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I want the following table structure, to store an auto increment a row's pid* attribute

          | id                                   | timstamp    | pid*
          | 00000000-1111-2222-93bb-0371fcb45674 | 0           | 1
          | 00000000-1111-2222-93bb-ee742a825e88 | 1           | 2
          | 00000000-1111-2222-93bb-bfac8753c0ba | 2           | 3
PutItem ->  autoId()                             | timestamp() | max(pid) + 1 = 4 ??

For PutItem operation, Is something like the following 1) possible, and 2) acceptable in DynamoDB land?

"pid" : $util.dynamodb.toDynamoDBJson(records.findMax(pid) + 1) # just pseudo code

3) How might one implement the above using DyanmoDB resolver mapper template?

Use case:

I'm trying to use AWS DynamoDB to back GraphQL, managed by AWS AppSync, the following is the request mapping template for Mutation.createFoo

{
    "version" : "2018-05-29",
    "operation" : "PutItem",
    "key" : {
        "id": $util.dynamodb.toDynamoDBJson($util.autoId()),
    },
    "attributeValues" : {
        "timestamp" :  $util.dynamodb.toDynamoDBJson($util.time.nowEpochMilliSeconds()),
        "pid" :  $util.dynamodb.toDynamoDBJson($ctx.args.input.pid), # currently client provided but it is not acceptable
        ...
    }
}

The primary key id is an UUID auto-generated by DynamoDB which is fine. But our use-case requires a incrementing pid for each new Foo in our FooTable. The business model requires at least for show a unique pid, while under the hood, queries like GetItem the UUID and timestamp will be used instead and business as usual.

I'm also weary to call for a change in business model because of an implementation detail issue.

References:

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  • 1
    There are some good discussions in these threads: stackoverflow.com/questions/37072341/… stackoverflow.com/questions/11721308/… stackoverflow.com/questions/13264236/… - in general, it's usually not a good idea, but see the responses on these questions for thoughts on how it can be done.
    – parkerfath
    Sep 4, 2019 at 1:26
  • multiple questions: do you need it to be auto-incrementing strictly by one? can there be holes in the pid value, e.g. 1, 2, 3, 8? what happens when an item is deleted? are the pid values need to be adjusted to avoid "holes"? alternatively, if holes are allowed, could it just be a unique numerical value? how many items are you going to store there? I guess many of these questions boil down to "how is pid used by the application?"
    – Itay Maman
    Sep 5, 2019 at 7:46

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