NAME
Net::Amazon::DynamoDB::Marshaler - Translate Perl hashrefs into
DynamoDb format and vice versa.
SYNOPSIS
use Net::Amazon::DynamoDB::Marshaler;
my $item = {
name => 'John Doe',
age => 28,
skills => ['Perl', 'Linux', 'PostgreSQL'],
};
# Translate a Perl hashref into DynamoDb format
my $item_dynamodb = dynamodb_marshal($item);
# $item_dynamodb looks like:
# {
# name => {
# S => 'John Doe',
# },
# age => {
# N => 28,
# },
# skills => {
# SS => ['Perl', 'Linux', 'PostgreSQL'],
# }
# };
# Translate a DynamoDb formatted hashref into regular Perl
my $item2 = dynamodb_unmarshal($item_dynamodb);
DESCRIPTION
AWS' DynamoDB service expects
attributes in a somewhat cumbersome format in which you must specify
the attribute type as well as its name and value(s). This module
simplifies working with DynamoDB by abstracting away the notion of
types and letting you use more intuitive data structures.
There are a handful of CPAN modules which provide a DynamoDB client
that do similar conversions. However, in all of these cases the
conversion is tightly bound to the client implementation. This module
exists in order to decouple the functionality of formatting with the
functionality of making AWS calls.
NOTE: this module does not yet support Binary or Binary Set types. Pull
requests welcome.
CONVERSION RULES
See
for more details on the various types supported by DynamoDB.
For a given Perl value, we use the following rules to pick the DynamoDB
type:
1. If the value is undef or an empty string, use Null ('NULL').
2. If the value looks like a number, and falls within the accepted
range for a DynamoDB number, use Number ('N').
3. For any other non-reference, use String ('S').
4. If the value is an arrayref, use List ('L').
5. If the value is a hashref, use Map ('M').
6. If the value isa boolean, use Boolean ('BOOL').
7. If the value isa Set::Object, use either Number Set ('NS') or
String Set ('SS'), depending on whether all members look like numbers
or not. All members must be defined, non-reference values, or an
error will be thrown.
8. Any other value will throw an error.
When doing the opposite - un-marshalling a hashref fetched from
DynamoDB - the module applies the rules above in reverse. Please note
that NULLs get unmarshalled as undefs, so an empty string will be
re-written to undef if it goes through a marshal/unmarshal cycle.
DynamoDB does not allow for a way to store empty strings as distinct
from NULL.
EXPORTS
By default, dynamodb_marshal and dynamodb_unmarshal are exported.
dynamodb_marshal
Takes in a "normal" Perl hashref, transforms it into DynamoDB format.
my $attrs_marshalled = dynamodb_marshal($attrs);
dynamodb_unmarshal
The opposite of dynamodb_marshal.
my $attrs = dynamodb_unmarshal($attrs_marshalled);
AUTHOR
Steve Caldwell
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2017- Steve Caldwell
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Paws::DynamoDB - the most up-to-date DynamoDB client.
DynamoDB's attribute format
Amazon::DynamoDB - DynamoDB client that does conversion for you.
Net::Amazon::DynamoDB - DynamoDB client that does conversion for you.
WebService::Amazon::DynamoDB - DynamoDB client that does conversion for
you.
Net::Amazon::DynamoDB::Table - DynamoDB client that does conversion for
you.
dynamoDb-marshaler
- JavaScript
library that performs a similar function.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Campus Explorer , who allowed
me to release this code as open source.