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objectid
– Tools for working with MongoDB ObjectIds¶
Tools for working with MongoDB ObjectIds.
Initialize a new ObjectId.
An ObjectId is a 12-byte unique identifier consisting of:
a 4-byte value representing the seconds since the Unix epoch,
a 5-byte random value,
a 3-byte counter, starting with a random value.
By default, ObjectId()
creates a new unique identifier. The optional parameter oid can be an ObjectId
, or any 12 bytes
.
For example, the 12 bytes b’foo-bar-quux’ do not follow the ObjectId specification but they are acceptable input:
>>> ObjectId(b'foo-bar-quux') ObjectId('666f6f2d6261722d71757578')
oid can also be a str
of 24 hex digits:
>>> ObjectId('0123456789ab0123456789ab') ObjectId('0123456789ab0123456789ab')
Raises InvalidId
if oid is not 12 bytes nor 24 hex digits, or TypeError
if oid is not an accepted type.
See also
The MongoDB documentation on ObjectIds.
Changed in version 3.8: ObjectId
now implements the ObjectID specification version 0.2.
Get a hex encoded version of ObjectId
o.
The following property always holds:
>>> o = ObjectId() >>> o == ObjectId(str(o)) True
This representation is useful for urls or other places where o.binary
is inappropriate.
12-byte binary representation of this ObjectId.
Create a dummy ObjectId instance with a specific generation time.
This method is useful for doing range queries on a field containing ObjectId
instances.
Warning
It is not safe to insert a document containing an ObjectId generated using this method. This method deliberately eliminates the uniqueness guarantee that ObjectIds generally provide. ObjectIds generated with this method should be used exclusively in queries.
generation_time will be converted to UTC. Naive datetime instances will be treated as though they already contain UTC.
An example using this helper to get documents where "_id"
was generated before January 1, 2010 would be:
>>> gen_time = datetime.datetime(2010, 1, 1) >>> dummy_id = ObjectId.from_datetime(gen_time) >>> result = collection.find({"_id": {"$lt": dummy_id}})
A datetime.datetime
instance representing the time of generation for this ObjectId
.
The datetime.datetime
is timezone aware, and represents the generation time in UTC. It is precise to the second.
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