GNU bug report logs -
#55837
Options `-p` and `--tmpdir` behave differently
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Reported by: Klaatu <klaatu <at> mixedsignals.ml>
Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 01:12:01 UTC
Severity: normal
Tags: notabug
Done: Bernhard Voelker <mail <at> bernhard-voelker.de>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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On 6/8/22 02:28, Klaatu wrote:
> According to the man page, `--tmpfile` is the long option for `-p`
> However, I get different results when using one or the other.
> The `-p` option results in success:
>
> <pre><code>
> $ mktemp -p ~/Demo
> /home/klaatu/Demo/tmp.6TWPxScyKK
> $ mktemp -p ~/Demo XXX
> /home/klaatu/Demo/KdC
> </code></pre>
>
> However, `--tempdir` results in failure:
>
> <pre><code>
> $ mktemp --tmpdir ~/Demo
> mktemp: too few X's in template ‘/home/klaatu/Demo’
> $ mktemp --tmpdir ~/Demo XXX
> mktemp: too many templates
> Try 'mktemp --help' for more information.
The option --tmpdir is indeed the long option for -p, but it has to be used with
it's argument following immediately and beginning after the '=' character:
$ mktemp --help | grep -- '-p.*tmpdir'
-p DIR, --tmpdir[=DIR] interpret TEMPLATE relative to DIR; if DIR is not
As the documentation states, the argument is optional, and therefore `mktemp`
took ~/Demo as pattern instead of argument to --tmpdir.
Use `mktemp --tmpdir=/some/dir` instead.
> $ mktemp --tmpdir='~/Demo' XXX
> mktemp: failed to create file via template ‘~/Demo/XXX’: No such file or
> directory
> </code></pre>
In this last code example, `mktemp` will receive the '~/Demo' literally because
the calling shell doesn't replace it with the real path (like /home/someuser/Demo)
as it usually would do without the quoting; therefore `mktemp` fails to create
a file there.
The program works as specified, and therefore I'm marking this as not a bug.
Have a nice day,
Berny
This bug report was last modified 2 years and 347 days ago.
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