BatchGetItem
The BatchGetItem
operation returns the attributes of one or more items
from one or more tables. You identify requested items by primary key.
A single operation can retrieve up to 16 MB of data, which can contain as many as 100
items. BatchGetItem
returns a partial result if the response size limit is
exceeded, the table's provisioned throughput is exceeded, more than 1MB per partition is
requested, or an internal processing failure occurs. If a partial result is returned,
the operation returns a value for UnprocessedKeys
. You can use this value
to retry the operation starting with the next item to get.
Important
If you request more than 100 items, BatchGetItem
returns a
ValidationException
with the message "Too many items requested for
the BatchGetItem call."
For example, if you ask to retrieve 100 items, but each individual item is 300 KB in
size, the system returns 52 items (so as not to exceed the 16 MB limit). It also returns
an appropriate UnprocessedKeys
value so you can get the next page of
results. If desired, your application can include its own logic to assemble the pages of
results into one dataset.
If none of the items can be processed due to insufficient
provisioned throughput on all of the tables in the request, then
BatchGetItem
returns a
ProvisionedThroughputExceededException
. If at least
one of the items is successfully processed, then
BatchGetItem
completes successfully, while returning the keys of the
unread items in UnprocessedKeys
.
Important
If DynamoDB returns any unprocessed items, you should retry the batch operation on those items. However, we strongly recommend that you use an exponential backoff algorithm. If you retry the batch operation immediately, the underlying read or write requests can still fail due to throttling on the individual tables. If you delay the batch operation using exponential backoff, the individual requests in the batch are much more likely to succeed.
For more information, see Batch Operations and Error Handling in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
By default, BatchGetItem
performs eventually consistent reads on every
table in the request. If you want strongly consistent reads instead, you can set
ConsistentRead
to true
for any or all tables.
In order to minimize response latency, BatchGetItem
may retrieve items in
parallel.
When designing your application, keep in mind that DynamoDB does not return items in
any particular order. To help parse the response by item, include the primary key values
for the items in your request in the ProjectionExpression
parameter.
If a requested item does not exist, it is not returned in the result. Requests for nonexistent items consume the minimum read capacity units according to the type of read. For more information, see Working with Tables in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
Request Syntax
{
"RequestItems": {
"string
" : {
"AttributesToGet": [ "string
" ],
"ConsistentRead": boolean
,
"ExpressionAttributeNames": {
"string
" : "string
"
},
"Keys": [
{
"string
" : {
"B": blob
,
"BOOL": boolean
,
"BS": [ blob
],
"L": [
"AttributeValue"
],
"M": {
"string
" : "AttributeValue"
},
"N": "string
",
"NS": [ "string
" ],
"NULL": boolean
,
"S": "string
",
"SS": [ "string
" ]
}
}
],
"ProjectionExpression": "string
"
}
},
"ReturnConsumedCapacity": "string
"
}
Request Parameters
The request accepts the following data in JSON format.
Note
In the following list, the required parameters are described first.
- RequestItems
-
A map of one or more table names or table ARNs and, for each table, a map that describes one or more items to retrieve from that table. Each table name or ARN can be used only once per
BatchGetItem
request.Each element in the map of items to retrieve consists of the following:
-
ConsistentRead
- Iftrue
, a strongly consistent read is used; iffalse
(the default), an eventually consistent read is used. -
ExpressionAttributeNames
- One or more substitution tokens for attribute names in theProjectionExpression
parameter. The following are some use cases for usingExpressionAttributeNames
:-
To access an attribute whose name conflicts with a DynamoDB reserved word.
-
To create a placeholder for repeating occurrences of an attribute name in an expression.
-
To prevent special characters in an attribute name from being misinterpreted in an expression.
Use the # character in an expression to dereference an attribute name. For example, consider the following attribute name:
-
Percentile
The name of this attribute conflicts with a reserved word, so it cannot be used directly in an expression. (For the complete list of reserved words, see Reserved Words in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide). To work around this, you could specify the following for
ExpressionAttributeNames
:-
{"#P":"Percentile"}
You could then use this substitution in an expression, as in this example:
-
#P = :val
Note
Tokens that begin with the : character are expression attribute values, which are placeholders for the actual value at runtime.
For more information about expression attribute names, see Accessing Item Attributes in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
-
-
Keys
- An array of primary key attribute values that define specific items in the table. For each primary key, you must provide all of the key attributes. For example, with a simple primary key, you only need to provide the partition key value. For a composite key, you must provide both the partition key value and the sort key value. -
ProjectionExpression
- A string that identifies one or more attributes to retrieve from the table. These attributes can include scalars, sets, or elements of a JSON document. The attributes in the expression must be separated by commas.If no attribute names are specified, then all attributes are returned. If any of the requested attributes are not found, they do not appear in the result.
For more information, see Accessing Item Attributes in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
-
AttributesToGet
- This is a legacy parameter. UseProjectionExpression
instead. For more information, see AttributesToGet in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
Type: String to KeysAndAttributes object map
Map Entries: Maximum number of 100 items.
Key Length Constraints: Minimum length of 1. Maximum length of 1024.
Required: Yes
-
- ReturnConsumedCapacity
-
Determines the level of detail about either provisioned or on-demand throughput consumption that is returned in the response:
-
INDEXES
- The response includes the aggregateConsumedCapacity
for the operation, together withConsumedCapacity
for each table and secondary index that was accessed.Note that some operations, such as
GetItem
andBatchGetItem
, do not access any indexes at all. In these cases, specifyingINDEXES
will only returnConsumedCapacity
information for table(s). -
TOTAL
- The response includes only the aggregateConsumedCapacity
for the operation. -
NONE
- NoConsumedCapacity
details are included in the response.
Type: String
Valid Values:
INDEXES | TOTAL | NONE
Required: No
-
Response Syntax
{
"ConsumedCapacity": [
{
"CapacityUnits": number,
"GlobalSecondaryIndexes": {
"string" : {
"CapacityUnits": number,
"ReadCapacityUnits": number,
"WriteCapacityUnits": number
}
},
"LocalSecondaryIndexes": {
"string" : {
"CapacityUnits": number,
"ReadCapacityUnits": number,
"WriteCapacityUnits": number
}
},
"ReadCapacityUnits": number,
"Table": {
"CapacityUnits": number,
"ReadCapacityUnits": number,
"WriteCapacityUnits": number
},
"TableName": "string",
"WriteCapacityUnits": number
}
],
"Responses": {
"string" : [
{
"string" : {
"B": blob,
"BOOL": boolean,
"BS": [ blob ],
"L": [
"AttributeValue"
],
"M": {
"string" : "AttributeValue"
},
"N": "string",
"NS": [ "string" ],
"NULL": boolean,
"S": "string",
"SS": [ "string" ]
}
}
]
},
"UnprocessedKeys": {
"string" : {
"AttributesToGet": [ "string" ],
"ConsistentRead": boolean,
"ExpressionAttributeNames": {
"string" : "string"
},
"Keys": [
{
"string" : {
"B": blob,
"BOOL": boolean,
"BS": [ blob ],
"L": [
"AttributeValue"
],
"M": {
"string" : "AttributeValue"
},
"N": "string",
"NS": [ "string" ],
"NULL": boolean,
"S": "string",
"SS": [ "string" ]
}
}
],
"ProjectionExpression": "string"
}
}
}
Response Elements
If the action is successful, the service sends back an HTTP 200 response.
The following data is returned in JSON format by the service.
- ConsumedCapacity
-
The read capacity units consumed by the entire
BatchGetItem
operation.Each element consists of:
-
TableName
- The table that consumed the provisioned throughput. -
CapacityUnits
- The total number of capacity units consumed.
Type: Array of ConsumedCapacity objects
-
- Responses
-
A map of table name or table ARN to a list of items. Each object in
Responses
consists of a table name or ARN, along with a map of attribute data consisting of the data type and attribute value.Type: String to array of string to AttributeValue object maps map
Key Length Constraints: Minimum length of 1. Maximum length of 1024.
Key Length Constraints: Maximum length of 65535.
- UnprocessedKeys
-
A map of tables and their respective keys that were not processed with the current response. The
UnprocessedKeys
value is in the same form asRequestItems
, so the value can be provided directly to a subsequentBatchGetItem
operation. For more information, seeRequestItems
in the Request Parameters section.Each element consists of:
-
Keys
- An array of primary key attribute values that define specific items in the table. -
ProjectionExpression
- One or more attributes to be retrieved from the table or index. By default, all attributes are returned. If a requested attribute is not found, it does not appear in the result. -
ConsistentRead
- The consistency of a read operation. If set totrue
, then a strongly consistent read is used; otherwise, an eventually consistent read is used.
If there are no unprocessed keys remaining, the response contains an empty
UnprocessedKeys
map.Type: String to KeysAndAttributes object map
Map Entries: Maximum number of 100 items.
Key Length Constraints: Minimum length of 1. Maximum length of 1024.
-
Errors
For information about the errors that are common to all actions, see Common Errors.
- InternalServerError
-
An error occurred on the server side.
HTTP Status Code: 500
- ProvisionedThroughputExceededException
-
Your request rate is too high. The AWS SDKs for DynamoDB automatically retry requests that receive this exception. Your request is eventually successful, unless your retry queue is too large to finish. Reduce the frequency of requests and use exponential backoff. For more information, go to Error Retries and Exponential Backoff in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
HTTP Status Code: 400
- RequestLimitExceeded
-
Throughput exceeds the current throughput quota for your account. Please contact AWS Support
to request a quota increase. HTTP Status Code: 400
- ResourceNotFoundException
-
The operation tried to access a nonexistent table or index. The resource might not be specified correctly, or its status might not be
ACTIVE
.HTTP Status Code: 400
Examples
Retrieve Items from Multiple Tables
The following example requests attributes from two different tables.
Sample Request
POST / HTTP/1.1
Host: dynamodb.<region>.<domain>;
Accept-Encoding: identity
Content-Length: <PayloadSizeBytes>
User-Agent: <UserAgentString>
Content-Type: application/x-amz-json-1.0
Authorization: AWS4-HMAC-SHA256 Credential=<Credential>, SignedHeaders=<Headers>, Signature=<Signature>
X-Amz-Date: <Date>
X-Amz-Target: DynamoDB_20120810.BatchGetItem
{
"RequestItems": {
"Forum": {
"Keys": [
{
"Name":{"S":"Amazon DynamoDB"}
},
{
"Name":{"S":"Amazon RDS"}
},
{
"Name":{"S":"Amazon Redshift"}
}
],
"ProjectionExpression":"Name, Threads, Messages, Views"
},
"Thread": {
"Keys": [
{
"ForumName":{"S":"Amazon DynamoDB"},
"Subject":{"S":"Concurrent reads"}
}
],
"ProjectionExpression":"Tags, Message"
}
},
"ReturnConsumedCapacity": "TOTAL"
}
Sample Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
x-amzn-RequestId: <RequestId>
x-amz-crc32: <Checksum>
Content-Type: application/x-amz-json-1.0
Content-Length: <PayloadSizeBytes>
Date: <Date>
{
"Responses": {
"Forum": [
{
"Name":{
"S":"Amazon DynamoDB"
},
"Threads":{
"N":"5"
},
"Messages":{
"N":"19"
},
"Views":{
"N":"35"
}
},
{
"Name":{
"S":"Amazon RDS"
},
"Threads":{
"N":"8"
},
"Messages":{
"N":"32"
},
"Views":{
"N":"38"
}
},
{
"Name":{
"S":"Amazon Redshift"
},
"Threads":{
"N":"12"
},
"Messages":{
"N":"55"
},
"Views":{
"N":"47"
}
}
]
"Thread": [
{
"Tags":{
"SS":["Reads","MultipleUsers"]
},
"Message":{
"S":"How many users can read a single data item at a time? Are there any limits?"
}
}
]
},
"UnprocessedKeys": {
},
"ConsumedCapacity": [
{
"TableName": "Forum",
"CapacityUnits": 3
},
{
"TableName": "Thread",
"CapacityUnits": 1
}
]
}
See Also
For more information about using this API in one of the language-specific AWS SDKs, see the following: