NAME
Data::TUID - A smaller and more communicable pseudo-UUID
VERSION
version 0.0122
SYNOPSIS
use Data::TUID
my $tuid = tuid # Generate a TUID of (default) length 8
$tuid = tuid length => 4 # Generate a TUID of length 4
$tuid = Data::TUID->tuid # Generate a TUID with the default length
$tuid = tuid uuid => '1bf4d967-9e4c-4414-9be0-26f31c16fb53' # Generate a TUID based off of the given UUID
A sample run (length 4):
rrry
ggf5
m1qb
xczx
pv9y
A sample run (length 8):
5xcfw8nj
2q255fyg
pn3xns4k
1xcamd3y
eczzca9c
A sample run (no length limit):
2kdk8wzjmfapj28cvexj6qndq7
2tmzr1f3k46tr813dtrxx2vhkqkd
1x3608c39mb1n726dhmxedjy72d
pre6tg2dm37zbw9amxg2c8bghn
3ys0kw21rmtpf54gsmnd28r99pj
DESCRIPTION
Data::TUID is a tool for creating small, communicable pseudo-unique identifiers. Essentially it will take a UUID, pass the result through Encode::Base32::Crockford, and resize accordingly (via substr
)
Although I've tried to sample the UUID evenly, this technique does not give any guarantee on uniqueness. Caveat emptor.
Finally, the result is more communicable (and smaller) due to the Crockford base-32 encoding. The Crockford technique uses:
A case-insensitive mapping
1 in place of '1','I', 'i', and 'L'
0 in place of '0', 'O', and 'o'
So, given a TUID (say something a user typed in for a URL), you can translate ambiguous characters (1, I, i, L, 0, 0, and o) into to 1 and 0.
USAGE
Data::TUID->tuid( ... )
Data::TUID::tuid( ... )
tuid ...
The arguments are:
uuid The UUID to use as a basis for the TUID. If none is given, one will be generated for you
length The length of the TUID returned. By default 8. A length of -1 will result in the whole
UUID being used, and a variable length TUID being returned (somewhere between 25 to 28)
SEE ALSO
http://www.crockford.com/wrmg/base32.html
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
AUTHOR
Robert Krimen <robertkrimen@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Robert Krimen.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.