497

How would it be possible to generate a random, unique string using numbers and letters for use in a verify link? Like when you create an account on a website, and it sends you an email with a link, and you have to click that link in order to verify your account

How can I generate one of those using PHP?

4
  • 1
    All you need are strings and uniformly distributed random numbers.
    – Artelius
    Dec 4, 2009 at 10:52
  • 12
    Hey Andrew, you should choose Scott as the correct answer. Scott is using OpenSSL's cryptographically secure psudo-random number generator (CSPRNG) which will choose the most secure source of entropy based on your platform.
    – rook
    Sep 18, 2013 at 19:50
  • 3
    Anyone reading this after 2015, please, please look here: paragonie.com/blog/2015/07/… Most top answers are flawed more or less...
    – rugk
    Oct 8, 2016 at 20:30
  • OpenSSL and uniqid are insecure. Use something like Random::alphanumericString($length) or Random::alphanumericHumanString($length).
    – caw
    Nov 20, 2019 at 16:39

31 Answers 31

679
Answer recommended by PHP Collective

PHP 7 standard library provides the random_bytes($length) function that generate cryptographically secure pseudo-random bytes.

Example:

$bytes = random_bytes(20);
var_dump(bin2hex($bytes));

The above example will output something similar to:

string(40) "5fe69c95ed70a9869d9f9af7d8400a6673bb9ce9"

More info: http://php.net/manual/en/function.random-bytes.php

PHP 5 (outdated)

I was just looking into how to solve this same problem, but I also want my function to create a token that can be used for password retrieval as well. This means that I need to limit the ability of the token to be guessed. Because uniqid is based on the time, and according to php.net "the return value is little different from microtime()", uniqid does not meet the criteria. PHP recommends using openssl_random_pseudo_bytes() instead to generate cryptographically secure tokens.

A quick, short and to the point answer is:

bin2hex(openssl_random_pseudo_bytes($bytes))

which will generate a random string of alphanumeric characters of length = $bytes * 2. Unfortunately this only has an alphabet of [a-f][0-9], but it works.


Below is the strongest function I could make that satisfies the criteria (This is an implemented version of Erik's answer).
function crypto_rand_secure($min, $max)
{
    $range = $max - $min;
    if ($range < 1) return $min; // not so random...
    $log = ceil(log($range, 2));
    $bytes = (int) ($log / 8) + 1; // length in bytes
    $bits = (int) $log + 1; // length in bits
    $filter = (int) (1 << $bits) - 1; // set all lower bits to 1
    do {
        $rnd = hexdec(bin2hex(openssl_random_pseudo_bytes($bytes)));
        $rnd = $rnd & $filter; // discard irrelevant bits
    } while ($rnd > $range);
    return $min + $rnd;
}

function getToken($length)
{
    $token = "";
    $codeAlphabet = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ";
    $codeAlphabet.= "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz";
    $codeAlphabet.= "0123456789";
    $max = strlen($codeAlphabet); // edited

    for ($i=0; $i < $length; $i++) {
        $token .= $codeAlphabet[crypto_rand_secure(0, $max-1)];
    }

    return $token;
}

crypto_rand_secure($min, $max) works as a drop in replacement for rand() or mt_rand. It uses openssl_random_pseudo_bytes to help create a random number between $min and $max.

getToken($length) creates an alphabet to use within the token and then creates a string of length $length.

Source: https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.openssl-random-pseudo-bytes.php#104322

30
  • 2
    Agreed. Plaintext password storage is awful! (I use blowfish.) But after the token is generated it allows the holder of the token to reset the password, so the token is password equivalent while it is valid (and is treated as such).
    – Scott
    May 8, 2013 at 1:44
  • 30
    Hey, I combined your excellent code with the convenient Kohana Text::random() method functionality and created this gist: gist.github.com/raveren/5555297
    – raveren
    May 10, 2013 at 15:51
  • 12
    Perfect! I tested it with 10 chars as length. 100000 tokens and still no duplicates! Feb 26, 2014 at 8:13
  • 5
    I used this process and found it super slow. With a length of 36 it timed out on the dev server. With a length of 24 it still took around 30 seconds. Not sure what I did wrong but it was too slow for me and I opted for another solution.
    – Shane
    Apr 17, 2014 at 1:25
  • 7
    You can also use base64_encode instead of bin2hex to get a shorter string with larger alphabet.
    – erjiang
    May 30, 2014 at 13:57
345

Security Notice: This solution should not be used in situations where the quality of your randomness can affect the security of an application. In particular, rand() and uniqid() are not cryptographically secure random number generators. See Scott's answer for a secure alternative.

If you do not need it to be absolutely unique over time:

md5(uniqid(rand(), true))

Otherwise (given you have already determined a unique login for your user):

md5(uniqid($your_user_login, true))
6
  • 101
    Both methods do not guarantee uniqueness - length of the input of the md5 function is greater than length of its output and according to the en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigeonhole_principle the collision is guaranteed. On the other hand, the greater the population relying on hashes to achieve the "unique" id, the greater the probability of occurring at least one collision (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_problem). The probability may be tiny for most of solutions but it still exists. Jul 14, 2011 at 12:30
  • 14
    This is not a secure method of generating random values. See Scott's answer.
    – rook
    Sep 18, 2013 at 19:51
  • 7
    For email confirmations that expire relatively soon, I think the tiny possibility that one person might one day confirm someone else's email is a negligible risk. But you could always check if the token already exists in the DB after creating it and just pick a new one if that is the case. However, the time you spend writing that snippet of code is likely wasted as it will most likely never be run.
    – Andrew
    May 26, 2014 at 21:10
  • 1
    Do note that md5 returns hexadecimal values, meaning the character set is limited to [0-9] and [a-f]. May 15, 2015 at 16:59
  • 2
    md5 can have collisions, you have just ruined uniqid advantage
    – user151496
    Sep 28, 2016 at 12:42
104

Object-oriented version of the most up-voted solution

I've created an object-oriented solution based on Scott's answer:

<?php

namespace Utils;

/**
 * Class RandomStringGenerator
 * @package Utils
 *
 * Solution taken from here:
 * http://stackoverflow.com/a/13733588/1056679
 */
class RandomStringGenerator
{
    /** @var string */
    protected $alphabet;

    /** @var int */
    protected $alphabetLength;


    /**
     * @param string $alphabet
     */
    public function __construct($alphabet = '')
    {
        if ('' !== $alphabet) {
            $this->setAlphabet($alphabet);
        } else {
            $this->setAlphabet(
                  implode(range('a', 'z'))
                . implode(range('A', 'Z'))
                . implode(range(0, 9))
            );
        }
    }

    /**
     * @param string $alphabet
     */
    public function setAlphabet($alphabet)
    {
        $this->alphabet = $alphabet;
        $this->alphabetLength = strlen($alphabet);
    }

    /**
     * @param int $length
     * @return string
     */
    public function generate($length)
    {
        $token = '';

        for ($i = 0; $i < $length; $i++) {
            $randomKey = $this->getRandomInteger(0, $this->alphabetLength);
            $token .= $this->alphabet[$randomKey];
        }

        return $token;
    }

    /**
     * @param int $min
     * @param int $max
     * @return int
     */
    protected function getRandomInteger($min, $max)
    {
        $range = ($max - $min);

        if ($range < 0) {
            // Not so random...
            return $min;
        }

        $log = log($range, 2);

        // Length in bytes.
        $bytes = (int) ($log / 8) + 1;

        // Length in bits.
        $bits = (int) $log + 1;

        // Set all lower bits to 1.
        $filter = (int) (1 << $bits) - 1;

        do {
            $rnd = hexdec(bin2hex(openssl_random_pseudo_bytes($bytes)));

            // Discard irrelevant bits.
            $rnd = $rnd & $filter;

        } while ($rnd >= $range);

        return ($min + $rnd);
    }
}

Usage

<?php

use Utils\RandomStringGenerator;

// Create new instance of generator class.
$generator = new RandomStringGenerator;

// Set token length.
$tokenLength = 32;

// Call method to generate random string.
$token = $generator->generate($tokenLength);

Custom alphabet

You can use custom alphabet if required. Just pass a string with supported chars to the constructor or setter:

<?php

$customAlphabet = '0123456789ABCDEF';

// Set initial alphabet.
$generator = new RandomStringGenerator($customAlphabet);

// Change alphabet whenever needed.
$generator->setAlphabet($customAlphabet);

Here's the output samples

SRniGU2sRQb2K1ylXKnWwZr4HrtdRgrM
q1sRUjNq1K9rG905aneFzyD5IcqD4dlC
I0euIWffrURLKCCJZ5PQFcNUCto6cQfD
AKwPJMEM5ytgJyJyGqoD5FQwxv82YvMr
duoRF6gAawNOEQRICnOUNYmStWmOpEgS
sdHUkEn4565AJoTtkc8EqJ6cC4MLEHUx
eVywMdYXczuZmHaJ50nIVQjOidEVkVna
baJGt7cdLDbIxMctLsEBWgAw5BByP5V0
iqT0B2obq3oerbeXkDVLjZrrLheW4d8f
OUQYCny6tj2TYDlTuu1KsnUyaLkeObwa

I hope it will help someone. Cheers!

5
  • I'm sorry but how do I run this thing? I did $obj = new RandomStringGenerator; but which method should I called? Thank you.
    – sg552
    Oct 1, 2014 at 16:41
  • @sg552, you should call generate method as in example above. Just pass an integer to it to specify length of the resulting string. Dec 2, 2014 at 8:38
  • Thanks it works for me but Custom Alphabet didn't. I got empty output when I echo. Anyway I'm not even sure what's the use of 2nd example Custom Alphabet so I think I just stay with the first example. Thanks.
    – sg552
    Dec 3, 2014 at 21:24
  • 1
    Nice, but pretty overkill in most scenarios, unless your project heavily relies on randomly generated codes
    – Daniel
    May 8, 2015 at 11:47
  • 2
    yes nice but overkill, especially considering it is pretty much deprecated now for php 5.7
    – Andrew
    Mar 21, 2016 at 17:30
64

I'm here with some good research data based on the functions provided by Scott's answer. So I set up a Digital Ocean droplet just for this 5-day long automated test and stored the generated unique strings in a MySQL database.

During this test period, I used 5 different lengths (5, 10, 15, 20, 50) and +/-0.5 million records were inserted for each length. During my test, only the length 5 generated +/-3K duplicates out of 0.5 million and the remaining lengths didn't generate any duplicates. So we can say that if we use a length of 15 or above with Scott's functions, then we can generate highly reliable unique strings. Here is the table showing my research data:

enter image description here

Update

I created a simple Heroku app using these functions that returns the token as a JSON response. The app can be accessed at https://uniquestrings.herokuapp.com/api/token?length=15

3
  • Why not simply add a time component like microtime() or simply check for duplicates when generating? If the requirement is "unique" it cannot have change not be unique. I appreciate your great research though, very usable if it is not absolutely critical.
    – ALZlper
    Dec 12, 2021 at 9:06
  • @ALZlper microtime() cannot generate cryptographically secure strings and we cannot rely on them if security is concerned.
    – Rehmat
    Dec 16, 2021 at 7:48
  • Of course it is not cryptographically secure. That's why I mentioned adding a time based part to the string. It is important to add it and not substitute your answer. You are right for wanting that said more explicitly. I wrote something similar in a different answer as well. Check it out :) stackoverflow.com/a/70365951/7335057
    – ALZlper
    Dec 16, 2021 at 15:20
48

You can use UUID(Universally Unique Identifier), it can be used for any purpose, from user authentication string to payment transaction id.

A UUID is a 16-octet (128-bit) number. In its canonical form, a UUID is represented by 32 hexadecimal digits, displayed in five groups separated by hyphens, in the form 8-4-4-4-12 for a total of 36 characters (32 alphanumeric characters and four hyphens).

function generate_uuid() {
    return sprintf( '%04x%04x-%04x-%04x-%04x-%04x%04x%04x',
        mt_rand( 0, 0xffff ), mt_rand( 0, 0xffff ),
        mt_rand( 0, 0xffff ),
        mt_rand( 0, 0x0C2f ) | 0x4000,
        mt_rand( 0, 0x3fff ) | 0x8000,
        mt_rand( 0, 0x2Aff ), mt_rand( 0, 0xffD3 ), mt_rand( 0, 0xff4B )
    );

}

//calling funtion

$transationID = generate_uuid();

some example outputs will be like:

E302D66D-87E3-4450-8CB6-17531895BF14
22D288BC-7289-442B-BEEA-286777D559F2
51B4DE29-3B71-4FD2-9E6C-071703E1FF31
3777C8C6-9FF5-4C78-AAA2-08A47F555E81
54B91C72-2CF4-4501-A6E9-02A60DCBAE4C
60F75C7C-1AE3-417B-82C8-14D456542CD7
8DE0168D-01D3-4502-9E59-10D665CEBCB2

hope it helps someone in future :)

1
  • Looks fantastic, added to my list! Jan 28, 2019 at 23:24
40

This function will generate a random key using numbers and letters:

function random_string($length) {
    $key = '';
    $keys = array_merge(range(0, 9), range('a', 'z'));

    for ($i = 0; $i < $length; $i++) {
        $key .= $keys[array_rand($keys)];
    }

    return $key;
}

echo random_string(50);

Example output:

zsd16xzv3jsytnp87tk7ygv73k8zmr0ekh6ly7mxaeyeh46oe8
5
  • 6
    After a while you get to the same numbers Feb 25, 2014 at 15:31
  • 1
    This isn't fully random because it will never have the same chacater more than once.
    – EricP
    Dec 19, 2014 at 17:32
  • @EricP I am almost 100% sure that you are wrong there. Why do you think that the function cannot have the same character twice, when even in the example there is a second 'z' almost right away.
    – v010dya
    Dec 27, 2023 at 13:14
  • @v010dya you're correct. I wrote the comment above 9 years ago, so I have no idea what I was thinking at the time.
    – EricP
    Dec 27, 2023 at 18:37
  • @EricP Maybe you thought that the Rathienth has shuffled $keys array and returned it?
    – v010dya
    Dec 29, 2023 at 5:55
18

I use this one-liner:

base64_encode(openssl_random_pseudo_bytes(3 * ($length >> 2)));

where length is the length of the desired string (divisible by 4, otherwise it gets rounded down to the nearest number divisible by 4)

2
13

Use the code below to generate the random number of 11 characters or change the number as per your requirement.

$randomNum=substr(str_shuffle("0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstvwxyz"), 0, 11);

or we can use custom function to generate the random number

 function randomNumber($length){
     $numbers = range(0,9);
     shuffle($numbers);
     for($i = 0;$i < $length;$i++)
        $digits .= $numbers[$i];
     return $digits;
 }

 //generate random number
 $randomNum=randomNumber(11);
3
  • 5
    This can never generate the string "aaaaaaaaaaa" or "aaaaabbbbbb". It just picks a substring of a random permutation of the alphabet. The 11 characters long string only has V(11,35) = 288 possible values. Do not use this if you expect the strings to be unique!
    – kdojeteri
    Sep 5, 2017 at 21:55
  • 1
    @Peping then do substr(str_shuffle(str_repeat('0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstvwxyz', 36)), 0, 11); Mar 18, 2019 at 22:43
  • 1
    thanks for nice function! '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTVWXYZ~!@#$%^&*()_+-=<>,.?/' - ext. str_shuffle range.
    – vitali_y
    Nov 10, 2020 at 17:09
8
  1. Generate a random number using your favourite random-number generator
  2. Multiply and divide it to get a number matching the number of characters in your code alphabet
  3. Get the item at that index in your code alphabet.
  4. Repeat from 1) until you have the length you want

e.g (in pseudo code)

int myInt = random(0, numcharacters)
char[] codealphabet = 'ABCDEF12345'
char random = codealphabet[i]
repeat until long enough
1
  • Theoretically speaking, couldn't this potentially generate the same string more than once?
    – frezq
    Jan 29, 2019 at 15:06
8

For really random strings, you can use

<?php

echo md5(microtime(true).mt_Rand());

outputs :

40a29479ec808ad4bcff288a48a25d5c

so even if you try to generate string multiple times at exact same time, you will get different output.

7

This is a simple function that allows you to generate random strings containing Letters and Numbers (alphanumeric). You can also limit the string length. These random strings can be used for various purposes, including: Referral Code, Promotional Code, Coupon Code. Function relies on following PHP functions: base_convert, sha1, uniqid, mt_rand

function random_code($length)
{
  return substr(base_convert(sha1(uniqid(mt_rand())), 16, 36), 0, $length);
}

echo random_code(6);

/*sample output
* a7d9e8
* 3klo93
*/
6

When trying to generate a random password you are trying to :

  • First generate a cryptographically secure set of random bytes

  • Second is turning those random bytes into a printable string

Now, there are multiple way to generate random bytes in php like :

$length = 32;

//PHP 7+
$bytes= random_bytes($length);

//PHP < 7
$bytes= openssl_random_pseudo_bytes($length);

Then you want to turn these random bytes into a printable string :

You can use bin2hex :

$string = bin2hex($bytes);

or base64_encode :

$string = base64_encode($bytes);

However, note that you do not control the length of the string if you use base64. You can use bin2hex to do that, using 32 bytes will turn into a 64 char string. But it will only work like so in an EVEN string.

So basically you can just do :

$length = 32;

if(PHP_VERSION>=7){
    $bytes= random_bytes($length);
}else{
    $bytes= openssl_random_pseudo_bytes($length);
} 

$string = bin2hex($bytes);
4

Here is what I use:

md5(time() . rand());    
// Creates something like 0c947c3b1047334f5bb8a3b7adc1d97b
1
  • best if someone looking for a single liner for just seeding dbs.
    – Sahil Jain
    Feb 18, 2022 at 7:31
4

Simple 'one line' string hash generator like 77zd43-7bc495-64cg9a-535548 (1byte = 2chars)

  $hash = implode('-', [
       bin2hex(random_bytes(3)),
       bin2hex(random_bytes(3)),
       bin2hex(random_bytes(3)),
       bin2hex(random_bytes(3)),
    ]);
3

If you want to generate a unique string in PHP, try following.

md5(uniqid().mt_rand());

In this,

uniqid() - It will generate unique string. This function returns timestamp based unique identifier as a string.

mt_rand() - Generate random number.

md5() - It will generate the hash string.

3

This people choking on a glass of water...

$random= substr(str_shuffle("0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ*.-_"), 0, 10);

Simple. The posibility to this random string repeat is 0,000000000000000000000000000001^70

2
  • This does prevent getting a character more than once. Generating a string of 10 a should be possible. Therefore, the string should also be repeated by the length of 10.
    – halloei
    Sep 8, 2021 at 7:27
  • 1
    18 rays are more likely to hit you in 10 seconds Sep 9, 2021 at 4:42
2

Here is ultimate unique id generator for you. made by me.

<?php
$d=date ("d");
$m=date ("m");
$y=date ("Y");
$t=time();
$dmt=$d+$m+$y+$t;    
$ran= rand(0,10000000);
$dmtran= $dmt+$ran;
$un=  uniqid();
$dmtun = $dmt.$un;
$mdun = md5($dmtran.$un);
$sort=substr($mdun, 16); // if you want sort length code.

echo $mdun;
?>

you can echo any 'var' for your id as you like. but $mdun is better, you can replace md5 to sha1 for better code but that will be very long which may you dont need.

Thank you.

2
  • 7
    In this case randomness is guaranteed by random written code, right? Jan 16, 2016 at 14:27
  • 3
    yeah, this is kind of "random" because it's non standard, obscure code. This makes it difficult to predict ... but not actually it uses insecure parts to generate a random number. so the result is technically not random or secure.
    – Philipp
    Jul 5, 2016 at 18:06
2

I like to use hash keys when dealing verification links. I would recommend using the microtime and hashing that using MD5 since there should be no reason why the keys should be the same since it hashes based off of the microtime.

  1. $key = md5(rand());
  2. $key = md5(microtime());
2
<?php
function generateRandomString($length = 11) {
    $characters = '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ';
    $charactersLength = strlen($characters);
    $randomString = '';
    for ($i = 0; $i < $length; $i++) {
        $randomString .= $characters[rand(0, $charactersLength - 1)];
    }
    return $randomString;

}

?>

above function will generate you a random string which is length of 11 characters.

2
function random_string($length = 8) {
    $alphabets = range('A','Z');
    $numbers = range('0','9');
    $additional_characters = array('_','=');
    $final_array = array_merge($alphabets,$numbers,$additional_characters);
       while($length--) {
      $key = array_rand($final_array);

      $password .= $final_array[$key];
                        }
  if (preg_match('/[A-Za-z0-9]/', $password))
    {
     return $password;
    }else{
    return  random_string();
    }

 }
1

after reading previous examples I came up with this:

protected static $nonce_length = 32;

public static function getNonce()
{
    $chars = array();
    for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++)
        $chars = array_merge($chars, range(0, 9), range('A', 'Z'));
    shuffle($chars);
    $start = mt_rand(0, count($chars) - self::$nonce_length);
    return substr(join('', $chars), $start, self::$nonce_length);
}

I duplicate 10 times the array[0-9,A-Z] and shuffle the elements, after I get a random start point for substr() to be more 'creative' :) you can add [a-z] and other elements to array, duplicate more or less, be more creative than me

1

A simple solution is to convert base 64 to alphanumeric by discarding the non-alphanumeric characters.

This one uses random_bytes() for a cryptographically secure result.

function random_alphanumeric(int $length): string
{
    $result='';
    do
    {
        //Base 64 produces 4 characters for each 3 bytes, so most times this will give enough bytes in a single pass
        $bytes=random_bytes(($length+3-strlen($result))*2);
        //Discard non-alhpanumeric characters
        $result.=str_replace(['/','+','='],['','',''],base64_encode($bytes));
        //Keep adding characters until the string is long enough
        //Add a few extra because the last 2 or 3 characters of a base 64 string tend to be less diverse
    }while(strlen($result)<$length+3);
    return substr($result,0,$length);
}

Edit: I just revisited this because I need something a bit more flexible. Here is a solution that performs a bit better than the above and gives the option to specify any subset of the ASCII character set:

<?php
class RandomText
{
    protected
        $allowedChars,
        //Maximum index to use
        $allowedCount,
        //Index values will be taken from a pool of this size
        //It is a power of 2 to keep the distribution of values even
        $distributionSize,
        //This many characters will be generated for each output character
        $ratio;
    /**
     * @param string $allowedChars characters to choose from
     */
    public function __construct(string $allowedChars)
    {
        $this->allowedCount = strlen($allowedChars);
        if($this->allowedCount < 1 || $this->allowedCount > 256) throw new \Exception('At least 1 and no more than 256 allowed character(s) must be specified.');
        $this->allowedChars = $allowedChars;
        //Find the power of 2 equal or greater than the number of allowed characters
        $this->distributionSize = pow(2,ceil(log($this->allowedCount, 2)));
        //Generating random bytes is the expensive part of this algorithm
        //In most cases some will be wasted so it is helpful to produce some extras, but not too many
        //On average, this is how many characters needed to produce 1 character in the allowed set
        //50% of the time, more characters will be needed. My tests have shown this to perform well.
        $this->ratio = $this->distributionSize / $this->allowedCount;
    }

    /**
     * @param int $length string length of required result
     * @return string random text
     */
    public function get(int $length) : string
    {
        if($length < 1) throw new \Exception('$length must be >= 1.');
        $result = '';
        //Keep track of result length to prevent having to compute strlen()
        $l = 0;
        $indices = null;
        $i = null;
        do
        {
            //Bytes will be used to index the character set. Convert to integers.
            $indices = unpack('C*', random_bytes(ceil(($length - $l) * $this->ratio)));
            foreach($indices as $i)
            {
                //Reduce to the smallest range that gives an even distribution
                $i %= $this->distributionSize;
                //If the index is within the range of characters, add one char to the string
                if($i < $this->allowedCount)
                {
                    $l++;
                    $result .= $this->allowedChars[$i];
                }
                if($l >= $length) break;
            }
        }while($l < $length);
        return $result;
    }
}
1

one can use this code. i tested with 35,000,00 IDs no duplicates.

<?php
$characters = '0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz-_';
$result = '';
for ($i = 0; $i < 11; $i++)
    $result .= $characters[mt_rand(0, 63)];?>

you are free to modify it as your need. and if you have any suggestions feel free to comment.it is recommended that you should check every id in your database before using this ids by doing that you have 100% unique ids in your database.

1
  • This aboslutely needs a time compunent like microtime()
    – ALZlper
    Dec 12, 2021 at 9:03
1
function codeGenerate() {
  $randCode  = (string)mt_rand(1000,9999);
  $randChar  = rand(65,90);
  $randInx   = rand(0,3);
  $randCode[$randInx] = chr($randChar);
  return $randCode;
}
echo codeGenerate();

OUTPUT

38I7
33V7
E836
736U
1

I always use this my function to generate a custom random alphanumeric string... Hope this help.

<?php
  function random_alphanumeric($length) {
    $chars = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ12345689';
    $my_string = '';
    for ($i = 0; $i < $length; $i++) {
      $pos = random_int(0, strlen($chars) -1);
      $my_string .= substr($chars, $pos, 1);
    }
    return $my_string;
  }
  echo random_alphanumeric(50); // 50 characters
?>

It generates for example: Y1FypdjVbFCFK6Gh9FDJpe6dciwJEfV6MQGpJqAfuijaYSZ86g

If you want compare with another string to be sure that is a unique sequence you can use this trick...

$string_1 = random_alphanumeric(50);
$string_2 = random_alphanumeric(50);
while ($string_1 == $string_2) {
  $string_1 = random_alphanumeric(50);
  $string_2 = random_alphanumeric(50);
  if ($string_1 != $string_2) {
     break;
  }
}
echo $string_1;
echo "<br>\n";
echo $string_2;

it generate two unique strings:

qsBDs4JOoVRfFxyLAOGECYIsWvpcpMzAO9pypwxsqPKeAmYLOi

Ti3kE1WfGgTNxQVXtbNNbhhvvapnaUfGMVJecHkUjHbuCb85pF

Hope this is what you are looking for...

0

Scott, yes you are very write and good solution! Thanks.

I am also required to generate unique API token for my each user. Following is my approach, i used user information (Userid and Username):

public function generateUniqueToken($userid, $username){

        $rand = mt_rand(100,999);
    $md5 = md5($userid.'!(&^ 532567_465 ///'.$username);

    $md53 = substr($md5,0,3);
    $md5_remaining = substr($md5,3);

    $md5 = $md53. $rand. $userid. $md5_remaining;

    return $md5;
}

Please have a look and let me know if any improvement i can do. Thanks

0

Here is what I'm using on one of my projects, it's working great and it generates a UNIQUE RANDOM TOKEN:

$timestampz=time();

function generateRandomString($length = 60) {
    $characters = '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ';
    $charactersLength = strlen($characters);
    $randomString = '';
    for ($i = 0; $i < $length; $i++) {
        $randomString .= $characters[rand(0, $charactersLength - 1)];
    }
    return $randomString;
}


$tokenparta = generateRandomString();


$token = $timestampz*3 . $tokenparta;

echo $token;

Please note that I multiplied the timestamp by three to create a confusion for whoever user might be wondering how this token is generated ;)

I hope it helps :)

2
  • 2
    "Please note that I multiplied the timestamp by three to create a confusion for whoever user might be wondering how this token is generated" Sounds like security through obfuscation stackoverflow.com/questions/533965/…
    – Harry
    Apr 6, 2017 at 9:14
  • This is not a "security through obfuscation " as the timestamp is then added to a random string that was generated, and that's the actual final string that we return ;) Oct 23, 2018 at 11:17
0

I think this is the best method to use.

str_shuffle(md5(rand(0,100000)))
0

Here is a fun one

public function randomStr($length = 16) {
    $string = '';
        
    while (($len = strlen($string)) < $length) {
        $size = $length - $len;
            
        $bytes = random_bytes($size);
            
        $string .= substr(str_replace(['/', '+', '='], '', base64_encode($bytes)), 0, $size);
    }
        
        return $string;
}

Stolen from laravel here

-1

I believe the problem with all the existing ideas is that they are probably unique, but not definitely unique (as pointed out in Dariusz Walczak's reply to loletech). I have a solution that actually is unique. It requires that your script have some sort of memory. For me this is a SQL database. You could also simply write to a file somewhere. There are two implementations:

First method: have TWO fields rather than 1 that provide uniqueness. The first field is an ID number that is not random but is unique (The first ID is 1, the second 2...). If you are using SQL, just define the ID field with the AUTO_INCREMENT property. The second field is not unique but is random. This can be generated with any of the other techniques people have already mentioned. Scott's idea was good, but md5 is convenient and probably good enough for most purposes:

$random_token = md5($_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'] . time());

Second method: Basically the same idea, but initially pick a maximum number of strings that will ever be generated. This could just be a really big number like a trillion. Then do the same thing, generate an ID, but zero pad it so that all IDs are the same number of digits. Then just concatenate the ID with the random string. It will be random enough for most purposes, but the ID section will ensure that it is also unique.

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