uuidrev K. R. Davis
Internet-Draft Cisco Systems
Updates: 9562 (if approved) 10 April 2026
Intended status: Standards Track
Expires: 12 October 2026
Longer Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs)
draft-davis-uuidrev-uuid-long-00
Abstract
This document extends Universally Unique Identifiers (UUIDs) beyond
128 bits to facilitate enhanced collision resistance and proper room
for embedding additional data within a given UUID algorithm.
These longer variable-length UUIDs ("UUID Long") leverage a
previously unused variant bit "F" and feature a new sub-typing
mechanism created to ensure there is enough space to define many
future UUID algorithms within this new variant of UUIDs.
This document updates RFC9562.
About This Document
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.
The latest revision of this draft can be found at https://github.com/
kyzer-davis/uuid-long/blob/main/draft-davis-uuidrev-uuid-long.md.
Status information for this document may be found at
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-davis-uuidrev-uuid-long/.
Discussion of this document takes place on the Revise Universally
Unique Identifier Definitions (uuidrev) Working Group mailing list
(mailto:uuidrev@ietf.org), which is archived at
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/uuidrev/. Subscribe at
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/uuidrev/.
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
https://github.com/kyzer-davis/uuid-long.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. The Need for Increased Entropy . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2. Requirements for Additional Embedded Data . . . . . . . . 4
1.3. A better UUID sub-typing system . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.4. Beyond Fixed-Length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Conventions and Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.1. Notational Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. UUID Long Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.1. Variant Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2. Sub-Typing Logic and Encoding Block . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.3. Sub-Variants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.4. Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4. Fixed-Length 160/192/256 bit UUID Long . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5. UUID Long Algorithms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5.1. Sub-Variant 0 (Experimental/Custom) . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.1.1. sv0a8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.2. Sub-Variant 1 (Random) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.2.1. sv1a4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.3. Sub-Variant 2 (Time) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.3.1. sv2a1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
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5.3.2. sv2a6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
5.3.3. sv2a7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
5.4. Sub-Variant 3 (Hashing) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
5.4.1. sv3a5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5.4.2. sv3a16 - sv3a27 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
6. Compatibility with 128 Bit UUIDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
7.1. Parsing and Length Validation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
7.2. Generation Limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
7.3. Data Integrity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Appendix A. Changelog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Appendix B. Test Vectors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
B.1. Example sv1a4 values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
B.2. Example sv2a7 Value . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
B.3. Example sv3a5 Value . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
B.4. Example sv3a17 Value . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
B.5. Further Encoding Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
B.5.1. Minimum UUID Long (160 bits) All 0s . . . . . . . . . 28
B.5.2. Minimum UUID Long (160 bits) All 1s . . . . . . . . . 29
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
1. Introduction
There are a few main driving factors behind extending UUID beyond 128
bits covered by the next sections.
1.1. The Need for Increased Entropy
While existing UUID formats provide sufficient entropy for most use
cases; there exist scenarios where even more entropy is required to
further reduce collision probabilities or guessability.
Further, while creating UUIDv7 during the draft phases of RFC9562, a
common discussion point surrounded the number of bits allocated to
entropy vs the number of bits allocated to the embedded timestamp.
The 128 bit limits on UUID created a situation where the community
had to balance timestamp granularity vs entropy. This resulted in
"sliding" bits one way or other trying to find a happy medium. While
in the end a fine balance was achieved; the entire problem could have
been avoided if there were more bits available to the UUID format.
With the additional length added by UUID Long; an application can
generate a UUID with certainty that it is truly "unique across space
and time".
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1.2. Requirements for Additional Embedded Data
Some implementations require more than 128 bits to properly embed all
of the application specific data they require for a given UUID
algorithm. Some examples include database metadata like entity
types, checksum values, shard/partition identifiers (see
[OrderlyID]), and even node identifiers for distributed UUID
generation.
UUID Long provides ample bit space for an algorithm to properly embed
all of the items required for the application logic to function.
1.3. A better UUID sub-typing system
128 bit UUIDs within the "OSF DCE / IETF" variant space are limited
to 16 versions. This version limit artificially inhibits innovation
of new UUID algorithms (a problem partly solved by UUIDv8).
This drawback of the "OSF DCE / IETF" variant space was observed
while working on [RFC9562], in particular to future name-based UUID
layouts that replace "UUIDv3" and "UUIDv5". With the number of
hashing algorithms available and the possibility that at any point
one may be deprecated; there was little chance of getting consensus
on leveraging one of the few remaining versions for such an
algorithm.
With UUID Long, as per section Section 3.2, there is ample room for
future UUID Long Algorithms.
1.4. Beyond Fixed-Length
With a fixed-length UUID, there is no room to grow as future
protocols change and severely limits the ability to innovate in the
space.
A point of contention that has come up many times across the
community is that 128 bits is not enough for modern protocols and
applications. Common alternate unique identifier lengths are 160
bits, 192 bits and 256 bits.
UUID Long provides these fixed length values and the flexibility to
accommodate future needs via the variable-length design.
Some example items that may change over time are, but not limited to,
hashing algorithms, signature algorithms, and post-quantum computing
related algorithms. Any of these could exceed a limit if UUID Long
does not select a large enough maximum value.
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See Section 7 for more considerations around generating and parsing
UUID Long values.
2. Conventions and Definitions
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
capitals, as shown here.
2.1. Notational Conventions
Throughout this document "UUID Long" generally references any
variable length UUID longer than 128 bits while "UUID Short"
references fixed-length 128-bit UUIDs in the prose of this document.
Field and Bit Layout in this document use a custom format borrowed
from [RFC9000] rather than those featured in [RFC9562]. The purpose
of this format is to summarize, not define, protocol elements. Prose
defines the complete semantics and details of structures.
Layout items are named and then followed by a list of fields
surrounded by a pair of matching braces. Each field in this list is
separated by commas.
Individual fields include length information, plus indications about
fixed value, optionality, or repetitions. Individual fields use the
following notational conventions, with all lengths in bits:
x (A):
: Indicates that x is A bits long
x (L) = C:
: Indicates that x has a fixed value of C; the length of x is described by
L, which can use any of the length forms above
x (..):
: Indicates that x has a variable length with no fixed upper limit
x (A..B):
: Indicates that x can be any length from A to B; A can be omitted to indicate
a minimum of zero bits, and B can be omitted to indicate no set upper limit
This document uses network byte order (that is, big endian) values.
Fields are placed starting from the high-order bits of each byte.
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By convention, individual fields reference a complex field by using
the name of the complex field.
Figure 1 provides an example:
Example Structure {
One-bit Field (1),
7-bit Field with Fixed Value (7) = 61,
Arbitrary-Length Field (..),
Variable-Length Field (8..24),
Field With Minimum Length (16..),
Field With Maximum Length (..128),
}
Figure 1: Example Format
3. UUID Long Format
At the core UUID Long features the same base characteristics as
[RFC9562], Section 4 featured in UUID Short. UUID Long may be
represented in all of the same ways as you would expect with a UUID
(e.g text, integer, binary, UUID URN, etc.)
The UUID Long Data Block starts at bit 129 separated by the dash
character "-" in the textual representation of UUID Long. This
separation allows at-a-glance readability around the variable-length
UUID Long Data.
The generalized layout of UUID Long is Figure 2.
UUID Long Structure {
UUID Short Part A (64),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
UUID Short Part B (60),
UUID Long Data (32..3968),
}
Figure 2: Example UUID Long Bit and Field Layout
Further, the base UUID Short string format with hex and dashes is
also found in the string format of UUID Long. Including this in the
base syntax ensures backwards compatibility as per Section 6. The
UUID Long string representation is defined by Figure 3 and Table 1.
xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-Fxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx-yy..zz
Figure 3: UUID Long Field Layout in Hex
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+========+=====================================+==========+
| ID | Description | Bits |
+========+=====================================+==========+
| x | Short UUID Bits | 124 |
+--------+-------------------------------------+----------+
| F | Frozen Variant byte (for backwards | 4 |
| | compatibility). See Section 3.1 | |
+--------+-------------------------------------+----------+
| yy..zz | Variable length UUID Long Data with | 32..3968 |
| | length described by LLLL. Minimum | |
| | one byte, maximum 496 bytes | |
+--------+-------------------------------------+----------+
Table 1: UUID Long String Layout Descriptors
A properly constructed UUID Long value will be, at a minimum, 160
bits or 20 octets. The maximum value for a UUID Long is computed as
UUID Short Length (128) + Maximum UUID Long Data Length (3,968) which
is 4,096 bits (512 octets). Note that these calculations do not take
into account the UUID Long Encoding Block (4 bytes or 32 bits)
described in Section 3.2 which is placed at the start of the
variable-length UUID Long data.
While it is theoretically possible to extend UUID Long beyond the
maximum total length of 4,096 bits; this value was chosen to be
sufficiently large to allow for any type of data that needs to be
implemented. If the time comes when UUID Long needs to be extended
beyond 4,096 bits; this specification can easily be updated to allow
for larger values due to the nature of the variable-length design of
UUID Long.
This would be accomplished by updating the UUID Encoding Block
definition (which already supports describing UUID Longs beyond 4096
bits via the two byte field) and updating the maximum length of the
UUID Long Data field in the layout definitions above.
3.1. Variant Field
This section updates [RFC9562], Section 4.1 to split the unused final
variant of "111x" into two variants as described by the Table 2
table.
Splitting the final variant space ensures that the "E" variant may be
used by future UUID Short definitions while the "F" variant is used
to signal a UUID Long Variant and maximum value for UUID Short as per
[RFC9562], Section 5.10.
These "F"rozen variant bits are set to all 1's (b1111).
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+======+======+======+======+=========+==========================+
| Msb0 | Msb1 | Msb2 | Msb3 | Variant | Description |
+======+======+======+======+=========+==========================+
| 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | E | Reserved for future |
| | | | | | definition. |
+------+------+------+------+---------+--------------------------+
| 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | F | The variant used by UUID |
| | | | | | Long in this document. |
| | | | | | Also includes Max UUID |
| | | | | | as per [RFC9562], |
| | | | | | Section 5.10. |
+------+------+------+------+---------+--------------------------+
Table 2: UUID Variant Updates
UUID Long algorithms featuring the frozen Variant F MUST use the sub-
typing logic and encoding block described in Section 3.2.
3.2. Sub-Typing Logic and Encoding Block
UUID Long does not re-use the "version" nomenclature (or bit
positions unless otherwise noted) from [RFC9562]. This serves to
help implementations easily distinguish 128 bit or 128+ bit UUIDs in
text and provide an opportunity for defining a better sub-typing
system within this new variant space.
UUID Long instead moves the sub-typing logic to a new 4 byte UUID
Long Encoding Block placed at the start of the encoded UUID Long
algorithm and prefixed after the UUID sub-variant algorithm is
computed and the underlying UUID Long value is created.
The first 2 bytes of the UUID Long Encoding Block feature a sub-
typing system with two levels of hierarchy. The first is a "Sub-
Variant" abbreviated "sv" which indicates the grouping of UUID Long
algorithm types. The second level of UUID Long sub-typing is defined
as simply the "algorithm" which can be abbreviated "a". The Sub-
Variant plus Algorithm (SV+A) serve as the identity behind a
particular UUID Long value.
With this in mind "Sub-Variant 1, Algorithm 4" can be expressed as
"sv1a4" or "UUIDsv1a4" throughout this document. Note that "UUIDv4"
or "UUID Version 4" is usually used to reference a UUID algorithm as
specified by [RFC9562], Section 5.4 and does not represent UUID Long
algorithms in this document.
The final 2 bytes of the UUID Long Encoding Block include a length
descriptor, expressed in octets (bytes), for the variable-length UUID
Long data which can be used by applications in order to understand
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where a UUID Long value ends. The value stored in this field
represents the number of octets of UUID Long data following the UUID
Short portion, not a bit count or character count. The length
descriptor MUST NOT take into account the UUID Long Encoding Block
itself and only describe the octet length of the variable-length UUID
Long data.
The full 4 byte UUID Encoding block can be observed in Figure 4 or
Figure 5 and described succinctly in Table 3.
UUID Long Encoding Block {
Sub-Variant Encoding (8),
Algorithm Encoding (8),
UUID Long Data Length Descriptor (16)
}
Figure 4: Example UUID Long Encoding Block Bit and Field Layout
SVAALLLL-xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-Fxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx-xx..zz
Figure 5: UUID Long Encoding Block and UUID Long Field Layout in Hex
+======+================================================+======+
| ID | Description | Bits |
+======+================================================+======+
| SV | One Byte Sub-Variant with 256 possible values | 8 |
+------+------------------------------------------------+------+
| AA | One Byte Algorithm with 256 possible values | 8 |
+------+------------------------------------------------+------+
| LLLL | Two Byte length descriptor in octets with a | 16 |
| | max value of 496 describing the UUID Long data | |
+------+------------------------------------------------+------+
Table 3: UUID Long String Layout Descriptors
3.3. Sub-Variants
UUID Long defines four starting sub-variant groupings as defined by
Table 4.
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+================+================================+
| Sub-Variant ID | Description |
+================+================================+
| sv0 | Experimental/Custom Algorithms |
+----------------+--------------------------------+
| sv1 | Random Based Algorithms |
+----------------+--------------------------------+
| sv2 | Time Based Algorithms |
+----------------+--------------------------------+
| sv3 | Hash-based Algorithms |
+----------------+--------------------------------+
| sv4-sv255 | Reserved for future algorithm |
| | groupings as required |
+----------------+--------------------------------+
Table 4: UUID Long Sub-Variants
Future sub-variants in the space (sv4-sv255) can be allocated where a
grouping of algorithms is required; but if a current sub-variant is
applicable for a new algorithm, the new algorithm should be grouped
under a given sub-variant.
The four starting sub-variant groupings mirror the four generic types
of UUID algorithms observed in [RFC9562].
3.4. Encoding
The default, widely implemented, "hex and dash" text presentation
format of 128 bit UUID short values is already inefficient at
conveying the underlying bits of UUID. This problem is only
exacerbated by creating 128+ bit UUIDs.
Implementations generating or parsing UUID Long values MUST utilize
at least one method defined in [ALT_UUID_ENCODING] to create a more
efficient UUID Long value. The "extended hex and dash" format MAY be
utilized for UUID Long though it is discouraged. The usage of this
format throughout this document is for illustrative purposes only.
For example the minimum and maximum UUID Long values using those
found in [ALT_UUID_ENCODING] are found in the table Table 5 found by
computing the maximum character length of an all 1s value at each bit
length. At Base32 and above the number of characters used by the
minimum length of UUID Long is still less than the 128 bit hex and
dash format of UUID Short without the UUID Long Encoding Block.
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Applications MUST ensure that UUID Long values leverage natural
boundaries and pad the least significant, right-most bits where
required to achieve a proper value for encoding as various BaseXX
Alphabets in [ALT_UUID_ENCODING].
+==========+===============+===============+===============+
| Encoding | Variant | Min UUID Long | Max UUID Long |
| | | (160 bits) | (4096 bits) |
+==========+===============+===============+===============+
| Base16 | THIS DRAFT | 8 + 45 (53) | 8 + 1029 |
| | | | (1037) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base16 | [RFC4648], | 8 + 40 (48) | 8 + 1024 |
| | Section 8 | | (1032) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base32 | [RFC4648], | 7 + 32 (39) | 7 + 820 (827) |
| | Section 6 | | |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base32 | [RFC4648], | 7 + 32 (39) | 7 + 820 (827) |
| | Section 7 | | |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base32 | [Base32human] | 7 + 32 (39) | 7 + 820 (827) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base36 | --- | 7 + 31 (38) | 7 + 793 (800) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base52 | --- | 6 + 29 (35) | 6 + 719 (725) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base58 | [Base58btc] | 6 + 28 (34) | 6 + 700 (706) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base62 | [Base62ieee] | 6 + 27 (33) | 6 + 688 (694) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base62 | [Base62sort] | 6 + 27 (33) | 6 + 688 (694) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base64 | [RFC4648], | 6 + 27 (33) | 6 + 683 (689) |
| | Section 4 | | |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base64 | [RFC4648], | 6 + 27 (33) | 6 + 683 (689) |
| | Section 5 | | |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base64 | [Base64sort] | 6 + 27 (33) | 6 + 683 (689) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Base85 | [Z85] | 5 + 25 (30) | 5 + 640 (645) |
+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
Table 5: Alt UUID Encoding Length Comparison
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4. Fixed-Length 160/192/256 bit UUID Long
Although UUID Long is variable length and features a very large top
end; implementations may end up generating fixed-length UUID Long
Values as described in this section. See Section 7 for security
discussion about this topic.
A common UUID length requested by the community is 160, 192 and 256
bit UUID values. With UUID Long generating these values is a trivial
task.
We can easily calculate the new bits by using the following logic
(for completeness up to 2048 has been illustrated.) Once calculated
these can be filled with the appropriate application specific data.
Apply the Variant bits as per Section 3.1 and the appropriate sub-
variant algorithm encoding as per Section 3.2 and then build the UUID
Long Encoding Block and you now have a fixed-length UUID Long value
of the required length.
160 - UUID Short Length (128) = 32 bits of additional UUID Long data
192 - UUID Short Length (128) = 64 bits of additional UUID Long data
256 - UUID Short Length (128) = 128 bits of additional UUID Long data
512 - UUID Short Length (128) = 384 bits of additional UUID Long data
1024 - UUID Short Length (128) = 896 bits of additional UUID Long data
2048 - UUID Short Length (128) = 1920 bits of additional UUID Long data
5. UUID Long Algorithms
As mentioned in Section 3.2, UUID Long Algorithms are grouped at the
Sub-Variant level.
UUID Long first maps the [RFC9562] versions to algorithms in the
appropriate sub-variant algorithm space. The sub-variant algorithm
identifier has been 'smeared' for ease of understanding when
referencing the old values. For example: "UUIDv4 == UUIDsv1a4" and
"UUIDv7 == UUIDsv2a7" where the final number in each abbreviation
matches.
The first 16 sub-variant algorithm values (a0-a15) in each sub-
variant space are reserved for matching the appropriate [RFC9562]
versions. This ensures that a future IETF spec can define both a
UUID Short Version and UUID Long sub-variant algorithm that line up
nicely to each other. With 256 possible sub-variant algorithms in
each of the 256 sub-variant spaces; 16 reserved sub-variant algorithm
identifiers should be no problem.
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When the time comes that all 16 [RFC9562] versions have been
allocated to their appropriate UUID Long SV+A IDs, or are no longer
in need of the mapping space; outstanding sub-variant algorithm
identifiers MAY be used by future UUID Long specifications.
Other UUID sub-types that exist in other variant spaces MAY leverage
unused sub-variant algorithm identifiers, starting at a16, for UUID
Long versions of the existing algorithms.
Generally speaking for sub-variant algorithms based on the RFC9562
versions; there are two main areas that need to be described:
1. How to leverage the new UUID Long bits.
2. Define the RFC9562 version bit handling.
The following sections illustrate the current sub-variant algorithm
mappings for UUID Long along with the methods for generating a UUID
Long value for a given sub-variant algorithm.
For all algorithms the following two statements apply, even if they
are based on an RFC9562-based algorithm.
* The Variant bits are always overwritten to "F" as per Section 3.1.
* The UUID Long Encoding Block is encoded with the sub-variant id,
algorithm id and long data length descriptor as per Figure 4.
TODO: where to slot UUIDv2
5.1. Sub-Variant 0 (Experimental/Custom)
Algorithm Identifiers in this sub-variant space SHOULD be used for
custom, experimental or vendor-specific use cases. UUIDv8 has been
mapped to UUIDsv0a8 in this document and is the only current
algorithm in this space defined by Table 6.
Vendors are encouraged to use this space for testing and experimental
algorithms before finalization into another sub-variant algorithm
identifier. At which point the Algorithm Identifier in this sub-
variant can be released for continued use.
+=======+==============+========+=================+=================+
| SV ID | Algorithm | Name | 9562 Version | Algorithm |
| | ID | | (if applicable) | Definition Link |
+=======+==============+========+=================+=================+
| sv0 | a8 | Custom | UUIDv8 | Section 5.1.1 |
+-------+--------------+--------+-----------------+-----------------+
Table 6: Sub-Variant 0 Algorithms
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5.1.1. sv0a8
sv0a8 is based on UUIDv8 from [RFC9562], Section 5.8 with the
following deltas:
* UUID Long Data can be leveraged as a new "custom_d" field of
arbitrary size within the UUID Long data as shown in Figure 6.
The length of this new data is calculated and inserted into the
UUID Long Encoding Block.
* The version behavior does not need to remain the same as
[RFC9562], Section 4.2 and can be set to whatever an
implementation desires.
UUIDsv0a8 Structure {
custom_a (48),
9562 Version (4),
custom_b (12),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
custom_c (60),
custom_d (8..3936),
}
Figure 6: Example sv0a8 Bit and Field Layout
Note that where possible, for experimental use cases, implementations
are encouraged to apply for a sub-variant algorithm for their UUID
Long Algorithm.
TODO: Link to process section if this is finalized.
5.2. Sub-Variant 1 (Random)
Algorithm Identifiers in this sub-variant space MUST be related to
random, pseudorandom, or other similar methods of generating UUID
Long values.
UUIDv4 has been mapped to UUIDsv1a4 in this document and is the only
current algorithm in this space defined by Table 7.
+=======+==============+========+=================+=================+
| SV ID | Algorithm | Name | 9562 Version | Algorithm |
| | ID | | (if applicable) | Definition Link |
+=======+==============+========+=================+=================+
| sv1 | a4 | Random | UUIDv4 | Section 5.2.1 |
+-------+--------------+--------+-----------------+-----------------+
Table 7: Sub-Variant 1 Algorithms
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5.2.1. sv1a4
sv1a4 is based on UUIDv4 from [RFC9562], Section 5.4 with the
following deltas:
* UUID Long Data can be leveraged as a new "random_d" field of
arbitrary size within the UUID Long data as shown in Figure 7.
The length of this new data is calculated and inserted into the
UUID Long Encoding Block.
* The version behavior does not need to remain the same as
[RFC9562], Section 4.2 and these 4 version bits MAY also be
randomized.
UUIDsv1a4 Structure {
random_a (48),
9562 Version (4),
random_b (12),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
random_c (60),
random_d (8..3936),
}
Figure 7: Example sv1a4 Bit and Field Layout
Examples of UUIDsv1a4 can be seen in Appendix B.1.
5.3. Sub-Variant 2 (Time)
Algorithm Identifiers in this sub-variant space MUST be related to
UUIDs which feature timestamps.
UUIDv1, UUIDv6 and UUIDv7 have been mapped to UUIDsv2a1, UUIDsv2a6,
UUIDsv2a7 where required as per Table 8.
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+=====+===========+============+=================+=================+
| SV | Algorithm | Name | 9562 Version | Algorithm |
| ID | ID | | (if applicable) | Definition Link |
+=====+===========+============+=================+=================+
| sv2 | a1 | Gregorian | UUIDv1 | Section 5.3.1 |
| | | Time-based | | |
+-----+-----------+------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| sv2 | a6 | Reordered | UUIDv6 | Section 5.3.2 |
| | | Gregorian | | |
| | | Time-based | | |
+-----+-----------+------------+-----------------+-----------------+
| sv2 | a7 | Unix Time- | UUIDv7 | Section 5.3.3 |
| | | based (MS) | | |
+-----+-----------+------------+-----------------+-----------------+
Table 8: Sub-Variant 2 Algorithms
TODO: Discuss if we want sv2a16 as Unix Time-based (Nanosecond time
resolution)... this timestamp resolution was a big ask from the
community.
TODO: Reserve an sv2a17 for custom epoch time, also a big item that
came from the community.
5.3.1. sv2a1
sv2a1 is based on UUIDv1 from [RFC9562], Section 5.1 with the
following deltas:
* UUID Long Data can be leveraged as an "extended_node" field within
the UUID Long data as shown in Figure 8. The length of this new
data is calculated and inserted into the UUID Long Encoding Block.
* The node value MAY feature IEEE 802 MAC address and random data of
arbitrary size or be fully randomized using portions of the
original node bits and variable-length UUID Long data.
* The version bits MAY also be randomized since this does not affect
the sortability of this algorithm.
* The clock_seq value is reduced by 2 bits to accommodate the new
variant bits as per Section 3.1.
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UUIDsv2a1 Structure {
time_low (32),
time_mid (16),
9562 Version (4),
time_high (12),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
clock_seq (12),
node (48),
extended_node (8..3936),
}
Figure 8: Example sv2a1 Bit and Field Layout
5.3.2. sv2a6
sv2a6 is based on UUIDv6 from [RFC9562], Section 5.6 with the
following deltas:
* UUID Long Data can be leveraged as an "extended_node" field within
the UUID Long data as shown in Figure 9. The length of this new
data is calculated and inserted into the UUID Long Encoding Block.
* The node value MAY feature IEEE 802 MAC address and random data of
arbitrary size or be fully randomized using portions of the
original node bits and variable-length UUID Long data.
* The version behavior MUST remain the same as [RFC9562],
Section 4.2 to ensure proper sortability, which is a key feature
of this UUID's algorithm.
* The clock_seq value is reduced by 2 bits to accommodate the new
variant bits as per Section 3.1.
UUIDsv2a6 Structure {
time_high (32),
time_mid (16),
9562 Version (4) = 0x6,
time_low (12),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
clock_seq (12),
node (48),
extended_node (8..3936),
}
Figure 9: Example sv2a6 Bit and Field Layout
5.3.3. sv2a7
sv2a7 is based on UUIDv7 [RFC9562], Section 5.7 with the following
deltas:
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* UUID Long Data can be leveraged as a "rand_c" field within the
UUID Long data as shown in Figure 10. The length of this new data
is calculated and inserted into the UUID Long Encoding Block.
* The version behavior MUST remain the same as [RFC9562],
Section 4.2 to ensure proper sortability, which is a key feature
of this UUID's algorithm.
UUIDsv2a7 Structure {
unix_ts_ms (48),
9562 Version (4) = 0x7,
rand_a (12),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
rand_b (60),
rand_c (8..3936),
}
Figure 10: Example sv2a7 Bit and Field Layout
An Example of UUIDsv2a7 can be seen in Appendix B.2.
5.4. Sub-Variant 3 (Hashing)
Algorithm Identifiers in this sub-variant space MUST be related to
hash-based UUIDs computed using "names" and "namespaces" as defined
by [RFC9562], Section 6.5. UUIDv5 has been mapped to UUIDsv3a5 while
new hashing protocols utilize algorithms a16 through a27.
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+===+=========+=============+=============+==========+=============+
|SV |Algorithm| Name | 9562 |Algorithm | Reference |
|ID |ID | | Version (if |Definition| |
| | | | applicable) |Link | |
+===+=========+=============+=============+==========+=============+
|sv3|a5 | SHA-1 | UUIDv5 |Section | [FIPS180-4] |
| | | | |5.4.1 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a16 | SHA-224 | |Section | [FIPS180-4] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a17 | SHA-256 | |Section | [FIPS180-4] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a18 | SHA-384 | |Section | [FIPS180-4] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a19 | SHA-512 | |Section | [FIPS180-4] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a20 | SHA-512/224 | |Section | [FIPS180-4] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a21 | SHA-512/256 | |Section | [FIPS180-4] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a22 | SHA3-224 | |Section | [FIPS202] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a23 | SHA3-256 | |Section | [FIPS202] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a24 | SHA3-384 | |Section | [FIPS202] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a25 | SHA3-512 | |Section | [FIPS202] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a26 | SHAKE128 | |Section | [FIPS202] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
|sv3|a27 | SHAKE256 | |Section | [FIPS202] |
| | | | |5.4.2 | |
+---+---------+-------------+-------------+----------+-------------+
Table 9: Sub-Variant 3 Algorithms
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Note that UUIDv3 has not been mapped to UUIDsv3a3 because the current
MD5-based algorithm from [RFC9562], Section 5.3 does not have any
requirements for bits past 128. Thus there is no need for a UUID
Long equivalent of this algorithm.
5.4.1. sv3a5
sv3a5 is based on UUIDv5 from [RFC9562], Section 5.5 with the
following deltas:
* The original algorithm requires that parts of the SHA-1 hash be
truncated to fit the 128 bit layout; however, with UUID Long these
extra bits can be embedded into the UUID Long Data as
"sha1_discard" seen in Figure 11. The length of this discarded
data is calculated and inserted into the UUID Long Encoding Block.
* The version MUST NOT remain the same as [RFC9562], Section 4.2.
As a result, the bits that would have been overwritten to a hard
coded "5" are now left as the original portions of the hash.
UUIDsv3a5 Structure {
sha1_high (48),
9562 Version (4),
sha1_mid (12),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
sha1_low (60),
sha1_discard (8..3936),
}
Figure 11: Example sv3a5 Bit and Field Layout
An Example of UUIDsv3a5 can be seen in Appendix B.3.
5.4.2. sv3a16 - sv3a27
sv3a16 - sv3a27 describe Name-Based UUID generation using new hashing
algorithms. From an operational standpoint the same fields are
described for all of these algorithms. This is shown in Figure 12.
The algorithm and creation of these UUID Long values is the same as
[RFC9562], Section 5.5 with the following deltas:
* The desired hash algorithm is used in place of SHA-1.
* The 9562 Version is not used and those 4 bits retain their value
from the hash.
* The bits beyond 128 are placed in "hash_low" with the length
calculated and inserted into the UUID Long Encoding Block.
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UUID Long Hash-Based Structure {
hash_high (64),
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
hash_middle (60),
hash_low (8..3936),
}
Figure 12: Example UUID Long Hash-Based Bit and Field Layout
Example of UUIDsv3a17, using SHA-256, can be seen in Appendix B.4.
6. Compatibility with 128 Bit UUIDs
UUID Long values are prefixed with a 32-bit UUID Long Encoding Block
followed by the UUID value itself. The UUID portion (bits 33 through
160 at minimum) is structured identically to a UUID Short in the
first 128 bits. However, because UUID Long uses the "F" variant
(b1111), many existing UUID parsers and database UUID types will
reject the UUID portion during variant validation.
To derive a compatible 128-bit UUID from a UUID Long value, an
implementation MUST first strip the 32-bit encoding block prefix to
isolate the 128-bit UUID Short portion. Stripping the prefix alone
does NOT produce a value that is generally accepted as a valid
[RFC9562] UUID because the F variant may not be recognized by
existing parsers.
Implementations that need a valid 128-bit UUID SHOULD then actively
transform the isolated value by overwriting the variant bits to
produce a valid "OSF DCE / IETF" variant (b10xx) UUID. For example,
an implementation could clear the two most significant variant bits
to produce a valid RFC 9562 variant before passing the value to
downstream systems. Implementations MUST document any such
transformation and be aware that the resulting 128-bit value will
differ from the original UUID Long's UUID Short portion.
Note that the version bit-space is not a requirement in UUID Long
thus some UUID long algorithms may have varying data at this
position. The bits still exist, so for systems that do not read the
variant bit first, they may see inconsistent results if trying to
read only the version or version and then variant.
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7. Security Considerations
UUID Long shares many of the same security considerations as
[RFC9562]. The main security consideration with UUID Long is the
maximum length of data and possible buffer overflows which lead to
other vulnerabilities. Implementations that only expect 128 bit
UUIDs MUST NOT read beyond 128 bits.
7.1. Parsing and Length Validation
Implementations that parse UUID Long values MUST validate the UUID
Long Data Length Descriptor field before allocating memory or reading
data. Specifically, a parser MUST:
* Verify that the length descriptor does not exceed an
implementation-defined maximum.
* Verify that the length descriptor does not exceed the number of
remaining input bytes.
* Reject any UUID Long value where either check fails.
General-purpose UUID libraries that do not have application-specific
requirements SHOULD default to a maximum UUID Long Data length of 128
bytes (1024 bits). This default SHOULD be configurable to allow
applications with different requirements to adjust the limit as
needed.
7.2. Generation Limits
An implementation may choose to put limits on the length of UUID Long
values that are generated to protect from using UUID Long as a
conveyance mechanism to retrieve buffer overflowed data exploited by
other means. For example, an implementation may choose to generate
UUID Long values of a maximum length of 1024 bits and no more. Thus
limiting the potential for side-channel exploits that may try to take
advantage of the variable-length properties of UUID Long.
7.3. Data Integrity
By default the UUID Long value (and UUID Short) do not feature any
hash/signature method. An attacker could modify the UUID Long Data
Length Descriptor bits and include new data in an attempt to force
some buffer overflow condition or append data that was not part of
the original algorithm. An algorithm MAY choose to create a hash/
digital signature on the final UUID Long value and provide this hash
to a peer in order to provide some level of data integrity.
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Further, where possible introspection into the UUID is discouraged as
per [RFC9562], Section 6.12.
8. IANA Considerations
TODO: IANA when things are finalized. Things like add sub-variant
algorithms to sub-types section of UUID registry.
https://www.iana.org/assignments/uuid/uuid.xhtml#uuid-subtypes
9. References
9.1. Normative References
[ALT_UUID_ENCODING]
"Alternate UUID Encoding Methods", n.d.,
.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, .
[RFC9562] Davis, K., Peabody, B., and P. Leach, "Universally Unique
IDentifiers (UUIDs)", RFC 9562, DOI 10.17487/RFC9562, May
2024, .
9.2. Informative References
[Base32human]
Crockford, D. and K. Davis, "Base32 for Humans", April
2026, .
[Base58btc]
Bitcoin, "Bitcoin Base58 Implementation", commit fae71d3,
November 2008,
.
[Base62ieee]
IEEE, "A secure, lossless, and compressed Base62
encoding", November 2008,
.
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[Base62sort]
Wu, P.-C., "A base62 transformation format of ISO 10646
for multilingual identifiers", August 2001,
.
[Base64sort]
Davis, K., "A Sortable Base64 Alphabet", December 2025,
.
[FIPS180-4]
National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Secure
Hash Standard", FIPS PUB 180-4, August 2015,
.
[FIPS202] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "SHA-3
Standard: Permutation-Based Hash and Extendable-Output
Functions", FIPS PUB 202, August 2015,
.
[OrderlyID]
piljoong, "Distributed ID Formats Are Architectural
Commitments, Not Just Data Types", December 2025,
.
[RFC4648] Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data
Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006,
.
[RFC9000] Iyengar, J., Ed. and M. Thomson, Ed., "QUIC: A UDP-Based
Multiplexed and Secure Transport", RFC 9000,
DOI 10.17487/RFC9000, May 2021,
.
[Z85] iMatix Corporation, "32/Z85", 2013,
.
Appendix A. Changelog
draft-00:
* Initial Release
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Appendix B. Test Vectors
Due to the variable length nature of the UUID Long Data field there
could be an infinite number of test vectors. The sections below
attempt to summarize the key points of the sub-variant algorithms as
described by the body of this document.
TODO: Add other test vectors as things are finalized.
B.1. Example sv1a4 values
The table, Table 10, details varying levels of random bits, as well
as commonly requested UUID Long lengths (160/192/256) in an attempt
to illustrate the difference between UUID length and Embedded Data
Length. This is all compared to UUIDv4 as seen in the first row of
the table.
For example, one can generate a fixed 256 bit UUID Long value with
random data and this UUID Long value will contain 252 bits of random
after applying the 0xF variant and 0x010400 encoding block for sv1a4
with 32 bits of long data bringing the total length of the UUID Long
to 288 bits.
256 bit length with 252 bits of random data is far larger than
UUIDv4's 122 bits of random data.
However, if further guarantees are required around randomness and
size of the outputs are not a problem, then generating a 512 bit UUID
which features 508 bits of random data can also solve an applications
needs.
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+=======+======+========+=======+====+======+=======+================================================================================================+
|DOC |Type |UUID |Variant|Sub-|Total |Long |Example |
| | |Length | |Type|Random|Data | |
| | |(with | | | | | |
| | |encoding| | | | | |
| | |block) | | | | | |
+=======+======+========+=======+====+======+=======+================================================================================================+
|RFC9562|UUIDv4|128 |2 |4 |122 |n/a |73e94fe0-e951-4153-aaf3-50e4e6089d9d |
+-------+------+--------+-------+----+------+-------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|DRAFT |sv1a4 |160 |4 |32 |156 |32 |01040020-3ed8afd7-4a31-e2c5-f9c2-63e65cee20ee-0bb665e0 |
| | |(192) | | | |(x0020)| |
+-------+------+--------+-------+----+------+-------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|DRAFT |sv1a4 |192 |4 |32 |188 |64 |01040040-2f70cb74-91e5-f901-fe27-9d9d9704a625-aea06e67af31c3ef |
| | |(224) | | | |(x0040)| |
+-------+------+--------+-------+----+------+-------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|DRAFT |sv1a4 |256 |4 |32 |252 |128 |01040080-35225f5c-78a0-50ba-f1c0-4ea2d181b096-7560113a765de7610e33d2aa69142289 |
| | |(288) | | | |(x0080)| |
+-------+------+--------+-------+----+------+-------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|DRAFT |sv1a4 |512 |4 |32 |508 |384 |01040180-2e675f90-fc04-b5ae-f687-4eb094c7c24e- |
| | |(544) | | | |(x0180)|649756dcee4b980e674f9ff0bed1c0a996b1b9fae89ea0107bc703e8cb64ccb58d7e8ad573747beb32f6c73d91b4d2ca|
+-------+------+--------+-------+----+------+-------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Table 10: UUID Random Example
B.2. Example sv2a7 Value
This example UUIDsv2a7 test vector utilizes a well-known Unix epoch
timestamp with millisecond precision to fill the first 48 bits.
rand_a, rand_b, rand_c are filled with 64 bits of random data.
The timestamp is Tuesday, February 22, 2022 2:22:22.00 PM GMT-05:00
represented as 0x017F22E279B0 or 1645557742000
UUIDsv2a7 Test Vector {
UUID Long Encoding Block (32) = 0x02070040,
unix_ts_ms (48) = 0x017F22E279B0,
9562 Version (4) = 0x7,
rand_a (12) = 0xFE6,
UUID Variant (4) = 0xF,
rand_b (60) = 0x76E2B86F151FB04,
rand_c (64) = 0xE6B4400B21E888CD,
}
02070040-017F22E2-79B0-7FE6-F76E-2B86F151FB04-E6B4400B21E888CD
B.3. Example sv3a5 Value
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Namespace (DNS): 6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8
Name: www.example.com
----------------------------------------------------------
SHA-1: 2ed6657de927468b55e12665a8aea6a22dee3e35
A: 2ed6657d-e927-468b-55e1-2665a8aea6a2-2dee3e35
B: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-Fxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
C: 2ed6657d-e927-468b-f5e1-2665a8aea6a2
D: -2dee3e35
E: 2ed6657d-e927-468b-f5e1-2665a8aea6a2-2dee3e35
F: 03050020-2ed6657d-e927-468b-f5e1-2665a8aea6a2-2dee3e35
* Line A details the full SHA-1 as a hexadecimal value with the
dashes inserted.
* Line B details the F variant hexadecimal positions, which must be
overwritten.
* Line C details the final value after the variant has been
overwritten.
* Line D details the leftover values from the original SHA-1
computation (Note that these have a length of 32 bits)
* Line E details the leftover values appended to form the full UUID
Long of form sv3a5 without the encoding block.
* Line F details the full UUID Long of form sv3a5 with the encoding
block prefixed.
B.4. Example sv3a17 Value
Namespace (DNS): 6ba7b810-9dad-11d1-80b4-00c04fd430c8
Name: www.example.com
----------------------------------------------------------------
SHA-256: 5c146b143c524afd938a375d0df1fbf6fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8
A: 5c146b14-3c52-4afd-938a-375d0df1fbf6-fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8
B: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-Fxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
C: 5c146b14-3c52-4afd-f38a-375d0df1fbf6
D: -fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8
E: 5c146b14-3c52-4afd-f38a-375d0df1fbf6-fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8
F: 03110080-5c146b14-3c52-4afd-f38a-375d0df1fbf6-fe12a66b645f72f6158759387e51f3c8
* Line A details the full SHA-256 as a hexadecimal value with the
dashes inserted.
* Line B details the F variant hexadecimal positions, which must be
overwritten.
* Line C details the final value after the variant has been
overwritten.
* Line D details the leftover values from the original SHA-256
computation (Note that these have a length of 128 bits)
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* Line E details the leftover values appended to form the full UUID
Long of form sv3a17 without the encoding block.
* Line F details the full UUID Long of form sv3a17 with the encoding
block prefixed.
B.5. Further Encoding Examples
The following test vectors illustrate the minimum (160-bit) UUID Long
values encoded as all 0s and all 1s across the various BaseXX
alphabets from Table 5.
The encoding block for these examples uses sv0a0 (SV=0x00, AA=0x00)
with LLLL value 0x0004 (4 bytes of long data).
All 0s values have the F variant set at the appropriate position; all
1s values are entirely 0xFF.
B.5.1. Minimum UUID Long (160 bits) All 0s
+========+=============+======================================================+
|Encoding|Variant |Value |
+========+=============+======================================================+
|Base16 |THIS DRAFT |00000004-00000000-0000-0000-f000-000000000000-00000000|
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base16 |[RFC4648], |000000040000000000000000f00000000000000000000000 |
| |Section 8 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base32 |[RFC4648], |AAAAAAEAAAAAAAAAAAAB4AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA |
| |Section 6 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base32 |[RFC4648], |00000040000000000001S000000000000000000 |
| |Section 7 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base32 |[Base32human]|00000040000000000001W000000000000000000 |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base36 |--- |0000004000000000000778rxuo7mqegxp0fcao |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base52 |--- |AAAAAEAAAAAAAAAAAAZzXatxaqveqUnXJFs |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base58 |[Base58btc] |111115111111111115XgaZChk8x2RpiFTD |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base62 |[Base62ieee] |00000400000000001YbB1W92hKBNBJ9iy |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base62 |[Base62sort] |00000400000000001YbB1W92hKBNBJ9iy |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base64 |[RFC4648], |AAAAAEAAAAAAAAAAA8AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA |
| |Section 4 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
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|Base64 |[RFC4648], |AAAAAEAAAAAAAAAAA8AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA |
| |Section 5 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base64 |[Base64sort] |-----3-----------w--------------- |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
|Base85 |[Z85] |000040000000000&ntjHu1d=1an-h* |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------------+
Table 11: 160-bit All 0s Boundary Encoding
B.5.2. Minimum UUID Long (160 bits) All 1s
+========+=============+================================================+
|Encoding|Variant |Value |
+========+=============+================================================+
|Base16 |THIS DRAFT |00000004-ffffffff-ffff-ffff-ffff-ffffffffffff- |
| | |ffffffff |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base16 |[RFC4648], |00000004ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff|
| |Section 8 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base32 |[RFC4648], |AAAAAAE77777777777777777777777777777777 |
| |Section 6 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base32 |[RFC4648], |0000004VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV |
| |Section 7 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base32 |[Base32human]|0000004ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base36 |--- |0000004twj4yidkw7a8pn4g709kzmfoaol3x8f |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base52 |--- |AAAAAEBQBgmlPXkFMhxLjXnmwANGzikNDAP |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base58 |[Base58btc] |1111154ZrjxJnU1LA5xSyrWMNuXTvSYKwt |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base62 |[Base62ieee] |000004aWgEPTl1tmebfsQzFP4bxwgy80V |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base62 |[Base62sort] |000004aWgEPTl1tmebfsQzFP4bxwgy80V |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base64 |[RFC4648], |AAAAAEP////////////////////////// |
| |Section 4 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base64 |[RFC4648], |AAAAAEP__*__**__**__**__* |
| |Section 5 | |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base64 |[Base64sort] |-----3Ezzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz |
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
|Base85 |[Z85] |00004&j{+1Vmjq.eU!hqMq17MmuaY0 |
Davis Expires 12 October 2026 [Page 29]
Internet-Draft UUID Long April 2026
+--------+-------------+------------------------------------------------+
Table 12: 160-bit All 1s Boundary Encoding
Author's Address
Kyzer R. Davis
Cisco Systems
Email: kydavis@cisco.com, kyzer.davis@outlook.com
Davis Expires 12 October 2026 [Page 30]