NAME
UUID::Tiny - Pure Perl UUID Support With Functional Interface
VERSION
Version 1.04
SYNOPSIS
Create version 1, 3, 4 and 5 UUIDs:
use UUID::Tiny ':std';
my $v1_mc_UUID = create_uuid();
my $v1_mc_UUID_2 = create_uuid(UUID_V1);
my $v1_mc_UUID_3 = create_uuid(UUID_TIME);
my $v3_md5_UUID = create_uuid(UUID_V3, $str);
my $v3_md5_UUID_2 = create_uuid(UUID_MD5, UUID_NS_DNS, 'caugustin.de');
my $v4_rand_UUID = create_uuid(UUID_V4);
my $v4_rand_UUID_2 = create_uuid(UUID_RANDOM);
my $v5_sha1_UUID = create_uuid(UUID_V5, $str);
my $v5_with_NS_UUID = create_uuid(UUID_SHA1, UUID_NS_DNS, 'caugustin.de');
my $v1_mc_UUID_string = create_uuid_as_string(UUID_V1);
my $v3_md5_UUID_string = uuid_to_string($v3_md5_UUID);
if ( version_of_uuid($v1_mc_UUID) == 1 ) { ... };
if ( version_of_uuid($v5_sha1_UUID) == 5 ) { ... };
if ( is_uuid_string($v1_mc_UUID_string) ) { ... };
if ( equal_uuids($uuid1, $uuid2) ) { ... };
my $uuid_time = time_of_uuid($v1_mc_UUID);
my $uuid_clk_seq = clk_seq_of_uuid($v1_mc_UUID);
DESCRIPTION
UUID::Tiny is a lightweight, low dependency Pure Perl module for UUID creation and testing. This module provides the creation of version 1 time based UUIDs (using random multicast MAC addresses), version 3 MD5 based UUIDs, version 4 random UUIDs, and version 5 SHA-1 based UUIDs.
ATTENTION! UUID::Tiny uses Perl's rand()
to create the basic random numbers, so the created v4 UUIDs are not cryptographically strong!
No fancy OO interface, no plethora of different UUID representation formats and transformations - just string and binary. Conversion, test and time functions equally accept UUIDs and UUID strings, so don't bother to convert UUIDs for them!
Continuing with 1.0x versions all constants and public functions are exported by default, but this will change in the future (see below).
UUID::Tiny deliberately uses a minimal functional interface for UUID creation (and conversion/testing), because in this case OO looks like overkill to me and makes the creation and use of UUIDs unnecessarily complicated.
If you need raw performance for UUID creation, or the real MAC address in version 1 UUIDs, or an OO interface, and if you can afford module compilation and installation on the target system, then better look at other CPAN UUID modules like Data::UUID.
This module is "fork safe", especially for random UUIDs (it works around Perl's rand() problem when forking processes).
This module is currently not "thread safe". Even though I've incorporated some changes proposed by Michael G. Schwern (thanks!), Digest::MD5 and Digest::SHA seem so have trouble with threads. There is a test file for threads, but it is de-activated. So use at your own risk!
DEPENDENCIES
This module should run from Perl 5.8 up and uses mostly standard (5.8 core) modules for its job. No compilation or installation required. These are the modules UUID::Tiny depends on:
Carp
Digest::MD5 Perl 5.8 core
Digest::SHA Perl 5.10 core (or Digest::SHA1, or Digest::SHA::PurePerl)
MIME::Base64 Perl 5.8 core
Time::HiRes Perl 5.8 core
POSIX Perl 5.8 core
If you are using this module on a Perl prior to 5.10 and you don't have Digest::SHA1 installed, you can use Digest::SHA::PurePerl instead.
ATTENTION! NEW STANDARD INTERFACE
After some debate I'm convinced that it is more Perlish (and far easier to write) to use all-lowercase function names - without exceptions. And that it is more polite to export symbols only on demand.
While the 1.0x versions will continue to export the old, "legacy" interface on default, the future standard interface is available using the :std
tag on import from version 1.02 on:
use UUID::Tiny ':std';
my $md5_uuid = create_uuid(UUID_MD5, $str);
In preparation for future version of UUID::Tiny you have to use the :legacy
tag if you want to stay with the version 1.0 interface:
use UUID::Tiny ':legacy';
my $md5_uuid = create_UUID(UUID_V3, $str);
CONSTANTS
- NIL UUID
-
This module provides the NIL UUID (shown with its string representation):
UUID_NIL: '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'
- Pre-defined Namespace UUIDs
-
This module provides the common pre-defined namespace UUIDs (shown with their string representation):
UUID_NS_DNS: '6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8' UUID_NS_URL: '6ba7b811-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8' UUID_NS_OID: '6ba7b812-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8' UUID_NS_X500: '6ba7b814-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8'
- UUID versions
-
This module provides the UUID version numbers as constants:
UUID_V1 UUID_V3 UUID_V4 UUID_V5
With
use UUID::Tiny ':std';
you get additional, "speaking" constants:UUID_TIME UUID_MD5 UUID_RANDOM UUID_SHA1
- UUID_SHA1_AVAIL
-
my $uuid = create_UUID( UUID_SHA1_AVAIL? UUID_V5 : UUID_V3, $str );
This function returns 1 if a module to create SHA-1 digests could be loaded, 0 otherwise.
UUID::Tiny (since version 1.02) tries to load Digest::SHA, Digest::SHA1 or Digest::SHA::PurePerl, but does not die if none of them is found. Instead
create_UUID()
andcreate_UUID_as_string()
die when trying to create an SHA-1 based UUID without an appropriate module available.
FUNCTIONS
All public functions are exported by default (they should not collide with other functions).
create_UUID()
creates standard binary UUIDs in network byte order (MSB first), create_UUID_as_string()
creates the standard string representation of UUIDs.
All query and test functions (except is_UUID_string
) accept both representations.
- create_UUID(), create_uuid() (:std)
-
my $v1_mc_UUID = create_UUID(); my $v1_mc_UUID = create_UUID(UUID_V1); my $v3_md5_UUID = create_UUID(UUID_V3, $ns_uuid, $name_or_filehandle); my $v3_md5_UUID = create_UUID(UUID_V3, $name_or_filehandle); my $v4_rand_UUID = create_UUID(UUID_V4); my $v5_sha1_UUID = create_UUID(UUID_V5, $ns_uuid, $name_or_filehandle); my $v5_sha1_UUID = create_UUID(UUID_V5, $name_or_filehandle);
Creates a binary UUID in network byte order (MSB first). For v3 and v5 UUIDs a
SCALAR
(normally a string),GLOB
("classic" file handle) orIO
object (i.e.IO::File
) can be used; files have to be opened for reading.I found no hint if and how UUIDs should be created from file content. It seems to be undefined, but it is useful - so I would suggest to use UUID_NIL as the namespace UUID, because no "real name" is used; UUID_NIL is used by default if a namespace UUID is missing (only 2 arguments are used).
- create_UUID_as_string(), create_uuid_as_string() (:std)
-
Similar to
create_UUID
, but creates a UUID string. - is_UUID_string(), is_uuid_string() (:std)
-
my $bool = is_UUID_string($str);
- UUID_to_string(), uuid_to_string() (:std)
-
my $uuid_str = UUID_to_string($uuid);
This function returns
$uuid
unchanged if it is a UUID string already. - string_to_UUID(), string_to_uuid() (:std)
-
my $uuid = string_to_UUID($uuid_str);
This function returns
$uuid_str
unchanged if it is a UUID already.In addition to the standard UUID string representation and its URN forms (starting with
urn:uuid:
oruuid:
), this function accepts 32 digit hex strings, variants with different positions of-
and Base64 encoded UUIDs.Throws an exception if string can't be interpreted as a UUID.
If you want to make sure to have a "pure" standard UUID representation, check with
is_UUID_string
! - version_of_UUID(), version_of_uuid() (:std)
-
my $version = version_of_UUID($uuid);
This function accepts binary and string UUIDs.
- time_of_UUID(), time_of_uuid() (:std)
-
my $uuid_time = time_of_UUID($uuid);
This function accepts UUIDs and UUID strings. Returns the time as a floating point value, so use
int()
to get atime()
compatible value.Returns
undef
if the UUID is not version 1. - clk_seq_of_UUID(), clk_seq_of_uuid() (:std)
-
my $uuid_clk_seq = clk_seq_of_UUID($uuid);
This function accepts UUIDs and UUID strings. Returns the clock sequence for a version 1 UUID. Returns
undef
if UUID is not version 1. - equal_UUIDs(), equal_uuids() (:std)
-
my $bool = equal_UUIDs($uuid1, $uuid2);
Returns true if the provided UUIDs are equal. Accepts UUIDs and UUID strings (can be mixed).
DISCUSSION
- Why version 1 only with random multi-cast MAC addresses?
-
The random multi-cast MAC address gives privacy, and getting the real MAC address with Perl is really dirty (and slow);
- Should version 3 or version 5 be used?
-
Using SHA-1 reduces the probability of collisions and provides a better "randomness" of the resulting UUID compared to MD5. Version 5 is recommended in RFC 4122 if backward compatibility is not an issue.
Using MD5 (version 3) has a better performance. This could be important with creating UUIDs from file content rather than names.
UUID DEFINITION
See RFC 4122 (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4122.txt) for technical details on UUIDs. Wikipedia gives a more palatable description at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universally_unique_identifier.
AUTHOR
Christian Augustin, <mail at caugustin.de>
CONTRIBUTORS
Some of this code is based on UUID::Generator by ITO Nobuaki <banb@cpan.org>. But that module is announced to be marked as "deprecated" in the future and it is much too complicated for my liking.
So I decided to reduce it to the necessary parts and to re-implement those parts with a functional interface ...
Jesse Vincent, <jesse at bestpractical.com>
, improved version 1.02 with his tips and a heavy refactoring.
Michael G. Schwern provided a patch for better thread support (as far as UUID::Tiny can be improved itself) that is incorporated in version 1.04.
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-uuid-tiny at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=UUID-Tiny. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc UUID::Tiny
You can also look for information at:
RT: CPAN's request tracker
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
Search CPAN
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Kudos to ITO Nobuaki <banb@cpan.org> for his UUID::Generator::PurePerl module! My work is based on his code, and without it I would've been lost with all those incomprehensible RFC texts and C codes ...
Thanks to Jesse Vincent (<jesse at bestpractical.com>
) for his feedback, tips and refactoring!
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2009, 2010, 2013 Christian Augustin, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
ITO Nobuaki has very graciously given me permission to take over copyright for the portions of code that are copied from or resemble his work (see rt.cpan.org #53642 https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=53642).