| import { getRandomBytesAsync } from 'expo-random' |
| |
| import { urlAlphabet } from '../url-alphabet/index.js' |
| |
| let random = getRandomBytesAsync |
| |
| let customAlphabet = (alphabet, size) => { |
| // First, a bitmask is necessary to generate the ID. The bitmask makes bytes |
| // values closer to the alphabet size. The bitmask calculates the closest |
| // `2^31 - 1` number, which exceeds the alphabet size. |
| // For example, the bitmask for the alphabet size 30 is 31 (00011111). |
| let mask = (2 << (31 - Math.clz32((alphabet.length - 1) | 1))) - 1 |
| // Though, the bitmask solution is not perfect since the bytes exceeding |
| // the alphabet size are refused. Therefore, to reliably generate the ID, |
| // the random bytes redundancy has to be satisfied. |
| |
| // Note: every hardware random generator call is performance expensive, |
| // because the system call for entropy collection takes a lot of time. |
| // So, to avoid additional system calls, extra bytes are requested in advance. |
| |
| // Next, a step determines how many random bytes to generate. |
| // The number of random bytes gets decided upon the ID size, mask, |
| // alphabet size, and magic number 1.6 (using 1.6 peaks at performance |
| // according to benchmarks). |
| let step = Math.ceil((1.6 * mask * size) / alphabet.length) |
| |
| let tick = id => |
| random(step).then(bytes => { |
| // A compact alternative for `for (var i = 0; i < step; i++)`. |
| let i = step |
| while (i--) { |
| // Adding `|| ''` refuses a random byte that exceeds the alphabet size. |
| id += alphabet[bytes[i] & mask] || '' |
| if (id.length === size) return id |
| } |
| return tick(id) |
| }) |
| |
| return () => tick('') |
| } |
| |
| let nanoid = (size = 21) => |
| random(size).then(bytes => { |
| let id = '' |
| // A compact alternative for `for (var i = 0; i < step; i++)`. |
| while (size--) { |
| // It is incorrect to use bytes exceeding the alphabet size. |
| // The following mask reduces the random byte in the 0-255 value |
| // range to the 0-63 value range. Therefore, adding hacks, such |
| // as empty string fallback or magic numbers, is unneccessary because |
| // the bitmask trims bytes down to the alphabet size. |
| id += urlAlphabet[bytes[size] & 63] |
| } |
| return id |
| }) |
| |
| export { nanoid, customAlphabet, random } |