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I need to generate unique ids for my application and I am looking for suitable algorithms. I would prefer something like this --

YYYY + MM + DD + HH + MM + SS + <random salt> + <something derived from the preceding values>

F.ex. -

20100128184544ewbhk4h3b45fdg544

I was thinking about using SHA-256 or something but the resultant string should not be too long. I could use UUID but again, they are too long and they are guaranteed to be unique on only one machine.

I would welcome suggestions, ideas. My programming language is Java.

Edit: The ids need not be cryptographically secure. I am looking at simpler hashing algos like the one by Dan Bernstein, etc.

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    UUID is guaranteed to be unique universally. It uses the MAC address in the algorithm to ensure no two machines generate the same UUID.
    – kennytm
    Jan 28, 2010 at 13:21
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    What's wrong with GUID? It's not much longer than the example you gave, and a GUID is unique Jan 28, 2010 at 13:21
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    @Kenny: Afaik no one uses the first version (the one with MAC addresses) anymore. Kinda beside the point anyway since many NICs nowadays have user-configurable MAC addresses. Most UUIDs I see today are version 4.
    – Joey
    Jan 28, 2010 at 13:25
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    Whilst the algorithm attempts to ensure that a UUID / GUID is Unique, there is a mathematical percentage chance that it can occur, but it is in the 1 in multiple Billions range. The MAC address component was removed in later variations of the algorithm, to prevent GUID's being traced back to Mac Addresses - it created a privacy issue.
    – Andrew
    Jan 28, 2010 at 13:26
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    Strictly speaking, it's impossible to generate a guaranteed unique value, as there is an infinite number of objects that could be constructed (and limited space to store the resulting ids) - you're after something with sufficient entropy to be virtually unique, and for this I'd go with a UUID (and base64 encode it if I needed it to be a bit shorter as a textual representation) Jan 28, 2010 at 13:29

4 Answers 4

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You could use that SHA-256 and then only take the first 10 bytes from the result (or however many you like, balancing length and uniqueness however you like).

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So I have finally settled for this -

d = YYYYMMDDHHMMSS
hash = d + sha256(d + random_salt)[:10]

Thank you all for the response.

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    You would be better off removing the date prefix and adding another 14 characters to the sha substring - each character of SHA256 output adds substantially more entropy than a character of datetime. Jan 29, 2010 at 10:36
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Try this:

java.security.messageDigest()
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    WHich is another way to run MD5 or SHA-1, no?
    – bmargulies
    Jan 28, 2010 at 13:53
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I think if you use SHA1(MD5(YYYYMMDDHHMMSS + YourSystemName + ClientName)) u'll be fine with 40 chars.. ;)

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    SHA1(MD5(...)) is useless; if you were to go down this route just use SHA1. Jan 28, 2010 at 13:30

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