Crates.io | nanoid |
lib.rs | nanoid |
version | 0.4.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2017-12-26 19:41:49.834684 |
updated_at | 2021-04-07 00:14:48.277945 |
description | A tiny, secure, URL-friendly, unique string ID generator for Rust. |
homepage | https://github.com/nikolay-govorov/nanoid |
repository | https://github.com/nikolay-govorov/nanoid.git |
max_upload_size | |
id | 44477 |
size | 18,035 |
A tiny, secure, URL-friendly, unique string ID generator for Rust
use nanoid::nanoid;
fn main() {
let id = nanoid!(); //=> "Yo1Tr9F3iF-LFHX9i9GvA"
}
Safe. It uses cryptographically strong random APIs and guarantees a proper distribution of symbols.
Compact. It uses a larger alphabet than UUID (A-Za-z0-9_-
)
and has a similar number of unique IDs in just 21 symbols instead of 36.
[dependencies]
nanoid = "0.4.0"
The main module uses URL-friendly symbols (A-Za-z0-9_-
) and returns an ID
with 21 characters.
use nanoid::nanoid;
fn main() {
let id = nanoid!(); //=> "Yo1Tr9F3iF-LFHX9i9GvA"
}
Symbols -,.()
are not encoded in the URL. If used at the end of a link
they could be identified as a punctuation symbol.
If you want to reduce ID length (and increase collisions probability), you can pass the length as an argument generate function:
use nanoid::nanoid;
fn main() {
let id = nanoid!(10); //=> "IRFa-VaY2b"
}
If you want to change the ID's alphabet or length, you can simply pass the
custom alphabet to the nanoid!()
macro as the second parameter:
use nanoid::nanoid;
fn main() {
let alphabet: [char; 16] = [
'1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9', '0', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'
];
let id = nanoid!(10, &alphabet); //=> "4f90d13a42"
}
Alphabet must contain 256 symbols or less. Otherwise, the generator will not be secure.
You can replace the default safe random generator using the complex
module.
For instance, to use a seed-based generator.
use nanoid::nanoid;
fn random_byte () -> u8 { 0 }
fn main() {
fn random (size: usize) -> Vec<u8> {
let mut bytes: Vec<u8> = vec![0; size];
for i in 0..size {
bytes[i] = random_byte();
}
bytes
}
nanoid!(10, &['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'], random); //=> "fbaefaadeb"
}
random
function must accept the array size and return an vector
with random numbers.
If you want to use the same URL-friendly symbols with format
,
you can get the default alphabet from the url
module:
use nanoid::nanoid;
fn random (size: usize) -> Vec<u8> {
let result: Vec<u8> = vec![0; size];
result
}
fn main() {
nanoid!(10, &nanoid::alphabet::SAFE, random); //=> "93ce_Ltuub"
}