The MongoId classMongoId
&reftitle.intro;
A unique identifier created for database objects. If an object is inserted
into the database without an _id field, an _id field will be added to it
with a MongoId instance as its value. If the data
has a naturally occuring unique field (say, a username or timestamp) it is
fine to use this as the _id field instead, and it will not be replaced with
a MongoId.
Instances of the MongoId class fulfill the role that
autoincrementing does in a relational database: to provide a unique key if
the data does not natually have one. Autoincrementing does not work well
with a sharded database, as it is impossible to find what the next number
should be quickly. This class fulfills the constraints of quickly
generating a value that is unique across shards.
Each MongoId is 12 bytes (making its string form 24 hexidecimal characters).
The first four bytes are a timestamp, the next three are a hash of the
client machine's hostname, the next two are the two least significant bytes
of the process id running the script, and the last three bytes are an
incrementing value.
MongoIds are serializable/unserializable. Their
serialized form is similar to their string form:
&reftitle.classsynopsis;
MongoIdMongoIdpublicstringid&null;&Methods;Fieldsid
This field contains the string representation of this object.
&reftitle.seealso;
MongoDB core docs on ids.
&reference.mongo.entities.mongoid;