ClickHouse/docs/en/sql-reference/functions/uuid-functions.md
2023-02-14 16:58:56 +00:00

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/en/sql-reference/functions/uuid-functions 53 UUID

Functions for Working with UUID

The functions for working with UUID are listed below.

generateUUIDv4

Generates the UUID of version 4.

Syntax

generateUUIDv4([x])

Arguments

Returned value

The UUID type value.

Usage example

This example demonstrates creating a table with the UUID type column and inserting a value into the table.

CREATE TABLE t_uuid (x UUID) ENGINE=TinyLog

INSERT INTO t_uuid SELECT generateUUIDv4()

SELECT * FROM t_uuid
┌────────────────────────────────────x─┐
│ f4bf890f-f9dc-4332-ad5c-0c18e73f28e9 │
└──────────────────────────────────────┘

Usage example if it is needed to generate multiple values in one row

SELECT generateUUIDv4(1), generateUUIDv4(2)
┌─generateUUIDv4(1)────────────────────┬─generateUUIDv4(2)────────────────────┐
 2d49dc6e-ddce-4cd0-afb8-790956df54c1  8abf8c13-7dea-4fdf-af3e-0e18767770e6 
└──────────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────┘

empty

Checks whether the input UUID is empty.

Syntax

empty(UUID)

The UUID is considered empty if it contains all zeros (zero UUID).

The function also works for arrays or strings.

Arguments

  • x — Input UUID. UUID.

Returned value

  • Returns 1 for an empty UUID or 0 for a non-empty UUID.

Type: UInt8.

Example

To generate the UUID value, ClickHouse provides the generateUUIDv4 function.

Query:

SELECT empty(generateUUIDv4());

Result:

┌─empty(generateUUIDv4())─┐
│                       0 │
└─────────────────────────┘

notEmpty

Checks whether the input UUID is non-empty.

Syntax

notEmpty(UUID)

The UUID is considered empty if it contains all zeros (zero UUID).

The function also works for arrays or strings.

Arguments

  • x — Input UUID. UUID.

Returned value

  • Returns 1 for a non-empty UUID or 0 for an empty UUID.

Type: UInt8.

Example

To generate the UUID value, ClickHouse provides the generateUUIDv4 function.

Query:

SELECT notEmpty(generateUUIDv4());

Result:

┌─notEmpty(generateUUIDv4())─┐
│                          1 │
└────────────────────────────┘

toUUID (x)

Converts String type value to UUID type.

toUUID(String)

Returned value

The UUID type value.

Usage example

SELECT toUUID('61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0') AS uuid
┌─────────────────────────────────uuid─┐
│ 61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0 │
└──────────────────────────────────────┘

toUUIDOrDefault (x,y)

Arguments

  • string — String of 36 characters or FixedString(36). String.
  • default — UUID to be used as the default if the first argument cannot be converted to a UUID type. UUID.

Returned value

UUID

toUUIDOrDefault(String, UUID)

Returned value

The UUID type value.

Usage examples

This first example returns the first argument converted to a UUID type as it can be converted:

SELECT toUUIDOrDefault('61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0', cast('59f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0' as UUID));
┌─toUUIDOrDefault('61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0', CAST('59f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0', 'UUID'))─┐
│ 61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0                                                                          │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

This second example returns the second argument (the provided default UUID) as the first argument cannot be converted to a UUID type:

SELECT toUUIDOrDefault('-----61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0', cast('59f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0' as UUID));
┌─toUUIDOrDefault('-----61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0', CAST('59f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0', 'UUID'))─┐
│ 59f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0                                                                               │
└────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

toUUIDOrNull (x)

It takes an argument of type String and tries to parse it into UUID. If failed, returns NULL.

toUUIDOrNull(String)

Returned value

The Nullable(UUID) type value.

Usage example

SELECT toUUIDOrNull('61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0T') AS uuid
┌─uuid─┐
│ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │
└──────┘

toUUIDOrZero (x)

It takes an argument of type String and tries to parse it into UUID. If failed, returns zero UUID.

toUUIDOrZero(String)

Returned value

The UUID type value.

Usage example

SELECT toUUIDOrZero('61f0c404-5cb3-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0T') AS uuid
┌─────────────────────────────────uuid─┐
│ 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 │
└──────────────────────────────────────┘

UUIDStringToNum

Accepts string containing 36 characters in the format xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx, and returns a FixedString(16) as its binary representation, with its format optionally specified by variant (Big-endian by default).

Syntax

UUIDStringToNum(string[, variant = 1])

Arguments

  • string — String of 36 characters or FixedString(36). String.
  • variant — Integer, representing a variant as specified by RFC4122. 1 = Big-endian (default), 2 = Microsoft.

Returned value

FixedString(16)

Usage examples

SELECT
    '612f3c40-5d3b-217e-707b-6a546a3d7b29' AS uuid,
    UUIDStringToNum(uuid) AS bytes
┌─uuid─────────────────────────────────┬─bytes────────────┐
│ 612f3c40-5d3b-217e-707b-6a546a3d7b29 │ a/<@];!~p{jTj={) │
└──────────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────┘
SELECT
    '612f3c40-5d3b-217e-707b-6a546a3d7b29' AS uuid,
    UUIDStringToNum(uuid, 2) AS bytes
┌─uuid─────────────────────────────────┬─bytes────────────┐
│ 612f3c40-5d3b-217e-707b-6a546a3d7b29 │ @</a;]~!p{jTj={) │
└──────────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────┘

UUIDNumToString

Accepts binary containing a binary representation of a UUID, with its format optionally specified by variant (Big-endian by default), and returns a string containing 36 characters in text format.

Syntax

UUIDNumToString(binary[, variant = 1])

Arguments

  • binaryFixedString(16) as a binary representation of a UUID.
  • variant — Integer, representing a variant as specified by RFC4122. 1 = Big-endian (default), 2 = Microsoft.

Returned value

String.

Usage example

SELECT
    'a/<@];!~p{jTj={)' AS bytes,
    UUIDNumToString(toFixedString(bytes, 16)) AS uuid
┌─bytes────────────┬─uuid─────────────────────────────────┐
│ a/<@];!~p{jTj={) │ 612f3c40-5d3b-217e-707b-6a546a3d7b29 │
└──────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────┘
SELECT
    '@</a;]~!p{jTj={)' AS bytes,
    UUIDNumToString(toFixedString(bytes, 16), 2) AS uuid
┌─bytes────────────┬─uuid─────────────────────────────────┐
│ @</a;]~!p{jTj={) │ 612f3c40-5d3b-217e-707b-6a546a3d7b29 │
└──────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────┘

serverUUID()

Returns the random and unique UUID, which is generated when the server is first started and stored forever. The result writes to the file uuid created in the ClickHouse server directory /var/lib/clickhouse/.

Syntax

serverUUID()

Returned value

  • The UUID of the server.

Type: UUID.

See Also