Temporary folder


In computing, a temporary folder or temporary directory is a directory used to hold temporary files. Many operating systems and some software automatically delete the contents of this directory at bootup or at regular intervals, leaving the directory itself intact.
For security reasons, it is best for each user to have their own temporary directory, since there has been a history of security vulnerabilities with temporary files due to programs incorrect file permissions or race conditions.
A standard procedure for system administration is to reduce the amount of storage space used by removing temporary files. In multi-user systems, this can potentially remove active files, disrupting users' activities. To avoid this, some space-reclaiming procedures remove only files which are inactive or "old" - those which have not been read or modified in several days.

Practical issues

In Unix-like systems, the /tmp directory will often be a separate disk partition. In systems with magnetic hard disk drives, performance will increase if disk-head movements from regular disk I/O are separated from the access to the temporary directory. Increasingly, memory-based solutions for the temporary directory or folder are being used, such as "RAM disks" set up in random-access memory, tmpfs file systems, or the shared-memory device in Linux.
A flash-based solid-state drive is less suitable as a temporary-storage device for reading and writing due to the asymmetric read/write duration and due to wear.

Traditional locations

In MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows, the temporary directory is set by the environment variable or. Using the Windows API, one can find the path to the temporary directory using the function, or one can obtain a path to a uniquely-named temporary file using the function. Originally, the default was, then. In the Windows XP era, the temporary directory was set per-user as, although still user-relocatable. For Windows Vista, 7, 8, and 10 the temp location has moved again to within the AppData section of the User Profile, typically User Name. In all versions of Windows, the Temp location can be accessed, for example, in Explorer, "Run..." boxes and in an application's internal code by using or. As with other environmental variables, or is synonymous with the full path.
In Unix-like systems, the global temporary directories are and. Web browsers periodically write data to the tmp directory during page views and downloads. Typically, is for persistent files, and is for more temporary files. See Filesystem Hierarchy Standard. In addition, a user can set their TMPDIR environment variable to point to a preferred directory. macOS provides user-specific temporary directories and sets TMPDIR to refer to that directory; a sandboxed application cannot use the standard Unix locations, but may use that user-specific directory, the path is provided by the function.
In OpenVMS, and in AmigaDOS are used.