That’s all. I just found this in a random script. Generates a random UUID every time it’s called. I didn’t know.
Of course I can also use uuidgen
or pipe /dev/(u)random
into something to get a random alphanumeric string - but this is built right into the kernel!
In /proc/sys/kernel/random/
, there’s also boot_id
which seems to do the same is static, and some tweakable parameters.
❤️🐧
Interesting,
non-scientific speed test:
kernel 6.1.0-37-amd64:
$ time for i in $(seq 1 100000); do cat /proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid > /dev/null; done real 3m53,388s user 1m37,366s sys 2m13,847s $ for i in $(seq 1 100000); do cat /proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid ; done | wc -l 100000
vs.
uuid
1.6.2-1.5+b11:$ time for i in $(seq 1 100000); do uuid -v4 > /dev/null; done real 4m44,854s user 1m37,867s sys 3m4,414s $ for i in $(seq 1 100000); do uuid -v4 ; done | wc -l 100000
EDIT: I’m blind (wrong result).