Re: Using PK value as a String
От | Moritz Onken |
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Тема | Re: Using PK value as a String |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 11DAE1B0-3655-49A4-B4D4-9A6F45741059@houseofdesign.de обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Using PK value as a String (Bill Moran <wmoran@collaborativefusion.com>) |
Список | pgsql-performance |
Am 12.08.2008 um 17:21 schrieb Bill Moran: > In response to Moritz Onken <onken@houseofdesign.de>: > >> >> Am 12.08.2008 um 17:04 schrieb Bill Moran: >> >>> In response to Moritz Onken <onken@houseofdesign.de>: >>> >>>> We chose UUID as PK because there is still some information in an >>>> integer key. >>>> You can see if a user has registered before someone else >>>> (user1.id < >>>> user2.id) >>>> or you can see how many new users registered in a specific period >>>> of >>>> time >>>> (compare the id of the newest user to the id a week ago). This is >>>> information >>>> which is in some cases critical. >>> >>> So you're accidentally storing critical information in magic values >>> instead of storing it explicitly? >>> >>> Good luck with that. >> >> How do I store critical information? I was just saying that it easy >> to get some information out of a primary key which is an incrementing >> integer. And it makes sense, in some rare cases, to have a PK which >> is some kind of random like UUIDs where you cannot guess the next >> value. > > I just repeated your words. Read above "this is information which > is in > some cases critical." > > If I misunderstood, then I misunderstood. If you are using incrementing integers as pk then you are storing this data implicitly with your primary key. Using UUIDs is a way to avoid that.
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