On most FHS systems, there is a /tmp
folder as well as a /var/tmp
folder. What is the functional difference between the two?
4 Answers
/tmp
is meant as fast (possibly small) storage with a short lifetime. Many systems clean /tmp
very fast - on some systems it is even mounted as RAM-disk. /var/tmp
is normally located on a physical disk, is larger and can hold temporary files for a longer time. Some systems also clean /var/tmp
, but less often.
Also note that /var/tmp
might not be available in the early boot-process, as /var
and/or /var/tmp
may be mountpoints. Thus it is a little bit comparable to the difference between /bin
and /usr/bin
. The first is available during early boot - the latter after the system has mounted everything. So most boot-scripts will use /tmp
and not /var/tmp
for temporary files.
Another (upcoming) location on Linux for temporary files is /dev/shm
.
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5I find it a bit ironic that
/bin
and/usr/bin
are actually the same these days (symlinks). ;-) Apr 5, 2016 at 14:28 -
3@Felix Not on all distributions yet. But Linux is moving that way. Propably because disks get bigger and bigger.– NilsMay 5, 2016 at 21:34
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So, How should
/tmp
and/var/tmp
should be sized considering/tmp
is available before/var/tmp
be mounted?– IsraelOct 24, 2022 at 1:44 -
@Israel 4 GB should be enough for each. But there has to be a policy not to use tmp-directies for long lasting storage.– NilsOct 24, 2022 at 7:57
/tmp
may be, and sometimes is, cleaned on reboot. /var/tmp
is preserved between reboots.
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2/tmp may even clean the files created by a process right after it has exited!– osveinOct 3, 2015 at 12:14
POSIX Base Specifications, Issue 7 on /tmp:
The following directory shall exist on conforming systems and shall be used as described:
/tmp
A directory made available for applications that need a place to create temporary files. Applications shall be allowed to create files in this directory, but shall not assume that such files are preserved between invocations of the application.
The File Hierarchy Standard 2.3 on /tmp:
The /tmp directory must be made available for programs that require temporary files.
Programs must not assume that any files or directories in /tmp are preserved between invocations of the program.
Rationale
IEEE standard P1003.2 (POSIX, part 2) makes requirements that are similar to the above section.
Although data stored in /tmp may be deleted in a site-specific manner, it is recommended that files and directories located in /tmp be deleted whenever the system is booted.
FHS added this recommendation on the basis of historical precedent and common practice, but did not make it a requirement because system administration is not within the scope of this standard.
POSIX does not specify /var/tmp. The FHS does though:
The /var/tmp directory is made available for programs that require temporary files or directories that are preserved between system reboots. Therefore, data stored in /var/tmp is more persistent than data in /tmp.
Files and directories located in /var/tmp must not be deleted when the system is booted. Although data stored in /var/tmp is typically deleted in a site-specific manner, it is recommended that deletions occur at a less frequent interval than /tmp.
They have the same purpose and functionality. Every version of UNIX/Linux will handle these directories differently. Historically, before the advent of RAM/swap based filesystems, you had disk-less systems where the /
and /usr
filesystems would be read-only and /var
(variable) would be read-write. The /tmp
name would be a symbolic link to /var/tmp
. Later, disk-less systems fell out of style, disk space became cheaper (to have larger root filesytems) and technology allowed for filesystems mounted from memory instead of disk. The /var/tmp
directory fell out of style, but is still used by some programs.
These days, more security are set up by default on /tmp
, like g+s,+t
permissions, but not on /var/tmp
. Additionally, /var/tmp
is rarely mounted from RAM or swap.
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1on my debian and fedora systems, /tmp and /var/tmp have the same mode -
a+rwx+t
- and nog+s
. Mar 14, 2018 at 19:23