![Image of node-temp logo](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bruce/node-temp/master/media/A5.jpg) ========= Temporary files, directories, and streams for Node.js. Handles generating a unique file/directory name under the appropriate system temporary directory, changing the file to an appropriate mode, and supports automatic removal (if asked) `temp` has a similar API to the `fs` module. Node.js Compatibility --------------------- Supports v6.0.0+. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/bruce/node-temp.png)](https://travis-ci.org/bruce/node-temp) Please let me know if you have problems running it on a later version of Node.js or have platform-specific problems. Installation ------------ Install it using [npm](http://github.com/isaacs/npm): $ npm install temp Or get it directly from: http://github.com/bruce/node-temp Synopsis -------- You can create temporary files with `open` and `openSync`, temporary directories with `mkdir` and `mkdirSync`, or you can get a unique name in the system temporary directory with `path`. Working copies of the following examples can be found under the `examples` directory. ### Temporary Files To create a temporary file use `open` or `openSync`, passing them an optional prefix, suffix, or both (see below for details on affixes). The object passed to the callback (or returned) has `path` and `fd` keys: ```javascript { path: "/path/to/file", , fd: theFileDescriptor } ``` In this example we write to a temporary file and call out to `grep` and `wc -l` to determine the number of time `foo` occurs in the text. The temporary file is chmod'd `0600` and cleaned up automatically when the process at exit (because `temp.track()` is called): ```javascript var temp = require('temp'), fs = require('fs'), util = require('util'), exec = require('child_process').exec; // Automatically track and cleanup files at exit temp.track(); // Fake data var myData = "foo\nbar\nfoo\nbaz"; // Process the data (note: error handling omitted) temp.open('myprefix', function(err, info) { if (!err) { fs.write(info.fd, myData, (err) => { console.log(err); }); fs.close(info.fd, function(err) { exec("grep foo '" + info.path + "' | wc -l", function(err, stdout) { util.puts(stdout.trim()); }); }); } }); ``` ### Want Cleanup? Make sure you ask for it. As noted in the example above, if you want temp to track the files and directories it creates and handle removing those files and directories on exit, you must call `track()`. The `track()` function is chainable, and it's recommended that you call it when requiring the module. ```javascript var temp = require("temp").track(); ``` Why is this necessary? In pre-0.6 versions of temp, tracking was automatic. While this works great for scripts and [Grunt tasks](http://gruntjs.com/), it's not so great for long-running server processes. Since that's arguably what Node.js is _for_, you have to opt-in to tracking. But it's easy. #### Cleanup anytime When tracking, you can run `cleanup()` and `cleanupSync()` anytime (`cleanupSync()` will be run for you on process exit). An object will be returned (or passed to the callback) with cleanup counts and the file/directory tracking lists will be reset. ```javascript > temp.cleanupSync(); { files: 1, dirs: 0 } ``` ```javascript > temp.cleanup(function(err, stats) { console.log(stats); }); { files: 1, dirs: 0 } ``` Note: If you're not tracking, an error ("not tracking") will be passed to the callback. ### Temporary Directories To create a temporary directory, use `mkdir` or `mkdirSync`, passing it an optional prefix, suffix, or both (see below for details on affixes). In this example we create a temporary directory, write to a file within it, call out to an external program to create a PDF, and read the result. While the external process creates a lot of additional files, the temporary directory is removed automatically at exit (because `temp.track()` is called): ```javascript var temp = require('temp'), fs = require('fs'), util = require('util'), path = require('path'), exec = require('child_process').exec; // Automatically track and cleanup files at exit temp.track(); // For use with ConTeXt, http://wiki.contextgarden.net var myData = "\\starttext\nHello World\n\\stoptext"; temp.mkdir('pdfcreator', function(err, dirPath) { var inputPath = path.join(dirPath, 'input.tex') fs.writeFile(inputPath, myData, function(err) { if (err) throw err; process.chdir(dirPath); exec("texexec '" + inputPath + "'", function(err) { if (err) throw err; fs.readFile(path.join(dirPath, 'input.pdf'), function(err, data) { if (err) throw err; sys.print(data); }); }); }); }); ``` ### Temporary Streams To create a temporary WriteStream, use 'createWriteStream', which sits on top of `fs.createWriteStream`. The return value is a `fs.WriteStream` with a `path` property containing the temporary file path for the stream. The `path` is registered for removal when `temp.cleanup` is called (because `temp.track()` is called). ```javascript var temp = require('temp'); // Automatically track and cleanup files at exit temp.track(); var stream = temp.createWriteStream(); // stream.path contains the temporary file path for the stream stream.write("Some data"); // Maybe do some other things stream.end(); ``` ### Affixes You can provide custom prefixes and suffixes when creating temporary files and directories. If you provide a string, it is used as the prefix for the temporary name. If you provide an object with `prefix`, `suffix` and `dir` keys, they are used for the temporary name. Here are some examples: * `"aprefix"`: A simple prefix, prepended to the filename; this is shorthand for: * `{prefix: "aprefix"}`: A simple prefix, prepended to the filename * `{suffix: ".asuffix"}`: A suffix, appended to the filename (especially useful when the file needs to be named with specific extension for use with an external program). * `{prefix: "myprefix", suffix: "mysuffix"}`: Customize both affixes * `{dir: path.join(os.tmpdir(), "myapp")}`: default prefix and suffix within a new temporary directory. * `null`: Use the defaults for files and directories (prefixes `"f-"` and `"d-"`, respectively, no suffixes). In this simple example we read a `pdf`, write it to a temporary file with a `.pdf` extension, and close it. ```javascript var fs = require('fs'), temp = require('temp'); fs.readFile('/path/to/source.pdf', function(err, data) { temp.open({suffix: '.pdf'}, function(err, info) { if (err) throw err; fs.write(info.fd, data, (err) => { console.log(err) }); fs.close(info.fd, function(err) { if (err) throw err; // Do something with the file }); }); }); ``` ### Just a path, please If you just want a unique name in your temporary directory, use `path`: ```javascript var fs = require('fs'); var tempName = temp.path({suffix: '.pdf'}); // Do something with tempName ``` Note: The file isn't created for you, and the mode is not changed -- and it will not be removed automatically at exit. If you use `path`, it's all up to you. Testing ------- ```sh $ npm test ``` Contributing ------------ You can find the repository at: http://github.com/bruce/node-temp Issues/Feature Requests can be submitted at: http://github.com/bruce/node-temp/issues I'd really like to hear your feedback, and I'd love to receive your pull-requests! Copyright --------- Copyright (c) 2010-2014 Bruce Williams. This software is licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE for details.