uuid vs uuid-random vs uuid-v4
UUID Generation Libraries Comparison
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What's UUID Generation Libraries?

UUID (Universally Unique Identifier) generation libraries are essential tools in web development for creating unique identifiers that can be used in databases, APIs, and other systems where unique identification is crucial. These libraries provide various methods for generating UUIDs, ensuring that they are unique across different contexts and systems. The main advantage of using UUIDs is their ability to prevent collisions, making them ideal for distributed systems and databases where multiple entities may generate identifiers concurrently.

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Feature Comparison: uuid vs uuid-random vs uuid-v4

UUID Version Support

  • uuid:

    The 'uuid' package supports multiple UUID versions, including v1 (time-based), v3 (namespace-based), v4 (random), and v5 (namespace-based). This versatility allows developers to choose the appropriate UUID generation method based on their specific use case requirements.

  • uuid-random:

    The 'uuid-random' package is focused solely on generating random UUIDs (v4). It does not support other UUID versions, making it less versatile but simpler for cases where only random UUIDs are needed.

  • uuid-v4:

    The 'uuid-v4' package exclusively generates version 4 UUIDs. It is optimized for this specific use case, ensuring efficient and straightforward random UUID generation.

Performance

  • uuid:

    The 'uuid' package is designed to be efficient and performant, but its support for multiple versions may introduce slight overhead compared to more focused libraries. However, it is still suitable for most applications requiring UUID generation.

  • uuid-random:

    The 'uuid-random' package is lightweight and optimized for generating random UUIDs quickly, making it ideal for applications where performance is critical and only v4 UUIDs are necessary.

  • uuid-v4:

    The 'uuid-v4' package is highly efficient for generating version 4 UUIDs, ensuring minimal overhead and fast performance, making it a great choice for high-performance applications.

Ease of Use

  • uuid:

    The 'uuid' package provides a straightforward API for generating various types of UUIDs, but its versatility may require users to familiarize themselves with the different methods available for each version.

  • uuid-random:

    The 'uuid-random' package offers a simple and intuitive API for generating random UUIDs, making it easy to use for developers who need a quick solution without additional complexity.

  • uuid-v4:

    The 'uuid-v4' package has a very simple API focused on generating v4 UUIDs, making it extremely easy to use for developers who only need this specific functionality.

Dependencies

  • uuid:

    The 'uuid' package has minimal dependencies, ensuring that it can be easily integrated into various projects without adding significant bloat.

  • uuid-random:

    The 'uuid-random' package has no dependencies, making it a lightweight choice for projects that require only random UUID generation.

  • uuid-v4:

    The 'uuid-v4' package also has no dependencies, ensuring a clean and lightweight implementation for generating v4 UUIDs.

Community and Maintenance

  • uuid:

    The 'uuid' package has a large user base and is actively maintained, ensuring that it stays up-to-date with best practices and security concerns.

  • uuid-random:

    The 'uuid-random' package is less popular but is still maintained, providing a reliable option for generating random UUIDs without the need for extensive features.

  • uuid-v4:

    The 'uuid-v4' package is widely used and actively maintained, ensuring that it remains a reliable choice for generating version 4 UUIDs.

How to Choose: uuid vs uuid-random vs uuid-v4
  • uuid:

    Choose 'uuid' if you need a comprehensive library that supports multiple UUID versions (v1, v3, v4, v5) and offers flexibility in generating UUIDs based on different algorithms. This package is ideal for applications that require a variety of UUID formats and robust functionality.

  • uuid-random:

    Choose 'uuid-random' if you specifically need to generate random UUIDs (v4) without the overhead of additional features. This package is lightweight and focuses solely on generating random UUIDs, making it suitable for simple use cases where only v4 UUIDs are needed.

  • uuid-v4:

    Choose 'uuid-v4' if your primary requirement is to generate version 4 UUIDs. This package is straightforward and optimized for generating random UUIDs, making it a good choice for projects that only need this specific version without any additional complexity.

README for uuid

uuid CI Browser

For the creation of RFC9562 (formerly RFC4122) UUIDs

[!NOTE] uuid@11 is now available: See the CHANGELOG for details. TL;DR:

  • TypeScript support is now included (remove @types/uuid from your dependencies)
  • Subtle changes to how the options arg is interpreted for v1(), v6(), and v7(). See details
  • Binary UUIDs are now Uint8Arrays. (May impact callers of parse(), stringify(), or that pass an option#buf argument to v1()-v7().)

Quickstart

1. Install

npm install uuid

2. Create a UUID

ESM-syntax (must use named exports):

import { v4 as uuidv4 } from 'uuid';
uuidv4(); // ⇨ '9b1deb4d-3b7d-4bad-9bdd-2b0d7b3dcb6d'

... CommonJS:

const { v4: uuidv4 } = require('uuid');
uuidv4(); // ⇨ '1b9d6bcd-bbfd-4b2d-9b5d-ab8dfbbd4bed'

For timestamp UUIDs, namespace UUIDs, and other options read on ...

API Summary

| | | | | --- | --- | --- | | uuid.NIL | The nil UUID string (all zeros) | New in uuid@8.3 | | uuid.MAX | The max UUID string (all ones) | New in uuid@9.1 | | uuid.parse() | Convert UUID string to array of bytes | New in uuid@8.3 | | uuid.stringify() | Convert array of bytes to UUID string | New in uuid@8.3 | | uuid.v1() | Create a version 1 (timestamp) UUID | | | uuid.v1ToV6() | Create a version 6 UUID from a version 1 UUID | New in uuid@10 | | uuid.v3() | Create a version 3 (namespace w/ MD5) UUID | | | uuid.v4() | Create a version 4 (random) UUID | | | uuid.v5() | Create a version 5 (namespace w/ SHA-1) UUID | | | uuid.v6() | Create a version 6 (timestamp, reordered) UUID | New in uuid@10 | | uuid.v6ToV1() | Create a version 1 UUID from a version 6 UUID | New in uuid@10 | | uuid.v7() | Create a version 7 (Unix Epoch time-based) UUID | New in uuid@10 | | ~~uuid.v8()~~ | "Intentionally left blank" | | | uuid.validate() | Test a string to see if it is a valid UUID | New in uuid@8.3 | | uuid.version() | Detect RFC version of a UUID | New in uuid@8.3 |

API

uuid.NIL

The nil UUID string (all zeros).

Example:

import { NIL as NIL_UUID } from 'uuid';

NIL_UUID; // ⇨ '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'

uuid.MAX

The max UUID string (all ones).

Example:

import { MAX as MAX_UUID } from 'uuid';

MAX_UUID; // ⇨ 'ffffffff-ffff-ffff-ffff-ffffffffffff'

uuid.parse(str)

Convert UUID string to array of bytes

| | | | --------- | ---------------------------------------- | | str | A valid UUID String | | returns | Uint8Array[16] | | throws | TypeError if str is not a valid UUID |

[!NOTE] Ordering of values in the byte arrays used by parse() and stringify() follows the left ↠ right order of hex-pairs in UUID strings. As shown in the example below.

Example:

import { parse as uuidParse } from 'uuid';

// Parse a UUID
uuidParse('6ec0bd7f-11c0-43da-975e-2a8ad9ebae0b'); // ⇨
// Uint8Array(16) [
//   110, 192, 189, 127,  17,
//   192,  67, 218, 151,  94,
//    42, 138, 217, 235, 174,
//    11
// ]

uuid.stringify(arr[, offset])

Convert array of bytes to UUID string

| | | | -------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | arr | Array-like collection of 16 values (starting from offset) between 0-255. | | [offset = 0] | Number Starting index in the Array | | returns | String | | throws | TypeError if a valid UUID string cannot be generated |

[!NOTE] Ordering of values in the byte arrays used by parse() and stringify() follows the left ↠ right order of hex-pairs in UUID strings. As shown in the example below.

Example:

import { stringify as uuidStringify } from 'uuid';

const uuidBytes = Uint8Array.of(
  0x6e,
  0xc0,
  0xbd,
  0x7f,
  0x11,
  0xc0,
  0x43,
  0xda,
  0x97,
  0x5e,
  0x2a,
  0x8a,
  0xd9,
  0xeb,
  0xae,
  0x0b
);

uuidStringify(uuidBytes); // ⇨ '6ec0bd7f-11c0-43da-975e-2a8ad9ebae0b'

uuid.v1([options[, buffer[, offset]]])

Create an RFC version 1 (timestamp) UUID

| | | | --- | --- | | [options] | Object with one or more of the following properties: | | [options.node = (random) ] | RFC "node" field as an Array[6] of byte values (per 4.1.6) | | [options.clockseq = (random)] | RFC "clock sequence" as a Number between 0 - 0x3fff | | [options.msecs = (current time)] | RFC "timestamp" field (Number of milliseconds, unix epoch) | | [options.nsecs = 0] | RFC "timestamp" field (Number of nanoseconds to add to msecs, should be 0-10,000) | | [options.random = (random)] | Array of 16 random bytes (0-255) used to generate other fields, above | | [options.rng] | Alternative to options.random, a Function that returns an Array of 16 random bytes (0-255) | | [buffer] | Uint8Array or Uint8Array subtype (e.g. Node.js Buffer). If provided, binary UUID is written into the array, starting at offset | | [offset = 0] | Number Index to start writing UUID bytes in buffer | | returns | UUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer | | throws | Error if more than 10M UUIDs/sec are requested |

[!NOTE] The default node id (the last 12 digits in the UUID) is generated once, randomly, on process startup, and then remains unchanged for the duration of the process.

[!NOTE] options.random and options.rng are only meaningful on the very first call to v1(), where they may be passed to initialize the internal node and clockseq fields.

Example:

import { v1 as uuidv1 } from 'uuid';

uuidv1(); // ⇨ '2c5ea4c0-4067-11e9-9bdd-2b0d7b3dcb6d'

Example using options:

import { v1 as uuidv1 } from 'uuid';

const options = {
  node: Uint8Array.of(0x01, 0x23, 0x45, 0x67, 0x89, 0xab),
  clockseq: 0x1234,
  msecs: new Date('2011-11-01').getTime(),
  nsecs: 5678,
};
uuidv1(options); // ⇨ '710b962e-041c-11e1-9234-0123456789ab'

uuid.v1ToV6(uuid)

Convert a UUID from version 1 to version 6

import { v1ToV6 } from 'uuid';

v1ToV6('92f62d9e-22c4-11ef-97e9-325096b39f47'); // ⇨ '1ef22c49-2f62-6d9e-97e9-325096b39f47'

uuid.v3(name, namespace[, buffer[, offset]])

Create an RFC version 3 (namespace w/ MD5) UUID

API is identical to v5(), but uses "v3" instead.

[!IMPORTANT] Per the RFC, "If backward compatibility is not an issue, SHA-1 [Version 5] is preferred."

uuid.v4([options[, buffer[, offset]]])

Create an RFC version 4 (random) UUID

| | | | --- | --- | | [options] | Object with one or more of the following properties: | | [options.random] | Array of 16 random bytes (0-255) | | [options.rng] | Alternative to options.random, a Function that returns an Array of 16 random bytes (0-255) | | [buffer] | Uint8Array or Uint8Array subtype (e.g. Node.js Buffer). If provided, binary UUID is written into the array, starting at offset | | [offset = 0] | Number Index to start writing UUID bytes in buffer | | returns | UUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer |

Example:

import { v4 as uuidv4 } from 'uuid';

uuidv4(); // ⇨ '9b1deb4d-3b7d-4bad-9bdd-2b0d7b3dcb6d'

Example using predefined random values:

import { v4 as uuidv4 } from 'uuid';

const v4options = {
  random: Uint8Array.of(
    0x10,
    0x91,
    0x56,
    0xbe,
    0xc4,
    0xfb,
    0xc1,
    0xea,
    0x71,
    0xb4,
    0xef,
    0xe1,
    0x67,
    0x1c,
    0x58,
    0x36
  ),
};
uuidv4(v4options); // ⇨ '109156be-c4fb-41ea-b1b4-efe1671c5836'

uuid.v5(name, namespace[, buffer[, offset]])

Create an RFC version 5 (namespace w/ SHA-1) UUID

| | | | --- | --- | | name | String \| Array | | namespace | String \| Array[16] Namespace UUID | | [buffer] | Uint8Array or Uint8Array subtype (e.g. Node.js Buffer). If provided, binary UUID is written into the array, starting at offset | | [offset = 0] | Number Index to start writing UUID bytes in buffer | | returns | UUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer |

[!NOTE] The RFC DNS and URL namespaces are available as v5.DNS and v5.URL.

Example with custom namespace:

import { v5 as uuidv5 } from 'uuid';

// Define a custom namespace.  Readers, create your own using something like
// https://www.uuidgenerator.net/
const MY_NAMESPACE = '1b671a64-40d5-491e-99b0-da01ff1f3341';

uuidv5('Hello, World!', MY_NAMESPACE); // ⇨ '630eb68f-e0fa-5ecc-887a-7c7a62614681'

Example with RFC URL namespace:

import { v5 as uuidv5 } from 'uuid';

uuidv5('https://www.w3.org/', uuidv5.URL); // ⇨ 'c106a26a-21bb-5538-8bf2-57095d1976c1'

uuid.v6([options[, buffer[, offset]]])

Create an RFC version 6 (timestamp, reordered) UUID

This method takes the same arguments as uuid.v1().

import { v6 as uuidv6 } from 'uuid';

uuidv6(); // ⇨ '1e940672-c5ea-64c0-9b5d-ab8dfbbd4bed'

Example using options:

import { v6 as uuidv6 } from 'uuid';

const options = {
  node: [0x01, 0x23, 0x45, 0x67, 0x89, 0xab],
  clockseq: 0x1234,
  msecs: new Date('2011-11-01').getTime(),
  nsecs: 5678,
};
uuidv6(options); // ⇨ '1e1041c7-10b9-662e-9234-0123456789ab'

uuid.v6ToV1(uuid)

Convert a UUID from version 6 to version 1

import { v6ToV1 } from 'uuid';

v6ToV1('1ef22c49-2f62-6d9e-97e9-325096b39f47'); // ⇨ '92f62d9e-22c4-11ef-97e9-325096b39f47'

uuid.v7([options[, buffer[, offset]]])

Create an RFC version 7 (random) UUID

| | | | --- | --- | | [options] | Object with one or more of the following properties: | | [options.msecs = (current time)] | RFC "timestamp" field (Number of milliseconds, unix epoch) | | [options.random = (random)] | Array of 16 random bytes (0-255) used to generate other fields, above | | [options.rng] | Alternative to options.random, a Function that returns an Array of 16 random bytes (0-255) | | [options.seq = (random)] | 32-bit sequence Number between 0 - 0xffffffff. This may be provided to help ensure uniqueness for UUIDs generated within the same millisecond time interval. Default = random value. | | [buffer] | Uint8Array or Uint8Array subtype (e.g. Node.js Buffer). If provided, binary UUID is written into the array, starting at offset | | [offset = 0] | Number Index to start writing UUID bytes in buffer | | returns | UUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer |

Example:

import { v7 as uuidv7 } from 'uuid';

uuidv7(); // ⇨ '01695553-c90c-705a-b56d-778dfbbd4bed'

~~uuid.v8()~~

"Intentionally left blank"

[!NOTE] Version 8 (experimental) UUIDs are "for experimental or vendor-specific use cases". The RFC does not define a creation algorithm for them, which is why this package does not offer a v8() method. The validate() and version() methods do work with such UUIDs, however.

uuid.validate(str)

Test a string to see if it is a valid UUID

| | | | --------- | --------------------------------------------------- | | str | String to validate | | returns | true if string is a valid UUID, false otherwise |

Example:

import { validate as uuidValidate } from 'uuid';

uuidValidate('not a UUID'); // ⇨ false
uuidValidate('6ec0bd7f-11c0-43da-975e-2a8ad9ebae0b'); // ⇨ true

Using validate and version together it is possible to do per-version validation, e.g. validate for only v4 UUIds.

import { version as uuidVersion } from 'uuid';
import { validate as uuidValidate } from 'uuid';

function uuidValidateV4(uuid) {
  return uuidValidate(uuid) && uuidVersion(uuid) === 4;
}

const v1Uuid = 'd9428888-122b-11e1-b85c-61cd3cbb3210';
const v4Uuid = '109156be-c4fb-41ea-b1b4-efe1671c5836';

uuidValidateV4(v4Uuid); // ⇨ true
uuidValidateV4(v1Uuid); // ⇨ false

uuid.version(str)

Detect RFC version of a UUID

| | | | --------- | ---------------------------------------- | | str | A valid UUID String | | returns | Number The RFC version of the UUID | | throws | TypeError if str is not a valid UUID |

Example:

import { version as uuidVersion } from 'uuid';

uuidVersion('45637ec4-c85f-11ea-87d0-0242ac130003'); // ⇨ 1
uuidVersion('6ec0bd7f-11c0-43da-975e-2a8ad9ebae0b'); // ⇨ 4

[!NOTE] This method returns 0 for the NIL UUID, and 15 for the MAX UUID.

Command Line

UUIDs can be generated from the command line using uuid.

$ npx uuid
ddeb27fb-d9a0-4624-be4d-4615062daed4

The default is to generate version 4 UUIDS, however the other versions are supported. Type uuid --help for details:

$ npx uuid --help

Usage:
  uuid
  uuid v1
  uuid v3 <name> <namespace uuid>
  uuid v4
  uuid v5 <name> <namespace uuid>
  uuid v7
  uuid --help

Note: <namespace uuid> may be "URL" or "DNS" to use the corresponding UUIDs
defined by RFC9562

options Handling for Timestamp UUIDs

Prior to uuid@11, it was possible for options state to interfere with the internal state used to ensure uniqueness of timestamp-based UUIDs (the v1(), v6(), and v7() methods). Starting with uuid@11, this issue has been addressed by using the presence of the options argument as a flag to select between two possible behaviors:

  • Without options: Internal state is utilized to improve UUID uniqueness.
  • With options: Internal state is NOT used and, instead, appropriate defaults are applied as needed.

Support

Browsers: uuid builds are tested against the latest version of desktop Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge. Mobile versions of these same browsers are expected to work but aren't currently tested.

Node: uuid builds are tested against node (LTS releases), plus one prior. E.g. node@18 is in maintainence mode, and node@22 is the current LTS release. So uuid supports node@16-node@22.

Typescript: TS versions released within the past two years are supported. source

Known issues

"getRandomValues() not supported"

This error occurs in environments where the standard crypto.getRandomValues() API is not supported. This issue can be resolved by adding an appropriate polyfill:

React Native / Expo

  1. Install react-native-get-random-values
  2. Import it before uuid. Since uuid might also appear as a transitive dependency of some other imports it's safest to just import react-native-get-random-values as the very first thing in your entry point:
import 'react-native-get-random-values';
import { v4 as uuidv4 } from 'uuid';

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