Just to note this function is fairly slow, and can bring your script to a crawl if it is in a loop. Strangely if you run it as uniqid('', true) it runs much more quickly
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
uniqid — Generate a time-based identifier
Gets an identifier based on the current time with microsecond precision,
prefixed with the given prefix
and optionally
appending a randomly generated value.
This function does not generate cryptographically secure values, and must not be used for cryptographic purposes, or purposes that require returned values to be unguessable.
If cryptographically secure randomness is required, the Random\Randomizer may be used with the Random\Engine\Secure engine. For simple use cases, the random_int() and random_bytes() functions provide a convenient and secure API that is backed by the operating system’s CSPRNG.
This function does not guarantee the uniqueness of the return
value because the value is based on the current time in microseconds
or the current time with a small amount of random data appended
if more_entropy
is true
.
prefix
Can be useful, for instance, if you generate identifiers simultaneously on several hosts that could generate the same identifier at the same microsecond. (This can happen even on a single host if the system clock is moved backwards, such as by an NTP adjustment.)
With an empty prefix
, the returned string will
be 13 characters long. If more_entropy
is
true
, it will be 23 characters.
more_entropy
If set to true
, uniqid() will add additional
entropy (using the combined linear congruential generator) at the end
of the return value, which increases the likelihood that the result
will be unique.
Returns timestamp based identifier as a string.
This function does not guarantee the uniqueness of the return value.
Example #1 uniqid() Example
<?php
/* A uniqid, like: 4b3403665fea6 */
printf("uniqid(): %s\r\n", uniqid());
/* We can also prefix the uniqid, this the same as
* doing:
*
* $uniqid = $prefix . uniqid();
* $uniqid = uniqid($prefix);
*/
printf("uniqid('php_'): %s\r\n", uniqid('php_'));
/* We can also activate the more_entropy parameter, which is
* required on some systems, like Cygwin. This makes uniqid()
* produce a value like: 4b340550242239.64159797
*/
printf("uniqid('', true): %s\r\n", uniqid('', true));
?>
Note:
Under Cygwin, the
more_entropy
must be set totrue
for this function to work.
Just to note this function is fairly slow, and can bring your script to a crawl if it is in a loop. Strangely if you run it as uniqid('', true) it runs much more quickly