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I use Cassandra DB and Helenus module for nodejs to operate with this. I have some rows which contains TimeUUID columns. How to get timestamp from TimeUUID in javascript?

2
  • 1
    I guess you can get the timestamp directly from row.forEach.
    – adrianp
    Jul 10, 2013 at 13:37
  • Unfortunately I can't in this case. I have structure in CF like this: timestamp_[user_key] : {timeUUID : 'JSON_DATA', timeUUID : 'JSON_DATA'...}. So ts var in row.forEach(function(name,value,ts,ttl) contains timestamp of creation date of timestamp_[user_key] row.
    – Vadim
    Jul 10, 2013 at 13:48

4 Answers 4

27

this lib ( UUID_to_Date ) is very simple and fast!! only used native String function. maybe this Javascript API can help you to convert the UUID to date format, Javascript is simple language and this simple code can help to writing API for every language.

this API convert UUID v1 to sec from 1970-01-01



all of you need:

    get_time_int = function (uuid_str) {
        var uuid_arr = uuid_str.split( '-' ),
            time_str = [
                uuid_arr[ 2 ].substring( 1 ),
                uuid_arr[ 1 ],
                uuid_arr[ 0 ]
            ].join( '' );
        return parseInt( time_str, 16 );
    };

    get_date_obj = function (uuid_str) {
        var int_time = this.get_time_int( uuid_str ) - 122192928000000000,
            int_millisec = Math.floor( int_time / 10000 );
        return new Date( int_millisec );
    };


Example:

    var date_obj = get_date_obj(  '8bf1aeb8-6b5b-11e4-95c0-001dba68c1f2' );
    date_obj.toLocaleString( );// '11/13/2014, 9:06:06 PM'
2
  • Thanks. For this specific uuid, I get "13.11.2014, 18:36:06" though. May 3, 2017 at 8:20
  • 1
    note, that uuid must be version 1; test with function get_uuid_version(uuid_str) { var uuid_arr = uuid_str.split( '-' ) var timeHiAndVersion = parseInt(uuid_arr[ 2 ], 16); var version = (timeHiAndVersion >> 12) & 0xF; return version; }
    – Steve Oh
    Nov 10, 2017 at 6:49
9

You can use the unixTimestampOf or dateOf functions in CQL3, or you can do it yourself, the hard way:

The time is encoded into the top 64 bits of the UUID, but it's interleaved with some other pieces, so it's not super straight forward to extract a time.

If n is the integer representation of the TimeUUID then you can extract the UNIX epoch like this:

n = (value >> 64)
t = 0
t |= (n & 0x0000000000000fff) << 48
t |= (n & 0x00000000ffff0000) << 16
t |= (n & 0xffffffff00000000) >> 32
t -= 122192928000000000
seconds = t/10_000_000
microseconds = (t - seconds * 10_000_000)/10.0

this code is from my Ruby CQL3 driver, cql-rb, and can be found in full here: https://github.com/iconara/cql-rb/blob/master/lib/cql/time_uuid.rb

I used this resource: http://www.famkruithof.net/guid-uuid-timebased.html, and the RFC to implement that code.

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  • 2
    So, for convert TimeUUID (for example aa009299-0c22-47c0-9cd4-aa518f0274a7) to timestamp using JS I need to convert uuid to integer representation first... Right? How to do that?
    – Vadim
    Jul 11, 2013 at 7:46
7

Use uuid-time module.

I asked maintainers of uuid module here https://github.com/kelektiv/node-uuid/issues/297 and they pointed me to the uuid-time module https://www.npmjs.com/package/uuid-time

1
  • This is what should be the correct answer now. Thank you for actually releasing a node module that does it with no additional dependency.
    – zenbeni
    Aug 9, 2021 at 13:54
4

node-uuid module for nodejs contains method for convert uuid v1 to timestamp

Commit with function for extract msecs from uuid v1

7
  • You didn't make a pull request for it?
    – Sam
    Nov 8, 2013 at 6:45
  • Did I make pull request for feature which is already added? No, I didn't
    – Vadim
    Nov 8, 2013 at 10:32
  • It's added? What's the name of the method?
    – Sam
    Nov 8, 2013 at 11:10
  • v1time() Did you click on link in answer?
    – Vadim
    Nov 8, 2013 at 11:38
  • 7
    Yeah, but the method is only added in your fork isn't it? That's why I was asking whether you had made a pull request. There is no v1time in the node-uuid package as far as I can tell.
    – Sam
    Nov 11, 2013 at 1:54

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