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Cross-platform way of getting temp directory in Python

Is there a cross-platform way of getting the path to the temp directory in Python 2.6?

For example, under Linux that would be /tmp, while under XP C:\Documents and settings\[user]\Application settings\Temp.

not a pythonist, but you should use these methods for creating temporary files/directories
See the tempfile module at docs.python.org/library/tempfile.html.

n
nosklo

That would be the tempfile module.

It has functions to get the temporary directory, and also has some shortcuts to create temporary files and directories in it, either named or unnamed.

Example:

import tempfile

print tempfile.gettempdir() # prints the current temporary directory

f = tempfile.TemporaryFile()
f.write('something on temporaryfile')
f.seek(0) # return to beginning of file
print f.read() # reads data back from the file
f.close() # temporary file is automatically deleted here

For completeness, here's how it searches for the temporary directory, according to the documentation:

The directory named by the TMPDIR environment variable. The directory named by the TEMP environment variable. The directory named by the TMP environment variable. A platform-specific location: On RiscOS, the directory named by the Wimp$ScrapDir environment variable. On Windows, the directories C:\TEMP, C:\TMP, \TEMP, and \TMP, in that order. On all other platforms, the directories /tmp, /var/tmp, and /usr/tmp, in that order. As a last resort, the current working directory.


For me, OSX is putting it in /var/folders/<garbage/here> instead of /tmp because that is how $TMPDIR is set. See here.
Currently, with python 3.6.5 on Windows 10, tempfile.gettempdir() resolves to C:\users\user\AppData\Local\Temp. An unfortunately long path.
R
RichieHindle

This should do what you want:

print tempfile.gettempdir()

For me on my Windows box, I get:

c:\temp

and on my Linux box I get:

/tmp

but this does not work for MacOS...Asclepius answer is for MacOS the better choice
A
Asclepius

I use:

from pathlib import Path
import platform
import tempfile

tempdir = Path("/tmp" if platform.system() == "Darwin" else tempfile.gettempdir())

This is because on MacOS, i.e. Darwin, tempfile.gettempdir() and os.getenv('TMPDIR') return a value such as '/var/folders/nj/269977hs0_96bttwj2gs_jhhp48z54/T'; it is one that I do not always want.


At least in this case MacOS does the right thing of returning you an user-level isolated temp directory. I am 99.99% sure this is what you need.... unless you want to mess with the operating system.
@sorin 99.99% is a stretch. I'd say 50% is more realistic. Often I'm working with multiprocessing and then I could want the same temp dir for all processes.
@Acumenus indeed as far as I know sorin is right. your assumption that the TMPDIR on osx will be different for each process is wrong. The TMPDIR is per user however per session. This location is cleaned up on reboot. If you want to convince yourself try a python code that display the TMPDIR and saved it to testTempdir.py Then do this in your terminal for ((i=0;i<20;i++)) do;./testTempDir.py&;echo $!;done. You’ll see 20 ≠ process id ans 20 times the same TMPDIR
@StephaneGasparini, true, but sometimes you need separate processes from separate parents (sessions), and this is more cross-platform
@Asclepius TMPDIR is an environment variable that express the result of NSTemporaryDirectory as far as I can tell. The API documentation says that it is per user see developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/…. see also stackoverflow.com/questions/10293348/…
h
hobs

The simplest way, based on @nosklo's comment and answer:

import tempfile
tmp = tempfile.mkdtemp()

But if you want to manually control the creation of the directories:

import os
from tempfile import gettempdir
tmp = os.path.join(gettempdir(), '.{}'.format(hash(os.times())))
os.makedirs(tmp)

That way you can easily clean up after yourself when you are done (for privacy, resources, security, whatever) with:

from shutil import rmtree
rmtree(tmp, ignore_errors=True)

This is similar to what applications like Google Chrome and Linux systemd do. They just use a shorter hex hash and an app-specific prefix to "advertise" their presence.


you should use tempfile.mkdtemp() instead
@nosklo, that's certainly an option, and would take advantage of all the robustness built into the tempfile package, but the hash approach lets you create a path of your choosing and nest multiple directories in a directory tree that meets your requirements. It's basically a more explicit, more flexible version of the mkdtemp() you suggested.
F
Freak

Why so many complex answers?

I just use this

   (os.getenv("TEMP") if os.name=="nt" else "/tmp") + os.path.sep + "tempfilename.tmp"

How is this less complex than other answers?