Step 1: Create a table in DynamoDB - Amazon DynamoDB

Step 1: Create a table in DynamoDB

In this step, you create a Music table in Amazon DynamoDB. The table has the following details:

  • Partition key — Artist

  • Sort key — SongTitle

For more information about table operations, see Working with tables and data in DynamoDB.

Note

Before you begin, make sure that you followed the steps in Prerequisites.

To create a new Music table using the DynamoDB console:

  1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the DynamoDB console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/dynamodb/.

  2. In the left navigation pane, choose Tables.

  3. Choose Create table.

  4. Enter the Table details as follows:

    1. For Table name, enter Music.

    2. For Partition key, enter Artist.

    3. For Sort key, enter SongTitle.

  5. For Table settings, keep the default selection of Default settings.

  6. Choose Create table to create the table.

    The Create table page with the Table details filled in.
  7. Once the table is in ACTIVE status, we recommend that you enable Point-in-time backups for DynamoDB on the table by performing the following steps:

    1. Choose the table name to open the table.

    2. Choose Backups.

    3. Choose Edit in the Point-in-time recovery (PITR) section.

    4. On the Edit point-in-time recovery settings page, choose Turn on point-in-time recovery.

    5. Choose Save changes.

The following AWS CLI example creates a new Music table using create-table.

Linux

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name Music \ --attribute-definitions \ AttributeName=Artist,AttributeType=S \ AttributeName=SongTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema \ AttributeName=Artist,KeyType=HASH \ AttributeName=SongTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput \ ReadCapacityUnits=5,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --table-class STANDARD

Windows CMD

aws dynamodb create-table ^ --table-name Music ^ --attribute-definitions ^ AttributeName=Artist,AttributeType=S ^ AttributeName=SongTitle,AttributeType=S ^ --key-schema ^ AttributeName=Artist,KeyType=HASH ^ AttributeName=SongTitle,KeyType=RANGE ^ --provisioned-throughput ^ ReadCapacityUnits=5,WriteCapacityUnits=5 ^ --table-class STANDARD

Using create-table returns the following sample result.

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "Music", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2023-03-29T12:11:43.379000-04:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 5, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-east-1:111122223333:table/Music", "TableId": "60abf404-1839-4917-a89b-a8b0ab2a1b87", "TableClassSummary": { "TableClass": "STANDARD" } } } }

Note that the value of the TableStatus field is set to CREATING.

To verify that DynamoDB has finished creating the Music table, use the describe-table command.

Linux

aws dynamodb describe-table --table-name Music | grep TableStatus

Windows CMD

aws dynamodb describe-table --table-name Music | findstr TableStatus

This command returns the following result. When DynamoDB finishes creating the table, the value of the TableStatus field is set to ACTIVE.

"TableStatus": "ACTIVE",

Once the table is in ACTIVE status, it's considered best practice to enable Point-in-time backups for DynamoDB on the table by running the following command:

Linux

aws dynamodb update-continuous-backups \ --table-name Music \ --point-in-time-recovery-specification \ PointInTimeRecoveryEnabled=true

Windows CMD

aws dynamodb update-continuous-backups --table-name Music --point-in-time-recovery-specification PointInTimeRecoveryEnabled=true

This command returns the following result.

{ "ContinuousBackupsDescription": { "ContinuousBackupsStatus": "ENABLED", "PointInTimeRecoveryDescription": { "PointInTimeRecoveryStatus": "ENABLED", "EarliestRestorableDateTime": "2023-03-29T12:18:19-04:00", "LatestRestorableDateTime": "2023-03-29T12:18:19-04:00" } } }
Note

There are cost implications to enabling continuous backups with point-in-time recovery. For more information about pricing, see Amazon DynamoDB pricing.

The following code examples show how to create a DynamoDB table using an AWS SDK.

.NET
AWS SDK for .NET
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

/// <summary> /// Creates a new Amazon DynamoDB table and then waits for the new /// table to become active. /// </summary> /// <param name="client">An initialized Amazon DynamoDB client object.</param> /// <param name="tableName">The name of the table to create.</param> /// <returns>A Boolean value indicating the success of the operation.</returns> public static async Task<bool> CreateMovieTableAsync(AmazonDynamoDBClient client, string tableName) { var response = await client.CreateTableAsync(new CreateTableRequest { TableName = tableName, AttributeDefinitions = new List<AttributeDefinition>() { new AttributeDefinition { AttributeName = "title", AttributeType = ScalarAttributeType.S, }, new AttributeDefinition { AttributeName = "year", AttributeType = ScalarAttributeType.N, }, }, KeySchema = new List<KeySchemaElement>() { new KeySchemaElement { AttributeName = "year", KeyType = KeyType.HASH, }, new KeySchemaElement { AttributeName = "title", KeyType = KeyType.RANGE, }, }, ProvisionedThroughput = new ProvisionedThroughput { ReadCapacityUnits = 5, WriteCapacityUnits = 5, }, }); // Wait until the table is ACTIVE and then report success. Console.Write("Waiting for table to become active..."); var request = new DescribeTableRequest { TableName = response.TableDescription.TableName, }; TableStatus status; int sleepDuration = 2000; do { System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(sleepDuration); var describeTableResponse = await client.DescribeTableAsync(request); status = describeTableResponse.Table.TableStatus; Console.Write("."); } while (status != "ACTIVE"); return status == TableStatus.ACTIVE; }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for .NET API Reference.

Bash
AWS CLI with Bash script
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

############################################################################### # function dynamodb_create_table # # This function creates an Amazon DynamoDB table. # # Parameters: # -n table_name -- The name of the table to create. # -a attribute_definitions -- JSON file path of a list of attributes and their types. # -k key_schema -- JSON file path of a list of attributes and their key types. # -p provisioned_throughput -- Provisioned throughput settings for the table. # # Returns: # 0 - If successful. # 1 - If it fails. ############################################################################### function dynamodb_create_table() { local table_name attribute_definitions key_schema provisioned_throughput response local option OPTARG # Required to use getopts command in a function. ####################################### # Function usage explanation ####################################### function usage() { echo "function dynamodb_create_table" echo "Creates an Amazon DynamoDB table." echo " -n table_name -- The name of the table to create." echo " -a attribute_definitions -- JSON file path of a list of attributes and their types." echo " -k key_schema -- JSON file path of a list of attributes and their key types." echo " -p provisioned_throughput -- Provisioned throughput settings for the table." echo "" } # Retrieve the calling parameters. while getopts "n:a:k:p:h" option; do case "${option}" in n) table_name="${OPTARG}" ;; a) attribute_definitions="${OPTARG}" ;; k) key_schema="${OPTARG}" ;; p) provisioned_throughput="${OPTARG}" ;; h) usage return 0 ;; \?) echo "Invalid parameter" usage return 1 ;; esac done export OPTIND=1 if [[ -z "$table_name" ]]; then errecho "ERROR: You must provide a table name with the -n parameter." usage return 1 fi if [[ -z "$attribute_definitions" ]]; then errecho "ERROR: You must provide an attribute definitions json file path the -a parameter." usage return 1 fi if [[ -z "$key_schema" ]]; then errecho "ERROR: You must provide a key schema json file path the -k parameter." usage return 1 fi if [[ -z "$provisioned_throughput" ]]; then errecho "ERROR: You must provide a provisioned throughput json file path the -p parameter." usage return 1 fi iecho "Parameters:\n" iecho " table_name: $table_name" iecho " attribute_definitions: $attribute_definitions" iecho " key_schema: $key_schema" iecho " provisioned_throughput: $provisioned_throughput" iecho "" response=$(aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name "$table_name" \ --attribute-definitions file://"$attribute_definitions" \ --key-schema file://"$key_schema" \ --provisioned-throughput "$provisioned_throughput") local error_code=${?} if [[ $error_code -ne 0 ]]; then aws_cli_error_log $error_code errecho "ERROR: AWS reports create-table operation failed.$response" return 1 fi return 0 }

The utility functions used in this example.

############################################################################### # function iecho # # This function enables the script to display the specified text only if # the global variable $VERBOSE is set to true. ############################################################################### function iecho() { if [[ $VERBOSE == true ]]; then echo "$@" fi } ############################################################################### # function errecho # # This function outputs everything sent to it to STDERR (standard error output). ############################################################################### function errecho() { printf "%s\n" "$*" 1>&2 } ############################################################################## # function aws_cli_error_log() # # This function is used to log the error messages from the AWS CLI. # # See https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/topic/return-codes.html#cli-aws-help-return-codes. # # The function expects the following argument: # $1 - The error code returned by the AWS CLI. # # Returns: # 0: - Success. # ############################################################################## function aws_cli_error_log() { local err_code=$1 errecho "Error code : $err_code" if [ "$err_code" == 1 ]; then errecho " One or more S3 transfers failed." elif [ "$err_code" == 2 ]; then errecho " Command line failed to parse." elif [ "$err_code" == 130 ]; then errecho " Process received SIGINT." elif [ "$err_code" == 252 ]; then errecho " Command syntax invalid." elif [ "$err_code" == 253 ]; then errecho " The system environment or configuration was invalid." elif [ "$err_code" == 254 ]; then errecho " The service returned an error." elif [ "$err_code" == 255 ]; then errecho " 255 is a catch-all error." fi return 0 }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS CLI Command Reference.

C++
SDK for C++
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

//! Create an Amazon DynamoDB table. /*! \sa createTable() \param tableName: Name for the DynamoDB table. \param primaryKey: Primary key for the DynamoDB table. \param clientConfiguration: AWS client configuration. \return bool: Function succeeded. */ bool AwsDoc::DynamoDB::createTable(const Aws::String &tableName, const Aws::String &primaryKey, const Aws::Client::ClientConfiguration &clientConfiguration) { Aws::DynamoDB::DynamoDBClient dynamoClient(clientConfiguration); std::cout << "Creating table " << tableName << " with a simple primary key: \"" << primaryKey << "\"." << std::endl; Aws::DynamoDB::Model::CreateTableRequest request; Aws::DynamoDB::Model::AttributeDefinition hashKey; hashKey.SetAttributeName(primaryKey); hashKey.SetAttributeType(Aws::DynamoDB::Model::ScalarAttributeType::S); request.AddAttributeDefinitions(hashKey); Aws::DynamoDB::Model::KeySchemaElement keySchemaElement; keySchemaElement.WithAttributeName(primaryKey).WithKeyType( Aws::DynamoDB::Model::KeyType::HASH); request.AddKeySchema(keySchemaElement); Aws::DynamoDB::Model::ProvisionedThroughput throughput; throughput.WithReadCapacityUnits(5).WithWriteCapacityUnits(5); request.SetProvisionedThroughput(throughput); request.SetTableName(tableName); const Aws::DynamoDB::Model::CreateTableOutcome &outcome = dynamoClient.CreateTable( request); if (outcome.IsSuccess()) { std::cout << "Table \"" << outcome.GetResult().GetTableDescription().GetTableName() << " created!" << std::endl; } else { std::cerr << "Failed to create table: " << outcome.GetError().GetMessage() << std::endl; return false; } return waitTableActive(tableName, dynamoClient); }

Code that waits for the table to become active.

//! Query a newly created DynamoDB table until it is active. /*! \sa waitTableActive() \param waitTableActive: The DynamoDB table's name. \param dynamoClient: A DynamoDB client. \return bool: Function succeeded. */ bool AwsDoc::DynamoDB::waitTableActive(const Aws::String &tableName, const Aws::DynamoDB::DynamoDBClient &dynamoClient) { // Repeatedly call DescribeTable until table is ACTIVE. const int MAX_QUERIES = 20; Aws::DynamoDB::Model::DescribeTableRequest request; request.SetTableName(tableName); int count = 0; while (count < MAX_QUERIES) { const Aws::DynamoDB::Model::DescribeTableOutcome &result = dynamoClient.DescribeTable( request); if (result.IsSuccess()) { Aws::DynamoDB::Model::TableStatus status = result.GetResult().GetTable().GetTableStatus(); if (Aws::DynamoDB::Model::TableStatus::ACTIVE != status) { std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::seconds(1)); } else { return true; } } else { std::cerr << "Error DynamoDB::waitTableActive " << result.GetError().GetMessage() << std::endl; return false; } count++; } return false; }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for C++ API Reference.

CLI
AWS CLI

Example 1: To create a table with tags

The following create-table example uses the specified attributes and key schema to create a table named MusicCollection. This table uses provisioned throughput and is encrypted at rest using the default AWS owned CMK. The command also applies a tag to the table, with a key of Owner and a value of blueTeam.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name MusicCollection \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=Artist,AttributeType=S AttributeName=SongTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=Artist,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=SongTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=5,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --tags Key=Owner,Value=blueTeam

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5, "ReadCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "TableName": "MusicCollection", "TableStatus": "CREATING", "KeySchema": [ { "KeyType": "HASH", "AttributeName": "Artist" }, { "KeyType": "RANGE", "AttributeName": "SongTitle" } ], "ItemCount": 0, "CreationDateTime": "2020-05-26T16:04:41.627000-07:00", "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/MusicCollection", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111" } }

For more information, see Basic Operations for Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 2: To create a table in On-Demand Mode

The following example creates a table called MusicCollection using on-demand mode, rather than provisioned throughput mode. This is useful for tables with unpredictable workloads.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name MusicCollection \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=Artist,AttributeType=S AttributeName=SongTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=Artist,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=SongTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --billing-mode PAY_PER_REQUEST

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "MusicCollection", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2020-05-27T11:44:10.807000-07:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 0, "WriteCapacityUnits": 0 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/MusicCollection", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "BillingModeSummary": { "BillingMode": "PAY_PER_REQUEST" } } }

For more information, see Basic Operations for Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 3: To create a table and encrypt it with a Customer Managed CMK

The following example creates a table named MusicCollection and encrypts it using a customer managed CMK.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name MusicCollection \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=Artist,AttributeType=S AttributeName=SongTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=Artist,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=SongTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=5,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --sse-specification Enabled=true,SSEType=KMS,KMSMasterKeyId=abcd1234-abcd-1234-a123-ab1234a1b234

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "MusicCollection", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2020-05-27T11:12:16.431000-07:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 5, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/MusicCollection", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "SSEDescription": { "Status": "ENABLED", "SSEType": "KMS", "KMSMasterKeyArn": "arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:key/abcd1234-abcd-1234-a123-ab1234a1b234" } } }

For more information, see Basic Operations for Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 4: To create a table with a Local Secondary Index

The following example uses the specified attributes and key schema to create a table named MusicCollection with a Local Secondary Index named AlbumTitleIndex.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name MusicCollection \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=Artist,AttributeType=S AttributeName=SongTitle,AttributeType=S AttributeName=AlbumTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=Artist,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=SongTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=10,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --local-secondary-indexes \ "[ { \"IndexName\": \"AlbumTitleIndex\", \"KeySchema\": [ {\"AttributeName\": \"Artist\",\"KeyType\":\"HASH\"}, {\"AttributeName\": \"AlbumTitle\",\"KeyType\":\"RANGE\"} ], \"Projection\": { \"ProjectionType\": \"INCLUDE\", \"NonKeyAttributes\": [\"Genre\", \"Year\"] } } ]"

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "AlbumTitle", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "Artist", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "MusicCollection", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "SongTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2020-05-26T15:59:49.473000-07:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/MusicCollection", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "LocalSecondaryIndexes": [ { "IndexName": "AlbumTitleIndex", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "Artist", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "AlbumTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "Projection": { "ProjectionType": "INCLUDE", "NonKeyAttributes": [ "Genre", "Year" ] }, "IndexSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "IndexArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/MusicCollection/index/AlbumTitleIndex" } ] } }

For more information, see Basic Operations for Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 5: To create a table with a Global Secondary Index

The following example creates a table named GameScores with a Global Secondary Index called GameTitleIndex. The base table has a partition key of UserId and a sort key of GameTitle, allowing you to find an individual user's best score for a specific game efficiently, whereas the GSI has a partition key of GameTitle and a sort key of TopScore, allowing you to quickly find the overall highest score for a particular game.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name GameScores \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=UserId,AttributeType=S AttributeName=GameTitle,AttributeType=S AttributeName=TopScore,AttributeType=N \ --key-schema AttributeName=UserId,KeyType=HASH \ AttributeName=GameTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=10,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --global-secondary-indexes \ "[ { \"IndexName\": \"GameTitleIndex\", \"KeySchema\": [ {\"AttributeName\":\"GameTitle\",\"KeyType\":\"HASH\"}, {\"AttributeName\":\"TopScore\",\"KeyType\":\"RANGE\"} ], \"Projection\": { \"ProjectionType\":\"INCLUDE\", \"NonKeyAttributes\":[\"UserId\"] }, \"ProvisionedThroughput\": { \"ReadCapacityUnits\": 10, \"WriteCapacityUnits\": 5 } } ]"

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "TopScore", "AttributeType": "N" }, { "AttributeName": "UserId", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "GameScores", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "UserId", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2020-05-26T17:28:15.602000-07:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "GlobalSecondaryIndexes": [ { "IndexName": "GameTitleIndex", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "TopScore", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "Projection": { "ProjectionType": "INCLUDE", "NonKeyAttributes": [ "UserId" ] }, "IndexStatus": "CREATING", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "IndexSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "IndexArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores/index/GameTitleIndex" } ] } }

For more information, see Basic Operations for Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 6: To create a table with multiple Global Secondary Indexes at once

The following example creates a table named GameScores with two Global Secondary Indexes. The GSI schemas are passed via a file, rather than on the command line.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name GameScores \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=UserId,AttributeType=S AttributeName=GameTitle,AttributeType=S AttributeName=TopScore,AttributeType=N AttributeName=Date,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=UserId,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=GameTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=10,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --global-secondary-indexes file://gsi.json

Contents of gsi.json:

[ { "IndexName": "GameTitleIndex", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "TopScore", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "Projection": { "ProjectionType": "ALL" }, "ProvisionedThroughput": { "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 } }, { "IndexName": "GameDateIndex", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "Date", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "Projection": { "ProjectionType": "ALL" }, "ProvisionedThroughput": { "ReadCapacityUnits": 5, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 } } ]

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "Date", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "TopScore", "AttributeType": "N" }, { "AttributeName": "UserId", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "GameScores", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "UserId", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2020-08-04T16:40:55.524000-07:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "GlobalSecondaryIndexes": [ { "IndexName": "GameTitleIndex", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "TopScore", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "Projection": { "ProjectionType": "ALL" }, "IndexStatus": "CREATING", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "IndexSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "IndexArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores/index/GameTitleIndex" }, { "IndexName": "GameDateIndex", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "Date", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "Projection": { "ProjectionType": "ALL" }, "IndexStatus": "CREATING", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 5, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "IndexSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "IndexArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores/index/GameDateIndex" } ] } }

For more information, see Basic Operations for Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 7: To create a table with Streams enabled

The following example creates a table called GameScores with DynamoDB Streams enabled. Both new and old images of each item will be written to the stream.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name GameScores \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=UserId,AttributeType=S AttributeName=GameTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=UserId,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=GameTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=10,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --stream-specification StreamEnabled=TRUE,StreamViewType=NEW_AND_OLD_IMAGES

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "UserId", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "GameScores", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "UserId", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2020-05-27T10:49:34.056000-07:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "StreamSpecification": { "StreamEnabled": true, "StreamViewType": "NEW_AND_OLD_IMAGES" }, "LatestStreamLabel": "2020-05-27T17:49:34.056", "LatestStreamArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores/stream/2020-05-27T17:49:34.056" } }

For more information, see Basic Operations for Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 8: To create a table with Keys-Only Stream enabled

The following example creates a table called GameScores with DynamoDB Streams enabled. Only the key attributes of modified items are written to the stream.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name GameScores \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=UserId,AttributeType=S AttributeName=GameTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=UserId,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=GameTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=10,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --stream-specification StreamEnabled=TRUE,StreamViewType=KEYS_ONLY

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "UserId", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "GameScores", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "UserId", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2023-05-25T18:45:34.140000+00:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "StreamSpecification": { "StreamEnabled": true, "StreamViewType": "KEYS_ONLY" }, "LatestStreamLabel": "2023-05-25T18:45:34.140", "LatestStreamArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores/stream/2023-05-25T18:45:34.140", "DeletionProtectionEnabled": false } }

For more information, see Change data capture for DynamoDB Streams in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 9: To create a table with the Standard Infrequent Access class

The following example creates a table called GameScores and assigns the Standard-Infrequent Access (DynamoDB Standard-IA) table class. This table class is optimized for storage being the dominant cost.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name GameScores \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=UserId,AttributeType=S AttributeName=GameTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=UserId,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=GameTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=10,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --table-class STANDARD_INFREQUENT_ACCESS

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "UserId", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "GameScores", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "UserId", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2023-05-25T18:33:07.581000+00:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "TableClassSummary": { "TableClass": "STANDARD_INFREQUENT_ACCESS" }, "DeletionProtectionEnabled": false } }

For more information, see Table classes in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

Example 10: To Create a table with Delete Protection enabled

The following example creates a table called GameScores and enables deletion protection.

aws dynamodb create-table \ --table-name GameScores \ --attribute-definitions AttributeName=UserId,AttributeType=S AttributeName=GameTitle,AttributeType=S \ --key-schema AttributeName=UserId,KeyType=HASH AttributeName=GameTitle,KeyType=RANGE \ --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=10,WriteCapacityUnits=5 \ --deletion-protection-enabled

Output:

{ "TableDescription": { "AttributeDefinitions": [ { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "AttributeType": "S" }, { "AttributeName": "UserId", "AttributeType": "S" } ], "TableName": "GameScores", "KeySchema": [ { "AttributeName": "UserId", "KeyType": "HASH" }, { "AttributeName": "GameTitle", "KeyType": "RANGE" } ], "TableStatus": "CREATING", "CreationDateTime": "2023-05-25T23:02:17.093000+00:00", "ProvisionedThroughput": { "NumberOfDecreasesToday": 0, "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 5 }, "TableSizeBytes": 0, "ItemCount": 0, "TableArn": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:123456789012:table/GameScores", "TableId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "DeletionProtectionEnabled": true } }

For more information, see Using deletion protection in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.

  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS CLI Command Reference.

Go
SDK for Go V2
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

import ( "context" "errors" "log" "time" "github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/aws" "github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/feature/dynamodb/attributevalue" "github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/feature/dynamodb/expression" "github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/service/dynamodb" "github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/service/dynamodb/types" ) // TableBasics encapsulates the Amazon DynamoDB service actions used in the examples. // It contains a DynamoDB service client that is used to act on the specified table. type TableBasics struct { DynamoDbClient *dynamodb.Client TableName string } // CreateMovieTable creates a DynamoDB table with a composite primary key defined as // a string sort key named `title`, and a numeric partition key named `year`. // This function uses NewTableExistsWaiter to wait for the table to be created by // DynamoDB before it returns. func (basics TableBasics) CreateMovieTable(ctx context.Context) (*types.TableDescription, error) { var tableDesc *types.TableDescription table, err := basics.DynamoDbClient.CreateTable(ctx, &dynamodb.CreateTableInput{ AttributeDefinitions: []types.AttributeDefinition{{ AttributeName: aws.String("year"), AttributeType: types.ScalarAttributeTypeN, }, { AttributeName: aws.String("title"), AttributeType: types.ScalarAttributeTypeS, }}, KeySchema: []types.KeySchemaElement{{ AttributeName: aws.String("year"), KeyType: types.KeyTypeHash, }, { AttributeName: aws.String("title"), KeyType: types.KeyTypeRange, }}, TableName: aws.String(basics.TableName), ProvisionedThroughput: &types.ProvisionedThroughput{ ReadCapacityUnits: aws.Int64(10), WriteCapacityUnits: aws.Int64(10), }, }) if err != nil { log.Printf("Couldn't create table %v. Here's why: %v\n", basics.TableName, err) } else { waiter := dynamodb.NewTableExistsWaiter(basics.DynamoDbClient) err = waiter.Wait(ctx, &dynamodb.DescribeTableInput{ TableName: aws.String(basics.TableName)}, 5*time.Minute) if err != nil { log.Printf("Wait for table exists failed. Here's why: %v\n", err) } tableDesc = table.TableDescription } return tableDesc, err }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for Go API Reference.

Java
SDK for Java 2.x
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

import software.amazon.awssdk.core.waiters.WaiterResponse; import software.amazon.awssdk.regions.Region; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.DynamoDbClient; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.AttributeDefinition; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.CreateTableRequest; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.CreateTableResponse; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.DescribeTableRequest; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.DescribeTableResponse; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.DynamoDbException; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.KeySchemaElement; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.KeyType; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.ProvisionedThroughput; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.model.ScalarAttributeType; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.waiters.DynamoDbWaiter; /** * Before running this Java V2 code example, set up your development * environment, including your credentials. * * For more information, see the following documentation topic: * * https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-java/latest/developer-guide/get-started.html */ public class CreateTable { public static void main(String[] args) { final String usage = """ Usage: <tableName> <key> Where: tableName - The Amazon DynamoDB table to create (for example, Music3). key - The key for the Amazon DynamoDB table (for example, Artist). """; if (args.length != 2) { System.out.println(usage); System.exit(1); } String tableName = args[0]; String key = args[1]; System.out.println("Creating an Amazon DynamoDB table " + tableName + " with a simple primary key: " + key); Region region = Region.US_EAST_1; DynamoDbClient ddb = DynamoDbClient.builder() .region(region) .build(); String result = createTable(ddb, tableName, key); System.out.println("New table is " + result); ddb.close(); } public static String createTable(DynamoDbClient ddb, String tableName, String key) { DynamoDbWaiter dbWaiter = ddb.waiter(); CreateTableRequest request = CreateTableRequest.builder() .attributeDefinitions(AttributeDefinition.builder() .attributeName(key) .attributeType(ScalarAttributeType.S) .build()) .keySchema(KeySchemaElement.builder() .attributeName(key) .keyType(KeyType.HASH) .build()) .provisionedThroughput(ProvisionedThroughput.builder() .readCapacityUnits(10L) .writeCapacityUnits(10L) .build()) .tableName(tableName) .build(); String newTable; try { CreateTableResponse response = ddb.createTable(request); DescribeTableRequest tableRequest = DescribeTableRequest.builder() .tableName(tableName) .build(); // Wait until the Amazon DynamoDB table is created. WaiterResponse<DescribeTableResponse> waiterResponse = dbWaiter.waitUntilTableExists(tableRequest); waiterResponse.matched().response().ifPresent(System.out::println); newTable = response.tableDescription().tableName(); return newTable; } catch (DynamoDbException e) { System.err.println(e.getMessage()); System.exit(1); } return ""; } }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for Java 2.x API Reference.

JavaScript
SDK for JavaScript (v3)
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

import { CreateTableCommand, DynamoDBClient } from "@aws-sdk/client-dynamodb"; const client = new DynamoDBClient({}); export const main = async () => { const command = new CreateTableCommand({ TableName: "EspressoDrinks", // For more information about data types, // see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/HowItWorks.NamingRulesDataTypes.html#HowItWorks.DataTypes and // https://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/Programming.LowLevelAPI.html#Programming.LowLevelAPI.DataTypeDescriptors AttributeDefinitions: [ { AttributeName: "DrinkName", AttributeType: "S", }, ], KeySchema: [ { AttributeName: "DrinkName", KeyType: "HASH", }, ], ProvisionedThroughput: { ReadCapacityUnits: 1, WriteCapacityUnits: 1, }, }); const response = await client.send(command); console.log(response); return response; };
SDK for JavaScript (v2)
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

// Load the AWS SDK for Node.js var AWS = require("aws-sdk"); // Set the region AWS.config.update({ region: "REGION" }); // Create the DynamoDB service object var ddb = new AWS.DynamoDB({ apiVersion: "2012-08-10" }); var params = { AttributeDefinitions: [ { AttributeName: "CUSTOMER_ID", AttributeType: "N", }, { AttributeName: "CUSTOMER_NAME", AttributeType: "S", }, ], KeySchema: [ { AttributeName: "CUSTOMER_ID", KeyType: "HASH", }, { AttributeName: "CUSTOMER_NAME", KeyType: "RANGE", }, ], ProvisionedThroughput: { ReadCapacityUnits: 1, WriteCapacityUnits: 1, }, TableName: "CUSTOMER_LIST", StreamSpecification: { StreamEnabled: false, }, }; // Call DynamoDB to create the table ddb.createTable(params, function (err, data) { if (err) { console.log("Error", err); } else { console.log("Table Created", data); } });
Kotlin
SDK for Kotlin
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

suspend fun createNewTable( tableNameVal: String, key: String, ): String? { val attDef = AttributeDefinition { attributeName = key attributeType = ScalarAttributeType.S } val keySchemaVal = KeySchemaElement { attributeName = key keyType = KeyType.Hash } val provisionedVal = ProvisionedThroughput { readCapacityUnits = 10 writeCapacityUnits = 10 } val request = CreateTableRequest { attributeDefinitions = listOf(attDef) keySchema = listOf(keySchemaVal) provisionedThroughput = provisionedVal tableName = tableNameVal } DynamoDbClient { region = "us-east-1" }.use { ddb -> var tableArn: String val response = ddb.createTable(request) ddb.waitUntilTableExists { // suspend call tableName = tableNameVal } tableArn = response.tableDescription!!.tableArn.toString() println("Table $tableArn is ready") return tableArn } }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for Kotlin API reference.

PHP
SDK for PHP
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

Create a table.

$tableName = "ddb_demo_table_$uuid"; $service->createTable( $tableName, [ new DynamoDBAttribute('year', 'N', 'HASH'), new DynamoDBAttribute('title', 'S', 'RANGE') ] ); public function createTable(string $tableName, array $attributes) { $keySchema = []; $attributeDefinitions = []; foreach ($attributes as $attribute) { if (is_a($attribute, DynamoDBAttribute::class)) { $keySchema[] = ['AttributeName' => $attribute->AttributeName, 'KeyType' => $attribute->KeyType]; $attributeDefinitions[] = ['AttributeName' => $attribute->AttributeName, 'AttributeType' => $attribute->AttributeType]; } } $this->dynamoDbClient->createTable([ 'TableName' => $tableName, 'KeySchema' => $keySchema, 'AttributeDefinitions' => $attributeDefinitions, 'ProvisionedThroughput' => ['ReadCapacityUnits' => 10, 'WriteCapacityUnits' => 10], ]); }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for PHP API Reference.

PowerShell
Tools for PowerShell

Example 1: This example creates a table named Thread that has a primary key consisting of 'ForumName' (key type hash) and 'Subject' (key type range). The schema used to construct the table can be piped into each cmdlet as shown or specified using the -Schema parameter.

$schema = New-DDBTableSchema $schema | Add-DDBKeySchema -KeyName "ForumName" -KeyDataType "S" $schema | Add-DDBKeySchema -KeyName "Subject" -KeyType RANGE -KeyDataType "S" $schema | New-DDBTable -TableName "Thread" -ReadCapacity 10 -WriteCapacity 5

Output:

AttributeDefinitions : {ForumName, Subject} TableName : Thread KeySchema : {ForumName, Subject} TableStatus : CREATING CreationDateTime : 10/28/2013 4:39:49 PM ProvisionedThroughput : Amazon.DynamoDBv2.Model.ProvisionedThroughputDescription TableSizeBytes : 0 ItemCount : 0 LocalSecondaryIndexes : {}

Example 2: This example creates a table named Thread that has a primary key consisting of 'ForumName' (key type hash) and 'Subject' (key type range). A local secondary index is also defined. The key of the local secondary index will be set automatically from the primary hash key on the table (ForumName). The schema used to construct the table can be piped into each cmdlet as shown or specified using the -Schema parameter.

$schema = New-DDBTableSchema $schema | Add-DDBKeySchema -KeyName "ForumName" -KeyDataType "S" $schema | Add-DDBKeySchema -KeyName "Subject" -KeyDataType "S" $schema | Add-DDBIndexSchema -IndexName "LastPostIndex" -RangeKeyName "LastPostDateTime" -RangeKeyDataType "S" -ProjectionType "keys_only" $schema | New-DDBTable -TableName "Thread" -ReadCapacity 10 -WriteCapacity 5

Output:

AttributeDefinitions : {ForumName, LastPostDateTime, Subject} TableName : Thread KeySchema : {ForumName, Subject} TableStatus : CREATING CreationDateTime : 10/28/2013 4:39:49 PM ProvisionedThroughput : Amazon.DynamoDBv2.Model.ProvisionedThroughputDescription TableSizeBytes : 0 ItemCount : 0 LocalSecondaryIndexes : {LastPostIndex}

Example 3: This example shows how to use a single pipeline to create a table named Thread that has a primary key consisting of 'ForumName' (key type hash) and 'Subject' (key type range) and a local secondary index. The Add-DDBKeySchema and Add-DDBIndexSchema create a new TableSchema object for you if one is not supplied from the pipeline or the -Schema parameter.

New-DDBTableSchema | Add-DDBKeySchema -KeyName "ForumName" -KeyDataType "S" | Add-DDBKeySchema -KeyName "Subject" -KeyDataType "S" | Add-DDBIndexSchema -IndexName "LastPostIndex" ` -RangeKeyName "LastPostDateTime" ` -RangeKeyDataType "S" ` -ProjectionType "keys_only" | New-DDBTable -TableName "Thread" -ReadCapacity 10 -WriteCapacity 5

Output:

AttributeDefinitions : {ForumName, LastPostDateTime, Subject} TableName : Thread KeySchema : {ForumName, Subject} TableStatus : CREATING CreationDateTime : 10/28/2013 4:39:49 PM ProvisionedThroughput : Amazon.DynamoDBv2.Model.ProvisionedThroughputDescription TableSizeBytes : 0 ItemCount : 0 LocalSecondaryIndexes : {LastPostIndex}
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS Tools for PowerShell Cmdlet Reference.

Python
SDK for Python (Boto3)
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

Create a table for storing movie data.

class Movies: """Encapsulates an Amazon DynamoDB table of movie data. Example data structure for a movie record in this table: { "year": 1999, "title": "For Love of the Game", "info": { "directors": ["Sam Raimi"], "release_date": "1999-09-15T00:00:00Z", "rating": 6.3, "plot": "A washed up pitcher flashes through his career.", "rank": 4987, "running_time_secs": 8220, "actors": [ "Kevin Costner", "Kelly Preston", "John C. Reilly" ] } } """ def __init__(self, dyn_resource): """ :param dyn_resource: A Boto3 DynamoDB resource. """ self.dyn_resource = dyn_resource # The table variable is set during the scenario in the call to # 'exists' if the table exists. Otherwise, it is set by 'create_table'. self.table = None def create_table(self, table_name): """ Creates an Amazon DynamoDB table that can be used to store movie data. The table uses the release year of the movie as the partition key and the title as the sort key. :param table_name: The name of the table to create. :return: The newly created table. """ try: self.table = self.dyn_resource.create_table( TableName=table_name, KeySchema=[ {"AttributeName": "year", "KeyType": "HASH"}, # Partition key {"AttributeName": "title", "KeyType": "RANGE"}, # Sort key ], AttributeDefinitions=[ {"AttributeName": "year", "AttributeType": "N"}, {"AttributeName": "title", "AttributeType": "S"}, ], ProvisionedThroughput={ "ReadCapacityUnits": 10, "WriteCapacityUnits": 10, }, ) self.table.wait_until_exists() except ClientError as err: logger.error( "Couldn't create table %s. Here's why: %s: %s", table_name, err.response["Error"]["Code"], err.response["Error"]["Message"], ) raise else: return self.table
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for Python (Boto3) API Reference.

Ruby
SDK for Ruby
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

# Encapsulates an Amazon DynamoDB table of movie data. class Scaffold attr_reader :dynamo_resource, :table_name, :table def initialize(table_name) client = Aws::DynamoDB::Client.new(region: 'us-east-1') @dynamo_resource = Aws::DynamoDB::Resource.new(client: client) @table_name = table_name @table = nil @logger = Logger.new($stdout) @logger.level = Logger::DEBUG end # Creates an Amazon DynamoDB table that can be used to store movie data. # The table uses the release year of the movie as the partition key and the # title as the sort key. # # @param table_name [String] The name of the table to create. # @return [Aws::DynamoDB::Table] The newly created table. def create_table(table_name) @table = @dynamo_resource.create_table( table_name: table_name, key_schema: [ { attribute_name: 'year', key_type: 'HASH' }, # Partition key { attribute_name: 'title', key_type: 'RANGE' } # Sort key ], attribute_definitions: [ { attribute_name: 'year', attribute_type: 'N' }, { attribute_name: 'title', attribute_type: 'S' } ], provisioned_throughput: { read_capacity_units: 10, write_capacity_units: 10 } ) @dynamo_resource.client.wait_until(:table_exists, table_name: table_name) @table rescue Aws::DynamoDB::Errors::ServiceError => e @logger.error("Failed create table #{table_name}:\n#{e.code}: #{e.message}") raise end
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for Ruby API Reference.

Rust
SDK for Rust
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

pub async fn create_table( client: &Client, table: &str, key: &str, ) -> Result<CreateTableOutput, Error> { let a_name: String = key.into(); let table_name: String = table.into(); let ad = AttributeDefinition::builder() .attribute_name(&a_name) .attribute_type(ScalarAttributeType::S) .build() .map_err(Error::BuildError)?; let ks = KeySchemaElement::builder() .attribute_name(&a_name) .key_type(KeyType::Hash) .build() .map_err(Error::BuildError)?; let pt = ProvisionedThroughput::builder() .read_capacity_units(10) .write_capacity_units(5) .build() .map_err(Error::BuildError)?; let create_table_response = client .create_table() .table_name(table_name) .key_schema(ks) .attribute_definitions(ad) .provisioned_throughput(pt) .send() .await; match create_table_response { Ok(out) => { println!("Added table {} with key {}", table, key); Ok(out) } Err(e) => { eprintln!("Got an error creating table:"); eprintln!("{}", e); Err(Error::unhandled(e)) } } }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for Rust API reference.

SAP ABAP
SDK for SAP ABAP
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

TRY. DATA(lt_keyschema) = VALUE /aws1/cl_dynkeyschemaelement=>tt_keyschema( ( NEW /aws1/cl_dynkeyschemaelement( iv_attributename = 'year' iv_keytype = 'HASH' ) ) ( NEW /aws1/cl_dynkeyschemaelement( iv_attributename = 'title' iv_keytype = 'RANGE' ) ) ). DATA(lt_attributedefinitions) = VALUE /aws1/cl_dynattributedefn=>tt_attributedefinitions( ( NEW /aws1/cl_dynattributedefn( iv_attributename = 'year' iv_attributetype = 'N' ) ) ( NEW /aws1/cl_dynattributedefn( iv_attributename = 'title' iv_attributetype = 'S' ) ) ). " Adjust read/write capacities as desired. DATA(lo_dynprovthroughput) = NEW /aws1/cl_dynprovthroughput( iv_readcapacityunits = 5 iv_writecapacityunits = 5 ). oo_result = lo_dyn->createtable( it_keyschema = lt_keyschema iv_tablename = iv_table_name it_attributedefinitions = lt_attributedefinitions io_provisionedthroughput = lo_dynprovthroughput ). " Table creation can take some time. Wait till table exists before returning. lo_dyn->get_waiter( )->tableexists( iv_max_wait_time = 200 iv_tablename = iv_table_name ). MESSAGE 'DynamoDB Table' && iv_table_name && 'created.' TYPE 'I'. " This exception can happen if the table already exists. CATCH /aws1/cx_dynresourceinuseex INTO DATA(lo_resourceinuseex). DATA(lv_error) = |"{ lo_resourceinuseex->av_err_code }" - { lo_resourceinuseex->av_err_msg }|. MESSAGE lv_error TYPE 'E'. ENDTRY.
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for SAP ABAP API reference.

Swift
SDK for Swift
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

import AWSDynamoDB /// /// Create a movie table in the Amazon DynamoDB data store. /// private func createTable() async throws { do { guard let client = self.ddbClient else { throw MoviesError.UninitializedClient } let input = CreateTableInput( attributeDefinitions: [ DynamoDBClientTypes.AttributeDefinition(attributeName: "year", attributeType: .n), DynamoDBClientTypes.AttributeDefinition(attributeName: "title", attributeType: .s) ], keySchema: [ DynamoDBClientTypes.KeySchemaElement(attributeName: "year", keyType: .hash), DynamoDBClientTypes.KeySchemaElement(attributeName: "title", keyType: .range) ], provisionedThroughput: DynamoDBClientTypes.ProvisionedThroughput( readCapacityUnits: 10, writeCapacityUnits: 10 ), tableName: self.tableName ) let output = try await client.createTable(input: input) if output.tableDescription == nil { throw MoviesError.TableNotFound } } catch { print("ERROR: createTable:", dump(error)) throw error } }
  • For API details, see CreateTable in AWS SDK for Swift API reference.

For more DynamoDB examples, see Code examples for DynamoDB using AWS SDKs.

After creating the new table, proceed to Step 2: Write data to a DynamoDB table.