On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 10:31, Adrian von Bidder <avbid...@fortytwo.ch> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> On Friday 29 January 2010 09.20:33 Joe Kramer wrote:
>> I need to generate unique id which is not guessable unlike
>> serial(integer) type. I need an id in format like md5 hash of random
>> number.
>> On top of that I need this id to be unique across multiple tables.
>
> Have a look at http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/static/uuid-ossp.html
>
> The usual approach is that (given a sensible random generator[1]) uuid are
> assumed to be unique[2].  So you don't need to check because the probability
> of collisions is so small that for practical purposes you can just ignore
> it.
>
> (If your engineer's mind balks at this, consider that you're trusting this
> already when you use digital cryptography / signatures, for example https
> certificates.)

uuid:s are, AFAIK, not cryptographically strong. They are predictable
- a lot less predictable than a sequence, but still. If you want
secure random numbers, you need to look at pgcrypto -
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/pgcrypto.html


-- 
 Magnus Hagander
 Me: http://www.hagander.net/
 Work: http://www.redpill-linpro.com/

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