Book Image

AWS Certified Database – Specialty (DBS-C01) Certification Guide

By : Kate Gawron
5 (1)
Book Image

AWS Certified Database – Specialty (DBS-C01) Certification Guide

5 (1)
By: Kate Gawron

Overview of this book

The AWS Certified Database – Specialty certification is one of the most challenging AWS certifications. It validates your comprehensive understanding of databases, including the concepts of design, migration, deployment, access, maintenance, automation, monitoring, security, and troubleshooting. With this guide, you'll understand how to use various AWS databases, such as Aurora Serverless and Global Database, and even services such as Redshift and Neptune. You’ll start with an introduction to the AWS databases, and then delve into workload-specific database design. As you advance through the chapters, you'll learn about migrating and deploying the databases, along with database security techniques such as encryption, auditing, and access controls. This AWS book will also cover monitoring, troubleshooting, and disaster recovery techniques, before testing all the knowledge you've gained throughout the book with the help of mock tests. By the end of this book, you'll have covered everything you need to pass the DBS-C01 AWS certification exam and have a handy, on-the-job desk reference guide.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction to Databases on AWS
Free Chapter
2
Chapter 1: AWS Certified Database – Specialty Overview
5
Part 2: Workload-Specific Database Design
12
Part 3: Deployment and Migration and Database Security
16
Part 4: Monitoring and Optimization
20
Part 5: Assessment
21
Chapter 16: Exam Practice

Understanding consistency modes

DynamoDB offers two different data consistency modes to handle different use cases:

  • Eventually consistent reads – This is the default.
  • Strongly consistent reads

Let's start by learning about eventually consistent reads.

DynamoDB is typically used for cases where data consistency is not critical to the application. For example, website session data can be lost without major impact; the user may have to log in again or they may have to add items back into their shopping cart but unlike a banking transaction, which must fully succeed and be consistent without exception, session data is classified as transient. As a result, DynamoDB defaults to what is called an eventually consistent read. An eventually consistent read means that each read request might not get data that has recently been updated. This is due to how DynamoDB stores its data; it does not wait for the write request to be written to each storage location before...