8 unstable releases (3 breaking)

0.4.1 Feb 29, 2024
0.4.0 Dec 21, 2023
0.3.1 Nov 14, 2023
0.3.0 Sep 10, 2023
0.1.1 Jul 21, 2023

#122 in Programming languages

Download history 496/week @ 2024-08-07 361/week @ 2024-08-14 422/week @ 2024-08-21 376/week @ 2024-08-28 311/week @ 2024-09-04 344/week @ 2024-09-11 279/week @ 2024-09-18 456/week @ 2024-09-25 359/week @ 2024-10-02 266/week @ 2024-10-09 349/week @ 2024-10-16 394/week @ 2024-10-23 321/week @ 2024-10-30 406/week @ 2024-11-06 324/week @ 2024-11-13 275/week @ 2024-11-20

1,397 downloads per month
Used in 6 crates (4 directly)

MIT license

15KB
246 lines

Sqids Rust

Latest version Github Actions Docs Downloads

Sqids (pronounced "squids") is a small library that lets you generate unique IDs from numbers. It's good for link shortening, fast & URL-safe ID generation and decoding back into numbers for quicker database lookups.

Features:

  • Encode multiple numbers - generate short IDs from one or several non-negative numbers
  • Quick decoding - easily decode IDs back into numbers
  • Unique IDs - generate unique IDs by shuffling the alphabet once
  • ID padding - provide minimum length to make IDs more uniform
  • URL safe - auto-generated IDs do not contain common profanity
  • Randomized output - Sequential input provides nonconsecutive IDs
  • Many implementations - Support for 40+ programming languages

🧰 Use-cases

Good for:

  • Generating IDs for public URLs (eg: link shortening)
  • Generating IDs for internal systems (eg: event tracking)
  • Decoding for quicker database lookups (eg: by primary keys)

Not good for:

  • Sensitive data (this is not an encryption library)
  • User IDs (can be decoded revealing user count)

🚀 Getting started

Add using cargo:

cargo add sqids

👩‍💻 Examples

Simple encode & decode:

# use sqids::Sqids;
let sqids = Sqids::default();
let id = sqids.encode(&[1, 2, 3])?; // "86Rf07"
let numbers = sqids.decode(&id); // [1, 2, 3]
# Ok::<(), sqids::Error>(())

Note 🚧 Because of the algorithm's design, multiple IDs can decode back into the same sequence of numbers. If it's important to your design that IDs are canonical, you have to manually re-encode decoded numbers and check that the generated ID matches.

Enforce a minimum length for IDs:

# use sqids::Sqids;
let sqids = Sqids::builder()
  .min_length(10)
  .build()?;
let id = sqids.encode(&[1, 2, 3])?; // "86Rf07xd4z"
let numbers = sqids.decode(&id); // [1, 2, 3]
# Ok::<(), sqids::Error>(())

Randomize IDs by providing a custom alphabet:

# use sqids::Sqids;
let sqids = Sqids::builder()
  .alphabet("FxnXM1kBN6cuhsAvjW3Co7l2RePyY8DwaU04Tzt9fHQrqSVKdpimLGIJOgb5ZE".chars().collect())
  .build()?;
let id = sqids.encode(&[1, 2, 3])?; // "B4aajs"
let numbers = sqids.decode(&id); // [1, 2, 3]
# Ok::<(), sqids::Error>(())

Prevent specific words from appearing anywhere in the auto-generated IDs:

# use sqids::Sqids;
let sqids = Sqids::builder()
  .blocklist(["86Rf07".to_string()].into())
  .build()?;
let id = sqids.encode(&[1, 2, 3])?; // "se8ojk"
let numbers = sqids.decode(&id); // [1, 2, 3]
# Ok::<(), sqids::Error>(())

📝 License

MIT

Dependencies

~1.2–2.1MB
~44K SLoC