re_tuid 0.12.0-rc.2

128-bit Time-based Unique Identifier
Documentation

TUID: Time-based Unique Identifier

Part of the rerun family of crates.

Latest version Documentation MIT Apache

TUID:s are 128-bit identifiers, that have a global time-based order, with tie-breaking between threads. This means you can use a TUID as a tie-breaker in time series databases.

Implementation

TUID is based on two fields, both of which are monotonically increasing:

  • time_ns: u64
  • inc: u64

time_ns is an approximate nanoseconds since unix epoch. It is monotonically increasing, though two TUID:s generated closely together may get the same time_ns.

inc is a monotonically increasing integer, initialized to some random number on each thread.

So the algorithm is this:

  • For each thread, generate a 64-bit random number as inc
  • When generating a new TUID:
    • increment the thread-local inc
    • get current time as time_ns
    • return TUID { time_ns, inc }

Performance

On a single core of a 2022 M1 MacBook we can generate 40 million TUID/s, which is 25 ns per TUID.

Future work

For time-based exploits (like Meltdown/Spectre) time_ns should probably be rounded to nearest millisecond for sensitive systems. The last ~20 bits of time_ns can be filled with more randomness to lessen the chance of collisions.