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uuid

README_js.md

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javascript
runmd.onRequire = (path) => {
  if (path == 'rng') return fun;
  return path.replace(/^uuid/, './dist/');
};

uuid

For the creation of RFC9562 (formerly RFC4122) UUIDs

<!-- prettier-ignore -->

[!NOTE]

Starting with uuid@12 CommonJS is no longer supported. See implications and motivation for details.

Quickstart

1. Install

shell
npm install uuid

2. Create a UUID

javascript
import { v4 as uuidv4 } from 'uuid';

uuidv4(); // RESULT

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

API Summary

uuid.NILThe nil UUID string (all zeros)New in [email protected]
uuid.MAXThe max UUID string (all ones)New in [email protected]
uuid.parse()Convert UUID string to array of bytesNew in [email protected]
uuid.stringify()Convert array of bytes to UUID stringNew in [email protected]
uuid.v1()Create a version 1 (timestamp) UUID
uuid.v1ToV6()Create a version 6 UUID from a version 1 UUIDNew 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) UUIDNew in uuid@10
uuid.v6ToV1()Create a version 1 UUID from a version 6 UUIDNew in uuid@10
uuid.v7()Create a version 7 (Unix Epoch time-based) UUIDNew in uuid@10
uuid.v8()"Intentionally left blank"
uuid.validate()Test a string to see if it is a valid UUIDNew in [email protected]
uuid.version()Detect RFC version of a UUIDNew in [email protected]

API

uuid.NIL

The nil UUID string (all zeros).

Example:

javascript
import { NIL as NIL_UUID } from 'uuid';

NIL_UUID; // RESULT

uuid.MAX

The max UUID string (all ones).

Example:

javascript
import { MAX as MAX_UUID } from 'uuid';

MAX_UUID; // RESULT

uuid.parse(str)

Convert UUID string to array of bytes

strA valid UUID String
returnsUint8Array[16]
throwsTypeError if str is not a valid UUID
<!-- prettier-ignore -->

[!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:

javascript
import { parse as uuidParse } from 'uuid';

// Parse a UUID
uuidParse('6ec0bd7f-11c0-43da-975e-2a8ad9ebae0b'); // RESULT

uuid.stringify(arr[, offset])

Convert array of bytes to UUID string

arrArray-like collection of 16 values (starting from offset) between 0-255.
[offset = 0]Number Starting index in the Array
returnsString
throwsTypeError if a valid UUID string cannot be generated
<!-- prettier-ignore -->

[!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:

javascript
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); // RESULT

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
returnsUUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer
throwsError if more than 10M UUIDs/sec are requested

Example:

javascript
import { v1 as uuidv1 } from 'uuid';

uuidv1(); // RESULT

Example using options:

javascript
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); // RESULT

uuid.v1ToV6(uuid)

Convert a UUID from version 1 to version 6

javascript
import { v1ToV6 } from 'uuid';

v1ToV6('92f62d9e-22c4-11ef-97e9-325096b39f47'); // RESULT

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

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

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

<!-- prettier-ignore -->

[!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
returnsUUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer

Example:

javascript
import { v4 as uuidv4 } from 'uuid';

uuidv4(); // RESULT

Example using predefined random values:

javascript
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); // RESULT

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

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

nameString | Array
namespaceString | 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
returnsUUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer
<!-- prettier-ignore -->

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

Example with custom namespace:

javascript
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); // RESULT

Example with RFC URL namespace:

javascript
import { v5 as uuidv5 } from 'uuid';

uuidv5('https://www.w3.org/', uuidv5.URL); // RESULT

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

Create an RFC version 6 (timestamp, reordered) UUID

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

javascript
import { v6 as uuidv6 } from 'uuid';

uuidv6(); // RESULT

Example using options:

javascript
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); // RESULT

uuid.v6ToV1(uuid)

Convert a UUID from version 6 to version 1

javascript
import { v6ToV1 } from 'uuid';

v6ToV1('1ef22c49-2f62-6d9e-97e9-325096b39f47'); // RESULT

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
returnsUUID String if no buffer is specified, otherwise returns buffer

Example:

javascript
import { v7 as uuidv7 } from 'uuid';

uuidv7(); // RESULT

uuid.v8()

"Intentionally left blank"

<!-- prettier-ignore -->

[!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

strString to validate
returnstrue if string is a valid UUID, false otherwise

Example:

javascript
import { validate as uuidValidate } from 'uuid';

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

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

javascript
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); // RESULT
uuidValidateV4(v1Uuid); // RESULT

uuid.version(str)

Detect RFC version of a UUID

strA valid UUID String
returnsNumber The RFC version of the UUID
throwsTypeError if str is not a valid UUID

Example:

javascript
import { version as uuidVersion } from 'uuid';

uuidVersion('45637ec4-c85f-11ea-87d0-0242ac130003'); // RESULT
uuidVersion('6ec0bd7f-11c0-43da-975e-2a8ad9ebae0b'); // RESULT
<!-- prettier-ignore -->

[!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.

shell
$ 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:

shell
$ 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. At the time of this writing node@20 is the "maintenance" release and node@24 is the "current" release, so uuid supports node@20-node@24.

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

Known issues

<!-- This header is referenced as an anchor in src/rng.ts -->

"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:
javascript
import 'react-native-get-random-values';
import { v4 as uuidv4 } from 'uuid';