As the title suggests — can I be reasonably sure that mktemp will exist on any unix-y operating system I'm likely to encounter?
4 Answers
POSIX does not seem to specify mktemp(1).
It looks like most modern systems have it, but the available functionality and the semantics of the options vary between implementations (so particular invocations may not be portable):
- mktemp(1) from OpenBSD — mktemp(1) originated in OpenBSD 2.1
- mktemp(1) from FreeBSD
- mktemp(1) from Mac OS X — almost always the same as from FreeBSD
- mktemp(1) from Todd C. Miller of sudo fame
- mktemp(1) from Solaris
- mktemp(1) from GNU coreutils
- mktemp(1) from HP/UX — this one seems particularly divergent from most of the others listed here
So if you want a portable solution you may need to stick to functionality and options that mean the same thing on all of your platforms of interest.
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1It use to be reasonably portable and defined by POSIX but it seems that some weaknesses in it were addressed by forming a new function 'mkstemp()'. "4.3BSD, POSIX.1-2001. POSIX.1-2008 removes the specification of mktemp()." man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/mktemp.3.html The newer replacment being man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/mkstemp.3.html– TafTApr 28, 2015 at 7:55
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3The
mktemp@TafT is addressing is the C library function, whereas themktempOP asked about is the command line program.– onlynoneAug 15, 2017 at 16:05 -
@onlynone is one of things not often a very thin veneer around the other?– TafTAug 16, 2017 at 16:40
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4@TafT kind of. But it's not quite that thin.
mktemp.cin gnu coreutils is 350 lines: lingrok.org/xref/coreutils/src/mktemp.c . And actually it doesn't look like it ever callsmktemp(3)instead it uses some gnulib function (not glibc) that does it's own logic and the only system call it makes is toopen.– onlynoneAug 17, 2017 at 15:47 -
@TafT No - no proper implementation of
mktempthe command line tool will usemktempthe deprecated C function.– mtraceurMay 16, 2020 at 5:13
A mktemp function (AKA mktemp(3)) first appeared in Unix V7 so it's likely to be everywhere. However, a mktemp command (aka mktemp(1)) first appeared, I believe, on OpenBSD 2.1, so if you have to deal with truly antediluvian Unix systems you might have to worry -- unless you can distribute the very portable mktemp.org version (to fix the potential lack of this utility on some customer's antediluvian system). How likely you are to encounter antediluvian system is nigh impossible for us to guess, of course -- e.g., in HP-UX, mktemp(1) has been around for at least 8 years (even most enterprises probably have updated their Unix OS's within that time frame), in Xenix I believe it appeared in 3.0 (in 1992), etc, etc.
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So the short summary is: yes, you can reasonably rely on mktemp being around– mpez0May 8, 2010 at 2:39
FYI, mktemp appears to NOT be included with Solaris 9 (released 2002/2003) - just ran across this today:
$ uname -a
SunOS dcmnapp02 5.9 Generic_122300-47 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V440
$ mktemp
bash: mktemp: command not found
$ man mktemp
bash-2.05$ man mktemp
Reformatting page. Please Wait... done
Standard C Library Functions mktemp(3C)
NAME
mktemp - make a unique file name
SYNOPSIS
#include
char *mktemp(char *template);
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2Yes, Solaris 10 was the first Solaris release to include the mktemp(1) command in the OS.– alancAug 18, 2012 at 6:55
On Solaris 9 it's in package SMCmktemp, see http://sunfreeware.com/indexsparc9.html:
uname -s
SunOS
uname -r
5.9
/usr/sbin/pkgchk -l -p /usr/local/bin/mktemp
Pathname: /usr/local/bin/mktemp
Type: regular file
Expected mode: 0555
Expected owner: bin
Expected group: bin
Expected file size (bytes): 8884
Expected sum(1) of contents: 6493
Expected last modification: Nov 05 08:48:17 2002
Referenced by the following packages:
SMCmktemp
Current status: installed
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2
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Yes, the service has moved to unixpackages.com and has become a paid service.– thecarpyApr 14 at 6:51