Commit 9f74c6cf authored by Petri Lehtinen's avatar Petri Lehtinen

Issue #8890: Stop advertising an insecure use of /tmp in docs

parent 8b945148
......@@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ under the distribution root; if you're excessively concerned with speed, or want
to keep the source tree pristine, you can change the build directory with the
:option:`--build-base` option. For example::
python setup.py build --build-base=/tmp/pybuild/foo-1.0
python setup.py build --build-base=/path/to/pybuild/foo-1.0
(Or you could do this permanently with a directive in your system or personal
Distutils configuration file; see section :ref:`inst-config-files`.) Normally, this
......
......@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ automatically when the program terminates without relying on the application
making an explicit call into this module at termination. ::
try:
_count = int(open("/tmp/counter").read())
_count = int(open("counter").read())
except IOError:
_count = 0
......@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ making an explicit call into this module at termination. ::
_count = _count + n
def savecounter():
open("/tmp/counter", "w").write("%d" % _count)
open("counter", "w").write("%d" % _count)
import atexit
atexit.register(savecounter)
......
......@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ program to users of your script, you can have the reports saved to files
instead, with code like this::
import cgitb
cgitb.enable(display=0, logdir="/tmp")
cgitb.enable(display=0, logdir="/path/to/logdir")
It's very helpful to use this feature during script development. The reports
produced by :mod:`cgitb` provide information that can save you a lot of time in
......
......@@ -65,6 +65,6 @@ to this variable:
Example::
>>> import imghdr
>>> imghdr.what('/tmp/bass.gif')
>>> imghdr.what('bass.gif')
'gif'
......@@ -71,6 +71,6 @@ An example usage::
>>> import mailcap
>>> d=mailcap.getcaps()
>>> mailcap.findmatch(d, 'video/mpeg', filename='/tmp/tmp1223')
('xmpeg /tmp/tmp1223', {'view': 'xmpeg %s'})
>>> mailcap.findmatch(d, 'video/mpeg', filename='tmp1223')
('xmpeg tmp1223', {'view': 'xmpeg %s'})
......@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ To post an article from a binary file (this assumes that the article has valid
headers, and that you have right to post on the particular newsgroup)::
>>> s = nntplib.NNTP('news.gmane.org')
>>> f = open('/tmp/article.txt', 'rb')
>>> f = open('article.txt', 'rb')
>>> s.post(f)
'240 Article posted successfully.'
>>> s.quit()
......
......@@ -171,10 +171,10 @@ required option
For example, consider this hypothetical command-line::
prog -v --report /tmp/report.txt foo bar
prog -v --report report.txt foo bar
``-v`` and ``--report`` are both options. Assuming that ``--report``
takes one argument, ``/tmp/report.txt`` is an option argument. ``foo`` and
takes one argument, ``report.txt`` is an option argument. ``foo`` and
``bar`` are positional arguments.
......
......@@ -26,12 +26,12 @@ The :mod:`pipes` module defines the following class:
Example::
>>> import pipes
>>> t=pipes.Template()
>>> t = pipes.Template()
>>> t.append('tr a-z A-Z', '--')
>>> f=t.open('/tmp/1', 'w')
>>> f = t.open('pipefile', 'w')
>>> f.write('hello world')
>>> f.close()
>>> open('/tmp/1').read()
>>> open('pipefile').read()
'HELLO WORLD'
......
......@@ -18,10 +18,10 @@ with the DB-API 2.0 specification described by :pep:`249`.
To use the module, you must first create a :class:`Connection` object that
represents the database. Here the data will be stored in the
:file:`/tmp/example` file::
:file:`example.db` file::
import sqlite3
conn = sqlite3.connect('/tmp/example')
conn = sqlite3.connect('example.db')
You can also supply the special name ``:memory:`` to create a database in RAM.
......
......@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ A simple example demonstrating the use of the programmatic interface::
# run the new command using the given tracer
tracer.run('main()')
# make a report, placing output in /tmp
# make a report, placing output in the current directory
r = tracer.results()
r.write_results(show_missing=True, coverdir="/tmp")
r.write_results(show_missing=True, coverdir=".")
......@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ Typically, :data:`sys.path` is a list of directory names as strings. This modul
also allows an item of :data:`sys.path` to be a string naming a ZIP file archive.
The ZIP archive can contain a subdirectory structure to support package imports,
and a path within the archive can be specified to only import from a
subdirectory. For example, the path :file:`/tmp/example.zip/lib/` would only
subdirectory. For example, the path :file:`example.zip/lib/` would only
import from the :file:`lib/` subdirectory within the archive.
Any files may be present in the ZIP archive, but only files :file:`.py` and
......@@ -144,8 +144,8 @@ Examples
Here is an example that imports a module from a ZIP archive - note that the
:mod:`zipimport` module is not explicitly used. ::
$ unzip -l /tmp/example.zip
Archive: /tmp/example.zip
$ unzip -l example.zip
Archive: example.zip
Length Date Time Name
-------- ---- ---- ----
8467 11-26-02 22:30 jwzthreading.py
......@@ -154,8 +154,8 @@ Here is an example that imports a module from a ZIP archive - note that the
$ ./python
Python 2.3 (#1, Aug 1 2003, 19:54:32)
>>> import sys
>>> sys.path.insert(0, '/tmp/example.zip') # Add .zip file to front of path
>>> sys.path.insert(0, 'example.zip') # Add .zip file to front of path
>>> import jwzthreading
>>> jwzthreading.__file__
'/tmp/example.zip/jwzthreading.py'
'example.zip/jwzthreading.py'
......@@ -234,12 +234,12 @@ two arguments: ``open(filename, mode)``.
::
>>> f = open('/tmp/workfile', 'w')
>>> f = open('workfile', 'w')
.. XXX str(f) is <io.TextIOWrapper object at 0x82e8dc4>
>>> print(f)
<open file '/tmp/workfile', mode 'w' at 80a0960>
<open file 'workfile', mode 'w' at 80a0960>
The first argument is a string containing the filename. The second argument is
another string containing a few characters describing the way in which the file
......@@ -346,7 +346,7 @@ of the file, 1 uses the current file position, and 2 uses the end of the file as
the reference point. *from_what* can be omitted and defaults to 0, using the
beginning of the file as the reference point. ::
>>> f = open('/tmp/workfile', 'rb+')
>>> f = open('workfile', 'rb+')
>>> f.write(b'0123456789abcdef')
16
>>> f.seek(5) # Go to the 6th byte in the file
......@@ -377,7 +377,7 @@ objects. This has the advantage that the file is properly closed after its
suite finishes, even if an exception is raised on the way. It is also much
shorter than writing equivalent :keyword:`try`\ -\ :keyword:`finally` blocks::
>>> with open('/tmp/workfile', 'r') as f:
>>> with open('workfile', 'r') as f:
... read_data = f.read()
>>> f.closed
True
......
......@@ -1170,6 +1170,7 @@ Sue Williams
Gerald S. Williams
Steven Willis
Frank Willison
Geoff Wilson
Greg V. Wilson
J Derek Wilson
Paul Winkler
......
......@@ -1078,6 +1078,10 @@ Tools/Demos
Documentation
-------------
- Issue #8890: Stop advertising an insecure practice by replacing uses
of the /tmp directory with better alternatives in the documentation.
Patch by Geoff Wilson.
- Issue #17203: add long option names to unittest discovery docs.
- Issue #13094: add "Why do lambdas defined in a loop with different values
......
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment