/usr/share/perl5/BSON/OID.pm is in libbson-perl 1.4.0-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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use strict;
use warnings;
package BSON::OID;
# ABSTRACT: BSON type wrapper for Object IDs
use version;
our $VERSION = 'v1.4.0';
use Carp;
use Config;
use Digest::MD5 'md5';
use Scalar::Util 'looks_like_number';
use Sys::Hostname;
use threads::shared; # NOP if threads.pm not loaded
use constant {
HAS_INT64 => $Config{use64bitint},
INT64_MAX => 9223372036854775807,
INT32_MAX => 2147483647,
ZERO_FILL => ("\0" x 8),
};
use Moo;
#pod =attr oid
#pod
#pod A 12-byte (packed) Object ID (OID) string. If not provided, a new OID
#pod will be generated.
#pod
#pod =cut
has 'oid' => (
is => 'ro'
);
use namespace::clean -except => 'meta';
# OID generation
{
my $_inc : shared;
{
lock($_inc);
$_inc = int( rand(0xFFFFFF) );
}
my $_host = substr( md5(hostname), 0, 3 );
#<<<
sub _packed_oid {
my $time = defined $_[0] ? $_[0] : time;
return pack(
'Na3na3', $time, $_host, $$ % 0xFFFF,
substr( pack( 'N', do { lock($_inc); $_inc++; $_inc %= 0xFFFFFF }), 1, 3)
);
}
sub _packed_oid_special {
my ($time, $fill) = @_;
return pack('Na8', $time, $fill);
}
#>>>
# see if we have XS OID generation
BEGIN {
if ( $INC{'BSON/XS.pm'} && BSON::XS->can('_generate_oid') ) {
*_generate_oid = \&BSON::XS::_generate_oid;
}
else {
*_generate_oid = \&_packed_oid;
}
}
}
sub BUILD {
my ($self) = @_;
$self->{oid} = _generate_oid() unless defined $self->{oid};
croak "Invalid 'oid' field: OIDs must be 12 bytes"
unless length( $self->oid ) == 12;
return;
}
#pod =method new
#pod
#pod my $oid = BSON::OID->new;
#pod
#pod my $oid = BSON::OID->new( oid => $twelve_bytes );
#pod
#pod This is the preferred way to generate an OID. Without arguments, a
#pod unique OID will be generated. With a 12-byte string, an object can
#pod be created around an existing OID byte-string.
#pod
#pod =method from_epoch
#pod
#pod # generate a new OID
#pod
#pod my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch( $epoch, 0); # other bytes zeroed
#pod my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch( $epoch, $eight_more_bytes );
#pod
#pod # reset an existing OID
#pod
#pod $oid->from_epoch( $new_epoch, 0 );
#pod $oid->from_epoch( $new_epoch, $eight_more_bytes );
#pod
#pod B<Warning!> You should not rely on this method for a source of unique IDs.
#pod Use this method for query boundaries, only.
#pod
#pod An OID is a twelve-byte string. Typically, the first four bytes represent
#pod integer seconds since the Unix epoch in big-endian format. The remaining
#pod bytes ensure uniqueness.
#pod
#pod With this method, the first argument to this method is an epoch time (in
#pod integer seconds). The second argument is the remaining eight-bytes to
#pod append to the string.
#pod
#pod When called as a class method, it returns a new BSON::OID object. When
#pod called as an object method, it mutates the existing internal OID value.
#pod
#pod As a special case, if the second argument is B<defined> and zero ("0"),
#pod then the remaining bytes will be zeroed.
#pod
#pod my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch(1467545180, 0);
#pod
#pod This is particularly useful when looking for documents by their insertion
#pod date: you can simply look for OIDs which are greater or lower than the one
#pod generated with this method.
#pod
#pod For backwards compatibility with L<Mango>, if called without a second
#pod argument, the method generates the remainder of the fields "like usual".
#pod This is equivalent to calling C<< BSON::OID->new >> and replacing the first
#pod four bytes with the packed epoch value.
#pod
#pod # UNSAFE: don't do this unless you have to
#pod
#pod my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch(1467545180);
#pod
#pod If you insist on creating a unique OID with C<from_epoch>, set the
#pod remaining eight bytes in a way that guarantees thread-safe uniqueness, such
#pod as from a reliable source of randomness (see L<Crypt::URandom>).
#pod
#pod use Crypt::Random 'urandom';
#pod my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch(1467545180, urandom(8));
#pod
#pod =cut
sub from_epoch {
my ($self, $epoch, $fill) = @_;
croak "BSON::OID::from_epoch expects an epoch in seconds, not '$epoch'"
unless looks_like_number( $epoch );
$fill = ZERO_FILL if defined $fill && looks_like_number($fill) && $fill == 0;
croak "BSON::OID expects the second argument to be missing, 0 or an 8-byte string"
unless @_ == 2 || length($fill) == 8;
my $oid = defined $fill
? _packed_oid_special($epoch, $fill)
: _packed_oid($epoch);
if (ref $self) {
$self->{oid} = $oid;
}
else {
$self = $self->new(oid => $oid);
}
return $self;
}
#pod =method hex
#pod
#pod Returns the C<oid> attributes as 24-byte hexadecimal value
#pod
#pod =cut
sub hex {
my ($self) = @_;
return defined $self->{_hex}
? $self->{_hex}
: ( $self->{_hex} = unpack( "H*", $self->{oid} ) );
}
#pod =method get_time
#pod
#pod Returns a number corresponding to the portion of the C<oid> value that
#pod represents seconds since the epoch.
#pod
#pod =cut
sub get_time {
return unpack( "N", substr( $_[0]->{oid}, 0, 4 ) );
}
# for testing purposes
sub _get_pid {
return unpack( "n", substr( $_[0]->{oid}, 7, 2 ) );
}
#pod =method TO_JSON
#pod
#pod Returns a string for this OID, with the OID given as 24 hex digits.
#pod
#pod If the C<BSON_EXTJSON> option is true, it will instead be compatible with
#pod MongoDB's L<extended JSON|https://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/mongodb-extended-json/>
#pod format, which represents it as a document as follows:
#pod
#pod {"$oid" : "012345678901234567890123"}
#pod
#pod =cut
sub TO_JSON {
return $_[0]->hex unless $ENV{BSON_EXTJSON};
return {'$oid' => $_[0]->hex };
}
# For backwards compatibility
*to_string = \&hex;
*value = \&hex;
use overload (
'""' => \&hex,
fallback => 1,
);
1;
=pod
=encoding UTF-8
=head1 NAME
BSON::OID - BSON type wrapper for Object IDs
=head1 VERSION
version v1.4.0
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use BSON::Types ':all';
my $oid = bson_oid();
my $oid = bson_oid->from_epoch(1467543496, 0); # for queries only
my $bytes = $oid->oid;
my $hex = $oid->hex;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module provides a wrapper around a BSON L<Object
ID|https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/method/ObjectId/>.
=head1 ATTRIBUTES
=head2 oid
A 12-byte (packed) Object ID (OID) string. If not provided, a new OID
will be generated.
=head1 METHODS
=head2 new
my $oid = BSON::OID->new;
my $oid = BSON::OID->new( oid => $twelve_bytes );
This is the preferred way to generate an OID. Without arguments, a
unique OID will be generated. With a 12-byte string, an object can
be created around an existing OID byte-string.
=head2 from_epoch
# generate a new OID
my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch( $epoch, 0); # other bytes zeroed
my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch( $epoch, $eight_more_bytes );
# reset an existing OID
$oid->from_epoch( $new_epoch, 0 );
$oid->from_epoch( $new_epoch, $eight_more_bytes );
B<Warning!> You should not rely on this method for a source of unique IDs.
Use this method for query boundaries, only.
An OID is a twelve-byte string. Typically, the first four bytes represent
integer seconds since the Unix epoch in big-endian format. The remaining
bytes ensure uniqueness.
With this method, the first argument to this method is an epoch time (in
integer seconds). The second argument is the remaining eight-bytes to
append to the string.
When called as a class method, it returns a new BSON::OID object. When
called as an object method, it mutates the existing internal OID value.
As a special case, if the second argument is B<defined> and zero ("0"),
then the remaining bytes will be zeroed.
my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch(1467545180, 0);
This is particularly useful when looking for documents by their insertion
date: you can simply look for OIDs which are greater or lower than the one
generated with this method.
For backwards compatibility with L<Mango>, if called without a second
argument, the method generates the remainder of the fields "like usual".
This is equivalent to calling C<< BSON::OID->new >> and replacing the first
four bytes with the packed epoch value.
# UNSAFE: don't do this unless you have to
my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch(1467545180);
If you insist on creating a unique OID with C<from_epoch>, set the
remaining eight bytes in a way that guarantees thread-safe uniqueness, such
as from a reliable source of randomness (see L<Crypt::URandom>).
use Crypt::Random 'urandom';
my $oid = BSON::OID->from_epoch(1467545180, urandom(8));
=head2 hex
Returns the C<oid> attributes as 24-byte hexadecimal value
=head2 get_time
Returns a number corresponding to the portion of the C<oid> value that
represents seconds since the epoch.
=head2 TO_JSON
Returns a string for this OID, with the OID given as 24 hex digits.
If the C<BSON_EXTJSON> option is true, it will instead be compatible with
MongoDB's L<extended JSON|https://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/mongodb-extended-json/>
format, which represents it as a document as follows:
{"$oid" : "012345678901234567890123"}
=for Pod::Coverage op_eq to_string value generate_oid BUILD
=head1 OVERLOAD
The string operator is overloaded so any string operations will actually use
the 24-character hex value of the OID. Fallback overloading is enabled.
=head1 THREADS
This module is thread safe.
=head1 AUTHORS
=over 4
=item *
David Golden <david@mongodb.com>
=item *
Stefan G. <minimalist@lavabit.com>
=back
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2017 by Stefan G. and MongoDB, Inc.
This is free software, licensed under:
The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004
=cut
__END__
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