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I've searched around for answers to this question, but not found anything quite on the money. I'd be really interested to hear people's thoughts. Here goes:

In Google AppEngine, lets say I have a number of User objects, each of which can have a number of Photo objects. The User objects need to be parents of their respective Photo objects.

But I also want to be able to have nice short urls for each Photo. I intended to generate these by Base64 encoding the automatically generated ID property of each Photo, but I realise I cannot do this as the IDs AppEngine generates are not guaranteed to be unique across entity groups (i.e. for entities with different parents). So a Photo which is a child of one User could conceivably have the same ID as a Photo which is the child of a different User.

This leaves me in a pickle. I can either:

  1. Try to come up with my own unique ID generator and use that

  2. Lose the parent->child hierarchy so IDs will be unique (not keen on this at all)

  3. Some super-clever option suggested as an answer to this question

I'm really hoping for option 3.

Any thoughts or ideas on the best way to deal with this would be fantastic.

Thanks in advance.

Edit

Just after posting I had the idea of incorporating a mini URL shortening service into the app. I'd just need a model with no parent and a single 'Key' property which would point to the Photo I wanted to link to. Then I can Base64 encode the Id of this entity and I'm done. What do you think?

2 Answers 2

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Why not just encode the ID of the parent user along with the ID of the relevant photo? You can encode it as two integers - /123/2 or in any other format you wish, such as base64 as you suggest. If you let users pick a unique name of some sort and use that as the key name on the user object, this is also more useful from a UI point of view, since it gives you URLs like /photos/nick/123

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  • Thanks for the reply Nick. This is a great idea, but the hierarchy is a little deeper in the real-life situation than the example I gave in the question, so there would be a few parts to the URL and it might end up quite long. It's definitely a possibility though.
    – Mason
    Jun 24, 2011 at 14:29
  • @Mason Well, the same reasoning still applies - a list of encoded IDs will always be substantially shorter than the whole encoded key. Jun 26, 2011 at 23:46
  • That's very true and I think your suggestion is looking like a great candidate at the moment. What do you think of the URL shortening service idea? Boris (below) mentioned a reservation regarding transactions, but I can't see where the problem is. Can you? Thanks in advance, I'm kind of new to GAE and I often feel like I'm playing chess against the DB at the moment!
    – Mason
    Jun 27, 2011 at 2:53
  • Incase anyone else is in the same position, I did it this way and I'm very happy with it.
    – Mason
    Jun 29, 2011 at 10:45
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If you can get away with the idea number 2 - you are done. as then you got your key - and "URL shortening service" is a single servlet of 3-4 lines and you are done.

But!

I you got to pay a price - no transactions for you.

As AppEngine support transactions only inside an entity group. this actually fires back on your later idea of "URL shortening service" based on another model with a key...

The catch is you will not be able to manage it in the same transaction you manage your "photos of the user" so you can end up with wrong URLs.

If you must have transaction - build a url out of the parent keys. if not - use direct unique key with no parent->child hierarchy.

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  • Thanks Boris. Can you explain why the URL shortening service wouldn't work in a bit more detail? To my mind, if I do Photo.get_or_insert() and then do ShortURL.get_or_insert(str(photo.key())) then I'll always end up with what I want. Then, when I come to interpret a url like mydomain.com/1023 I look for the ShortURL with that ID and find the entity pointed to by the key name. Is this wrong?
    – Mason
    Jun 26, 2011 at 3:12
  • well, it will work as long as everything ok but in the way you described you do actions on entities in transaction and then create / update entity that is pointer for the URL shortening out of transaction so it can happen that also data in transaction is ok the reference will go wrong. Jul 8, 2011 at 20:56

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