On Jan 5, 2011, at 12:03 PM, Bill Moran wrote:

> For crying out loud.  If you're going to pick me apart with numbers, then
> actually do it with some intelligence.

If you're going to get nasty, at least try to be accurate.

> I could easily counter your argument by upping the numbers to 500,000
> mobile devices generating 10000 UUIDs per hour over 20 years ... or raise
> it even higher if you come back with that same argument ...

Yeah, then you get into the realm of 1 in 10s of millions of a chance of 
collision. But you would need to explain to me how you would get that many 
records into the database committed to disk, when the UUIDs alone without any 
other data represent a stream of 22MB/s ;-) Or, looked at another way, 
inserting 1,388,889 rows/second would indeed be difficult to sustain. 

> But the point (that you are trying to sidestep) is that the UUID namespace
> is finite, so therefore you WILL hit a problem with conflicts at some point.
> Just because that point is larger than most people have to concern themselves
> with isn't an invalidation.

I'm not sidestepping the point at all. The point is that the finiteness of the 
space is a red herring. The space is large enough that there's no chance of 
collision in any realistic scenario. In order to get to a point where the 
probability of collision is high enough to worry about, you have to generate 
(and collect) UUIDs at a rate that is simply not realistic--as in your second 
example quoted above. If you just keep raising your numbers, you could go for 
100,000,000,000,000 devices generating 100,000,000,000,000 UUIDs an hour for 
10,000 years. Collisions would be guaranteed, but that does not make it a 
useful scenario to consider.

2^256 is a finite space as well. Would you argue that because it "is finite, so 
therefore you WILL hit a problem with conflicts at some point"? How about 
2^512? (Bearing in mind that even though finite that space would be large 
enough to assign approximately 10^74 UUIDs to every atom in the observable 
universe, or 10^51 UUIDs to every atom in the total universe using high-end 
estimates of the size of the non-observable universe)?


-- 
Scott Ribe
scott_r...@elevated-dev.com
http://www.elevated-dev.com/
(303) 722-0567 voice





-- 
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general

Reply via email to