This is a purely informative rendering of an RFC that includes verified errata. This rendering may not be used as a reference.

The following 'Verified' errata have been incorporated in this document: EID 7929, EID 7955, EID 7958


Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                          K. Davis
Request for Comments: 9562                                 Cisco Systems
Obsoletes: 4122                                               B. Peabody
Category: Standards Track                                        Uncloud
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                 P. Leach
                                                University of Washington
                                                                May 2024

                 Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs)

Abstract

   This specification defines UUIDs (Universally Unique IDentifiers) --
   also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique IDentifiers) -- and a Uniform
   Resource Name namespace for UUIDs.  A UUID is 128 bits long and is
   intended to guarantee uniqueness across space and time.  UUIDs were
   originally used in the Apollo Network Computing System (NCS), later
   in the Open Software Foundation's (OSF's) Distributed Computing
   Environment (DCE), and then in Microsoft Windows platforms.

   This specification is derived from the OSF DCE specification with the
   kind permission of the OSF (now known as "The Open Group").
   Information from earlier versions of the OSF DCE specification have
   been incorporated into this document.  This document obsoletes RFC
   4122.

Status of This Memo

   This is an Internet Standards Track document.

   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
   received public review and has been approved for publication by the
   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
   Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.

   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
   https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9562.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2024 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.

   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
   (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
   publication of this document.  Please review these documents
   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
   include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the
   Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described
   in the Revised BSD License.

Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction
   2.  Motivation
     2.1.  Update Motivation
   3.  Terminology
     3.1.  Requirements Language
     3.2.  Abbreviations
   4.  UUID Format
     4.1.  Variant Field
     4.2.  Version Field
   5.  UUID Layouts
     5.1.  UUID Version 1
     5.2.  UUID Version 2
     5.3.  UUID Version 3
     5.4.  UUID Version 4
     5.5.  UUID Version 5
     5.6.  UUID Version 6
     5.7.  UUID Version 7
     5.8.  UUID Version 8
     5.9.  Nil UUID
     5.10. Max UUID
   6.  UUID Best Practices
     6.1.  Timestamp Considerations
     6.2.  Monotonicity and Counters
     6.3.  UUID Generator States
     6.4.  Distributed UUID Generation
     6.5.  Name-Based UUID Generation
     6.6.  Namespace ID Usage and Allocation
     6.7.  Collision Resistance
     6.8.  Global and Local Uniqueness
     6.9.  Unguessability
     6.10. UUIDs That Do Not Identify the Host
     6.11. Sorting
     6.12. Opacity
     6.13. DBMS and Database Considerations
   7.  IANA Considerations
     7.1.  IANA UUID Subtype Registry and Registration
     7.2.  IANA UUID Namespace ID Registry and Registration
   8.  Security Considerations
   9.  References
     9.1.  Normative References
     9.2.  Informative References
   Appendix A.  Test Vectors
     A.1.  Example of a UUIDv1 Value
     A.2.  Example of a UUIDv3 Value
     A.3.  Example of a UUIDv4 Value
     A.4.  Example of a UUIDv5 Value
     A.5.  Example of a UUIDv6 Value
     A.6.  Example of a UUIDv7 Value
   Appendix B.  Illustrative Examples
     B.1.  Example of a UUIDv8 Value (Time-Based)
     B.2.  Example of a UUIDv8 Value (Name-Based)
   Acknowledgements
   Authors' Addresses

1.  Introduction

   This specification defines a Uniform Resource Name namespace for
   Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs), also known as Globally Unique
   IDentifiers (GUIDs).  A UUID is 128 bits long and requires no central
   registration process.

   The use of UUIDs is extremely pervasive in computing.  They comprise
   the core identifier infrastructure for many operating systems such as
   Microsoft Windows and applications such as the Mozilla Web browser;
   in many cases, they can become exposed in many non-standard ways.

   This specification attempts to standardize that practice as openly as
   possible and in a way that attempts to benefit the entire Internet.
   The information here is meant to be a concise guide for those wishing
   to implement services using UUIDs either in combination with URNs
   [RFC8141] or otherwise.

   There is an ITU-T Recommendation and an ISO/IEC Standard [X667] that
   are derived from [RFC4122].  Both sets of specifications have been
   aligned and are fully technically compatible.  Nothing in this
   document should be construed to override the DCE standards that
   defined UUIDs.

2.  Motivation

   One of the main reasons for using UUIDs is that no centralized
   authority is required to administer them (although two formats may
   leverage optional IEEE 802 Node IDs, others do not).  As a result,
   generation on demand can be completely automated and used for a
   variety of purposes.  The UUID generation algorithm described here
   supports very high allocation rates of 10 million per second per
   machine or more, if necessary, so that they could even be used as
   transaction IDs.

   UUIDs are of a fixed size (128 bits), which is reasonably small
   compared to other alternatives.  This lends itself well to sorting,
   ordering, and hashing of all sorts; storing in databases; simple
   allocation; and ease of programming in general.

   Since UUIDs are unique and persistent, they make excellent URNs.  The
   unique ability to generate a new UUID without a registration process
   allows for UUIDs to be one of the URNs with the lowest minting cost.

2.1.  Update Motivation

   Many things have changed in the time since UUIDs were originally
   created.  Modern applications have a need to create and utilize UUIDs
   as the primary identifier for a variety of different items in complex
   computational systems, including but not limited to database keys,
   file names, machine or system names, and identifiers for event-driven
   transactions.

   One area in which UUIDs have gained popularity is database keys.
   This stems from the increasingly distributed nature of modern
   applications.  In such cases, "auto-increment" schemes that are often
   used by databases do not work well: the effort required to coordinate
   sequential numeric identifiers across a network can easily become a
   burden.  The fact that UUIDs can be used to create unique, reasonably
   short values in distributed systems without requiring coordination
   makes them a good alternative, but UUID versions 1-5, which were
   originally defined by [RFC4122], lack certain other desirable
   characteristics, such as:

   1.  UUID versions that are not time ordered, such as UUIDv4
       (described in Section 5.4), have poor database-index locality.
       This means that new values created in succession are not close to
       each other in the index; thus, they require inserts to be
       performed at random locations.  The resulting negative
       performance effects on the common structures used for this
       (B-tree and its variants) can be dramatic.

   2.  The 100-nanosecond Gregorian Epoch used in UUIDv1 timestamps
       (described in Section 5.1) is uncommon and difficult to represent
       accurately using a standard number format such as that described
       in [IEEE754].

   3.  Introspection/parsing is required to order by time sequence, as
       opposed to being able to perform a simple byte-by-byte
       comparison.

   4.  Privacy and network security issues arise from using a Media
       Access Control (MAC) address in the node field of UUIDv1.
       Exposed MAC addresses can be used as an attack surface to locate
       network interfaces and reveal various other information about
       such machines (minimally, the manufacturer and, potentially,
       other details).  Additionally, with the advent of virtual
       machines and containers, uniqueness of the MAC address is no
       longer guaranteed.

   5.  Many of the implementation details specified in [RFC4122]
       involved trade-offs that are neither possible to specify for all
       applications nor necessary to produce interoperable
       implementations.

   6.  [RFC4122] did not distinguish between the requirements for
       generating a UUID and those for simply storing one, although they
       are often different.

   Due to the aforementioned issues, many widely distributed database
   applications and large application vendors have sought to solve the
   problem of creating a better time-based, sortable unique identifier
   for use as a database key.  This has led to numerous implementations
   over the past 10+ years solving the same problem in slightly
   different ways.

   While preparing this specification, the following 16 different
   implementations were analyzed for trends in total ID length, bit
   layout, lexical formatting and encoding, timestamp type, timestamp
   format, timestamp accuracy, node format and components, collision
   handling, and multi-timestamp tick generation sequencing:

   1.   [ULID]
   2.   [LexicalUUID]
   3.   [Snowflake]
   4.   [Flake]
   5.   [ShardingID]
   6.   [KSUID]
   7.   [Elasticflake]
   8.   [FlakeID]
   9.   [Sonyflake]
   10.  [orderedUuid]
   11.  [COMBGUID]
   12.  [SID]
   13.  [pushID]
   14.  [XID]
   15.  [ObjectID]
   16.  [CUID]

   An inspection of these implementations and the issues described above
   has led to this document, in which new UUIDs are adapted to address
   these issues.

   Further, [RFC4122] itself was in need of an overhaul to address a
   number of topics such as, but not limited to, the following:

   1.  Implementation of miscellaneous errata reports.  Mostly around
       bit-layout clarifications, which lead to inconsistent
       implementations [Err1957], [Err3546], [Err4975], [Err4976],
       [Err5560], etc.

   2.  Decoupling other UUID versions from the UUIDv1 bit layout so that
       fields like "time_hi_and_version" do not need to be referenced
       within a UUID that is not time based while also providing
       definition sections similar to that for UUIDv1 for UUIDv3,
       UUIDv4, and UUIDv5.

   3.  Providing implementation best practices around many real-world
       scenarios and corner cases observed by existing and prototype
       implementations.

   4.  Addressing security best practices and considerations for the
       modern age as it pertains to MAC addresses, hashing algorithms,
       secure randomness, and other topics.

   5.  Providing implementations a standard-based option for
       implementation-specific and/or experimental UUID designs.

   6.  Providing more test vectors that illustrate real UUIDs created as
       per the specification.

3.  Terminology

3.1.  Requirements Language

   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
   BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
   capitals, as shown here.

3.2.  Abbreviations

   The following abbreviations are used in this document:

   ABNF          Augmented Backus-Naur Form

   CSPRNG        Cryptographically Secure Pseudorandom Number Generator

   DBMS          Database Management System

   IEEE          Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

   ITU           International Telecommunication Union

   MAC           Media Access Control

   MD5           Message Digest 5

   MSB           Most Significant Bit

   OID           Object Identifier

   SHA           Secure Hash Algorithm

   SHA-1         Secure Hash Algorithm 1 (with message digest of 160
                 bits)

   SHA-3         Secure Hash Algorithm 3 (arbitrary size)

   SHA-224       Secure Hash Algorithm 2 with message digest size of 224
                 bits

   SHA-256       Secure Hash Algorithm 2 with message digest size of 256
                 bits

   SHA-512       Secure Hash Algorithm 2 with message digest size of 512
                 bits

   SHAKE         Secure Hash Algorithm 3 based on the KECCAK algorithm

   URN           Uniform Resource Names

   UTC           Coordinated Universal Time

   UUID          Universally Unique Identifier

   UUIDv1        Universally Unique Identifier version 1

   UUIDv2        Universally Unique Identifier version 2

   UUIDv3        Universally Unique Identifier version 3

   UUIDv4        Universally Unique Identifier version 4

   UUIDv5        Universally Unique Identifier version 5

   UUIDv6        Universally Unique Identifier version 6

   UUIDv7        Universally Unique Identifier version 7

   UUIDv8        Universally Unique Identifier version 8

4.  UUID Format

   The UUID format is 16 octets (128 bits) in size; the variant bits in
   conjunction with the version bits described in the next sections
   determine finer structure.  In terms of these UUID formats and
   layout, bit definitions start at 0 and end at 127, while octet
   definitions start at 0 and end at 15.

   In the absence of explicit application or presentation protocol
   specification to the contrary, each field is encoded with the most
   significant byte first (known as "network byte order").

   Saving UUIDs to binary format is done by sequencing all fields in
   big-endian format.  However, there is a known caveat that Microsoft's
   Component Object Model (COM) GUIDs leverage little-endian when saving
   GUIDs.  The discussion of this (see [MS_COM_GUID]) is outside the
   scope of this specification.

   UUIDs MAY be represented as binary data or integers.  When in use
   with URNs or as text in applications, any given UUID should be
   represented by the "hex-and-dash" string format consisting of
   multiple groups of uppercase or lowercase alphanumeric hexadecimal
   characters separated by single dashes/hyphens.  When used with
   databases, please refer to Section 6.13.

   The formal definition of the UUID string representation is provided
   by the following ABNF [RFC5234]:

   UUID     = 4hexOctet "-"
              2hexOctet "-"
              2hexOctet "-"
              2hexOctet "-"
              6hexOctet
   hexOctet = HEXDIG HEXDIG
   DIGIT    = %x30-39
   HEXDIG   = DIGIT / "A" / "B" / "C" / "D" / "E" / "F"

   Note that the alphabetic characters may be all uppercase, all
   lowercase, or mixed case, as per Section 2.3 of [RFC5234].  An
   example UUID using this textual representation from the above ABNF is
   shown in Figure 1.

   f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6

                    Figure 1: Example String UUID Format

   The same UUID from Figure 1 is represented in binary (Figure 2), as
   an unsigned integer (Figure 3), and as a URN (Figure 4) defined by
   [RFC8141].

   111110000001110101001111101011100111110111101100000100011101000\
   01010011101100101000000001010000011001001000111100110101111110110

                       Figure 2: Example Binary UUID

   329800735698586629295641978511506172918

    Figure 3: Example Unsigned Integer UUID (Shown as a Decimal Number)

   urn:uuid:f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6

                  Figure 4: Example URN Namespace for UUID

   There are many other ways to define a UUID format; some examples are
   detailed below.  Please note that this is not an exhaustive list and
   is only provided for informational purposes.

   *  Some UUID implementations, such as those found in [Python] and
      [Microsoft], will output UUID with the string format, including
      dashes, enclosed in curly braces.

   *  [X667] provides UUID format definitions for use of UUID with an
      OID.

   *  [IBM_NCS] is a legacy implementation that produces a unique UUID
      format compatible with Variant 0xx of Table 1.

4.1.  Variant Field

   The variant field determines the layout of the UUID.  That is, the
   interpretation of all other bits in the UUID depends on the setting
   of the bits in the variant field.  As such, it could more accurately
   be called a "type" field; we retain the original term for
   compatibility.  The variant field consists of a variable number of
   the most significant bits of octet 8 of the UUID.

   Table 1 lists the contents of the variant field, where the letter "x"
   indicates a "don't-care" value.

     +======+======+======+======+=========+=========================+
     | MSB0 | MSB1 | MSB2 | MSB3 | Variant | Description             |
     +======+======+======+======+=========+=========================+
          | 0    | x    | x    | x    | 0-7     | Reserved.  Network      | 
     |      |      |      |      |         | Computing System (NCS)  |
     |      |      |      |      |         | backward compatibility, |
     |      |      |      |      |         | and includes Nil UUID   |
     |      |      |      |      |         | as per Section 5.9.     |

EID 7958 (Verified) is as follows:

Section: 4.1

Original Text:

     | 0    | x    | x    | x    | 1-7     | Reserved.  Network      |
     |      |      |      |      |         | Computing System (NCS)  |
     |      |      |      |      |         | backward compatibility, |
     |      |      |      |      |         | and includes Nil UUID   |
     |      |      |      |      |         | as per Section 5.9.     |

Corrected Text:

     | 0    | x    | x    | x    | 0-7     | Reserved.  Network      |
     |      |      |      |      |         | Computing System (NCS)  |
     |      |      |      |      |         | backward compatibility, |
     |      |      |      |      |         | and includes Nil UUID   |
     |      |      |      |      |         | as per Section 5.9.     |
Notes:
This row matches the case where MSB0, MSB1, MSB2, MSB3 are all 0, which would make the variant number 0.
+------+------+------+------+---------+-------------------------+ | 1 | 0 | x | x | 8-9,A-B | The variant specified | | | | | | | in this document. | +------+------+------+------+---------+-------------------------+ | 1 | 1 | 0 | x | C-D | Reserved. Microsoft | | | | | | | Corporation backward | | | | | | | compatibility. | +------+------+------+------+---------+-------------------------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | x | E-F | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition and includes | | | | | | | Max UUID as per | | | | | | | Section 5.10. | +------+------+------+------+---------+-------------------------+ Table 1: UUID Variants Interoperability, in any form, with variants other than the one defined here is not guaranteed but is not likely to be an issue in practice. Specifically for UUIDs in this document, bits 64 and 65 of the UUID (bits 0 and 1 of octet 8) MUST be set to 1 and 0 as specified in row 2 of Table 1. Accordingly, all bit and field layouts avoid the use of these bits. 4.2. Version Field The version number is in the most significant 4 bits of octet 6 (bits 48 through 51 of the UUID). Table 2 lists all of the versions for this UUID variant 10xx specified in this document. +======+======+======+======+=========+============================+ | MSB0 | MSB1 | MSB2 | MSB3 | Version | Description | +======+======+======+======+=========+============================+ | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Unused. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | The Gregorian time-based | | | | | | | UUID specified in this | | | | | | | document. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | Reserved for DCE Security | | | | | | | version, with embedded | | | | | | | POSIX UUIDs. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 3 | The name-based version | | | | | | | specified in this document | | | | | | | that uses MD5 hashing. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 | The randomly or | | | | | | | pseudorandomly generated | | | | | | | version specified in this | | | | | | | document. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 5 | The name-based version | | | | | | | specified in this document | | | | | | | that uses SHA-1 hashing. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 6 | Reordered Gregorian time- | | | | | | | based UUID specified in | | | | | | | this document. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 7 | Unix Epoch time-based UUID | | | | | | | specified in this | | | | | | | document. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 8 | Reserved for custom UUID | | | | | | | formats specified in this | | | | | | | document. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 9 | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 10 | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 11 | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 12 | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 13 | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 14 | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 15 | Reserved for future | | | | | | | definition. | +------+------+------+------+---------+----------------------------+ Table 2: UUID Variant 10xx Versions Defined by This Specification An example version/variant layout for UUIDv4 follows the table where "M" represents the version placement for the hexadecimal representation of 0x4 (0b0100) and the "N" represents the variant placement for one of the four possible hexadecimal representation of variant 10xx: 0x8 (0b1000), 0x9 (0b1001), 0xA (0b1010), 0xB (0b1011). 00000000-0000-4000-8000-000000000000 00000000-0000-4000-9000-000000000000 00000000-0000-4000-A000-000000000000 00000000-0000-4000-B000-000000000000 xxxxxxxx-xxxx-Mxxx-Nxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx Figure 5: UUIDv4 Variant Examples It should be noted that the other remaining UUID variants found in Table 1 leverage different sub-typing or versioning mechanisms. The recording and definition of the remaining UUID variant and sub-typing combinations are outside of the scope of this document. 5. UUID Layouts To minimize confusion about bit assignments within octets and among differing versions, the UUID record definition is provided as a grouping of fields within a bit layout consisting of four octets per row. The fields are presented with the most significant one first. 5.1. UUID Version 1 UUIDv1 is a time-based UUID featuring a 60-bit timestamp represented by Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) as a count of 100-nanosecond intervals since 00:00:00.00, 15 October 1582 (the date of Gregorian reform to the Christian calendar). UUIDv1 also features a clock sequence field that is used to help avoid duplicates that could arise when the clock is set backwards in time or if the Node ID changes. The node field consists of an IEEE 802 MAC address, usually the host address or a randomly derived value per Sections 6.9 and 6.10. 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | time_low | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | time_mid | ver | time_high | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |var| clock_seq | node | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | node | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 6: UUIDv1 Field and Bit Layout time_low: The least significant 32 bits of the 60-bit starting timestamp. Occupies bits 0 through 31 (octets 0-3). time_mid: The middle 16 bits of the 60-bit starting timestamp. Occupies bits 32 through 47 (octets 4-5). ver: The 4-bit version field as defined by Section 4.2, set to 0b0001 (1). Occupies bits 48 through 51 of octet 6. time_high: The most significant 12 bits from the 60-bit starting timestamp. Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7).
EID 7955 (Verified) is as follows:

Section: 5.1

Original Text:

time_high:
    The least significant 12 bits from the 60-bit starting timestamp.
    Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7).

Corrected Text:

time_high:
    The most significant 12 bits from the 60-bit starting timestamp.
    Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7).
Notes:
The original text has the least significant 12 bits from the 60-bit starting timestamp duplicated in the UUID. Once as the least significant 12 bits of time_low and again as time_high. The most significant 12 bits of the starting timestamp are omitted from the UUID.

The corrected text gives the self-evident intention of the committee.
var: The 2-bit variant field as defined by Section 4.1, set to 0b10. Occupies bits 64 and 65 of octet 8. clock_seq: The 14 bits containing the clock sequence. Occupies bits 66 through 79 (octets 8-9). node: 48-bit spatially unique identifier. Occupies bits 80 through 127 (octets 10-15). For systems that do not have UTC available but do have the local time, they may use that instead of UTC as long as they do so consistently throughout the system. However, this is not recommended since generating the UTC from local time only needs a time-zone offset. If the clock is set backwards, or if it might have been set backwards (e.g., while the system was powered off), and the UUID generator cannot be sure that no UUIDs were generated with timestamps larger than the value to which the clock was set, then the clock sequence MUST be changed. If the previous value of the clock sequence is known, it MAY be incremented; otherwise it SHOULD be set to a random or high-quality pseudorandom value. Similarly, if the Node ID changes (e.g., because a network card has been moved between machines), setting the clock sequence to a random number minimizes the probability of a duplicate due to slight differences in the clock settings of the machines. If the value of the clock sequence associated with the changed Node ID were known, then the clock sequence MAY be incremented, but that is unlikely. The clock sequence MUST be originally (i.e., once in the lifetime of a system) initialized to a random number to minimize the correlation across systems. This provides maximum protection against Node IDs that may move or switch from system to system rapidly. The initial value MUST NOT be correlated to the Node ID. Notes about nodes derived from IEEE 802: * On systems with multiple IEEE 802 addresses, any available one MAY be used. * On systems with no IEEE address, a randomly or pseudorandomly generated value MUST be used; see Sections 6.9 and 6.10. * On systems utilizing a 64-bit MAC address, the least significant, rightmost 48 bits MAY be used. * Systems utilizing an IEEE 802.15.4 16-bit address SHOULD instead utilize their 64-bit MAC address where the least significant, rightmost 48 bits MAY be used. An alternative is to generate 32 bits of random data and postfix at the end of the 16-bit MAC address to create a 48-bit value. 5.2. UUID Version 2 UUIDv2 is for DCE Security UUIDs (see [C309] and [C311]). As such, the definition of these UUIDs is outside the scope of this specification. 5.3. UUID Version 3 UUIDv3 is meant for generating UUIDs from names that are drawn from, and unique within, some namespace as per Section 6.5. UUIDv3 values are created by computing an MD5 hash [RFC1321] over a given Namespace ID value (Section 6.6) concatenated with the desired name value after both have been converted to a canonical sequence of octets, as defined by the standards or conventions of its namespace, in network byte order. This MD5 value is then used to populate all 128 bits of the UUID layout. The UUID version and variant then replace the respective bits as defined by Sections 4.2 and 4.1. An example of this bit substitution can be found in Appendix A.2. Information around selecting a desired name's canonical format within a given namespace can be found in Section 6.5 under the heading "A note on names". Where possible, UUIDv5 SHOULD be used in lieu of UUIDv3. For more information on MD5 security considerations, see [RFC6151]. 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | md5_high | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | md5_high | ver | md5_mid | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |var| md5_low | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | md5_low | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 7: UUIDv3 Field and Bit Layout md5_high: The first 48 bits of the layout are filled with the most significant, leftmost 48 bits from the computed MD5 value. Occupies bits 0 through 47 (octets 0-5). ver: The 4-bit version field as defined by Section 4.2, set to 0b0011 (3). Occupies bits 48 through 51 of octet 6. md5_mid: 12 more bits of the layout consisting of the least significant, rightmost 12 bits of 16 bits immediately following md5_high from the computed MD5 value. Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7). var: The 2-bit variant field as defined by Section 4.1, set to 0b10. Occupies bits 64 and 65 of octet 8. md5_low: The final 62 bits of the layout immediately following the var field to be filled with the least significant, rightmost bits of the final 64 bits from the computed MD5 value. Occupies bits 66 through 127 (octets 8-15) 5.4. UUID Version 4 UUIDv4 is meant for generating UUIDs from truly random or pseudorandom numbers. An implementation may generate 128 bits of random data that is used to fill out the UUID fields in Figure 8. The UUID version and variant then replace the respective bits as defined by Sections 4.1 and 4.2. Alternatively, an implementation MAY choose to randomly generate the exact required number of bits for random_a, random_b, and random_c (122 bits total) and then concatenate the version and variant in the required position. For guidelines on random data generation, see Section 6.9. 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | random_a | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | random_a | ver | random_b | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |var| random_c | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | random_c | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 8: UUIDv4 Field and Bit Layout random_a: The first 48 bits of the layout that can be filled with random data as specified in Section 6.9. Occupies bits 0 through 47 (octets 0-5). ver: The 4-bit version field as defined by Section 4.2, set to 0b0100 (4). Occupies bits 48 through 51 of octet 6. random_b: 12 more bits of the layout that can be filled random data as per Section 6.9. Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7). var: The 2-bit variant field as defined by Section 4.1, set to 0b10. Occupies bits 64 and 65 of octet 8. random_c: The final 62 bits of the layout immediately following the var field to be filled with random data as per Section 6.9. Occupies bits 66 through 127 (octets 8-15). 5.5. UUID Version 5 UUIDv5 is meant for generating UUIDs from "names" that are drawn from, and unique within, some "namespace" as per Section 6.5. UUIDv5 values are created by computing an SHA-1 hash [FIPS180-4] over a given Namespace ID value (Section 6.6) concatenated with the desired name value after both have been converted to a canonical sequence of octets, as defined by the standards or conventions of its namespace, in network byte order. The most significant, leftmost 128 bits of the SHA-1 value are then used to populate all 128 bits of the UUID layout, and the remaining 32 least significant, rightmost bits of SHA-1 output are discarded. The UUID version and variant then replace the respective bits as defined by Sections 4.2 and 4.1. An example of this bit substitution and discarding excess bits can be found in Appendix A.4. Information around selecting a desired name's canonical format within a given namespace can be found in Section 6.5 under the heading "A note on names". There may be scenarios, usually depending on organizational security policies, where SHA-1 libraries may not be available or may be deemed unsafe for use. As such, it may be desirable to generate name-based UUIDs derived from SHA-256 or newer SHA methods. These name-based UUIDs MUST NOT utilize UUIDv5 and MUST be within the UUIDv8 space defined by Section 5.8. An illustrative example of UUIDv8 for SHA-256 name-based UUIDs is provided in Appendix B.2. For more information on SHA-1 security considerations, see [RFC6194]. 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | sha1_high | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | sha1_high | ver | sha1_mid | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |var| sha1_low | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | sha1_low | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 9: UUIDv5 Field and Bit Layout sha1_high: The first 48 bits of the layout are filled with the most significant, leftmost 48 bits from the computed SHA-1 value. Occupies bits 0 through 47 (octets 0-5). ver: The 4-bit version field as defined by Section 4.2, set to 0b0101 (5). Occupies bits 48 through 51 of octet 6. sha1_mid: 12 more bits of the layout consisting of the least significant, rightmost 12 bits of 16 bits immediately following sha1_high from the computed SHA-1 value. Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7). var: The 2-bit variant field as defined by Section 4.1, set to 0b10. Occupies bits 64 and 65 of octet 8. sha1_low: The final 62 bits of the layout immediately following the var field to be filled by skipping the two most significant, leftmost bits of the remaining SHA-1 hash and then using the next 62 most significant, leftmost bits. Any leftover SHA-1 bits are discarded and unused. Occupies bits 66 through 127 (octets 8-15). 5.6. UUID Version 6 UUIDv6 is a field-compatible version of UUIDv1 (Section 5.1), reordered for improved DB locality. It is expected that UUIDv6 will primarily be implemented in contexts where UUIDv1 is used. Systems that do not involve legacy UUIDv1 SHOULD use UUIDv7 (Section 5.7) instead. Instead of splitting the timestamp into the low, mid, and high sections from UUIDv1, UUIDv6 changes this sequence so timestamp bytes are stored from most to least significant. That is, given a 60-bit timestamp value as specified for UUIDv1 in Section 5.1, for UUIDv6 the first 48 most significant bits are stored first, followed by the 4-bit version (same position), followed by the remaining 12 bits of the original 60-bit timestamp. The clock sequence and node bits remain unchanged from their position in Section 5.1. The clock sequence and node bits SHOULD be reset to a pseudorandom value for each new UUIDv6 generated; however, implementations MAY choose to retain the old clock sequence and MAC address behavior from Section 5.1. For more information on MAC address usage within UUIDs, see the Section 8. The format for the 16-byte, 128-bit UUIDv6 is shown in Figure 10. 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | time_high | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | time_mid | ver | time_low | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |var| clock_seq | node | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | node | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 10: UUIDv6 Field and Bit Layout time_high: The most significant 32 bits of the 60-bit starting timestamp. Occupies bits 0 through 31 (octets 0-3). time_mid: The middle 16 bits of the 60-bit starting timestamp. Occupies bits 32 through 47 (octets 4-5). ver: The 4-bit version field as defined by Section 4.2, set to 0b0110 (6). Occupies bits 48 through 51 of octet 6. time_low: 12 bits that will contain the least significant 12 bits from the 60-bit starting timestamp. Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7). var: The 2-bit variant field as defined by Section 4.1, set to 0b10. Occupies bits 64 and 65 of octet 8. clock_seq: The 14 bits containing the clock sequence. Occupies bits 66 through 79 (octets 8-9). node: 48-bit spatially unique identifier. Occupies bits 80 through 127 (octets 10-15). With UUIDv6, the steps for splitting the timestamp into time_high and time_mid are OPTIONAL since the 48 bits of time_high and time_mid will remain in the same order. An extra step of splitting the first 48 bits of the timestamp into the most significant 32 bits and least significant 16 bits proves useful when reusing an existing UUIDv1 implementation. 5.7. UUID Version 7 UUIDv7 features a time-ordered value field derived from the widely implemented and well-known Unix Epoch timestamp source, the number of milliseconds since midnight 1 Jan 1970 UTC, leap seconds excluded. Generally, UUIDv7 has improved entropy characteristics over UUIDv1 (Section 5.1) or UUIDv6 (Section 5.6). UUIDv7 values are created by allocating a Unix timestamp in milliseconds in the most significant 48 bits and filling the remaining 74 bits, excluding the required version and variant bits, with random bits for each new UUIDv7 generated to provide uniqueness as per Section 6.9. Alternatively, implementations MAY fill the 74 bits, jointly, with a combination of the following subfields, in this order from the most significant bits to the least, to guarantee additional monotonicity within a millisecond: 1. An OPTIONAL sub-millisecond timestamp fraction (12 bits at maximum) as per Section 6.2 (Method 3). 2. An OPTIONAL carefully seeded counter as per Section 6.2 (Method 1 or 2). 3. Random data for each new UUIDv7 generated for any remaining space. Implementations SHOULD utilize UUIDv7 instead of UUIDv1 and UUIDv6 if possible. 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | unix_ts_ms | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | unix_ts_ms | ver | rand_a | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |var| rand_b | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | rand_b | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 11: UUIDv7 Field and Bit Layout unix_ts_ms: 48-bit big-endian unsigned number of the Unix Epoch timestamp in milliseconds as per Section 6.1. Occupies bits 0 through 47 (octets 0-5). ver: The 4-bit version field as defined by Section 4.2, set to 0b0111 (7). Occupies bits 48 through 51 of octet 6. rand_a: 12 bits of pseudorandom data to provide uniqueness as per Section 6.9 and/or optional constructs to guarantee additional monotonicity as per Section 6.2. Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7). var: The 2-bit variant field as defined by Section 4.1, set to 0b10. Occupies bits 64 and 65 of octet 8. rand_b: The final 62 bits of pseudorandom data to provide uniqueness as per Section 6.9 and/or an optional counter to guarantee additional monotonicity as per Section 6.2. Occupies bits 66 through 127 (octets 8-15). 5.8. UUID Version 8 UUIDv8 provides a format for experimental or vendor-specific use cases. The only requirement is that the variant and version bits MUST be set as defined in Sections 4.1 and 4.2. UUIDv8's uniqueness will be implementation specific and MUST NOT be assumed. The only explicitly defined bits are those of the version and variant fields, leaving 122 bits for implementation-specific UUIDs. To be clear, UUIDv8 is not a replacement for UUIDv4 (Section 5.4) where all 122 extra bits are filled with random data. Some example situations in which UUIDv8 usage could occur: * An implementation would like to embed extra information within the UUID other than what is defined in this document. * An implementation has other application and/or language restrictions that inhibit the use of one of the current UUIDs. Appendix B provides two illustrative examples of custom UUIDv8 algorithms to address two example scenarios. 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | custom_a | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | custom_a | ver | custom_b | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |var| custom_c | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | custom_c | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 12: UUIDv8 Field and Bit Layout custom_a: The first 48 bits of the layout that can be filled as an implementation sees fit. Occupies bits 0 through 47 (octets 0-5). ver: The 4-bit version field as defined by Section 4.2, set to 0b1000 (8). Occupies bits 48 through 51 of octet 6. custom_b: 12 more bits of the layout that can be filled as an implementation sees fit. Occupies bits 52 through 63 (octets 6-7). var: The 2-bit variant field as defined by Section 4.1, set to 0b10. Occupies bits 64 and 65 of octet 8. custom_c: The final 62 bits of the layout immediately following the var field to be filled as an implementation sees fit. Occupies bits 66 through 127 (octets 8-15). 5.9. Nil UUID The Nil UUID is special form of UUID that is specified to have all 128 bits set to zero. 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 Figure 13: Nil UUID Format A Nil UUID value can be useful to communicate the absence of any other UUID value in situations that otherwise require or use a 128-bit UUID. A Nil UUID can express the concept "no such value here". Thus, it is reserved for such use as needed for implementation-specific situations. Note that the Nil UUID value falls within the range of the Apollo NCS variant as per the first row of Table 1 rather than the variant defined by this document. 5.10. Max UUID The Max UUID is a special form of UUID that is specified to have all 128 bits set to 1. This UUID can be thought of as the inverse of the Nil UUID defined in Section 5.9. FFFFFFFF-FFFF-FFFF-FFFF-FFFFFFFFFFFF Figure 14: Max UUID Format A Max UUID value can be used as a sentinel value in situations where a 128-bit UUID is required, but a concept such as "end of UUID list" needs to be expressed and is reserved for such use as needed for implementation-specific situations. Note that the Max UUID value falls within the range of the "yet-to-be defined" future UUID variant as per the last row of Table 1 rather than the variant defined by this document. 6. UUID Best Practices The minimum requirements for generating UUIDs of each version are described in this document. Everything else is an implementation detail, and it is up to the implementer to decide what is appropriate for a given implementation. Various relevant factors are covered below to help guide an implementer through the different trade-offs among differing UUID implementations. 6.1. Timestamp Considerations UUID timestamp source, precision, and length were topics of great debate while creating UUIDv7 for this specification. Choosing the right timestamp for your application is very important. This section will detail some of the most common points on this issue. Reliability: Implementations acquire the current timestamp from a reliable source to provide values that are time ordered and continually increasing. Care must be taken to ensure that timestamp changes from the environment or operating system are handled in a way that is consistent with implementation requirements. For example, if it is possible for the system clock to move backward due to either manual adjustment or corrections from a time synchronization protocol, implementations need to determine how to handle such cases. (See "Altering, Fuzzing, or Smearing" below.) Source: UUIDv1 and UUIDv6 both utilize a Gregorian Epoch timestamp, while UUIDv7 utilizes a Unix Epoch timestamp. If other timestamp sources or a custom timestamp Epoch are required, UUIDv8 MUST be used. Sub-second Precision and Accuracy: Many levels of precision exist for timestamps: milliseconds, microseconds, nanoseconds, and beyond. Additionally, fractional representations of sub-second precision may be desired to mix various levels of precision in a time-ordered manner. Furthermore, system clocks themselves have an underlying granularity, which is frequently less than the precision offered by the operating system. With UUIDv1 and UUIDv6, 100 nanoseconds of precision are present, while UUIDv7 features a millisecond level of precision by default within the Unix Epoch that does not exceed the granularity capable in most modern systems. For other levels of precision, UUIDv8 is available. Similar to Section 6.2, with UUIDv1 or UUIDv6, a high-resolution timestamp can be simulated by keeping a count of the number of UUIDs that have been generated with the same value of the system time and using that count to construct the low order bits of the timestamp. The count of the high-resolution timestamp will range between zero and the number of 100-nanosecond intervals per system-time interval. Length: The length of a given timestamp directly impacts how many timestamp ticks can be contained in a UUID before the maximum value for the timestamp field is reached. Take care to ensure that the proper length is selected for a given timestamp. UUIDv1 and UUIDv6 utilize a 60-bit timestamp valid until 5623 AD; UUIDv7 features a 48-bit timestamp valid until the year 10889 AD. Altering, Fuzzing, or Smearing: Implementations MAY alter the actual timestamp. Some examples include security considerations around providing a real-clock value within a UUID to 1) correct inaccurate clocks, 2) handle leap seconds, or 3) obtain a millisecond value by dividing by 1024 (or some other value) for performance reasons (instead of dividing a number of microseconds by 1000). This specification makes no requirement or guarantee about how close the clock value needs to be to the actual time. If UUIDs do not need to be frequently generated, the UUIDv1 or UUIDv6 timestamp can simply be the system time multiplied by the number of 100-nanosecond intervals per system-time interval. Padding: When timestamp padding is required, implementations MUST pad the most significant bits (leftmost) with data. An example for this padding data is to fill the most significant, leftmost bits of a Unix timestamp with zeroes to complete the 48-bit timestamp in UUIDv7. An alternative approach for padding data is to fill the most significant, leftmost bits with the number of 32-bit Unix timestamp rollovers after 2038-01-19. Truncating: When timestamps need to be truncated, the lower, least significant bits MUST be used. An example would be truncating a 64-bit Unix timestamp to the least significant, rightmost 48 bits for UUIDv7. Error Handling: If a system overruns the generator by requesting too many UUIDs within a single system-time interval, the UUID service can return an error or stall the UUID generator until the system clock catches up and MUST NOT knowingly return duplicate values due to a counter rollover. Note that if the processors overrun the UUID generation frequently, additional Node IDs can be allocated to the system, which will permit higher speed allocation by making multiple UUIDs potentially available for each timestamp value. Similar techniques are discussed in Section 6.4. 6.2. Monotonicity and Counters Monotonicity (each subsequent value being greater than the last) is the backbone of time-based sortable UUIDs. Normally, time-based UUIDs from this document will be monotonic due to an embedded timestamp; however, implementations can guarantee additional monotonicity via the concepts covered in this section. Take care to ensure UUIDs generated in batches are also monotonic. That is, if one thousand UUIDs are generated for the same timestamp, there should be sufficient logic for organizing the creation order of those one thousand UUIDs. Batch UUID creation implementations MAY utilize a monotonic counter that increments for each UUID created during a given timestamp. For single-node UUID implementations that do not need to create batches of UUIDs, the embedded timestamp within UUIDv6 and UUIDv7 can provide sufficient monotonicity guarantees by simply ensuring that timestamp increments before creating a new UUID. Distributed nodes are discussed in Section 6.4. Implementations SHOULD employ the following methods for single-node UUID implementations that require batch UUID creation or are otherwise concerned about monotonicity with high-frequency UUID generation. Fixed Bit-Length Dedicated Counter (Method 1): Some implementations allocate a specific number of bits in the UUID layout to the sole purpose of tallying the total number of UUIDs created during a given UUID timestamp tick. If present, a fixed bit-length counter MUST be positioned immediately after the embedded timestamp. This promotes sortability and allows random data generation for each counter increment. With this method, the rand_a section (or a subset of its leftmost bits) of UUIDv7 is used as a fixed bit-length dedicated counter that is incremented for every UUID generation. The trailing random bits generated for each new UUID in rand_b can help produce unguessable UUIDs. In the event that more counter bits are required, the most significant (leftmost) bits of rand_b MAY be used as additional counter bits. Monotonic Random (Method 2): With this method, the random data is extended to also function as a counter. This monotonic value can be thought of as a "randomly seeded counter" that MUST be incremented in the least significant position for each UUID created on a given timestamp tick. UUIDv7's rand_b section SHOULD be utilized with this method to handle batch UUID generation during a single timestamp tick. The increment value for every UUID generation is a random integer of any desired length larger than zero. It ensures that the UUIDs retain the required level of unguessability provided by the underlying entropy. The increment value MAY be 1 when the number of UUIDs generated in a particular period of time is important and guessability is not an issue. However, incrementing the counter by 1 SHOULD NOT be used by implementations that favor unguessability, as the resulting values are easily guessable. Replace Leftmost Random Bits with Increased Clock Precision (Method 3): For UUIDv7, which has millisecond timestamp precision, it is possible to use additional clock precision available on the system to substitute for up to 12 random bits immediately following the timestamp. This can provide values that are time ordered with sub-millisecond precision, using however many bits are appropriate in the implementation environment. With this method, the additional time precision bits MUST follow the timestamp as the next available bit in the rand_a field for UUIDv7. To calculate this value, start with the portion of the timestamp expressed as a fraction of the clock's tick value (fraction of a millisecond for UUIDv7). Compute the count of possible values that can be represented in the available bit space, 4096 for the UUIDv7 rand_a field. Using floating point or scaled integer arithmetic, multiply this fraction of a millisecond value by 4096 and round down (toward zero) to an integer result to arrive at a number between 0 and the maximum allowed for the indicated bits, which sorts monotonically based on time. Each increasing fractional value will result in an increasing bit field value to the precision available with these bits. For example, let's assume a system timestamp of 1 Jan 2023 12:34:56.1234567. Taking the precision greater than 1 ms gives us a value of 0.4567, as a fraction of a millisecond. If we wish to encode this as 12 bits, we can take the count of possible values that fit in those bits (4096 or 2^12), multiply it by our millisecond fraction value of 0.4567, and truncate the result to an integer, which gives an integer value of 1870. Expressed as hexadecimal, it is 0x74E or the binary bits 0b011101001110. One can then use those 12 bits as the most significant (leftmost) portion of the random section of the UUID (e.g., the rand_a field in UUIDv7). This works for any desired bit length that fits into a UUID, and applications can decide the appropriate length based on available clock precision; for UUIDv7, it is limited to 12 bits at maximum to reserve sufficient space for random bits. The main benefit to encoding additional timestamp precision is that it utilizes additional time precision already available in the system clock to provide values that are more likely to be unique; thus, it may simplify certain implementations. This technique can also be used in conjunction with one of the other methods, where this additional time precision would immediately follow the timestamp. Then, if any bits are to be used as a clock sequence, they would follow next. The following sub-topics cover issues related solely to creating reliable fixed bit-length dedicated counters: Fixed Bit-Length Dedicated Counter Seeding: Implementations utilizing the fixed bit-length counter method randomly initialize the counter with each new timestamp tick. However, when the timestamp has not increased, the counter is instead incremented by the desired increment logic. When utilizing a randomly seeded counter alongside Method 1, the random value MAY be regenerated with each counter increment without impacting sortability. The downside is that Method 1 is prone to overflows if a counter of adequate length is not selected or the random data generated leaves little room for the required number of increments. Implementations utilizing fixed bit-length counter method MAY also choose to randomly initialize a portion of the counter rather than the entire counter. For example, a 24-bit counter could have the 23 bits in least significant, rightmost position randomly initialized. The remaining most significant, leftmost counter bit is initialized as zero for the sole purpose of guarding against counter rollovers. Fixed Bit-Length Dedicated Counter Length: Select a counter bit-length that can properly handle the level of timestamp precision in use. For example, millisecond precision generally requires a larger counter than a timestamp with nanosecond precision. General guidance is that the counter SHOULD be at least 12 bits but no longer than 42 bits. Care must be taken to ensure that the counter length selected leaves room for sufficient entropy in the random portion of the UUID after the counter. This entropy helps improve the unguessability characteristics of UUIDs created within the batch. The following sub-topics cover rollover handling with either type of counter method: Counter Rollover Guards: The technique from "Fixed Bit-Length Dedicated Counter Seeding" above that describes allocating a segment of the fixed bit-length counter as a rollover guard is also helpful to mitigate counter rollover issues. This same technique can be used with monotonic random counter methods by ensuring that the total length of a possible increment in the least significant, rightmost position is less than the total length of the random value being incremented. As such, the most significant, leftmost bits can be incremented as rollover guarding. Counter Rollover Handling: Counter rollovers MUST be handled by the application to avoid sorting issues. The general guidance is that applications that care about absolute monotonicity and sortability should freeze the counter and wait for the timestamp to advance, which ensures monotonicity is not broken. Alternatively, implementations MAY increment the timestamp ahead of the actual time and reinitialize the counter. Implementations MAY use the following logic to ensure UUIDs featuring embedded counters are monotonic in nature: 1. Compare the current timestamp against the previously stored timestamp. 2. If the current timestamp is equal to the previous timestamp, increment the counter according to the desired method. 3. If the current timestamp is greater than the previous timestamp, re-initialize the desired counter method to the new timestamp and generate new random bytes (if the bytes were frozen or being used as the seed for a monotonic counter). Monotonic Error Checking: Implementations SHOULD check if the currently generated UUID is greater than the previously generated UUID. If this is not the case, then any number of things could have occurred, such as clock rollbacks, leap second handling, and counter rollovers. Applications SHOULD embed sufficient logic to catch these scenarios and correct the problem to ensure that the next UUID generated is greater than the previous, or they should at least report an appropriate error. To handle this scenario, the general guidance is that the application MAY reuse the previous timestamp and increment the previous counter method. 6.3. UUID Generator States The (optional) UUID generator state only needs to be read from stable storage once at boot time, if it is read into a system-wide shared volatile store (and updated whenever the stable store is updated). This stable storage MAY be used to record various portions of the UUID generation, which prove useful for batch UUID generation purposes and monotonic error checking with UUIDv6 and UUIDv7. These stored values include but are not limited to last known timestamp, clock sequence, counters, and random data. If an implementation does not have any stable store available, then it MAY proceed with UUID generation as if this were the first UUID created within a batch. This is the least desirable implementation because it will increase the frequency of creation of values such as clock sequence, counters, or random data, which increases the probability of duplicates. Further, frequent generation of random numbers also puts more stress on any entropy source and/or entropy pool being used as the basis for such random numbers. An implementation MAY also return an application error in the event that collision resistance is of the utmost concern. The semantics of this error are up to the application and implementation. See Section 6.7 for more information on weighting collision tolerance in applications. For UUIDv1 and UUIDv6, if the Node ID can never change (e.g., the network interface card from which the Node ID is derived is inseparable from the system), or if any change also re-initializes the clock sequence to a random value, then instead of keeping it in stable store, the current Node ID may be returned. For UUIDv1 and UUIDv6, the state does not always need to be written to stable store every time a UUID is generated. The timestamp in the stable store can periodically be set to a value larger than any yet used in a UUID. As long as the generated UUIDs have timestamps less than that value, and the clock sequence and Node ID remain unchanged, only the shared volatile copy of the state needs to be updated. Furthermore, if the timestamp value in stable store is in the future by less than the typical time it takes the system to reboot, a crash will not cause a re-initialization of the clock sequence. If it is too expensive to access shared state each time a UUID is generated, then the system-wide generator can be implemented to allocate a block of timestamps each time it is called; a per-process generator can allocate from that block until it is exhausted. 6.4. Distributed UUID Generation Some implementations MAY desire the utilization of multi-node, clustered, applications that involve two or more nodes independently generating UUIDs that will be stored in a common location. While UUIDs already feature sufficient entropy to ensure that the chances of collision are low, as the total number of UUID generating nodes increases, so does the likelihood of a collision. This section will detail the two additional collision resistance approaches that have been observed by multi-node UUID implementations in distributed environments. It should be noted that, although this section details two methods for the sake of completeness, implementations should utilize the pseudorandom Node ID option if additional collision resistance for distributed UUID generation is a requirement. Likewise, utilization of either method is not required for implementing UUID generation in distributed environments. Node IDs: With this method, a pseudorandom Node ID value is placed within the UUID layout. This identifier helps ensure the bit space for a given node is unique, resulting in UUIDs that do not conflict with any other UUID created by another node with a different node id. Implementations that choose to leverage an embedded node id SHOULD utilize UUIDv8. The node id SHOULD NOT be an IEEE 802 MAC address per Section 8. The location and bit length are left to implementations and are outside the scope of this specification. Furthermore, the creation and negotiation of unique node ids among nodes is also out of scope for this specification. Centralized Registry: With this method, all nodes tasked with creating UUIDs consult a central registry and confirm the generated value is unique. As applications scale, the communication with the central registry could become a bottleneck and impact UUID generation in a negative way. Shared knowledge schemes with central/global registries are outside the scope of this specification and are NOT RECOMMENDED. Distributed applications generating UUIDs at a variety of hosts MUST be willing to rely on the random number source at all hosts. 6.5. Name-Based UUID Generation Although some prefer to use the word "hash-based" to describe UUIDs featuring hashing algorithms (MD5 or SHA-1), this document retains the usage of the term "name-based" in order to maintain consistency with previously published documents and existing implementations. The requirements for name-based UUIDs are as follows: * UUIDs generated at different times from the same name (using the same canonical format) in the same namespace MUST be equal. * UUIDs generated from two different names (same or differing canonical format) in the same namespace should be different (with very high probability). * UUIDs generated from the same name (same or differing canonical format) in two different namespaces should be different (with very high probability). * If two UUIDs that were generated from names (using the same canonical format) are equal, then they were generated from the same name in the same namespace (with very high probability). A note on names: The concept of name (and namespace) should be broadly construed and not limited to textual names. A canonical sequence of octets is one that conforms to the specification for that name form's canonical representation. A name can have many usual forms, only one of which can be canonical. An implementer of new namespaces for UUIDs needs to reference the specification for the canonical form of names in that space or define such a canonical form for the namespace if it does not exist. For example, at the time of writing, Domain Name System (DNS) [RFC9499] has three conveyance formats: common (www.example.com), presentation (www.example.com.), and wire format (3www7example3com0). Looking at [X500] Distinguished Names (DNs), [RFC4122] allowed either text-based or binary DER-based names as inputs. For Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) [RFC1738], one could provide a Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) with or without the protocol identifier www.example.com or https://www.example.com. When it comes to Object Identifiers (OIDs) [X660], one could choose dot notation without the leading dot (2.999), choose to include the leading dot (.2.999), or select one of the many formats from [X680] such as OID Internationalized Resource Identifier (OID-IRI) (/Joint-ISO-ITU-T/Example). While most users may default to the common format for DNS, FQDN format for a URL, text format for X.500, and dot notation without a leading dot for OID, name-based UUID implementations generally SHOULD allow arbitrary input that will compute name-based UUIDs for any of the aforementioned example names and others not defined here. Each name format within a namespace will output different UUIDs. As such, the mechanisms or conventions used for allocating names and ensuring their uniqueness within their namespaces are beyond the scope of this specification. 6.6. Namespace ID Usage and Allocation This section details the namespace IDs for some potentially interesting namespaces such as those for DNS [RFC9499], URLs [RFC1738], OIDs [X660], and DNs [X500]. Further, this section also details allocation, IANA registration, and other details pertinent to Namespace IDs. +=========+====================================+=========+==========+ |Namespace|Namespace ID Value |Name |Namespace | | | |Reference|ID | | | | |Reference | +=========+====================================+=========+==========+ |DNS |6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8|[RFC9499]|[RFC4122],| | | | |RFC 9562 | +---------+------------------------------------+---------+----------+ |URL |6ba7b811-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8|[RFC1738]|[RFC4122],| | | | |RFC 9562 | +---------+------------------------------------+---------+----------+ |OID |6ba7b812-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8|[X660] |[RFC4122],| | | | |RFC 9562 | +---------+------------------------------------+---------+----------+ |X500 |6ba7b814-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8|[X500] |[RFC4122],| | | | |RFC 9562 | +---------+------------------------------------+---------+----------+ Table 3: Namespace IDs Items may be added to this registry using the Specification Required policy as per [RFC8126]. For designated experts, generally speaking, Namespace IDs are allocated as follows: * The first Namespace ID value, for DNS, was calculated from a time- based UUIDv1 and "6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8", used as a starting point. * Subsequent Namespace ID values increment the least significant, rightmost bit of time_low "6ba7b810" while freezing the rest of the UUID to "9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8". * New Namespace ID values MUST use this same logic and MUST NOT use a previously used Namespace ID value. * Thus, "6ba7b815" is the next available time_low for a new Namespace ID value with the full ID being "6ba7b815-9dad- 11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8". * The upper bound for time_low in this special use, Namespace ID values, is "ffffffff" or "ffffffff-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8", which should be sufficient space for future Namespace ID values. Note that the Namespace ID value "6ba7b813-9dad- 11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8" and its usage are not defined by this document or by [RFC4122]; thus, it SHOULD NOT be used as a Namespace ID value. New Namespace ID values MUST be documented as per Section 7 if they are to be globally available and fully interoperable. Implementations MAY continue to use vendor-specific, application- specific, and deployment-specific Namespace ID values; but know that interoperability is not guaranteed. These custom Namespace ID values MUST NOT use the logic above; instead, generating a UUIDv4 or UUIDv7 Namespace ID value is RECOMMENDED. If collision probability (Section 6.7) and uniqueness (Section 6.8) of the final name-based UUID are not a problem, an implementation MAY also leverage UUIDv8 instead to create a custom, application-specific Namespace ID value. Implementations SHOULD provide the ability to input a custom namespace to account for newly registered IANA Namespace ID values outside of those listed in this section or custom, application- specific Namespace ID values. 6.7. Collision Resistance Implementations should weigh the consequences of UUID collisions within their application and when deciding between UUID versions that use entropy (randomness) versus the other components such as those in Sections 6.1 and 6.2. This is especially true for distributed node collision resistance as defined by Section 6.4. There are two example scenarios below that help illustrate the varying seriousness of a collision within an application. Low Impact: A UUID collision generated a duplicate log entry, which results in incorrect statistics derived from the data. Implementations that are not negatively affected by collisions may continue with the entropy and uniqueness provided by UUIDs defined in this document. High Impact: A duplicate key causes an airplane to receive the wrong course, which puts people's lives at risk. In this scenario, there is no margin for error. Collisions must be avoided: failure is unacceptable. Applications dealing with this type of scenario must employ as much collision resistance as possible within the given application context. 6.8. Global and Local Uniqueness UUIDs created by this specification MAY be used to provide local uniqueness guarantees. For example, ensuring UUIDs created within a local application context are unique within a database MAY be sufficient for some implementations where global uniqueness outside of the application context, in other applications, or around the world is not required. Although true global uniqueness is impossible to guarantee without a shared knowledge scheme, a shared knowledge scheme is not required by a UUID to provide uniqueness for practical implementation purposes. Implementations MAY use a shared knowledge scheme, introduced in Section 6.4, as they see fit to extend the uniqueness guaranteed by this specification. 6.9. Unguessability Implementations SHOULD utilize a cryptographically secure pseudorandom number generator (CSPRNG) to provide values that are both difficult to predict ("unguessable") and have a low likelihood of collision ("unique"). The exception is when a suitable CSPRNG is unavailable in the execution environment. Take care to ensure the CSPRNG state is properly reseeded upon state changes, such as process forks, to ensure proper CSPRNG operation. CSPRNG ensures the best of Sections 6.7 and 8 are present in modern UUIDs. Further advice on generating cryptographic-quality random numbers can be found in [RFC4086], [RFC8937], and [RANDOM]. 6.10. UUIDs That Do Not Identify the Host This section describes how to generate a UUIDv1 or UUIDv6 value if an IEEE 802 address is not available or its use is not desired. Implementations MAY leverage MAC address randomization techniques [IEEE802.11bh] as an alternative to the pseudorandom logic provided in this section. Alternatively, implementations MAY elect to obtain a 48-bit cryptographic-quality random number as per Section 6.9 to use as the Node ID. After generating the 48-bit fully randomized node value, implementations MUST set the least significant bit of the first octet of the Node ID to 1. This bit is the unicast or multicast bit, which will never be set in IEEE 802 addresses obtained from network cards. Hence, there can never be a conflict between UUIDs generated by machines with and without network cards. An example of generating a randomized 48-bit node value and the subsequent bit modification is detailed in Appendix A. For more information about IEEE 802 address and the unicast or multicast or local/global bits, please review [RFC9542]. For compatibility with earlier specifications, note that this document uses the unicast or multicast bit instead of the arguably more correct local/global bit because MAC addresses with the local/ global bit set or not set are both possible in a network. This is not the case with the unicast or multicast bit. One node cannot have a MAC address that multicasts to multiple nodes. In addition, items such as the computer's name and the name of the operating system, while not strictly speaking random, will help differentiate the results from those obtained by other systems. The exact algorithm to generate a Node ID using these data is system specific because both the data available and the functions to obtain them are often very system specific. However, a generic approach is to accumulate as many sources as possible into a buffer, use a message digest (such as SHA-256 or SHA-512 defined by [FIPS180-4]), take an arbitrary 6 bytes from the hash value, and set the multicast bit as described above. 6.11. Sorting UUIDv6 and UUIDv7 are designed so that implementations that require sorting (e.g., database indexes) sort as opaque raw bytes without the need for parsing or introspection. Time-ordered monotonic UUIDs benefit from greater database-index locality because the new values are near each other in the index. As a result, objects are more easily clustered together for better performance. The real-world differences in this approach of index locality versus random data inserts can be one order of magnitude or more. UUID formats created by this specification are intended to be lexicographically sortable while in the textual representation. UUIDs created by this specification are crafted with big-endian byte order (network byte order) in mind. If little-endian style is required, UUIDv8 is available for custom UUID formats. 6.12. Opacity As general guidance, avoiding parsing UUID values unnecessarily is recommended; instead, treat UUIDs as opaquely as possible. Although application-specific concerns could, of course, require some degree of introspection (e.g., to examine Sections 4.1 or 4.2 or perhaps the timestamp of a UUID), the advice here is to avoid this or other parsing unless absolutely necessary. Applications typically tend to be simpler, be more interoperable, and perform better when this advice is followed. 6.13. DBMS and Database Considerations For many applications, such as databases, storing UUIDs as text is unnecessarily verbose, requiring 288 bits to represent 128-bit UUID values. Thus, where feasible, UUIDs SHOULD be stored within database applications as the underlying 128-bit binary value. For other systems, UUIDs MAY be stored in binary form or as text, as appropriate. The trade-offs to both approaches are as follows: * Storing in binary form requires less space and may result in faster data access. * Storing as text requires more space but may require less translation if the resulting text form is to be used after retrieval, which may make it simpler to implement. DBMS vendors are encouraged to provide functionality to generate and store UUID formats defined by this specification for use as identifiers or left parts of identifiers such as, but not limited to, primary keys, surrogate keys for temporal databases, foreign keys included in polymorphic relationships, and keys for key-value pairs in JSON columns and key-value databases. Applications using a monolithic database may find using database-generated UUIDs (as opposed to client-generated UUIDs) provides the best UUID monotonicity. In addition to UUIDs, additional identifiers MAY be used to ensure integrity and feedback. Designers of database schema are cautioned against using name-based UUIDs (see Sections 5.3 and 5.5) as primary keys in tables. A common issue observed in database schema design is the assumption that a particular value will never change, which later turns out to be an incorrect assumption. Postal codes, license or other identification numbers, and numerous other such identifiers seem unique and unchanging at a given point time -- only later to have edge cases where they need to change. The subsequent change of the identifier, used as a "name" input for name-based UUIDs, can invalidate a given database structure. In such scenarios, it is observed that using any non-name-based UUID version would have resulted in the field in question being placed somewhere that would have been easier to adapt to such changes (primary key excluded from this statement). The general advice is to avoid name-based UUID natural keys and, instead, to utilize time-based UUID surrogate keys based on the aforementioned problems detailed in this section. 7. IANA Considerations All references to [RFC4122] in IANA registries (outside of those created by this document) have been replaced with references to this document, including the IANA URN namespace registration [URNNamespaces] for UUID. References to Section 4.1.2 of [RFC4122] have been updated to refer to Section 4 of this document. Finally, IANA should track UUID Subtypes and Special Case "Namespace IDs Values" as specified in Sections 7.1 and 7.2 at the following location: <https://www.iana.org/assignments/uuid>. When evaluating requests, the designated expert should consider community feedback, how well-defined the reference specification is, and this specification's requirements. Vendor-specific, application- specific, and deployment-specific values are unable to be registered. Specification documents should be published in a stable, freely available manner (ideally, located with a URL) but need not be standards. The designated expert will either approve or deny the registration request and communicate this decision to IANA. Denials should include an explanation and, if applicable, suggestions as to how to make the request successful. 7.1. IANA UUID Subtype Registry and Registration This specification defines the "UUID Subtypes" registry for common widely used UUID standards. +======================+====+=========+================+============+ | Name | ID | Subtype | Variant | Reference | +======================+====+=========+================+============+ | Gregorian Time-based | 1 | version | OSF DCE | [RFC4122], | | | | | / IETF | RFC 9562 | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ | DCE Security | 2 | version | OSF DCE | [C309], | | | | | / IETF | [C311] | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ | MD5 Name-based | 3 | version | OSF DCE | [RFC4122], | | | | | / IETF | RFC 9562 | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ | Random | 4 | version | OSF DCE | [RFC4122], | | | | | / IETF | RFC 9562 | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ | SHA-1 Name-based | 5 | version | OSF DCE | [RFC4122], | | | | | / IETF | RFC 9562 | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ | Reordered Gregorian | 6 | version | OSF DCE | RFC 9562 | | Time-based | | | / IETF | | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ | Unix Time-based | 7 | version | OSF DCE | RFC 9562 | | | | | / IETF | | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ | Custom | 8 | version | OSF DCE | RFC 9562 | | | | | / IETF | | +----------------------+----+---------+----------------+------------+ Table 4: IANA UUID Subtypes This table may be extended by Standards Action as per [RFC8126]. For designated experts: * The minimum and maximum "ID" value for the subtype "version" within the "OSF DCE / IETF" variant is 0 through 15. The versions within Table 1 described as "Reserved for future definition" or "unused" are omitted from this IANA registry until properly defined. * The "Subtype" column is free-form text. However, at the time of publication, "version" and "family" are the only known UUID subtypes. The "family" subtype is part of the "Apollo NCS" variant space (both are outside the scope of this specification). The Microsoft variant may have subtyping mechanisms defined; however, they are unknown and outside of the scope of this specification. Similarly, the final "Reserved for future definition" variant may introduce new subtyping logic at a future date. Subtype IDs are permitted to overlap. That is, an ID of "1" may exist in multiple variant spaces. * The "Variant" column is free-form text. However, it is likely that one of four values will be included: the first three are "OSF DCE / IETF", "Apollo NCS", and "Microsoft", and the final variant value belongs to the "Reserved for future definition" variant and may introduce a new name at a future date. 7.2. IANA UUID Namespace ID Registry and Registration This specification defines the "UUID Namespace IDs" registry for common, widely used Namespace ID values. The full details of this registration, including information for designated experts, can be found in Section 6.6. 8. Security Considerations Implementations SHOULD NOT assume that UUIDs are hard to guess. For example, they MUST NOT be used as security capabilities (identifiers whose mere possession grants access). Discovery of predictability in a random number source will result in a vulnerability. Implementations MUST NOT assume that it is easy to determine if a UUID has been slightly modified in order to redirect a reference to another object. Humans do not have the ability to easily check the integrity of a UUID by simply glancing at it. MAC addresses pose inherent security risks around privacy and SHOULD NOT be used within a UUID. Instead CSPRNG data SHOULD be selected from a source with sufficient entropy to ensure guaranteed uniqueness among UUID generation. See Sections 6.9 and 6.10 for more information. Timestamps embedded in the UUID do pose a very small attack surface. The timestamp in conjunction with an embedded counter does signal the order of creation for a given UUID and its corresponding data but does not define anything about the data itself or the application as a whole. If UUIDs are required for use with any security operation within an application context in any shape or form, then UUIDv4 (Section 5.4) SHOULD be utilized. See [RFC6151] for MD5 security considerations and [RFC6194] for SHA-1 security considerations. 9. References 9.1. Normative References [C309] X/Open Company Limited, "X/Open DCE: Remote Procedure Call", ISBN 1-85912-041-5, Open CAE Specification C309, August 1994, <https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9696999099/ toc.pdf>. [C311] The Open Group, "DCE 1.1: Authentication and Security Services", Open Group CAE Specification C311, August 1997, <https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9696989899/ toc.pdf>. [FIPS180-4] National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), "Secure Hash Standard (SHS)", FIPS PUB 180-4, DOI 10.6028/NIST.FIPS.180-4, August 2015, <https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/ NIST.FIPS.180-4.pdf>. [FIPS202] National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), "SHA-3 Standard: Permutation-Based Hash and Extendable- Output Functions", FIPS PUB 202, DOI 10.6028/NIST.FIPS.202, August 2015, <https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/ NIST.FIPS.202.pdf>. [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>. [RFC8141] Saint-Andre, P. and J. Klensin, "Uniform Resource Names (URNs)", RFC 8141, DOI 10.17487/RFC8141, April 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8141>. [RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>. [X667] ITU-T, "Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - Procedures for the operation of OSI Registration Authorities: Generation and registration of Universally Unique Identifiers (UUIDs) and their use as ASN.1 object identifier components", ISO/IEC 9834-8:2004, ITU-T Recommendation X.667, September 2004. 9.2. Informative References [COMBGUID] "Creating sequential GUIDs in C# for MSSQL or PostgreSql", commit 2759820, December 2020, <https://github.com/richardtallent/RT.Comb>. [CUID] "Collision-resistant ids optimized for horizontal scaling and performance.", commit 215b27b, October 2020, <https://github.com/ericelliott/cuid>. [Elasticflake] Pearcy, P., "Sequential UUID / Flake ID generator pulled out of elasticsearch common", commit dd71c21, January 2015, <https://github.com/ppearcy/elasticflake>. [Err1957] RFC Errata, Erratum ID 1957, RFC 4122, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata/eid1957>. [Err3546] RFC Errata, Erratum ID 3546, RFC 4122, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata/eid3546>. [Err4975] RFC Errata, Erratum ID 4975, RFC 4122, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata/eid4975>. [Err4976] RFC Errata, Erratum ID 4976, RFC 4122, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata/eid4976>. [Err5560] RFC Errata, Erratum ID 5560, RFC 4122, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata/eid5560>. [Flake] Boundary, "Flake: A decentralized, k-ordered id generation service in Erlang", commit 15c933a, February 2017, <https://github.com/boundary/flake>. [FlakeID] "Flake ID Generator", commit fcd6a2f, April 2020, <https://github.com/T-PWK/flake-idgen>. [IBM_NCS] IBM, "uuid_gen Command (NCS)", March 2023, <https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.1?topic=u-uuid-gen- command-ncs>. [IEEE754] IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic.", IEEE Std 754-2019, DOI 10.1109/IEEESTD.2019.8766229, July 2019, <https://standards.ieee.org/ieee/754/6210/>. [IEEE802.11bh] IEEE, "IEEE Draft Standard for Information technology-- Telecommunications and information exchange between systems Local and metropolitan area networks--Specific requirements - Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications Amendment: Enhancements for Extremely High Throughput (EHT)", Electronic ISBN 978-1-5044-9520-2, March 2023, <https://standards.ieee.org/ieee/802.11bh/10525/>. [KSUID] Segment, "K-Sortable Globally Unique IDs", commit bf376a7, July 2020, <https://github.com/segmentio/ksuid>. [LexicalUUID] Twitter, "Cassie", commit f6da4e0, November 2012, <https://github.com/twitter-archive/cassie>. [Microsoft] Microsoft, "2.3.4.3 GUID - Curly Braced String Representation", April 2023, <https://learn.microsoft.com/ en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms- dtyp/222af2d3-5c00-4899-bc87-ed4c6515e80d>. [MS_COM_GUID] Chen, R., "Why does COM express GUIDs in a mix of big- endian and little-endian? Why can't it just pick a side and stick with it?", September 2022, <https://devblogs.microsoft.com/ oldnewthing/20220928-00/?p=107221>. [ObjectID] MongoDB, "ObjectId", <https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/method/ ObjectId/>. [orderedUuid] Cabrera, I. B., "Laravel: The mysterious "Ordered UUID"", January 2020, <https://itnext.io/laravel-the-mysterious- ordered-uuid-29e7500b4f8>. [pushID] Lehenbauer, M., "The 2^120 Ways to Ensure Unique Identifiers", February 2015, <https://firebase.googleblog.com/2015/02/the-2120-ways-to- ensure-unique_68.html>. [Python] Python, "uuid - UUID objects according to RFC 4122", <https://docs.python.org/3/library/uuid.html>. [RANDOM] Occil, P., "Random Number Generator Recommendations for Applications", June 2023, <https://peteroupc.github.io/random.html>. [RFC1321] Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1321, DOI 10.17487/RFC1321, April 1992, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1321>. [RFC1738] Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L., and M. McCahill, "Uniform Resource Locators (URL)", RFC 1738, DOI 10.17487/RFC1738, December 1994, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1738>. [RFC4086] Eastlake 3rd, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, "Randomness Requirements for Security", BCP 106, RFC 4086, DOI 10.17487/RFC4086, June 2005, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4086>. [RFC4122] Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122, DOI 10.17487/RFC4122, July 2005, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4122>. [RFC5234] Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>. [RFC6151] Turner, S. and L. Chen, "Updated Security Considerations for the MD5 Message-Digest and the HMAC-MD5 Algorithms", RFC 6151, DOI 10.17487/RFC6151, March 2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6151>. [RFC6194] Polk, T., Chen, L., Turner, S., and P. Hoffman, "Security Considerations for the SHA-0 and SHA-1 Message-Digest Algorithms", RFC 6194, DOI 10.17487/RFC6194, March 2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6194>. [RFC8126] Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>. [RFC8937] Cremers, C., Garratt, L., Smyshlyaev, S., Sullivan, N., and C. Wood, "Randomness Improvements for Security Protocols", RFC 8937, DOI 10.17487/RFC8937, October 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8937>. [RFC9499] Hoffman, P. and K. Fujiwara, "DNS Terminology", BCP 219, RFC 9499, DOI 10.17487/RFC9499, March 2024, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9499>. [RFC9542] Eastlake 3rd, D., Abley, J., and Y. Li, "IANA Considerations and IETF Protocol and Documentation Usage for IEEE 802 Parameters", BCP 141, RFC 9542, DOI 10.17487/RFC9542, April 2024, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9542>. [ShardingID] Instagram Engineering, "Sharding & IDs at Instagram", December 2012, <https://instagram-engineering.com/ sharding-ids-at-instagram-1cf5a71e5a5c>. [SID] "sid : generate sortable identifiers", Commit 660e947, June 2019, <https://github.com/chilts/sid>. [Snowflake] Twitter, "Snowflake is a network service for generating unique ID numbers at high scale with some simple guarantees.", commit ec40836, May 2014, <https://github.com/twitter-archive/snowflake>. [Sonyflake] Sony, "A distributed unique ID generator inspired by Twitter's Snowflake", commit 848d664, August 2020, <https://github.com/sony/sonyflake>. [ULID] "Universally Unique Lexicographically Sortable Identifier", Commit d0c7170, May 2019, <https://github.com/ulid/spec>. [URNNamespaces] IANA, "Uniform Resource Names (URN) Namespaces", <https://www.iana.org/assignments/urn-namespaces/>. [X500] ITU-T, "Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The Directory: Overview of concepts, models and services", ISO/IEC 9594-1, ITU-T Recommendation X.500, October 2019. [X660] ITU-T, "Information technology - Procedures for the operation of object identifier registration authorities: General procedures and top arcs of the international object identifier tree", ISO/IEC 9834-1, ITU-T Recommendation X.660, July 2011. [X680] ITU-T, "Information Technology - Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) & ASN.1 encoding rules", ISO/IEC 8824-1:2021, ITU-T Recommendation X.680, February 2021. [XID] "Globally Unique ID Generator", commit efa678f, October 2020, <https://github.com/rs/xid>. Appendix A. Test Vectors Both UUIDv1 and UUIDv6 test vectors utilize the same 60-bit timestamp: 0x1EC9414C232AB00 (138648505420000000) Tuesday, February 22, 2022 2:22:22.000000 PM GMT-05:00. Both UUIDv1 and UUIDv6 utilize the same values in clock_seq and node; all of which have been generated with random data. For the randomized node, the least significant bit of the first octet is set to a value of 1 as per Section 6.10. Thus, the starting value 0x9E6BDECED846 was changed to 0x9F6BDECED846. The pseudocode used for converting from a 64-bit Unix timestamp to a 100 ns Gregorian timestamp value has been left in the document for reference purposes. # Gregorian-to-Unix Offset: # The number of 100 ns intervals between the # UUID Epoch 1582-10-15 00:00:00 # and the Unix Epoch 1970-01-01 00:00:00 # Greg_Unix_offset = 0x01b21dd213814000 or 122192928000000000 # Unix 64-bit Nanosecond Timestamp: # Unix NS: Tuesday, February 22, 2022 2:22:22 PM GMT-05:00 # Unix_64_bit_ns = 0x16D6320C3D4DCC00 or 1645557742000000000 # Unix Nanosecond precision to Gregorian 100-nanosecond intervals # Greg_100_ns = (Unix_64_bit_ns/100)+Greg_Unix_offset # Work: # Greg_100_ns = (1645557742000000000/100)+122192928000000000 # Unix_64_bit_ns = (138648505420000000-122192928000000000)*100 # Final: # Greg_100_ns = 0x1EC9414C232AB00 or 138648505420000000 Figure 15: Test Vector Timestamp Pseudocode A.1. Example of a UUIDv1 Value ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- time_low 32 0xC232AB00 time_mid 16 0x9414 ver 4 0x1 time_high 12 0x1EC var 2 0b10 clock_seq 14 0b11, 0x3C8 node 48 0x9F6BDECED846 ------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: C232AB00-9414-11EC-B3C8-9F6BDECED846 Figure 16: UUIDv1 Example Test Vector A.2. Example of a UUIDv3 Value The MD5 computation from is detailed in Figure 17 using the DNS Namespace ID value and the Name "www.example.com". The field mapping and all values are illustrated in Figure 18. Finally, to further illustrate the bit swapping for version and variant, see Figure 19. Namespace (DNS): 6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8 Name: www.example.com ------------------------------------------------------ MD5: 5df418813aed051548a72f4a814cf09e Figure 17: UUIDv3 Example MD5 ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- md5_high 48 0x5df418813aed ver 4 0x3 md5_mid 12 0x515 var 2 0b10 md5_low 62 0b00, 0x8a72f4a814cf09e ------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: 5df41881-3aed-3515-88a7-2f4a814cf09e Figure 18: UUIDv3 Example Test Vector MD5 hex and dash: 5df41881-3aed-0515-48a7-2f4a814cf09e Ver and Var Overwrite: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-Mxxx-Nxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx Final: 5df41881-3aed-3515-88a7-2f4a814cf09e Figure 19: UUIDv3 Example Ver/Var Bit Swaps A.3. Example of a UUIDv4 Value This UUIDv4 example was created by generating 16 bytes of random data resulting in the hexadecimal value of 919108F752D133205BACF847DB4148A8. This is then used to fill out the fields as shown in Figure 20. Finally, to further illustrate the bit swapping for version and variant, see Figure 21. ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- random_a 48 0x919108f752d1 ver 4 0x4 random_b 12 0x320 var 2 0b10 random_c 62 0b01, 0xbacf847db4148a8 ------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: 919108f7-52d1-4320-9bac-f847db4148a8 Figure 20: UUIDv4 Example Test Vector Random hex: 919108f752d133205bacf847db4148a8 Random hex and dash: 919108f7-52d1-3320-5bac-f847db4148a8 Ver and Var Overwrite: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-Mxxx-Nxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx Final: 919108f7-52d1-4320-9bac-f847db4148a8 Figure 21: UUIDv4 Example Ver/Var Bit Swaps A.4. Example of a UUIDv5 Value The SHA-1 computation form is detailed in Figure 22, using the DNS Namespace ID value and the Name "www.example.com". The field mapping and all values are illustrated in Figure 23. Finally, to further illustrate the bit swapping for version and variant and the unused/ discarded part of the SHA-1 value, see Figure 24. Namespace (DNS): 6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8 Name: www.example.com ---------------------------------------------------------- SHA-1: 2ed6657de927468b55e12665a8aea6a22dee3e35 Figure 22: UUIDv5 Example SHA-1 ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- sha1_high 48 0x2ed6657de927 ver 4 0x5 sha1_mid 12 0x68b var 2 0b10 sha1_low 62 0b01, 0x5e12665a8aea6a2 ------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: 2ed6657d-e927-568b-95e1-2665a8aea6a2 Figure 23: UUIDv5 Example Test Vector SHA-1 hex and dash: 2ed6657d-e927-468b-55e1-2665a8aea6a2-2dee3e35 Ver and Var Overwrite: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-Mxxx-Nxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx Final: 2ed6657d-e927-568b-95e1-2665a8aea6a2 Discarded: -2dee3e35 Figure 24: UUIDv5 Example Ver/Var Bit Swaps and Discarded SHA-1 Segment A.5. Example of a UUIDv6 Value ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- time_high 32 0x1EC9414C time_mid 16 0x232A ver 4 0x6 time_high 12 0xB00 var 2 0b10 clock_seq 14 0b11, 0x3C8 node 48 0x9F6BDECED846 ------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: 1EC9414C-232A-6B00-B3C8-9F6BDECED846 Figure 25: UUIDv6 Example Test Vector A.6. Example of a UUIDv7 Value This example UUIDv7 test vector utilizes a well-known Unix Epoch timestamp with millisecond precision to fill the first 48 bits. rand_a and rand_b are filled with random data. The timestamp is Tuesday, February 22, 2022 2:22:22.00 PM GMT-05:00, represented as 0x017F22E279B0 or 1645557742000. ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- unix_ts_ms 48 0x017F22E279B0 ver 4 0x7 rand_a 12 0xCC3 var 2 0b10 rand_b 62 0b01, 0x8C4DC0C0C07398F ------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: 017F22E2-79B0-7CC3-98C4-DC0C0C07398F Figure 26: UUIDv7 Example Test Vector Appendix B. Illustrative Examples The following sections contain illustrative examples that serve to show how one may use UUIDv8 (Section 5.8) for custom and/or experimental application-based logic. The examples below have not been through the same rigorous testing, prototyping, and feedback loop that other algorithms in this document have undergone. The authors encourage implementers to create their own UUIDv8 algorithm rather than use the items defined in this section. B.1. Example of a UUIDv8 Value (Time-Based) This example UUIDv8 test vector utilizes a well-known 64-bit Unix Epoch timestamp with 10 ns precision, truncated to the least significant, rightmost bits to fill the first 60 bits of custom_a and custom_b, while setting the version bits between these two segments to the version value of 8. The variant bits are set; and the final segment, custom_c, is filled with random data. Timestamp is Tuesday, February 22, 2022 2:22:22.000000 PM GMT-05:00, represented as 0x2489E9AD2EE2E00 or 164555774200000000 (10 ns-steps). ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- custom_a 48 0x2489E9AD2EE2 ver 4 0x8 custom_b 12 0xE00 var 2 0b10 custom_c 62 0b00, 0xEC932D5F69181C0 ------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: 2489E9AD-2EE2-8E00-8EC9-32D5F69181C0 Figure 27: UUIDv8 Example Time-Based Illustrative Example B.2. Example of a UUIDv8 Value (Name-Based) As per Section 5.5, name-based UUIDs that want to use modern hashing algorithms MUST be created within the UUIDv8 space. These MAY leverage newer hashing algorithms such as SHA-256 or SHA-512 (as defined by [FIPS180-4]), SHA-3 or SHAKE (as defined by [FIPS202]), or even algorithms that have not been defined yet. A SHA-256 version of the SHA-1 computation in Appendix A.4 is detailed in Figure 28 as an illustrative example detailing how this can be achieved. The creation of the name-based UUIDv8 value in this section follows the same logic defined in Section 5.5 with the difference being SHA-256 in place of SHA-1. The field mapping and all values are illustrated in Figure 29. Finally, to further illustrate the bit swapping for version and variant and the unused/discarded part of the SHA-256 value, see Figure 30. An important note for secure hashing algorithms that produce outputs of an arbitrary size, such as those found in SHAKE, is that the output hash MUST be 128 bits or larger. Namespace (DNS): 6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8 Name: www.example.com ---------------------------------------------------------------- SHA-256: 5c146b143c524afd938a375d0df1fbf6fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8 Figure 28: UUIDv8 Example SHA256 ------------------------------------------- field bits value ------------------------------------------- custom_a 48 0x5c146b143c52 ver 4 0x8 custom_b 12 0xafd var 2 0b10 custom_c 62 0b01, 0x38a375d0df1fbf6
EID 7929 (Verified) is as follows:

Section: B.2

Original Text:

custom_c  62   0b00, 0x38a375d0df1fbf6

Corrected Text:

custom_c  62   0b01, 0x38a375d0df1fbf6
Notes:
As shown as -938a- in Figure 30.

B: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-Mxxx-Nxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
C: 5c146b14-3c52-8afd-938a-375d0df1fbf6

See also: https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/uuidrev/2wJLek182NMv4xQZf8TIos6XrD0/
------------------------------------------- total 128 ------------------------------------------- final: 5c146b14-3c52-8afd-938a-375d0df1fbf6 Figure 29: UUIDv8 Example Name-Based SHA-256 Illustrative Example A: 5c146b14-3c52-4afd-938a-375d0df1fbf6-fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8 B: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-Mxxx-Nxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx C: 5c146b14-3c52-8afd-938a-375d0df1fbf6 D: -fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8 Figure 30: UUIDv8 Example Ver/Var Bit Swaps and Discarded SHA-256 Segment Examining Figure 30: * Line A details the full SHA-256 as a hexadecimal value with the dashes inserted. * Line B details the version and variant hexadecimal positions, which must be overwritten. * Line C details the final value after the ver and var have been overwritten. * Line D details the discarded leftover values from the original SHA-256 computation. Acknowledgements The authors gratefully acknowledge the contributions of Rich Salz, Michael Mealling, Ben Campbell, Ben Ramsey, Fabio Lima, Gonzalo Salgueiro, Martin Thomson, Murray S. Kucherawy, Rick van Rein, Rob Wilton, Sean Leonard, Theodore Y. Ts'o, Robert Kieffer, Sergey Prokhorenko, and LiosK. As well as all of those in the IETF community and on GitHub to who contributed to the discussions that resulted in this document. This document draws heavily on the OSF DCE specification (Appendix A of [C309]) for UUIDs. Ted Ts'o provided helpful comments. We are also grateful to the careful reading and bit-twiddling of Ralf S. Engelschall, John Larmouth, and Paul Thorpe. Professor Larmouth was also invaluable in achieving coordination with ISO/IEC. Authors' Addresses Kyzer R. Davis Cisco Systems Email: kydavis@cisco.com Brad G. Peabody Uncloud Email: brad@peabody.io Paul J. Leach University of Washington Email: pjl7@uw.edu