Background:
I am creating a service booking website. Each order needs to have a unique order number. I have chosen 16 digits because that's what the previous software used.
Questions
I am not sure if there is any benefit to putting data into the order number or if it should just be a purely random string.
If it is just a random string then its only purpose is to act as an ID. If that is the case, then why not just use an incremental ID? Other then to obfuscate the number of orders we have generated to the end user I can't think of a good reason.
If it is a good idea to put data into the string, what kind of data should I include? Probably the date of the order, but other then that I don't know.
I am currently generating a purely random 16 digit string like this.
public function generateOrderNumber()
{
$time = time(); // Time (CET) to hash
$token = md5($time); // Hash stored in variable
return str_shuffle(substr($token, 0, 16)); // Hash shortened to 5 chars and randomised
}
However I am not sure if this is good enough for production.
If you need globally unique, say across multiple databases that are synchronized at intervals, then I'd go with standard 128-bit GUID which could be squeezed into 16 8-bit bytes to maintain backwards compatibility. PHP has com_create_guid to generate GUIDs.
MD5 only produces values in the a-f0-9 range which is severely limiting here. You really need to expand this and use the entire alphabet, maybe even Base62, a variant of Base64 minus the two "annoying" characters.
A cryptographically random number, not the junk rand() produces, encoded as a 5-character Base62 value could work.
If you need people to be able to read and write these values by hand you'll want to omit 0, O and 1 and l and I for clarity.
Remember, on really short values you will probably get collisions so you'll need to test any INSERT you do against a UNIQUE constraint and retry if they fail.
I'm trying to use mcrypt_create_iv to generate random salts. When I test to see if the salt is generated by echo'ing it out, it checks out but it isn't the required length which I pass as a parameter to it (32), instead its less than that.
When I store it in my database table however, it shows up as something like this K??5P?M???4?o???"?0??
I'm sure it's something to do with the database, but I tried to change the collation of it to correspond with the config settings of CI, which is utf8_general_ci, but it doesn't solve the problem, instead it generates a much smaller salt.
Does anyone know of what may be wrong? Thanks for any feedback/help
The function mcrypt_create_iv() will return a binary string, containing \0 and other unreadable characters. Depending on how you want to use the salts, you first have to encode those byte strings, to an accepted alphabet. It is also possible to store binary strings in the database, but of course you will have a problem to display them.
Since salts are normally used for password storing, i would recommend to have a look at PHP's function password_hash(), it will generate a salt automatically and includes it in the resulting hash-value, so you don't need a separate database field for the salt.
I'm looking for a function (php) to encode int id into string looks like result of md5, or uuid.
Requirements for function is next:
encoding must be reverse
fast
encoded string must be unique
desired chars are [a-z0-9-]
Security is not the point, I just need use such id conversion "perceived" security by customers, indeed used other approaches to make link available only for order owner.
Workflow I see now: I take encoded string from URL, decode it to int, make query using this int value.
I thought about approach, when together with id need store some hash, and use this hash in urls, but if I can use function with requirements I'm asking for, it would be great, because I don't want to add separate filed, index by this field, etc.
Try base64_encode/base64_decode.
http://php.net/manual/en/function.base64-encode.php
http://php.net/manual/en/function.base64-decode.php
I'm creating a pretty simple application which allows references (of potential employees) to upload their own reference letters. Here's how it works:
The applicant submits the references email
The reference receives an automatically generated email containing a unique URL (for security reasons)
Reference follows the link, answers security question (in case he wishes to access the site more than once)
Uploads letter
I'm stuck on how to generate a completely (okay, okay, quasi will do) random URL. What's more: how do I ensure that following the link will direct the references to the correct page? Do I have to create a new page containing the drop box every time I send out a random URL?
Thanks for any suggestions on how to go about this :)
You might try using a hash algorithm which generates the unique-esque checksum from the contents of the file. Usually (for example with md5()) one byte change in the original content results in a completely different hash. (Notice: md5 has some collision vulnerabilities.)
If you store the uploaded file with the filename of the hash, you will be able to retrieve it at a later date, but for more complex system, there should be a database set up which makes the relation between the random URL and the stored content.
If you don't want to hash, there code snippet below could help to generate random URLs (but make sure that if an URL is already used, you prevent accidental overwrites):
md5( sha1( time() + rand(0, time()) ) );
I presume that when you say that you want to generate a random URL, you are essentially asking to generate a random string. This is potentially very simple; here's some pseudocode:
for i = 1 to stringLength
randomString[i] = floor(random() * 26) + 'a'
end
In other words, generate a random number between 0 and 25, and add it to the ASCII value for the character 'a'. This would generate a random string of lowercase letters, which I think should be sufficient for your task. In PHP, you would use the rand function. It would be advisable to use the srand function to seed the random number generator with the current time, like the example at the end of the given link.
As for the second part; I recommend that you simplify things; rather than generating an actual page with a random URL, why not simply pass a random string into the query string such as:
www.mydomain.com/uploadReference.php?id=xxxxxxx
Where xxxxxxx is your random string. You can then verify the string and look it up in a database using PHP. This seems, for your purposes, by far the easiest way.
You can make a unique string based on some form of hash of the current time stamp or the reference's unique credentials (e.g. username or something). You could then create one page for the dropbox that would accept that unique string in the URL to be used for a script on the page which would retrieve the relevant data mapped by that string in a database.
You could also create a random permutation of numerals and characters so that
hash($previous) // is unique
The basic idea is that the 'hash'-function depends only on the previous value, creating a new unique value. For example so that '0' -> '1', '1' -> '2', '9' -> 'a', 'z' -> '10', 'z0' -> '11'. Such an algorithm is relatively easy to devise
I've always wondered how and why they do this...an example: http://youtube.com/watch?v=DnAMjq0haic
How are these IDs generated such that there are no duplicates, and what advantage does this have over having a simple auto incrementing numeric ID?
How do one keep it short but still keep it's uniqueness? The string uniqid creates are pretty long.
Kevin van Zonneveld has written an excellent article including a PHP function to do exactly this. His approach is the best I've found while researching this topic.
His function is quite clever. It uses a fixed $index variable so problematic characters can be removed (vowels for instance, or to avoid O and 0 confusion). It also has an option to obfuscate ids so that they are not easily guessable.
Try this: http://php.net/manual/en/function.uniqid.php
uniqid — Generate a unique ID...
Gets a prefixed unique identifier based on the current time in microseconds.
Caution
This function does not generate cryptographically secure values, and should not be used for cryptographic purposes. If you need a cryptographically secure value, consider using random_int(), random_bytes(), or openssl_random_pseudo_bytes() instead.
Warning
This function does not guarantee uniqueness of return value. Since most systems adjust system clock by NTP or like, system time is changed constantly. Therefore, it is possible that this function does not return unique ID for the process/thread. Use more_entropy to increase likelihood of uniqueness...
base62 or base64 encode your primary key's value then store it in another field.
example base62 for primary key 12443 = 3eH
saves some space, which is why im sure youtube is using it.
doing a base62(A-Za-z0-9) encode on your PK or unique identifier will prevent the overhead of having to check to see if the key already exists :)
I had a similar issue - I had primary id's in the database, but I did not want to expose them to the user - it would've been much better to show some sort of a hash instead. So, I wrote hashids.
Documentation: http://www.hashids.org/php/
Souce: https://github.com/ivanakimov/hashids.php
Hashes created with this class are unique and decryptable. You can provide a custom salt value, so others cannot decrypt your hashes (not that it's a big problem, but still a "good-to-have").
To encrypt a number your would do this:
require('lib/Hashids/Hashids.php');
$hashids = new Hashids\Hashids('this is my salt');
$hash = $hashids->encrypt(123);
Your $hash would now be: YDx
You can also set minimum hash length as the second parameter to the constructor so your hashes can be longer. Or if you have a complex clustered system you could even encrypt several numbers into one hash:
$hash = $hashids->encrypt(2, 456); /* aXupK */
(for example, if you have a user in cluster 2 and an object with primary id 456) Decryption works the same way:
$numbers = $hashids->decrypt('aXupK');
$numbers would then be: [2, 456].
The good thing about this is you don't even have to store these hashes in the database. You could get the hash from url once request comes in and decrypt it on the fly - and then pull by primary id's from the database (which is obviously an advantage in speed).
Same with output - you could encrypt the id's on the way out, and display the hash to the user.
EDIT:
Changed urls to include both doc website and code source
Changed example code to adjust to the main lib updates (current PHP lib version is 0.3.0 - thanks to all the open-source community for improving the lib)
Auto-incrementing can easily be crawled. These cannot be predicted, and therefore cannot be sequentially crawled.
I suggest going with a double-url format (Similar to the SO URLs):
yoursite.com/video_idkey/url_friendly_video_title
If you required both the id, and the title in the url, you could then use simple numbers like 0001, 0002, 0003, etc.
Generating these keys can be really simple. You could use the uniqid() function in PHP to generate 13 chars, or 23 with more entropy.
If you want short URLs and predictability is not a concern, you can convert the auto-incrementing ID to a higher base.
Here is a small function that generates unique key randomly each time. It has very fewer chances to repeat same unique ID.
function uniqueKey($limit = 10) {
$characters = '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ';
$randstring = '';
for ($i = 0; $i < $limit; $i++) {
$randstring .= $characters[rand(0, strlen($characters))];
}
return $randstring;
}
source: generate random unique IDs like YouTube or TinyURL in PHP
Consider using something like:
$id = base64_encode(md5(uniqid(),true));
uniqid will get you a unique identifier. MD5 will diffuse it giving you a 128 bit result. Base 64 encoding that will give you 6 bits per character in an identifier suitable for use on the web, weighing in around 23 characters and computationally intractable to guess. If you want to be even more paranoid ugrade from md5 to sha1 or higher.
A way to do it is by a hash function with unique input every time.
example (you've tagged the question with php therfore):
$uniqueID = null
do {
$uniqueID = sha1( $fileName + date() );
} while ( !isUnique($uniqueID) )
There should be a library for PHP to generate these IDs. If not, it's not difficult to implement it.
The advantage is that later you won't have name conflicts, when you try to reorganize or merge different server resources. With numeric ids you would have to change some of them to resolve conflicts and that will result in Url change leading to SEO hit.
So much of this depends on what you need to do. How 'unique' is unique? Are you serving up the unique ID's, and do they mean something in your DB? if so, a sequential # might be ok.
ON the other hand, if you use sequential #'s someone could systematically steal your content by iterating thru the numbers.
There are filesystem commands that will generate unique file names - you could use those.
Or GUID's.
Results of hash functions like SHA-1 or MD5 and GUIDs tend to become very long, which is probably something you don't want. (You've specifically mentioned YouTube as an example: Their identifiers stay relatively short even with the bazillion videos they are hosting.)
This is why you might want to look into converting your numeric IDs, which you are using behind the scenes, into another base when putting them into URLs. Flickr e.g. uses Base58 for their canonical short URLs. Details about this are available here: http://www.flickr.com/groups/api/discuss/72157616713786392/. If you are looking for a generic solution, have a look at the PEAR package Mathe_Basex.
Please note that even in another base, the IDs can still be predicted from outside of your application.
I don't have a formula but we do this on a project that I'm on. (I can't share it). But we basically generate one character at a time and append the string.
Once we have a completed string, we check it against the database. If there is no other, we go with it. If it is a duplicate, we start the process over. Not very complicated.
The advantage is, I guess that of a GUID.
This is NOT PHP but can be converted to php or as it's Javascript & so clinetside without the need to slow down the server.. it can be used as you post whatever needs a unique id to your php.
Here is a way to create unique ids limited to
9 007 199 254 740 992 unique id's
it always returns 9 charachters.
where iE2XnNGpF is 9 007 199 254 740 992
You can encode a long Number and then decode the 9char generated String
and it returns the number.
basically this function uses the 62base index Math.log() and Math.Power to get the right index based on the number.. i would explain more about the function but ifound it some time ago and can't find the site anymore and it toke me very long time to get how this works... anyway i rewrote the function from 0.. and this one is 2-3 times faster than the one that i found.
i looped through 10million checking if the number is the same as the enc dec process and it toke 33sec with this one and the other one 90sec.
var UID={
ix:'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ',
enc:function(N){
N<=9007199254740992||(alert('OMG no more uid\'s'));
var M=Math,F=M.floor,L=M.log,P=M.pow,r='',I=UID.ix,l=I.length,i;
for(i=F(L(N)/L(l));i>=0;i--){
r+=I.substr((F(N/P(l,i))%l),1)
};
return UID.rev(new Array(10-r.length).join('a')+r)
},
dec:function(S){
var S=UID.rev(S),r=0,i,l=S.length,I=UID.ix,j=I.length,P=Math.pow;
for(i=0;i<=(l-1);i++){r+=I.indexOf(S.substr(i,1))*P(j,(l-1-i))};
return r
},
rev:function(a){return a.split('').reverse().join('')}
};
As i wanted a 9 character string i also appended a's on the generated string which are 0's.
To encode a number you need to pass a Number and not a string.
var uniqueId=UID.enc(9007199254740992);
To decode the Number again you need to pass the 9char generated String
var id=UID.dec(uniqueId);
here are some numbers
console.log(UID.enc(9007199254740992))//9 biliardi o 9 milioni di miliardi
console.log(UID.enc(1)) //baaaaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(10)) //kaaaaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(100)) //Cbaaaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(1000)) //iqaaaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(10000)) //sBcaaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(100000)) //Ua0aaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(1000000)) //cjmeaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(10000000)) //u2XFaaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(100000000)) //o9ALgaaaa
console.log(UID.enc(1000000000)) //qGTFfbaaa
console.log(UID.enc(10000000000)) //AOYKUkaaa
console.log(UID.enc(100000000000)) //OjO9jLbaa
console.log(UID.enc(1000000000000)) //eAfM7Braa
console.log(UID.enc(10000000000000)) //EOTK1dQca
console.log(UID.enc(100000000000000)) //2ka938y2a
As you can see there are alot of a's and you don't want that... so just start with a high number.
let's say you DB id is 1 .. just add 100000000000000 so that you have 100000000000001
and you unique id looks like youtube's id 3ka938y2a
i don't think it's easy to fulfill the other 8907199254740992 unique id's