11 rand.Seed(time.Now().UnixNano())
12 seeds := []uint32{0xCAFE, 0xcaFE, 0xcafe, 0xCAAF, 0xFACE}
13 min, max := 0, len(seeds)-1
14 return seeds[rand.Intn(max-min+1)+min]15}
16
17var xxhash = xxHash32.New(randomSeed()) // hash.Hash32
math/rand
is much faster for applications that don’t need crypto-level or security-related random data generation. crypto/rand
is suited for secure and crypto-ready usage, but it’s slower. But in most cases, crypto/rand
is likely to be more suitable, unless the performance is critical but the application's security is not (which is rare).
It is highly recommended to use crypto/rand
when needing to be secure with random numbers such as generating session ID in a web application.
package main
import "math/rand"
func main() {
bad := rand.Int()
println(bad)
}
package main
import "crypto/rand"
func main() {
good, _ := rand.Read(nil)
println(good)
}