how to use UUID in Django

Chad Crowe picture Chad Crowe · Sep 11, 2015 · Viewed 57.1k times · Source

I am trying to get unique IDs for my Django objects. In Django 1.8 they have the UUIDField. I am unsure how to use this field in order to generate unique IDs for each object in my model.

Here is what I have for the UUIDField

import uuid
from django.db import models

class MyUUIDModel(models.Model):
    id = models.UUIDField(primary_key=True, default=uuid.uuid4, editable=False)

class Person(models.Model):
    ...
    unique_id = MyUUIDModel()

I can reproduce the id for the UUID model, but everytime I do I get the exact same id. :(. For Example:

person = Person.objects.get(some_field = some_thing)
id = person.unique_id.id

id then gives me the same id every time. What is wrong, how do I fix this? Thank you for your help!

Answer

Alasdair picture Alasdair · Sep 11, 2015

I'm not sure why you've created a UUID model. You can add the uuid field directly to the Person model.

class Person(models.Model):
    unique_id = models.UUIDField(default=uuid.uuid4, editable=False, unique=True)

Each person should then have a unique id. If you wanted the uuid to be the primary key, you would do:

class Person(models.Model):
    id = models.UUIDField(primary_key=True, default=uuid.uuid4, editable=False)

Your current code hasn't added a field to the person. It has created a MyUUIDModel instance when you do MyUUIDModel(), and saved it as a class attribute. It doesn't make sense to do that, the MyUUIDModel will be created each time the models.py loads. If you really wanted to use the MyUUIDModel, you could use a ForeignKey. Then each person would link to a different MyUUIDModel instance.

class Person(models.Model):
    ...
    unique_id = models.ForeignKey(MyUUIDModel, unique=True)

However, as I said earlier, the easiest approach is to add the UUID field directly to the person.