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Which gtk method I have to use to get temporary path in Ubuntu?

How can I get the temporary directory path in Ubuntu?

like image 596
boom Avatar asked Jan 25 '11 05:01

boom


3 Answers

On most Unix-like systems, you'd be looking for /tmp. If that's not quite the answer you were after, you should specify which bit of Ubuntu you're talking about.

Certain applications will allow you to specify where their temporary files are put (such as with the TMP, TEMP or TMPDIR environment variables) but a lot of stuff would break under UNIX if /tmp didn't exist, so it's safe just to use that. If you want to make it configurable, in your code, you'd use something like the function getTmpDir() in the following complete program:

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

const char *getTmpDir (void) {
    char *tmpdir;

    if ((tmpdir = getenv ("TEMP")) != NULL)   return tmpdir;
    if ((tmpdir = getenv ("TMP")) != NULL)    return tmpdir;
    if ((tmpdir = getenv ("TMPDIR")) != NULL) return tmpdir;

    return "/tmp";
}

int main(void) {
    const char *xyzzy = getTmpDir();
    printf ("Temporary directory =  %s\n", xyzzy);
    return 0;
}

which outputs, in my CygWin environment (I have both TEMP and TMP set to this value):

Temporary directory =  /cygdrive/c/Users/Pax/AppData/Local/Temp

That's pretty much what the GLib g_get_tmp_dir() call does, though possibly in a different order.

Of course, if you wanted to use an application-specific environment variable, you could put that before the others thus:

const char *getTmpDir (void) {
    char *tmpdir;

    if ((tmpdir = getenv ("XYZZY_TMP")) != NULL)   return tmpdir;
    if ((tmpdir = getenv ("TEMP")) != NULL)        return tmpdir;
    if ((tmpdir = getenv ("TMP")) != NULL)         return tmpdir;
    if ((tmpdir = getenv ("TMPDIR")) != NULL)      return tmpdir;

    return "/tmp";
}

Or even take out some or all of the "standard" ones. But you should pretty much always fall back on /tmp if the user hasn't configured anything.

like image 144
paxdiablo Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 12:10

paxdiablo


I looked at how Python does this, and there doesn't seem to be any specific UNIX interface to do so.

They just try, in sequence:

  1. The environment variables TMPDIR, TEMP, and TMP
  2. /tmp
  3. /var/tmp
  4. /usr/tmp

Given that Python was written by people a lot smarter than I am, I'd be willing to bet this is probably the best you can do.

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Paul Fisher Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 11:10

Paul Fisher


Flocks,

Thanks for taking your time but what i am expecting is from the gnome link.

http://library.gnome.org/devel/glib/unstable/glib-Miscellaneous-Utility-Functions.html

using the API g_get_tmp_dir() we can have the location of temp directory

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boom Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 11:10

boom