While profiling RulerZ with Blackfire.io, I noticed that a non-negligible amount of time was consumed by PHP’s uniqid() function.

For those who don’t know, this function provides an easy way to generate unique identifiers based on the current date and an optional prefix.

Wait, the “current date” part can actually be interesting for our performance issue. What happens if we write something like this:

foreach ($foo as $bar) { $awesomeCollection[] = new CoolObject(uniqid(), $bar); }

A simple loop like this should run pretty fast, so if uniqid() simply relies on the current date we should have collisions… but it is not the case. Why?

The answer to this question lies in the implementation of uniqid() : in order to avoid time-induced collisions on the same host, uniqid() literally waits before getting the current date. That’s why there is a usleep(1) call in the function’s implementation.

But wait, there’s more. As the man page for usleep says, “ The usleep() function suspends execution of the calling thread for (at least) usec microseconds. The sleep may be lengthened slightly by any system activity or by the time spent processing the call or by the granularity of system timers. ”.

Yup, if you’re not lucky usleep(n) calls can suspend the execution for more than n microseconds.

Now, you may have noticed that the usleep() call is conditioned by the more_entropy variable, which happens to be a parameter exposed in the user-land uniqid . By setting more_entropy to true , we choose to provide an additional source of entropy by appending data using php_combined_lcg() (a pseudo-random number generator), thus preventing time-induced collisions without having to sleep.