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+.. _healthreport_identifiers:
+
+===========
+Identifiers
+===========
+
+Firefox Health Report records some identifiers to keep track of clients
+and uploaded documents.
+
+Identifier Types
+================
+
+Document/Upload IDs
+-------------------
+
+A random UUID called the *Document ID* or *Upload ID* is generated when the FHR
+client creates or uploads a new document.
+
+When clients generate a new *Document ID*, they persist this ID to disk
+**before** the upload attempt.
+
+As part of the upload, the client sends all old *Document IDs* to the server
+and asks the server to delete them. In well-behaving clients, the server
+has a single record for each client with a randomly-changing *Document ID*.
+
+Client IDs
+----------
+
+A *Client ID* is an identifier that **attempts** to uniquely identify an
+individual FHR client. Please note the emphasis on *attempts* in that last
+sentence: *Client IDs* do not guarantee uniqueness.
+
+The *Client ID* is generated when the client first runs or as needed.
+
+The *Client ID* is transferred to the server as part of every upload. The
+server is thus able to affiliate multiple document uploads with a single
+*Client ID*.
+
+Client ID Versions
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The semantics for how a *Client ID* is generated are versioned.
+
+Version 1
+ The *Client ID* is a randomly-generated UUID.
+
+History of Identifiers
+======================
+
+In the beginning, there were just *Document IDs*. The thinking was clients
+would clean up after themselves and leave at most 1 active document on the
+server.
+
+Unfortunately, this did not work out. Using brute force analysis to
+deduplicate records on the server, a number of interesting patterns emerged.
+
+Orphaning
+ Clients would upload a new payload while not deleting the old payload.
+
+Divergent records
+ Records would share data up to a certain date and then the data would
+ almost completely diverge. This appears to be indicative of profile
+ copying.
+
+Rollback
+ Records would share data up to a certain date. Each record in this set
+ would contain data for a day or two but no extra data. This could be
+ explained by filesystem rollback on the client.
+
+A significant percentage of the records on the server belonged to
+misbehaving clients. Identifying these records was extremely resource
+intensive and error-prone. These records were undermining the ability
+to use Firefox Health Report data.
+
+Thus, the *Client ID* was born. The intent of the *Client ID* was to
+uniquely identify clients so the extreme effort required and the
+questionable reliability of deduplicating server data would become
+problems of the past.
+
+The *Client ID* was originally a randomly-generated UUID (version 1). This
+allowed detection of orphaning and rollback. However, these version 1
+*Client IDs* were still susceptible to use on multiple profiles and
+machines if the profile was copied.