How to generate a GUID in Oracle?
Asked Answered
I

10

115

Is it possible to auto-generate a GUID into an Insert statement?

Also, what type of field should I use to store this GUID?

Intermix answered 14/6, 2010 at 13:13 Comment(1)
Does this answer your question? How to generate a version 4 (random) UUID on Oracle?Dulla
C
164

You can use the SYS_GUID() function to generate a GUID in your insert statement:

insert into mytable (guid_col, data) values (sys_guid(), 'xxx');

The preferred datatype for storing GUIDs is RAW(16).

As Gopinath answer:

 select sys_guid() from dual
 union all
 select sys_guid() from dual
 union all 
 select sys_guid() from dual

You get

88FDC68C75DDF955E040449808B55601
88FDC68C75DEF955E040449808B55601
88FDC68C75DFF955E040449808B55601

As Tony Andrews says, differs only at one character

88FDC68C75DDF955E040449808B55601
88FDC68C75DEF955E040449808B55601
88FDC68C75DFF955E040449808B55601

Maybe useful: http://feuerthoughts.blogspot.com/2006/02/watch-out-for-sequential-oracle-guids.html

Campy answered 14/6, 2010 at 13:20 Comment(6)
Weird, the sys_guid() is always giving me the same GUID.. Do I need to give a seed to the function or?Intermix
Are you sure they are exactly the same? It does tend to return very similar (but different) values - e.g. when I just tried I got 88FDC68C75DEF955E040449808B55601 and 88FDC68C75DFF955E040449808B55601, which differ only at the 12th character!Campy
Try select sys_guid() from dual and compare values. Modify answer about it.Gearbox
@TonyAndrews In MySQL I use UUID_TO_BIN(uuid(),true) to generate an ordered uuid which seems to be recommended. I wonder if there is an equivalent for generating an ordered uuid in Oracle SQL or maybe using sys_guid() as RAW(16) is enough?Falzetta
@EdgarMagallon as far as I know there is no ordered GUID concept in Oracle.Campy
@TonyAndrews oh, thanks! I will try to test it, I think using sys_guid is enoughFalzetta
L
28

You can also include the guid in the create statement of the table as default, for example:

create table t_sysguid
( id     raw(16) default sys_guid() primary key
, filler varchar2(1000)
)
/

See here: http://rwijk.blogspot.com/2009/12/sysguid.html

Lodgings answered 22/5, 2011 at 6:33 Comment(1)
Thanks for alerting me to a useful Oracle feature I didn't know about.Sniffle
A
21

Example found on: http://www.orafaq.com/usenet/comp.databases.oracle.server/2006/12/20/0646.htm

SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE(SYS_GUID(), '(.{8})(.{4})(.{4})(.{4})(.{12})', '\1-\2-\3-\4-\5') MSSQL_GUID  FROM DUAL 

Result:

6C7C9A50-3514-4E77-E053-B30210AC1082 
Anglophobe answered 18/5, 2018 at 14:24 Comment(3)
Wish I could buy you a drink for this. +1Medical
Fantastic! Thank you :)Bonnie
My aim was to generate non-predictable values, but "SYS_GUID" is no good. Here are 3 values I generated in a row: - 0305B54BBD617444E06332030A0A5C6F - 0305B54BBD627444E06332030A0A5C6F - 0305B54BBD637444E06332030A0A5C6F They are very similar. Other methods need to be used (at least for my use-case)Remitter
K
9

It is not clear what you mean by auto-generate a guid into an insert statement but at a guess, I think you are trying to do something like the following:

INSERT INTO MY_TAB (ID, NAME) VALUES (SYS_GUID(), 'Adams');
INSERT INTO MY_TAB (ID, NAME) VALUES (SYS_GUID(), 'Baker');

In that case I believe the ID column should be declared as RAW(16);

I am doing this off the top of my head. I don't have an Oracle instance handy to test against, but I think that is what you want.

Kurdistan answered 14/6, 2010 at 13:25 Comment(0)
L
8

sys_guid() is a poor option, as other answers have mentioned. One way to generate UUIDs and avoid sequential values is to generate random hex strings yourself:

select regexp_replace(
    to_char(
        DBMS_RANDOM.value(0, power(2, 128)-1),
        'FM0xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'),
    '([a-f0-9]{8})([a-f0-9]{4})([a-f0-9]{4})([a-f0-9]{4})([a-f0-9]{12})',
    '\1-\2-\3-\4-\5') from DUAL;
Lapin answered 31/1, 2017 at 1:43 Comment(1)
Those are not guaranteed to be unique. You'd need to pair it with something like a unique constraint on wherever you're storing it, if you're storing it. (and generating a new number if you encounter a repeated value and violate the unique constraint, however unlikely that may be)Grey
E
8

If you need non-sequential guids you can send the sys_guid() results through a hashing function (see https://mcmap.net/q/189654/-how-to-call-oracle-md5-hash-function ). The idea is to keep whatever uniqueness is used from the original creation, and get something with more shuffled bits.

For instance:

LOWER(SUBSTR(STANDARD_HASH(SYS_GUID(), 'SHA1'), 0, 32))  

Example showing default sequential guid vs sending it through a hash:

SELECT LOWER(SYS_GUID()) AS OGUID FROM DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT LOWER(SYS_GUID()) AS OGUID FROM DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT LOWER(SYS_GUID()) AS OGUID FROM DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT LOWER(SYS_GUID()) AS OGUID FROM DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT LOWER(SUBSTR(STANDARD_HASH(SYS_GUID(), 'SHA1'), 0, 32)) AS OGUID FROM DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT LOWER(SUBSTR(STANDARD_HASH(SYS_GUID(), 'SHA1'), 0, 32)) AS OGUID FROM DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT LOWER(SUBSTR(STANDARD_HASH(SYS_GUID(), 'SHA1'), 0, 32)) AS OGUID FROM DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT LOWER(SUBSTR(STANDARD_HASH(SYS_GUID(), 'SHA1'), 0, 32)) AS OGUID FROM DUAL  

output

80c32a4fbe405707e0531e18980a1bbb
80c32a4fbe415707e0531e18980a1bbb
80c32a4fbe425707e0531e18980a1bbb
80c32a4fbe435707e0531e18980a1bbb
c0f2ff2d3ef7b422c302bd87a4588490
d1886a8f3b4c547c28b0805d70b384f3
a0c565f3008622dde3148cfce9353ba7
1c375f3311faab15dc6a7503ce08182c
Edroi answered 31/1, 2019 at 15:2 Comment(0)
A
3

You can run the following query

 select sys_guid() from dual
 union all
 select sys_guid() from dual
 union all 
 select sys_guid() from dual
Ahoy answered 20/11, 2013 at 19:42 Comment(0)
K
3

I would recommend using Oracle's "dbms_crypto.randombytes" function.

Why?
This function returns a RAW value containing a cryptographically secure pseudo-random sequence of bytes, which can be used to generate random material for encryption keys.

select REGEXP_REPLACE(dbms_crypto.randombytes(16), '(.{8})(.{4})(.{4})(.{4})(.{12})', '\1-\2-\3-\4-\5') from dual;

You should not use the function "sys_guid" because only one character changes.

ALTER TABLE locations ADD (uid_col RAW(16));

UPDATE locations SET uid_col = SYS_GUID();

SELECT location_id, uid_col FROM locations
   ORDER BY location_id, uid_col;

LOCATION_ID UID_COL
----------- ----------------------------------------------------------------
       1000 09F686761827CF8AE040578CB20B7491
       1100 09F686761828CF8AE040578CB20B7491
       1200 09F686761829CF8AE040578CB20B7491
       1300 09F68676182ACF8AE040578CB20B7491
       1400 09F68676182BCF8AE040578CB20B7491
       1500 09F68676182CCF8AE040578CB20B7491

https://docs.oracle.com/database/121/SQLRF/functions202.htm#SQLRF06120

Kayak answered 31/5, 2020 at 8:43 Comment(0)
R
2

you can use function bellow in order to generate your UUID

create or replace FUNCTION RANDOM_GUID
    RETURN VARCHAR2 IS

    RNG    NUMBER;
    N      BINARY_INTEGER;
    CCS    VARCHAR2 (128);
    XSTR   VARCHAR2 (4000) := NULL;
  BEGIN
    CCS := '0123456789' || 'ABCDEF';
    RNG := 15;

    FOR I IN 1 .. 32 LOOP
      N := TRUNC (RNG * DBMS_RANDOM.VALUE) + 1;
      XSTR := XSTR || SUBSTR (CCS, N, 1);
    END LOOP;

    RETURN SUBSTR(XSTR, 1, 4) || '-' ||
        SUBSTR(XSTR, 5, 4)        || '-' ||
        SUBSTR(XSTR, 9, 4)        || '-' ||
        SUBSTR(XSTR, 13,4)        || '-' ||
        SUBSTR(XSTR, 17,4)        || '-' ||
        SUBSTR(XSTR, 21,4)        || '-' ||
        SUBSTR(XSTR, 24,4)        || '-' ||
        SUBSTR(XSTR, 28,4);
END RANDOM_GUID;

Example of GUID genedrated by the function above:
8EA4-196D-BC48-9793-8AE8-5500-03DC-9D04

Rees answered 27/11, 2017 at 11:5 Comment(3)
SYS_GUID was not random enough for our needs, but this seems to pump GUID's that are way more random.Tabshey
These are not guaranteed to be uniqueGrey
Same answer in #13952076Dulla
M
1

Creating a 350 characters GUID:

dbms_random.STRING ('a', 350) - returning string in mixed case alpha characters

dbms_random.STRING ('x', 350) - returning string in uppercase alpha-numeric characters

Mediator answered 10/12, 2020 at 8:51 Comment(0)

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