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pg-snowflake: generate Snowflake ID Standard compatible ids with optional cluster number
Exposes snowflake_gen() function that generates Snowflake ID
Standard compatible ids (with the
number of bits customizable, see below):
# Snowflake ID compatible (each letter is 1 bit):
0tttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt | CCCCC | iiiiiiiiii | ssssssssssssss
^ ^ ^ ^
35 5 10 14 bitsHere,
- "t" denotes the bits of timestamp, which is the current Unix time in
milliseconds minus the value of
CONST_SNOWFLAKE_TS_STARTpsql variable. OnlyCONST_SNOWFLAKE_TS_BITShighest bits of the timestamp are used. - "C" denotes "cluster number". If
CONST_SNOWFLAKE_CLUSTER_NO_BITSis 0, then this field is not present, and the entire leftmost range is used for the timestamp. - "i" is "island no" aka "Snowflake Machine ID", must be unique across all master nodes within the same cluster.
- "s" is "sequence number bits".
You can customize the length of the bit fields in your pg-snowflake.config.sql
file, see below.
Also, you can pass custom arguments to snowflake_gen() function itself.
The library is typically installed in schema public on every PostgreSQL node.
Installation
First, copy pg-snowflake.config.sql.example to pg-snowflake.config.sql in
the root of your app and optionally update CONST_* according to your needs.
\set CONST_SNOWFLAKE_TS_START 1475796139634
\set CONST_SNOWFLAKE_TS_BITS 35
\set CONST_SNOWFLAKE_CLUSTER_NO_BITS 5
\set CONST_SNOWFLAKE_ISLAND_NO_BITS 10
\set CONST_SNOWFLAKE_SEQ_BITS 14Then run in psql console:
-- The library is typically installed in schema "public".
SET search_path TO public;
-- Optional: if you don't want to pass PG_SNOWFLAKE_CLUSTER_NO environment
-- variable, create this configuration function manually.
--CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION snowflake_cluster_no() RETURNS integer LANGUAGE sql
-- SET search_path FROM CURRENT AS 'SELECT 1';
-- Optional: if you don't want to pass PG_SNOWFLAKE_ISLAND_NO environment
-- variable, create this configuration function manually.
--CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION snowflake_island_no() RETURNS integer LANGUAGE sql
-- SET search_path FROM CURRENT AS 'SELECT 1';
-- Install the library to the current schema.
\ir .../pg-snowflake-up.sqlThe pg-snowflake-up.sql installation script will search for
pg-snowflake.config.sql file in the parent folders (it will fail if the file
is not found).
By default, cluster number is read from PG_SNOWFLAKE_CLUSTER_NO shell env
variable. This way, you can assign it to e.g. 1 for development, 2 for staging,
3 for production environments (or 3, 4, 5, ... for different clusters in
different AWS regions). If for some reason you don't want this behavior, just
define snowflake_cluster_no() function manually.
The same applies to PG_SNOWFLAKE_ISLAND_NO and snowflake_island_no()
functions.
snowflake_gen([seq_name regclass][,ts_start bigint][,ts_bits][,cluster_no_bits][,island_no_bits][,seq_bits])
Generates a Snowflake ID Standard compatible ids.
seq_name: by default, the function usessnowflake_seqsequence to avoid within-millisecond (or within-second) collisions, but you can also pass your own sequence name instead.ts_start: optional epoch start timestamp in milliseconds. Defaults toCONST_SNOWFLAKE_TS_START(see pg-snowflake.config.sql.example).ts_bits: optional number of bits for the timestamp part. Defaults toCONST_SNOWFLAKE_TS_BITS.cluster_no_bits: optional number of bits for the cluster number part. Defaults toCONST_SNOWFLAKE_CLUSTER_NO_BITS.island_no_bits: optional number of bits for the island number part. Defaults toCONST_SNOWFLAKE_ISLAND_NO_BITS.seq_bits: optional number of bits for the sequence part. Defaults toCONST_SNOWFLAKE_SEQ_BITS.
The default format is t35-C5-i10-s14. To customize, use PostgreSQL named
arguments syntax, e.g.:
SELECT snowflake_gen(ts_bits:=30, cluster_no_bits:=10, island_no_bits:=10);The benefit of this function is that you can order by id to get the approximate timestamp-based order, even across microshards/nodes. It also uses bits in the bigint id efficiently. The downside is that the id is not easily parsable by just the human eye, since it's bits-based (not decimal positions based).
Example of id generated:
4705186322862407685