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AWS Certified Database – Specialty (DBS-C01) Certification Guide

You're reading from  AWS Certified Database – Specialty (DBS-C01) Certification Guide

Product type Book
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243108
Pages 472 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Kate Gawron Kate Gawron
Profile icon Kate Gawron

Table of Contents (24) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to Databases on AWS
2. Chapter 1: AWS Certified Database – Specialty Overview 3. Chapter 2: Understanding Database Fundamentals 4. Chapter 3: Understanding AWS Infrastructure 5. Part 2: Workload-Specific Database Design
6. Chapter 4: Relational Database Service 7. Chapter 5: Amazon Aurora 8. Chapter 6: Amazon DynamoDB 9. Chapter 7: Redshift and DocumentDB 10. Chapter 8: Neptune, Quantum Ledger Database, and Timestream 11. Chapter 9: Amazon ElastiCache 12. Part 3: Deployment and Migration and Database Security
13. Chapter 10: The AWS Schema Conversion Tool and AWS Database Migration Service 14. Chapter 11: Database Task Automation 15. Chapter 12: AWS Database Security 16. Part 4: Monitoring and Optimization
17. Chapter 13: CloudWatch and Logging 18. Chapter 14: Backup and Restore 19. Chapter 15: Troubleshooting Tools and Techniques 20. Part 5: Assessment
21. Chapter 16: Exam Practice
22. Chapter 17: Answers 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding DynamoDB pricing and limits

DynamoDB is a serverless managed service, which means you do not pick an instance size to control the performance. Instead, DynamoDB is charged based on how much data you read and write to your table. DynamoDB has four main components to its pricing:

  • Read request units
  • Write request units
  • Storage
  • Additional features such as DAX, global tables, and streams

Let's start by looking at read and write capacity units.

Request units

Request units are the main usage mechanism within DynamoDB. The number of requests you need for each task will depend on the amount of data being returned as well as the read/write type:

  • One read request will give you one strongly consistent read request or two eventually consistent requests for every 4 KB of data.
  • Two read requests will give you one transactional read for every 4 KB of data.
  • One write request will give you one standard write for every 1 KB of data...
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