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Home/ Questions/Q 693337
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T02:44:36+00:00 2026-05-14T02:44:36+00:00

I need a fresh temporary directory to do some work in a shell script.

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I need a fresh temporary directory to do some work in a shell script. When the work is done (or if I kill the job midway), I want the script to change back to the old working directory and wipe out the temporary one. In Ruby, it might look like this:

require 'tmpdir'

Dir.mktmpdir 'my_build' do |temp_dir|
  puts "Temporary workspace is #{temp_dir}"
  do_some_stuff(temp_dir)
end

puts "Temporary directory already deleted"

What would be the best bang for the buck to do that in a Bash script?

Here is my current implementation. Any thoughts or suggestions?

here=$( pwd )
tdir=$( mktemp -d )
trap 'return_here' INT TERM EXIT
return_here () {
    cd "$here"
    [ -d "$tdir" ] && rm -rf "$tdir"
}

do_stuff # This may succeed, fail, change dir, or I may ^C it.
return_here
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T02:44:37+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 2:44 am

    Here you go:

    #!/bin/bash
    TDIR=`mktemp -d`
    
    trap "{ cd - ; rm -rf $TDIR; exit 255; }" SIGINT
    
    cd $TDIR
    # do important stuff here
    cd -
    
    rm -rf $TDIR
    
    exit 0
    
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