Crates.io | pxid |
lib.rs | pxid |
version | 1.0.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2023-02-12 17:12:15.6036 |
updated_at | 2024-09-09 00:23:59.43217 |
description | Prefixed Globally Unique Identifier |
homepage | https://github.com/whizzes/pxid |
repository | https://github.com/whizzes/pxid |
max_upload_size | |
id | 783341 |
size | 56,869 |
Extend the rs/xid implementation by adding capability to have
a prefix and at the same time have a u16
type support by fitting prefix bits.
This library is inspired in Stripe IDs which have a friendly notation and are very short IDs. These IDs are prefixed with a maximum of 4 bytes belonging to the entity behind them.
use pxid::Pxid;
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
// Given that some of the dependencies to build
// an instance of the Pxid may fail.
// - Getting current timestamp
// - Getting machine id
// - Getting process id
//
// A `Result<Pxid, Error>` is returned.
let id = Pxid::new("acct".as_bytes())?;
println!("{}", id); // acct_9m4e2mr0ui3e8a215n4g
}
To improve memory usage (reduce allocations), and reuse dependencies required,
the Factory
struct can also be used to build Pxid
instances.
This is the recommended way to build Pxid
instances, given that resources are
initialized once, and then reused.
use pxid::Factory;
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
let factory = Factory::new_without_prefix()?;
let id = factory.with_prefix("acct");
println!("{}", id); // acct_9m4e2mr0ui3e8a215n4g
let factory_with_prefix = Factory::new("acct")?;
let id = factory_with_prefix.generate();
println!("{}", id); // acct_9m4e2mr0ui3e8a215n4g
}
You can use Pxid
on GraphQL via the async-graphql
crate.
Make sure the graphql
feature is enabled and import Pxid
for GraphQL.
use async_graphql::{Context, InputObject, Result, SimpleObject};
use pxid::graphql::Pxid;
// -- snip --
#[derive(Debug, InputObject)]
pub struct PostCreateInput {
pub title: String,
pub content: String,
pub parent_id: Option<Pxid>,
}
impl PostCreate {
pub async fn exec(ctx: &Context<'_>, input: PostCreateInput) -> Result<Self> {
// -- snip --
Check out the full example here.
A prefixed XID fits nicely on a 16 bytes slice thanks to its packed data format.
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |
Prefix | Timestamp | Machine ID | Process ID | Counter |
For a total of 16 bytes.
The prefix allows up to 4 UTF-8 Characters, this allows the ID to provide some context about its scope.
acct_9m4e2mr0ui3e8a215n4g
ordr_9m4e2mr0ui3e8a215n4g
usr_9m4e2mr0ui3e8a215n4g
This way IDs are not only even harder to collide, but they also provides a bit of context on record association.
This project is licensed under the MIT License