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Generate unique hashes for django models

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-24 12:45 出处:网络
I want to use unique hashes for each model rather than ids. I implemented the following function to use it across the board easily.

I want to use unique hashes for each model rather than ids.

I implemented the following function to use it across the board easily.

import random,hashlib
from base64 import urlsafe_b64encode

def set_unique_random_value(model_object,field_name='hash_uuid',length=5,use_sha=True,urlencode=False):
    while 1:
        uuid_number = str(random.random())[2:]
        uuid = hashlib.sha256(uuid_number).hexdigest() if use_sha else uuid_number
        uuid = uuid[:length]
        if urlencode:
           开发者_运维百科 uuid = urlsafe_b64encode(uuid)[:-1]
        hash_id_dict = {field_name:uuid}
        try:
            model_object.__class__.objects.get(**hash_id_dict)
        except model_object.__class__.DoesNotExist:
            setattr(model_object,field_name,uuid)
            return

I'm seeking feedback, how else could I do it? How can I improve it? What is good bad and ugly about it?


I do not like this bit:

uuid = uuid[:5]

In the best scenario (uuid are uniformly distributed) you will get a collision with probability greater than 0.5 after 1k of elements!

It is because of the birthday problem. In a brief it is proven that the probability of collision exceeds 0.5 when number of elements is larger than square root from number of possible labels.

You have 0xFFFFF=10^6 labels (different numbers) so after a 1000 of generated values you will start having collisions.

Even if you enlarge length to -1 you have still problem here:

str(random.random())[2:]

You will start having collisions after 3 * 10^6 (the same calculations follows).

I think your best bet is to use uuid that is more likely to be unique, here is an example

>>> import uuid
>>> uuid.uuid1().hex
'7e0e52d0386411df81ce001b631bdd31'

Update If you do not trust math just run the following sample to see the collision:

 >>> len(set(hashlib.sha256(str(i)).hexdigest()[:5] for i in range(0,2000)))
 1999 # it should obviously print 2000 if there wasn't any collision


The ugly:

import random

From the documentation:

This module implements pseudo-random number generators for various distributions.

If anything, please use os.urandom

Return a string of n random bytes suitable for cryptographic use.

This is how I use it in my models:

import os
from binascii import hexlify

def _createId():
    return hexlify(os.urandom(16))

class Book(models.Model):
    id_book = models.CharField(max_length=32, primary_key=True, default=_createId)


Django 1.8+ has a built-in UUIDField. Here's the suggested implementation, using the standard library's uuid module, from the docs:

import uuid
from django.db import models

class MyUUIDModel(models.Model):
    id = models.UUIDField(primary_key=True, default=uuid.uuid4, editable=False)
    # other fields

For older django versions you can use the django-uuidfield package.


Use your database engine's UUID support instead of making up your own hash. Almost everything beyond SQLite supports them, so there's little reason to not use them.

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