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Getting Started With ScyllaDB Alternator¶
Installing ScyllaDB¶
Before you can start using ScyllaDB Alternator, you will have to have an up and running a ScyllaDB cluster configured to expose the Alternator port. This section will guide you through the steps for setting up the cluster:
Get ScyllaDB with Alternator support from a docker:¶
Download the latest stable ScyllaDB image for Docker, by running
docker pull scylladb/scylla:latest
To run this Docker image, follow the instructions in https://hub.docker.com/r/scylladb/scylla/, but add to every
docker run
command a-p 8000:8000
before the image name and--alternator-port=8000 --alternator-write-isolation=always
at the end. The “alternator-port” option specifies on which port Scylla will listen for the (unencrypted) DynamoDB API, and the “alternator-write-isolation” chooses whether or not Alternator will use LWT for every write. For example,docker run --name scylla -d -p 8000:8000 scylladb/scylla:latest --alternator-port=8000 --alternator-write-isolation=always
. The--alternator-https-port=...
option can also be used to enable Alternator on an encrypted (HTTPS) port. Note that in this case, the files/etc/scylla/scylla.crt
and/etc/scylla/scylla.key
must be inserted into the image, containing the SSL certificate and key to use.
By default, ScyllaDB run in this way will not have authentication or authorization enabled, and any DynamoDB API request will be honored without requiring them to be signed appropriately. See the Scylla Alternator for DynamoDB users document on how to configure authentication and authorization.
Testing Scylla’s DynamoDB API support:¶
Running AWS Tic Tac Toe demo app to test the cluster:¶
Follow the instructions on the AWS github page
Enjoy your tic-tac-toe game :-)
Setting up the python environment¶
Run the following commands on your machine, this will install boto3 python library which also contains drivers for DynamoDB:
sudo pip install --upgrade boto3
Running some simple scripts:¶
The following is a 3 scripts test that creates a table named usertable writes the famous hello world record to it, and then, reads it back.
Put the following create table example script in a python file and run it (changing local host to the address of your docker node if you are using docker):
import boto3
dynamodb = boto3.resource('dynamodb',endpoint_url='http://localhost:8000',
region_name='None', aws_access_key_id='None', aws_secret_access_key='None')
dynamodb.create_table(
AttributeDefinitions=[
{
'AttributeName': 'key',
'AttributeType': 'S'
},
],
BillingMode='PAY_PER_REQUEST',
TableName='usertable',
KeySchema=[
{
'AttributeName': 'key',
'KeyType': 'HASH'
},
])
Put the following write example script in a python file and run it (changing local host to the address of your docker node if you are using docker):
import boto3
dynamodb = boto3.resource('dynamodb',endpoint_url='http://localhost:8000',
region_name='None', aws_access_key_id='None', aws_secret_access_key='None')
dynamodb.batch_write_item(RequestItems={
'usertable': [
{
'PutRequest': {
'Item': {
'key': 'test', 'x' : {'hello': 'world'}
}
},
}
]
})
Put the following read example script in a python file and run it (changing local host to the address of your docker node if you are using docker):
import boto3
dynamodb = boto3.resource('dynamodb',endpoint_url='http://localhost:8000',
region_name='None', aws_access_key_id='None', aws_secret_access_key='None')
print(dynamodb.batch_get_item(RequestItems={
'usertable' : { 'Keys': [{ 'key': 'test' }] }
}))
You should see the record you inserted in step 2 along with some http info printed to screen.