On Fri, Jun 30, 2006 at 04:04:19AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Martijn van Oosterhout wrote: > > > It seems to me that maybe the backend should include a 16-byte fixed > > > length object (after all, we've got 1, 2, 4 and 8 bytes already) and > > > then people can use that to build whatever they like, using domains, > > > for example... > > So how about the split? I.e. just add a 16 byte data type and forget all > > about UUID's for now. > > Martijn: Were you thinking that it would look like a really big integer, > displayed by default as a decimal string in the client? > > This makes sense to me.
Either that, or a hex string. My problem with displaying as integer is that not many clients will be able to parse (or print) a 16-byte integer (the C library doesn't do it), but anyone can write a hex-to-binary converter, or convince scanf/printf to do it for them. > If it was a full data type - could it be passed around in memory by > value, and not as a pointer? Or is 16 bytes too big to pass around by > value? You can't pass it by value (doesn't fit in a register on the CPU and there is no corrosponding C type), and I'm not sure you'd want to. A pointer is much easier and faster to pass around. The other thing I was thinking of is a type generator, like so: # select make_raw_hex_type(16,'uuid'); NOTICE: Created raw hex type 'uuid' of fixed length 16 make_raw_hex_type ------------------- (0 rows) # select '1234FF'::uuid; ERROR: Bad length for type 'uuid' # select 'hello world'::uuid; ERROR: Invalid characters for type 'uuid' # select '1234567890abcdef'::uuid; ?column? ------------------ 1234567890ABCDEF (1 row) Only this could be used to create other types too, for cryptographic functions for example. PostgreSQL doesn't have any type generators yet, so I'm unsure whether a patch creating one would be accepted for core. Have a nice day, -- Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org> http://svana.org/kleptog/ > From each according to his ability. To each according to his ability to > litigate.
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