UUIDGEN(2) | System Calls Manual | UUIDGEN(2) |
uuidgen
— generate
universally unique identifiers
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<sys/uuid.h>
int
uuidgen
(struct
uuid *store, int
count);
The
uuidgen
()
system call generates count universally unique
identifiers (UUIDs) and writes them to the buffer pointed to by
store. The identifiers are generated according to the
syntax and semantics of the DCE version 1 variant of universally unique
identifiers. See below for a more in-depth description of the identifiers.
When no IEEE 802 address is available for the node field, a random multicast
address is generated for each invocation of the system call. According to
the algorithm of generating time-based UUIDs, this will also force a new
random clock sequence, thereby increasing the likelihood for the identifier
to be unique.
When multiple identifiers are to be generated, the
uuidgen
()
system call will generate a set of identifiers that is dense in such a way
that there is no identifier that is larger than the smallest identifier in
the set and smaller than the largest identifier in the set and that is not
already in the set.
Universally unique identifiers, also known as globally unique identifiers (GUIDs), have a binary representation of 128-bits. The grouping and meaning of these bits is described by the following structure and its description of the fields that follow it:
struct uuid { uint32_t time_low; uint16_t time_mid; uint16_t time_hi_and_version; uint8_t clock_seq_hi_and_reserved; uint8_t clock_seq_low; uint8_t node[_UUID_NODE_LEN]; };
uuidgen
()
system call have variant value 10b. the variant value is stored in the
most significant bits of the field.The binary representation is sensitive to byte ordering. Any multi-byte field is to be stored in the local or native byte-order and identifiers must be converted when transmitted to hosts that do not agree on the byte-order. The specification does not however document what this means in concrete terms and is otherwise beyond the scope of this system call.
Upon successful completion, the value 0 is returned; otherwise the value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error.
The uuidgen
() system call can fail
with:
The identifiers are represented and generated in conformance with
the DCE 1.1 RPC specification. The uuidgen
() system
call is itself not part of the specification.
The uuidgen
() system call first appeared
in FreeBSD 5.0.
May 26, 2002 | Debian |