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

You're reading from   AWS Certified Database – Specialty (DBS-C01) Certification Guide A comprehensive guide to becoming an AWS Certified Database specialist

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243108
Length 472 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Kate Gawron Kate Gawron
Author Profile Icon Kate Gawron
Kate Gawron
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Toc

Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to Databases on AWS
2. Chapter 1: AWS Certified Database – Specialty Overview FREE CHAPTER 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 consistency modes

DynamoDB offers two different data consistency modes to handle different use cases:

  • Eventually consistent reads – This is the default.
  • Strongly consistent reads

Let's start by learning about eventually consistent reads.

DynamoDB is typically used for cases where data consistency is not critical to the application. For example, website session data can be lost without major impact; the user may have to log in again or they may have to add items back into their shopping cart but unlike a banking transaction, which must fully succeed and be consistent without exception, session data is classified as transient. As a result, DynamoDB defaults to what is called an eventually consistent read. An eventually consistent read means that each read request might not get data that has recently been updated. This is due to how DynamoDB stores its data; it does not wait for the write request to be written to each storage location before...

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