Optimus
pg-ulid
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Optimus
-
PostgreSQL UUID vs. Serial vs. Identity
Yes, I completely forgot about it. I used it a few years ago, I tried also [1] which is integers instead of strings.
[1] https://github.com/jenssegers/optimus
-
API: external UUID to internal ID in validation or controller or ?
To obfuscate id there are several solutions, other than the already mentioned hashids you can try this one https://github.com/jenssegers/optimus
pg-ulid
-
Lesser Known PostgreSQL Features
Here's one[1], not actively maintained though.
[1] https://github.com/edoceo/pg-ulid
-
PostgreSQL UUID vs. Serial vs. Identity
Yeah, just use a UUID unless the bits to store the UUID really are your driving limitation (they're not), having a UUID that is non-linear is almost always the most straight-forward option for identifying things, for the tradeoff of human readability (though you can get some of that back with prefixes and some other schemes). I'm not going to rehash the benefits that people have brought up for UUIDs, but they're in this thread. At this point what I'm concerned about is just... what is the best kind of UUID to use -- I've recently started using mostly v1 because time relationship is important to me (despite the unfortunate order issues) and v6[0] isn't quite so spread yet. Here's a list of other approaches out there worth looking at
- isntauuid[1] (mentioned in this thread, I've given it a name here)
- timeflake[2]
- HiLo[3][4]
- ulid[5]
- ksuid[6] (made popular by segment.io)
- v1-v6 UUIDs (the ones we all know and some love)
- sequential interval based UUIDs in Postgres[7]
Just add a UUID -- this almost surely isn't going to be what bricks your architecture unless you have some crazy high write use case like time series or IoT or something maybe.
[0]: http://gh.peabody.io/uuidv6/
[1]: https://instagram-engineering.com/sharding-ids-at-instagram-...
[2]: https://github.com/anthonynsimon/timeflake
[3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hi/Lo_algorithm
[4]: https://www.npgsql.org/efcore/modeling/generated-properties....
[5]: https://github.com/edoceo/pg-ulid
[6]: https://github.com/segmentio/ksuid
[7]: https://www.2ndquadrant.com/en/blog/sequential-uuid-generato...
What are some alternatives?
HTML Purifier - Standards compliant HTML filter written in PHP
ksuid - K-Sortable Globally Unique IDs
PHP Encryption - Simple Encryption in PHP.
cuid - Collision-resistant ids optimized for horizontal scaling and performance.
PHP SSH - An experimental object oriented SSH api in PHP
Dapper - Dapper - a simple object mapper for .Net
Themis - Easy to use cryptographic framework for data protection: secure messaging with forward secrecy and secure data storage. Has unified APIs across 14 platforms.
Hasura - Blazing fast, instant realtime GraphQL APIs on your DB with fine grained access control, also trigger webhooks on database events.
True Random - Fetches random integers from random.org instead of using PHP's PRNG implementation
tbls - tbls is a CI-Friendly tool for document a database, written in Go.
hashids - A small PHP library to generate YouTube-like ids from numbers. Use it when you don't want to expose your database ids to the user.
timeflake - Timeflake is a 128-bit, roughly-ordered, URL-safe UUID.