The UNIQUEIDENTIFIER data type is used for storage of UUID (also known as GUID) values.
The UNIQUEIDENTIFIER data type is often used for a primary key or other unique column to hold UUID (Universally Unique Identifier) values that can be used to uniquely identify rows. The NEWID function generates UUID values in such a way that a value produced on one computer does not match a UUID produced on another computer. UNIQUEIDENTIFIER values generated using NEWID can therefore be used as keys in a synchronization environment.
For example, the following statement updates the table mytab and sets the value of the column uid_col to a unique identifier generated by the NEWID function, if the current value of the column is NULL.
UPDATE mytab SET uid_col = NEWID() WHERE uid_col IS NULL
If you execute the following statement,
SELECT NEWID()
the unique identifier is returned as a BINARY(16). For example, the value might be 0xd3749fe09cf446e399913bc6434f1f08. You can convert this string into a readable format using the UUIDTOSTR() function.
UUID values are also referred to as GUIDs (Globally Unique Identifier).
The STRTOUUID and UUIDTOSTR functions are used to convert values between UNIQUEIDENTIFIER and string representations.
UNIQUEIDENTIFIER values are stored and returned as BINARY(16).
Because UNIQUEIDENTIFIER values are large, using UNSIGNED BIGINT or UNSIGNED INT identity columns instead of UNIQUEIDENTIFIER is more efficient, if you do not need cross database unique identifiers.