I was testing the npm node-machine-id. It works fine to generate a "unique" machine id. However, I was hoping to get some additional advice on if this would be the best option for my needs.
In summary, I am building an electron app that will get deployed on the local station. This app will need to obtain from this machine a unique "machine id" (i should preface that i'm targeting windows x32 x64 os).
This npm info indicates says the following:
Win32/64 uses key MachineGuid in registry
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Cryptography (can be changed by
administrator but with unpredictable consequences)
The use case for my specific scenario is needing a way to generate a true unique id for the machine. This will be used for licensing/registration purposes. I need to make sure someone can't somehow crack the licensing by essentially replicating the same unique machine id on a different station.
I want to make sure before I use a library like this npm it would actually provide the safety i'm looking for.
I also understand that in theory anything can usually be cracked with enough efforts.
So let me get to the point...
What is the best approach to obtaining a "unique machine id" in a nodejs environment? Is it possible or do i need to maybe for example write a C++ library type of external file that I can call a method via nodejs addons to get access to lower level system functions?
Thanks everyone for the review of this question.