This library provides utilities for automatically submitting arbitrarily-sized
batches of reads and writes to DynamoDB using well-formed BatchGetItem
and
BatchWriteItem
operations, respectively. Partial successes (i.e.,
BatchGetItem
operations that return some responses and some unprocessed keys
or BatchWriteItem
operations that return some unprocessed items) will retry
the unprocessed items automatically using exponential backoff.
Create a BatchGet
object, supplying an instantiated DynamoDB client from the
AWS SDK for JavaScript and an iterable of keys that you wish to retrieve. The
iterable may be synchronous (such as an array) or asynchronous (such as an
object stream wrapped with async-iter-stream's
wrap
method).
import { BatchGet } from '@aws/dynamodb-batch-iterator';
import DynamoDB = require('aws-sdk/clients/dynamodb');
const dynamoDb = new DynamoDB({region: 'us-west-2'});
const keys = [
['tableName', {keyProperty: {N: '0'}}],
['tableName', {keyProperty: {N: '1'}}],
['tableName', {keyProperty: {N: '2'}}],
// etc., continuing to count up to
['tableName', {keyProperty: {N: '1001'}}],
];
for await (const item of new BatchGet(dynamoDb, keys)) {
console.log(item);
}
The above code snippet will automatically split the provided keys into
BatchGetItem
requests of 100 or fewer keys, and any unprocessed keys will be
automatically retried until they are handled. The above code will execute at
least 11 BatchGetItem
operations, dependening on how many items are returned
without processing due to insufficient provisioned read capacity.
Each item yielded in the for...await...of
loop will be a single DynamoDB
record. Iteration will stop once each key has been retrieved or an error has
been encountered.
Create a BatchWrite
object, supplying an instantiated DynamoDB client from the
AWS SDK for JavaScript and an iterable of write requests that you wish to
execute. The iterable may be synchronous (such as an array) or asynchronous
(such as an object stream wrapped with async-iter-stream's
wrap
method).
Each write request should contain either a DeleteRequest
key or a PutRequest
key as described in the Amazon DynamoDB API reference.
import { BatchWrite } from '@aws/dynamodb-batch-iterator';
import DynamoDB = require('aws-sdk/clients/dynamodb');
const dynamoDb = new DynamoDB({region: 'us-west-2'});
const keys = [
['tableName', {DeleteRequest: {Key: {keyProperty: {N: '0'}}}}],
['tableName', {PutRequest: {Item: {keyProperty: {N: '1'}, otherProperty: {BOOL: false}}}}],
['tableName', {DeleteRequest: {Key: {keyProperty: {N: '2'}}}}],
['tableName', {PutRequest: {Item: {keyProperty: {N: '3'}, otherProperty: {BOOL: false}}}}],
['tableName', {N: '2'}],
// etc., continuing to count up to
['tableName', {DeleteRequest: {Key: {keyProperty: {N: '102'}}}}],
];
for await (const item of new BatchWrite(dynamoDb, keys)) {
console.log(item);
}
The above code snippet will automatically split the provided keys into
BatchWriteItem
requests of 25 or fewer write request objects, and any
unprocessed request objects will be automatically retried until they are
handled. The above code will execute at least 5 BatchWriteItem
operations,
dependening on how many items are returned without processing due to
insufficient provisioned write capacity.
Each item yielded in the for...await...of
loop will be a single write request
that has succeeded. Iteration will stop once each request has been handled or an
error has been encountered.