Defined in header <stdio.h> | ||
---|---|---|
char *tmpnam( char *filename ); | (1) | |
errno_t tmpnam_s(char *filename_s, rsize_t maxsize); | (2) | (since C11) |
L_tmpnam
in length) and stores it in character string pointed to by filename
. The function is capable of generating up to TMP_MAX
of unique filenames, but some or all of them may be in use in the filesystem and thus not suitable return values. TMP_MAX_S
names may be generated, no longer than L_tmpnam_s
in length, and he following errors are detected at runtime and call the currently installed constraint handler function: filename_s
is a null pointer maxsize
is greater than RSIZE_MAX
maxsize
is less than the generated file name string tmpnam_s
is only guaranteed to be available of __STDC_LIB_EXT1__
is defined by the implementation and if the user defines __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__
to the integer constant 1
before including <stdio.h>
.tmpnam
and tmpnam_s
modify static state (which may be shared between these functions) and are not required to be thread-safe.
filename | - | pointer to the character array capable of holding at least L_tmpnam bytes, to be used as a result buffer. If null pointer is passed, a pointer to an internal static buffer is returned. |
filename_s | - | pointer to the character array capable of holding at least L_tmpnam_s bytes, to be used as a result buffer. |
maxsize | - | maximum number of characters the function is allowed to write (typically the size of the filename_s array). |
filename
if filename
was not a null pointer. Otherwise a pointer to an internal static buffer is returned. If no suitable filename can be generated, null pointer is returned.filename_s
on success. On error, returns non-zero and writes the null character to filename_s[0]
(only if filename_s
is not null and maxsize
is not zero and is not greater than RSIZE_MAX
).Although the names generated by tmpnam
are difficult to guess, it is possible that a file with that name is created by another process between the moment tmpnam
returns and the moment this program attempts to use the returned name to create a file. The standard function tmpfile
and the POSIX function mkstemp do not have this problem (creating a unique directory using only the standard C library still requires the use of tmpnam
).
POSIX systems additionally define the similarly named function tempnam()
, which offers the choice of a directory (which defaults to the optionally defined macro P_tmpdir)
.
#include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> int main(void) { char* name1 = tmpnam(NULL); printf("temporary file name: %s\n", name1); char name2[L_tmpnam]; if (tmpnam(name2)) printf("temporary file name: %s\n", name2); }
Possible output:
temporary file name: /tmp/fileRZHMwL temporary file name: /tmp/file420gSN
(C11) | returns a pointer to a temporary file (function) |
C++ documentation for tmpnam |
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