223

I would like an efficient utility to generate unique sequences of bytes. UUID is a good candidate but UUID.randomUUID().toString() generates stuff like 44e128a5-ac7a-4c9a-be4c-224b6bf81b20 which is good, but I would prefer dash-less string.

I'm looking for an efficient way to generate a random strings, only from alphanumeric characters (no dashes or any other special symbols).

5
  • 45
    Why do the dashes need to be removed for such a UUID to be transmitted over HTTP?
    – Bruno
    Sep 27, 2010 at 14:08
  • 7
    I didn't think dashes needed to be removed in HTTP in general... which bit is causing you hassle?
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 27, 2010 at 14:08
  • 3
    Maybe in a mobile environment, if you still pay for each byte transmitted, and using a low-bandwidth & high-latency network, saving 4 bytes is still important in some scenarios...
    – Guido
    Sep 27, 2010 at 14:36
  • 3
    I want the dashes to be removed because we later using the UUID string as unique request identifier, it's much easier working with only hex decimal chars then [a-f0-9-]. Sep 28, 2010 at 10:19
  • 1
    I have removed the HTTP part because it's not relevant (as Maxim explained), only confuses the readers (as can be seen both in comments and answers). Feb 13, 2020 at 16:11

10 Answers 10

360

This does it:

public static void main(String[] args) {
    final String uuid = UUID.randomUUID().toString().replace("-", "");
    System.out.println("uuid = " + uuid);
}
5
  • For example, Mongodb do not uses dashes in ObjectID. So removing dashes can be useful for api. Mar 28, 2015 at 13:28
  • 1
    I'll give you a reason why. There's an API I'm working with (high profile, well known) that doesn't allow dashes in its UUID. You have to strip them. Oct 28, 2015 at 3:28
  • 29
    No need to do replaceAll, that uses regular expressions. Just do .replace("-", "")
    – Craigo
    May 31, 2016 at 8:50
  • 1
    replace method of String class is a bit slow, I think
    – bmscomp
    Aug 20, 2019 at 15:22
  • @bmscomp for the first invocation, it is slow, but for next invocations, there is no issue.
    – Gaurav
    Aug 28, 2019 at 8:57
36

Dashes don't need to be removed from HTTP request as you can see in URL of this thread. But if you want to prepare well-formed URL without dependency on data you should use URLEncoder.encode( String data, String encoding ) instead of changing standard form of you data. For UUID string representation dashes is normal.

2
  • "Dashes don't need to be removed from HTTP request as you can see in URL of this thread." Don't understand, unless Stack Overflow previously used UUIDs in their URLs?
    – RenniePet
    Sep 17, 2014 at 13:17
  • 2
    Not that the url is a UUID, but that it has dashes: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3804591/efficient-method-to-generate-uuid-string-in-java-uuid-randomuuid-tostring-w?rq=1 Nov 22, 2014 at 5:52
16

I used JUG (Java UUID Generator) to generate unique ID. It is unique across JVMs. Pretty good to use. Here is the code for your reference:

private static final SecureRandom secureRandom = new SecureRandom();
private static final UUIDGenerator generator = UUIDGenerator.getInstance();

public synchronized static String generateUniqueId() {
  UUID uuid = generator.generateRandomBasedUUID(secureRandom);

  return uuid.toString().replaceAll("-", "").toUpperCase();
}

You could download the library from: https://github.com/cowtowncoder/java-uuid-generator

5
  • For your case what's wrong with UUID.randomUUID().toString() ? Also note that you (theoretically) decrease the entropy by holding a static final SecureRandom (make it volatile). also why synchronize the generateUniqueId? This means all your threads are blocked on this method. Sep 28, 2010 at 10:27
  • 1
    First of all, Safehaus claims JUG is faster. And it can generate unique IDs across machines which you might not need. They have time-based method which is the fatest one among all methods. Yes, synchronized is not necessary here cause' I realized SecureRandom is thread safe already. Why would declaring static final on SecureRandom would decrease the entropy? I am curious :) There are more details here: jug.safehaus.org/FAQ Sep 28, 2010 at 14:46
  • JUG can generate random-number based UUIDs as well; but the main reasons why developers prefer using time-based variant is either that it's 10-20x faster (cowtowncoder.com/blog/archives/2010/10/entry_429.html); or that they don't trust randomness to produce unique ids (which is kinda funny)
    – StaxMan
    Oct 24, 2010 at 3:30
  • jug.safehaus.org doesn't exist anymore, but you can find the FAQ at raw.github.com/cowtowncoder/java-uuid-generator/3.0/… Sep 20, 2012 at 21:58
  • 1
    +1 for mentioning JUG - I have review its usefulness but it's good to know that there are some serious java.util.UUID alternatives. Sep 6, 2015 at 17:28
15

A simple solution is

UUID.randomUUID().toString().replace("-", "")

(Like the existing solutions, only that it avoids the String#replaceAll call. Regular expression replacement is not required here, so String#replace feels more natural, though technically it still is implemented with regular expressions. Given that the generation of the UUID is more costly than the replacement, there should not be a significant difference in runtime.)

Using the UUID class is probably fast enough for most scenarios, though I would expect that some specialized hand-written variant, which does not need the postprocessing, to be faster. Anyway, the bottleneck of the overall computation will normally be the random number generator. In case of the UUID class, it uses SecureRandom.

Which random number generator to use is also a trade-off that depends on the application. If it is security-sensitive, SecureRandom is, in general, the recommendation. Otherwise, ThreadLocalRandom is an alternative (faster than SecureRandom or the old Random, but not cryptographically secure).

14

Ended up writing something of my own based on UUID.java implementation. Note that I'm not generating a UUID, instead just a random 32 bytes hex string in the most efficient way I could think of.

Implementation

import java.security.SecureRandom;
import java.util.UUID;

public class RandomUtil {
    // Maxim: Copied from UUID implementation :)
    private static volatile SecureRandom numberGenerator = null;
    private static final long MSB = 0x8000000000000000L;

    public static String unique() {
        SecureRandom ng = numberGenerator;
        if (ng == null) {
            numberGenerator = ng = new SecureRandom();
        }

        return Long.toHexString(MSB | ng.nextLong()) + Long.toHexString(MSB | ng.nextLong());
    }       
}

Usage

RandomUtil.unique()

Tests

Some of the inputs I've tested to make sure it's working:

public static void main(String[] args) {
    System.out.println(UUID.randomUUID().toString());
    System.out.println(RandomUtil.unique());

    System.out.println();
    System.out.println(Long.toHexString(0x8000000000000000L |21));
    System.out.println(Long.toBinaryString(0x8000000000000000L |21));
    System.out.println(Long.toHexString(Long.MAX_VALUE + 1));
}
1
  • 1
    not sure why this is upvoted more, this generated UUID without the "-" in the most efficient method from all the options written here. String replacement is not better then conversion from long to string. It's true that both are O(n), yet at scale where you generate millions of uuid's a minute it becomes meaningful. Sep 8, 2016 at 12:48
10

I am amazed to see so many string replace ideas of UUID. How about this:

UUID temp = UUID.randomUUID();
String uuidString = Long.toHexString(temp.getMostSignificantBits())
     + Long.toHexString(temp.getLeastSignificantBits());

This is the fasted way of doing it since the whole toString() of UUID is already more expensive not to mention the regular expression which has to be parsed and executed or the replacing with empty string.

4
  • 7
    This is not reliable. The output will be shorter if leading bits are 0.
    – OG Dude
    Aug 9, 2016 at 17:55
  • 8
    String.format("0x%016x%016x", f.getMostSignificantBits(), f.getLeastSignificantBits())
    – galets
    Sep 21, 2016 at 0:17
  • @galets Although I've up voted your comment for solving the issue with leading 0s, I wonder whether this would be any better compared to the alternative of replacing dashes using replace. Aug 25, 2017 at 6:25
  • 1
    String.format is slow
    – Mike
    Jun 19, 2019 at 15:11
6

I have just copied UUID toString() method and just updated it to remove "-" from it. It will be much more faster and straight forward than any other solution

public String generateUUIDString(UUID uuid) {
    return (digits(uuid.getMostSignificantBits() >> 32, 8) +
            digits(uuid.getMostSignificantBits() >> 16, 4) +
            digits(uuid.getMostSignificantBits(), 4) +
            digits(uuid.getLeastSignificantBits() >> 48, 4) +
            digits(uuid.getLeastSignificantBits(), 12));
}

/** Returns val represented by the specified number of hex digits. */
private String digits(long val, int digits) {
    long hi = 1L << (digits * 4);
    return Long.toHexString(hi | (val & (hi - 1))).substring(1);
}

Usage:

generateUUIDString(UUID.randomUUID())

Another implementation using reflection

public String generateString(UUID uuid) throws NoSuchMethodException, InvocationTargetException, IllegalAccessException {

    if (uuid == null) {
        return "";
    }

    Method digits = UUID.class.getDeclaredMethod("digits", long.class, int.class);
    digits.setAccessible(true);

    return ( (String) digits.invoke(uuid, uuid.getMostSignificantBits() >> 32, 8) +
            digits.invoke(uuid, uuid.getMostSignificantBits() >> 16, 4) +
            digits.invoke(uuid, uuid.getMostSignificantBits(), 4) +
            digits.invoke(uuid, uuid.getLeastSignificantBits() >> 48, 4) +
            digits.invoke(uuid, uuid.getLeastSignificantBits(), 12));

}
2

I use org.apache.commons.codec.binary.Base64 to convert a UUID into a url-safe unique string that is 22 characters in length and has the same uniqueness as UUID.

I posted my code on Storing UUID as base64 String

0
2

Well, since an UUID gets added the hyphens (dashes) on toString() we can steal the implementation from Java's own implementation, shorting the byte array to 32 and adjusting the offset.

        public static String special() {
            UUID uuid = UUID.randomUUID();
            return fastUUID(uuid.getLeastSignificantBits(), uuid.getMostSignificantBits());
        }

        private static String fastUUID(long lsb, long msb) {
            byte[] buf = new byte[32];
            formatUnsignedLong0(lsb,        4, buf, 20, 12);
            formatUnsignedLong0(lsb >>> 48, 4, buf, 16, 4);

            formatUnsignedLong0(msb,        4, buf, 12, 4);
            formatUnsignedLong0(msb >>> 16, 4, buf, 8,  4);
            formatUnsignedLong0(msb >>> 32, 4, buf, 0,  8);

            return new String(buf, 0);
        }

        private static final char[] digits = {
                '0' , '1' , '2' , '3' , '4' , '5' ,
                '6' , '7' , '8' , '9' , 'a' , 'b' ,
                'c' , 'd' , 'e' , 'f' , 'g' , 'h' ,
                'i' , 'j' , 'k' , 'l' , 'm' , 'n' ,
                'o' , 'p' , 'q' , 'r' , 's' , 't' ,
                'u' , 'v' , 'w' , 'x' , 'y' , 'z'
        };
        private static void formatUnsignedLong0(long val, int shift, byte[] buf, int offset, int len) {
            int charPos = offset + len;
            int radix = 1 << shift;
            int mask = radix - 1;
            do {
                buf[--charPos] = (byte)digits[((int) val) & mask];
                val >>>= shift;
            } while (charPos > offset);
        }

Running it:

        public static void main(String[] args) {
            IntStream.range(0, 100).forEach(i-> {
                System.out.println(special());
            });
        }

Generates:

23f57da8a2784bb5acca553030f82e61
a14427efd8d147fdae315c1cf20fc53c
ee972aa1cf85414ca364bef5c74a7e57
6877ef35eab94b9485c5dd7c8c5a8a56
578721476629422381c0f625e22564a8
dbf60f068b5443d7bc6e5280696fed9f
dd611e870700480d81d394dd2125316c
04d71b9379ef4db49c28e113485ea76d
fd4e8cf3f85a45ae8c1b9bfe3e489a4a
858c4e8297f849b784b65b6096dec4d4
b30a8ca318a349b486b5693814422555
351c2fab9bc1426fa3bb512484628f12
9ce59e01db38405aab82d46f2a236880
5ffb5acb547a4f15a4621b406391bc0d
541b5fba8ddb4f1ebbd59cdcd5f59f7c
77f9460c4baa43a7bbaaf7f2aff205bd
85fa5254305b4c72b1b7c0103aaee269
062d45aa86694b06aad841236b839341
7a265293560f4223ab8248fda502c89b
b748c13ac45747b99aead4b0a2d7d179
cbcbf623c75d407fa3c88cfc89a90ed4
da263eed8771496faebb6290527f77fa
22231088dec04cffa40fb79ff56c6453
594a66de4b874b3491649c5d033917f6
4f6802ebd0cc4a39b25a67191c3af09d
8878b7ab8aa445cdadbef0f7c70d3deb
2c3ed0154f0c4ddbad498b7ae928b9bc
cac1dcaa80e54e2db3248987d2dbda4a
f9a3567e6dd54bf5900444c8b1c03815
f0d25d7b615a4495b51c01ab15093a88
243e45926311437c8b26cede2dc7de25
e4738c50e4cd448fbac252571c0907df
261d3593cc054569bcd645885d22c2ee
64a4796356a04cc4a09506aeb6f5b8fd
9aeebcbdde074ed69738589ca9bde0f1
ec040c956861466b84ed7f7cec601be0
18bd233781e44e7cb152800db4c4edc7
1b7b251df1244e8db46a45c186aada2b
3e32f644c9074cb3bbb15c5be1d9b95e
625309e3ffd14a90bfbd6d48142ac60e
664f0cf347ce4767add576da584526e7
fe3893fd376849fe9fed00e328e61470
254ce1441bbf4a7eae1cdf8d288e61e8
90896c6b309a49f48cc3b7a1570e1846
5f47acd1319245648098c1aec9b95f23
f798033052614b9eae8da7eba4ba3475
3471c4320e4e431eb1fa9f5eb5cb21e0
855f473fed034b1fa17f4f65b850e03b
1245de826d0d4373bdd4cf2157792954
543a8b16efca4fa2b5263315e8b21660
2dc186d699274257922853d783c0ec13
a92e6b1783db4b49a4aaa424b9e1b03f
16773feb48054cf0942a2a27204b3572
1e58da2107ac4ee39e28a93b32e1df1d
67622c19498d4178a1bab6b19087f2c2
412b6b4474fc43ccbeb1e7707b6420ee
7d0fd632913c425eb5f087600ccea870
439687baddb44852a43048b04d38427c
8b2dcc4e50464429a18b11e4aacf51a2
2fccb1c832894fe6b0b61bbdf175cd39
6d224b3d6e8747319fcf01b0309d8a0f
b4982e3b4b594cb4b334c95c2c96355e
c47fbaf90d1d4e9caf211f93b742631f
9440271e8ba6447d9a008e89a93016a6
8d24274b6a3f436a88362438aa6a221d
60452bd3f71747ed8c3706abb2235bd5
6fa93f2ee30740b89496439dd7227a4f
cc17504cf80641f882c8665ae166ba44
743efe8eac6e47a789928da4fb5b6f70
4c4d2df3461448c4a3e934cf4a7ea74f
b231eb3fb46240d38157764e8906aa7b
a234ae65f7ed48f6b1887644eed36cc2
c9cd5ed3df3f4a27957b45498f0c48ef
3eb2fbbb0a714bb7986aef3ee34f0254
d15968e605f0440c9e740e3f4e498a9f
63a8d50e8db24b91a13d4ac2fb6f7d5b
5377df9296154c57926672ca8b3c9478
a4db4a3a9d5148648a23aa7f4f77f1e0
d0aee355a2ba42de89d659385514b0fa
e92e7702481a4575a66d59c061459c5b
1b6c542d8f994d85a1312ab2cf4545ce
88e347a515474ec59013673e5402b97f
2187d9b2dc2b4d96baceade5ae99db44
4d641e69ca5b4acf90f8afe238d8a940
9c0f4c101c434831b928114c5fc0c401
140e16f6cf134785a98ae9baee5b9e7b
4dac5910f4d047e1b213c058e2230bf3
fb50a7e6333f49e4b469234426d5002f
c96c5f2fa167458eaa6d01997d90a980
1e79721e587c4a92aa55cdf8195c8c55
0da27fc5d8384ce299197b4e06cda1d4
a5e32d9cf5834e86b3fe02bc0e3104d6
2dc1826647594b1fb728de67d3df363c
0276371815254198bd22cc76f901b332
bf9d77b7b4a64e7a97ade2a62af1f8e0
268cce3249f64895b6b47e86cf296e5b
d523201fc950435f803bf89d5f042c45
607a4306b90b467f8b19c2c943bc92ef
adfa9fb63a874ca1ad746ff573f03f28
fe88132c70d141e8839ce9e7f0308750

Should be just as efficient (more effecient) than Javas actually.

1

This utility class generates UUIDs as String with or without dashes.

package your.package.name;

import java.security.SecureRandom;
import java.util.Random;

/**
 * Utility class that creates random-based UUIDs.
 * 
 */
public abstract class RandomUuidStringCreator {

    private static final int RANDOM_VERSION = 4;

    /**
     * Returns a random-based UUID as String.
     * 
     * It uses a thread local {@link SecureRandom}.
     * 
     * @return a random-based UUID string
     */
    public static String getRandomUuid() {
        return getRandomUuid(SecureRandomLazyHolder.SECURE_RANDOM);
    }

    /**
     * Returns a random-based UUID as String WITH dashes.
     * 
     * It uses a thread local {@link SecureRandom}.
     * 
     * @return a random-based UUID string
     */
    public static String getRandomUuidWithDashes() {
        return format(getRandomUuid());
    }

    /**
     * Returns a random-based UUID String.
     * 
     * It uses any instance of {@link Random}.
     * 
     * @return a random-based UUID string
     */
    public static String getRandomUuid(Random random) {

        long msb = 0;
        long lsb = 0;

        // (3) set all bit randomly
        if (random instanceof SecureRandom) {
            // Faster for instances of SecureRandom
            final byte[] bytes = new byte[16];
            random.nextBytes(bytes);
            msb = toNumber(bytes, 0, 8); // first 8 bytes for MSB
            lsb = toNumber(bytes, 8, 16); // last 8 bytes for LSB
        } else {
            msb = random.nextLong(); // first 8 bytes for MSB
            lsb = random.nextLong(); // last 8 bytes for LSB
        }

        // Apply version and variant bits (required for RFC-4122 compliance)
        msb = (msb & 0xffffffffffff0fffL) | (RANDOM_VERSION & 0x0f) << 12; // apply version bits
        lsb = (lsb & 0x3fffffffffffffffL) | 0x8000000000000000L; // apply variant bits

        // Convert MSB and LSB to hexadecimal
        String msbHex = zerofill(Long.toHexString(msb), 16);
        String lsbHex = zerofill(Long.toHexString(lsb), 16);

        // Return the UUID
        return msbHex + lsbHex;
    }

    /**
     * Returns a random-based UUID as String WITH dashes.
     * 
     * It uses a thread local {@link SecureRandom}.
     * 
     * @return a random-based UUID string
     */
    public static String getRandomUuidWithDashes(Random random) {
        return format(getRandomUuid(random));
    }

    private static long toNumber(final byte[] bytes, final int start, final int length) {
        long result = 0;
        for (int i = start; i < length; i++) {
            result = (result << 8) | (bytes[i] & 0xff);
        }
        return result;
    }

    private static String zerofill(String string, int length) {
        return new String(lpad(string.toCharArray(), length, '0'));
    }

    private static char[] lpad(char[] chars, int length, char fill) {

        int delta = 0;
        int limit = 0;

        if (length > chars.length) {
            delta = length - chars.length;
            limit = length;
        } else {
            delta = 0;
            limit = chars.length;
        }

        char[] output = new char[chars.length + delta];
        for (int i = 0; i < limit; i++) {
            if (i < delta) {
                output[i] = fill;
            } else {
                output[i] = chars[i - delta];
            }
        }
        return output;
    }

    private static String format(String string) {
        char[] input = string.toCharArray();
        char[] output = new char[36];

        System.arraycopy(input, 0, output, 0, 8);
        System.arraycopy(input, 8, output, 9, 4);
        System.arraycopy(input, 12, output, 14, 4);
        System.arraycopy(input, 16, output, 19, 4);
        System.arraycopy(input, 20, output, 24, 12);

        output[8] = '-';
        output[13] = '-';
        output[18] = '-';
        output[23] = '-';

        return new String(output);
    }

    // Holds lazy secure random
    private static class SecureRandomLazyHolder {
        static final Random SECURE_RANDOM = new SecureRandom();
    }

    /**
     * For tests!
     */
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        System.out.println("// Using `java.security.SecureRandom` (DEFAULT)");
        System.out.println("RandomUuidCreator.getRandomUuid()");
        System.out.println();
        for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
            System.out.println(RandomUuidStringCreator.getRandomUuid());
        }

        System.out.println();
        System.out.println("// Using `java.util.Random` (FASTER)");
        System.out.println("RandomUuidCreator.getRandomUuid(new Random())");
        System.out.println();
        Random random = new Random();
        for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
            System.out.println(RandomUuidStringCreator.getRandomUuid(random));
        }
    }
}

This is the output:

// Using `java.security.SecureRandom` (DEFAULT)
RandomUuidStringCreator.getRandomUuid()

'f553ca75657b4b5d85bedf1082785a0b'
'525ecc389e934f209b97d0f0db09d9c6'
'93ec6425bb04499ab47b790fd013ab0d'
'c2d438c620ea4cd5baafd448f9fe945b'
'fb4bc5734931415e94e78da62cb5fe0d'

// Using `java.util.Random` (FASTER)
RandomUuidStringCreator.getRandomUuid(new Random())

'051360b5c92d40fbbb89b40842adbacc'
'a993896538aa43faacbcfd83f913f38b'
'720684d22c584d5299cb03cdbc1912d2'
'82cf94ea296a4a138a92825a0068d4a1'
'a7eda46a215c4e55be3aa957ba74ca9c'

There's a codec in uuid-creator that can do it more efficiently: Base16Codec. Example:

// Returns a base-16 string
// It is much faster than doing `uuid.toString().replaceAll("-", "")`.
UuidCodec<String> codec = new Base16Codec();
String string = codec.encode(UUID.randomUUID());

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