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I've found this in the Nhibernate documentation (it's one method to generate unique keys, section 5.1.4.2), but I haven't found any good explanation of how does it work.

I know than Nhibernate handles it and I don't need to know the inside but I'm just curious.

Thanks folks!

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2 Answers

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The basic idea is that you have two numbers to make up a primary key- a "high" number and a "low" number. A client can basically increment the "high" sequence, knowing that it can then safely generate keys from the entire range of the previous "high" value with the variety of "low" values.

For instance, supposing you have a "high" sequence with a current value of 35, and the "low" number is in the range 0-1023. Then the client can increment the sequence to 36 (for other clients to be able to generate keys while it's using 35) and know that keys 35/0, 35/1, 35/2, 35/3... 35/1023 are all available.

It can be very useful (particularly with ORMs) to be able to set the primary keys on the client side, instead of inserting values without primary keys and then fetching them back onto the client. Aside from anything else, it means you can easily make parent/child relationships and have the keys all in place before you do any inserts, which makes batching them simpler.

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Are you saying that "low ranges" are coordinated within the client, while the "high sequence" corresponds to a DB sequence? – Chris Noe Jun 30 at 13:15
Yup, that's basically it. – Jon Skeet Jun 30 at 13:38
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Are the hi & lo values typically then composed into a single integer value, or as a two-part business key? – Chris Noe Jun 30 at 15:48
like an IP address then - ICANN gives you a high 'network' number, you then have as many low 'host' numbers as you like, within the limit of the CIDR range you're given. – gbjbaanb Aug 7 at 14:19
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In addition to Jon's answer:

It is used to be able to work disconnected. A client can then ask the server for a hi number and create objects increasing the lo number itself. It does not need to contact the server until the lo range is used up.

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