You could encode the string as base 40 which is more compact than base 64. This will give you 12 such tokens into a 64 bit long. The 40th token could be the end of string marker to give you the length (as it will not be a whole number of bytes any more)
If you use arithmetic encoding, it could be much smaller but you would need a table of frequencies for each token. (using a long list of possible examples)
class Encoder {
public static final int BASE = 40;
StringBuilder chars = new StringBuilder(BASE);
byte[] index = new byte[256];
{
chars.append('\0');
for (char ch = 'a'; ch <= 'z'; ch++) chars.append(ch);
for (char ch = '0'; ch <= '9'; ch++) chars.append(ch);
chars.append("-:.");
Arrays.fill(index, (byte) -1);
for (byte i = 0; i < chars.length(); i++)
index[chars.charAt(i)] = i;
}
public byte[] encode(String address) {
try {
ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
DataOutputStream dos = new DataOutputStream(baos);
for (int i = 0; i < address.length(); i += 3) {
switch (Math.min(3, address.length() - i)) {
case 1: // last one.
byte b = index[address.charAt(i)];
dos.writeByte(b);
break;
case 2:
char ch = (char) ((index[address.charAt(i+1)]) * 40 + index[address.charAt(i)]);
dos.writeChar(ch);
break;
case 3:
char ch2 = (char) ((index[address.charAt(i+2)] * 40 + index[address.charAt(i + 1)]) * 40 + index[address.charAt(i)]);
dos.writeChar(ch2);
break;
}
}
return baos.toByteArray();
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new AssertionError(e);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Encoder encoder = new Encoder();
for (String s : "twitter.com:2122,123.211.80.4:2122,my-domain.se:2121,www.stackoverflow.com:80".split(",")) {
System.out.println(s + " (" + s.length() + " chars) encoded is " + encoder.encode(s).length + " bytes.");
}
}
}
prints
twitter.com:2122 (16 chars) encoded is 11 bytes.
123.211.80.4:2122 (17 chars) encoded is 12 bytes.
my-domain.se:2121 (17 chars) encoded is 12 bytes.
www.stackoverflow.com:80 (24 chars) encoded is 16 bytes.
I leave decoding as an exercise. ;)