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service.go
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service.go
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// THIS FILE IS AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED. DO NOT EDIT.
package dynamodb
import (
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws/client"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws/client/metadata"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws/request"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/private/protocol/jsonrpc"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/private/signer/v4"
)
// Overview
//
// This is the Amazon DynamoDB API Reference. This guide provides descriptions
// and samples of the low-level DynamoDB API. For information about DynamoDB
// application development, see the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/).
//
// Instead of making the requests to the low-level DynamoDB API directly from
// your application, we recommend that you use the AWS Software Development
// Kits (SDKs). The easy-to-use libraries in the AWS SDKs make it unnecessary
// to call the low-level DynamoDB API directly from your application. The libraries
// take care of request authentication, serialization, and connection management.
// For more information, see Using the AWS SDKs with DynamoDB (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/UsingAWSSDK.html)
// in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
//
// If you decide to code against the low-level DynamoDB API directly, you will
// need to write the necessary code to authenticate your requests. For more
// information on signing your requests, see Using the DynamoDB API (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/API.html)
// in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
//
// The following are short descriptions of each low-level API action, organized
// by function.
//
// Managing Tables
//
// CreateTable - Creates a table with user-specified provisioned throughput
// settings. You must designate one attribute as the hash primary key for the
// table; you can optionally designate a second attribute as the range primary
// key. DynamoDB creates indexes on these key attributes for fast data access.
// Optionally, you can create one or more secondary indexes, which provide fast
// data access using non-key attributes.
//
// DescribeTable - Returns metadata for a table, such as table size, status,
// and index information.
//
// UpdateTable - Modifies the provisioned throughput settings for a table.
// Optionally, you can modify the provisioned throughput settings for global
// secondary indexes on the table.
//
// ListTables - Returns a list of all tables associated with the current
// AWS account and endpoint.
//
// DeleteTable - Deletes a table and all of its indexes.
//
// For conceptual information about managing tables, see Working with Tables
// (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/WorkingWithTables.html)
// in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
//
// Reading Data
//
// GetItem - Returns a set of attributes for the item that has a given primary
// key. By default, GetItem performs an eventually consistent read; however,
// applications can request a strongly consistent read instead.
//
// BatchGetItem - Performs multiple GetItem requests for data items using
// their primary keys, from one table or multiple tables. The response from
// BatchGetItem has a size limit of 16 MB and returns a maximum of 100 items.
// Both eventually consistent and strongly consistent reads can be used.
//
// Query - Returns one or more items from a table or a secondary index. You
// must provide a specific hash key value. You can narrow the scope of the query
// using comparison operators against a range key value, or on the index key.
// Query supports either eventual or strong consistency. A single response has
// a size limit of 1 MB.
//
// Scan - Reads every item in a table; the result set is eventually consistent.
// You can limit the number of items returned by filtering the data attributes,
// using conditional expressions. Scan can be used to enable ad-hoc querying
// of a table against non-key attributes; however, since this is a full table
// scan without using an index, Scan should not be used for any application
// query use case that requires predictable performance.
//
// For conceptual information about reading data, see Working with Items
// (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/WorkingWithItems.html)
// and Query and Scan Operations (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/QueryAndScan.html)
// in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
//
// Modifying Data
//
// PutItem - Creates a new item, or replaces an existing item with a new
// item (including all the attributes). By default, if an item in the table
// already exists with the same primary key, the new item completely replaces
// the existing item. You can use conditional operators to replace an item only
// if its attribute values match certain conditions, or to insert a new item
// only if that item doesn't already exist.
//
// UpdateItem - Modifies the attributes of an existing item. You can also
// use conditional operators to perform an update only if the item's attribute
// values match certain conditions.
//
// DeleteItem - Deletes an item in a table by primary key. You can use conditional
// operators to perform a delete an item only if the item's attribute values
// match certain conditions.
//
// BatchWriteItem - Performs multiple PutItem and DeleteItem requests across
// multiple tables in a single request. A failure of any request(s) in the batch
// will not cause the entire BatchWriteItem operation to fail. Supports batches
// of up to 25 items to put or delete, with a maximum total request size of
// 16 MB.
//
// For conceptual information about modifying data, see Working with Items
// (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/WorkingWithItems.html)
// and Query and Scan Operations (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/QueryAndScan.html)
// in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
//The service client's operations are safe to be used concurrently.
// It is not safe to mutate any of the client's properties though.
type DynamoDB struct {
*client.Client
}
// Used for custom client initialization logic
var initClient func(*client.Client)
// Used for custom request initialization logic
var initRequest func(*request.Request)
// A ServiceName is the name of the service the client will make API calls to.
const ServiceName = "dynamodb"
// New creates a new instance of the DynamoDB client with a session.
// If additional configuration is needed for the client instance use the optional
// aws.Config parameter to add your extra config.
//
// Example:
// // Create a DynamoDB client from just a session.
// svc := dynamodb.New(mySession)
//
// // Create a DynamoDB client with additional configuration
// svc := dynamodb.New(mySession, aws.NewConfig().WithRegion("us-west-2"))
func New(p client.ConfigProvider, cfgs ...*aws.Config) *DynamoDB {
c := p.ClientConfig(ServiceName, cfgs...)
return newClient(*c.Config, c.Handlers, c.Endpoint, c.SigningRegion)
}
// newClient creates, initializes and returns a new service client instance.
func newClient(cfg aws.Config, handlers request.Handlers, endpoint, signingRegion string) *DynamoDB {
svc := &DynamoDB{
Client: client.New(
cfg,
metadata.ClientInfo{
ServiceName: ServiceName,
SigningRegion: signingRegion,
Endpoint: endpoint,
APIVersion: "2012-08-10",
JSONVersion: "1.0",
TargetPrefix: "DynamoDB_20120810",
},
handlers,
),
}
// Handlers
svc.Handlers.Sign.PushBack(v4.Sign)
svc.Handlers.Build.PushBack(jsonrpc.Build)
svc.Handlers.Unmarshal.PushBack(jsonrpc.Unmarshal)
svc.Handlers.UnmarshalMeta.PushBack(jsonrpc.UnmarshalMeta)
svc.Handlers.UnmarshalError.PushBack(jsonrpc.UnmarshalError)
// Run custom client initialization if present
if initClient != nil {
initClient(svc.Client)
}
return svc
}
// newRequest creates a new request for a DynamoDB operation and runs any
// custom request initialization.
func (c *DynamoDB) newRequest(op *request.Operation, params, data interface{}) *request.Request {
req := c.NewRequest(op, params, data)
// Run custom request initialization if present
if initRequest != nil {
initRequest(req)
}
return req
}