ULIDs are unique, sortable identifiers that work much in the same way as UUIDs, though with some improvements:
- Lexicographically sortable
- Canonically encoded as a 26 character string, as opposed to the 36 character UUID
- Uses Crockford's base32 for better efficiency and readability (5 bits per character)
- Monotonic sort order (correctly detects and handles the same millisecond)
ULIDs also provide:
- 128-bit compatibility with UUID
- 1.21e+24 unique IDs per millisecond
- Case insensitivity
- No special characters (URL safe)
UUID can be suboptimal for many uses-cases because:
- It isn't the most character efficient way of encoding 128 bits of randomness
- UUID v1/v2 is impractical in many environments, as it requires access to a unique, stable MAC address
- UUID v3/v5 requires a unique seed and produces randomly distributed IDs, which can cause fragmentation in many data structures
- UUID v4 provides no other information than randomness which can cause fragmentation in many data structures
Install using NPM:
npm install ulid --saveULID supports the following environments:
| Version | NodeJS | Browsers | React-Native | Web Workers | Edge Functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| v3 | v18+ | Yes | Yes | Yes | ? |
| v2 | v16+ | Yes | No | No | No |
Additionally, both ESM and CommonJS entrypoints are provided.
To quickly generate a ULID, you can simply import the ulid function:
import { ulid } from "ulid";
ulid(); // "01ARZ3NDEKTSV4RRFFQ69G5FAV"You can also input a seed time which will consistently give you the same string for the time component. This is useful for migrating to ulid.
ulid(1469918176385) // "01ARYZ6S41TSV4RRFFQ69G5FAV"To generate monotonically increasing ULIDs, create a monotonic counter with monotonicFactory.
Note that the same seed time is being passed in for this example to demonstrate its behaviour when generating multiple ULIDs within the same millisecond
import { monotonicFactory } from "ulid";
const ulid = monotonicFactory();
// Strict ordering for the same timestamp, by incrementing the least-significant random bit by 1
ulid(150000); // "000XAL6S41ACTAV9WEVGEMMVR8"
ulid(150000); // "000XAL6S41ACTAV9WEVGEMMVR9"
ulid(150000); // "000XAL6S41ACTAV9WEVGEMMVRA"
ulid(150000); // "000XAL6S41ACTAV9WEVGEMMVRB"
ulid(150000); // "000XAL6S41ACTAV9WEVGEMMVRC"
// Even if a lower timestamp is passed (or generated), it will preserve sort order
ulid(100000); // "000XAL6S41ACTAV9WEVGEMMVRD"ulid automatically detects a suitable (cryptographically-secure) PRNG. In the browser it will use crypto.getRandomValues and on NodeJS it will use crypto.randomBytes.
By default, ulid will not use Math.random to generate random values. You can bypass this limitation by overriding the PRNG:
const ulid = monotonicFactory(() => Math.random());
ulid(); // "01BXAVRG61YJ5YSBRM51702F6M"You can verify if a value is a valid ULID by using isValid:
import { isValid } from "ulid";
isValid("01ARYZ6S41TSV4RRFFQ69G5FAV"); // true
isValid("01ARYZ6S41TSV4RRFFQ69G5FA"); // falseYou can encode and decode ULID timestamps by using encodeTime and decodeTime respectively:
import { decodeTime } from "ulid";
decodeTime("01ARYZ6S41TSV4RRFFQ69G5FAV"); // 1469918176385Note that while decodeTime works on full ULIDs, encodeTime encodes only the time portion of ULIDs:
import { encodeTime } from "ulid";
encodeTime(1469918176385); // "01ARYZ6S41"Install dependencies using npm install first, and then simply run npm test to run the test suite.
ulid can be used on the command line, either via global install:
npm install -g ulid
ulidOr via npx:
npx ulidYou can also generate multiple IDs at the same time:
ulid --count 15You can find the full specification, as well as information regarding implementations in other languages, over at ulid/spec.
You can test ulid's performance by running npm run bench:
Simple ulid x 56,782 ops/sec ±2.50% (86 runs sampled)
ulid with timestamp x 58,574 ops/sec ±1.80% (87 runs sampled)
Done!
