19

When writing a DynamoDB Java App you can receive the 'no mapping for HASH key' error when writing or retrieving from a table if the table and its data model are not configured correctly. The full exception would be similar to:

com.amazonaws.services.dynamodbv2.datamodeling.DynamoDBMappingException: <YourClassNameHere>; no mapping for HASH key

5 Answers 5

24

Make sure that your annotated mapped class's getters are declared public.

1
  • 2
    Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
    – Hephaestus
    Mar 14, 2019 at 7:36
12

Two helpful things to check here:

1) For your main setter for your hash key value make sure that the @DynamoDBHashKey notation is correctly set. @DynamoDBAttribute is NOT the correct one to use for your table's main hash key and neither is @DynamoDBIndexHashKey.

2) Make sure that the hash key is defined in the table definition:

        CreateTableRequest createTableRequest = new CreateTableRequest()
                .withTableName("testtable")
                .withKeySchema(
                        new KeySchemaElement("id", KeyType.HASH)
                )
                .withProvisionedThroughput(new ProvisionedThroughput(1L, 1L))
                .withAttributeDefinitions(
                        new AttributeDefinition("id", "S")
                );

        CreateTableResult result = amazonDynamoDB.createTable(createTableRequest);

The above table definition creates a table 'testtable' with a main index or hash key variable titled id and the type is S for string.

Additionally, if you are using inheritance, make sure that you don't have two functions with the same name that override each other. Dynamo will use the top-level getter and this can cause issues.

5
  • What if I have my HashKey attribute in an abstract class and final data structure is inheriting that? I am getting same error. How to resolve it. Jan 6, 2020 at 14:34
  • Hi @KuldeepYadav. Have you managed to solve it? I'm facing the same issue.
    – dbaltor
    Dec 7, 2022 at 20:14
  • @dbaltor Can't recall it :( Dec 7, 2022 at 20:24
  • Thanks anyway @KuldeepYadav. I'll share here any solution I find, if any.
    – dbaltor
    Dec 7, 2022 at 20:34
  • @DynamoDBHashKey attribute has to be declared in the class being serialized, the child.
    – dbaltor
    Dec 9, 2022 at 20:44
1

If you are using @Data annotation (lombok.data), Try again after removing it and generate getters and setters for all the Attributes(including the primary_key/partition_key).

0
0

In my case the problem was that the instance object that I was writing to DB for was of a subclass of the actual class that was annotated with DynamoDB annotations.

Was tricky to find out because the object param was declared as the parent class type.

0

If you are using @Data annotation (lombok.data), Try again after removing it and generate getters and setters for all the Attributes(including the primary_key/partition_key). Manually generate the constructor also. With and without aruguments. It helped me

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