You may be able to use the #{RAILS_ROOT}/tmp/
directory or Rails.root.join('tmp').to_s
:
Aspen & Bamboo
[...]
There are two directories that are writeable: ./tmp
and ./log
(under your application root).
[...]
Cedar
Cedar offers an ephemeral writeable filesystem. You can write out to disk anywhere you would like. Your changes will be lost on dyno restart and spin-up.
RAILS_ROOT
is for older Rails versions, Rails.root
is for newer versions.
You can't depend on anything surviving across requests of course, there's no guarantee that you'll even be working with the same dyno.
As long as you stay within the same process or request, Rails.root.join('tmp')
should be usable. If you need the temporary data to survive across requests or processes then you're better off using something else (such as MongoDB or PostgreSQL) as a collecting ground for your data on its way to S3.
Thanks to Benjamin Wheeler for the heads up about the RAILS_ROOT
to Rails.root
change.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…