reset the random number seed using
2348 srand(EXPR) in each child else all the children will attempt to walk
2349 through the same set of random file names and may well cause
2350 themselves to give up if they exceed the number of retry attempts.
2352 =head2 Directory removal
2354 Note that if you have chdir'ed into the temporary directory and it is
2355 subsequently cleaned up (either in the END block or as part of object
2356 destruction), then you will get a warning from File::Path::rmtree().
2358 =head2 BINMODE
2360 The file returned by File::Temp will have been opened in binary mode
2361 if such a mode is available. If that is not correct, use the C<binmode()>
2362 function to change the mode of the filehandle.
2364 Note that you can modify the encoding of a file opened by File::Temp
2365 also by using C<binmode()>.
2367 =head1 HISTORY
2369 Originally began life in May 1999 as an XS interface to the system
2370 mkstemp() function. In March 2000, the OpenBSD mkstemp() code was
2371 translated to Perl for total control of the code's
2372 security checking, to ensure the presence of the function regardless of
2373 operating system and to help with portability. The module was shipped
2374 as a standard part of perl from v5.6.1.
2376 =head1 SEE ALSO
2378 L<POSIX/tmpnam>, L<POSIX/tmpfile>, L<File::Spec>, L<File::Path>
2380 See L<IO::File> and L<File::MkTemp>, L<Apache::TempFile> for
2381 different implementations of temporary file handling.
2383 See L<File::Tempdir> for an alternative object-oriented wrapper for
2384 the C<tempdir> function.
2386 =head1 AUTHOR
2388 Tim Jenness E<lt>tjenness@cpan.orgE<gt>
2390 Copyright (C) 2007-2009 Tim Jenness.
2391 Copyright (C) 1999-2007 Tim Jenness and the UK Particle Physics and
2392 Astronomy Research Council. All Rights Reserved. This program is free
2393 software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
2394 terms as Perl itself.
2396 Original Perl implementation loosely based on the OpenBSD C code for
2397 mkstemp(). Thanks to Tom Christiansen for suggesting that this module
2398 should be written and providing ideas for code improvements and
2399 security enhancements.
2401 =cut
2403 package File::Temp::Dir;
2405 use File::Path qw/ rmtree /;
2406 use strict;
2407 use overload '""' => "STRINGIFY", fallback => 1;
2409 # private class specifically to support tempdir objects
2410 # created by File::Temp->newdir
2412 # ostensibly the same method interface as File::Temp but without
2413 # inheriting all the IO::Seekable methods and other cruft
2415 # Read-only - returns the name of the temp directory
2417 sub dirname {
2418 my $self = shift;
2419 return $self->{DIRNAME};
2422 sub STRINGIFY {
2423 my $self = shift;
2424 return $self->dirname;
2427 sub unlink_on_destroy {
2428 my $self = shift;
2429 if (@_) {
2430 $self->{CLEANUP} = shift;
2432 return $self->{CLEANUP};
2435 sub DESTROY {
2436 my $self = shift;
2437 local($., $@, $!, $^E, $?);
2438 if ($self->unlink_on_destroy &&
2439 $$ == $self->{LAUNCHPID} && !$File::Temp::KEEP_ALL) {
2440 if (-d $self->{DIRNAME}) {
2441 # Some versions of rmtree will abort if you attempt to remove
2442 # the directory you are sitting in. We protect that and turn it
2443 # into a warning. We do this because this occurs during object
2444 # destruction and so can not be caught by the user.
2445 eval { rmtree($self->{DIRNAME}, $File::Temp::DEBUG, 0); };
2446 warn $@ if ($@ && $^W);