This project was built for a DynamoDB demo on Marcia Villalba's YouTube channel. For this demo, we saw how + why to use DynamoDB, then displayed some common DynamoDB patterns by building a simple Instagram clone.
You may also refer to the following artifacts to understand this project:
To deploy this project, run the following commands in your terminal:
git clone [email protected]:alexdebrie/dynamodb-instagram.git && cd dynamodb-instagram
npm i
sls deploy
You should see output indicating the service was deployed and your endpoints are live:
Service Information
service: dynamodb-instagram
stage: dev
region: us-east-1
stack: dynamodb-instagram-dev
resources: 69
api keys:
None
endpoints:
POST - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users
GET - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}
POST - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/photos
GET - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/photos/{photoId}
POST - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/photos/{photoId}/likes
GET - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/photos/{photoId}/likes
POST - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/photos/{photoId}/comments
GET - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/photos/{photoId}/comments
POST - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/followers
GET - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/followers
GET - https://*********.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/users/{username}/following
functions:
createUser: dynamodb-instagram-dev-createUser
getUser: dynamodb-instagram-dev-getUser
createPhoto: dynamodb-instagram-dev-createPhoto
...
We are building an Instagram clone where users can post photos. Other users may like a photo or comment on a photo. Finally, a user may choose to 'follow' another user in order to see their recent activity.
Each entity is discussed further below. Clicking on the entity link will take you to the code definition for the entity.
-
A User represents a person that has signed up for our application. They will be uniquely identified by a username.
-
A Photo represents an image uploaded by a particular User. You can browse all Photos for a particular User in reverse-chronological order. Each Photo can be Liked or Commented on (see below).
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A Like represents a specific User 'liking' a specific Photo. A specific Photo may only be liked once by a specific User. When showing a Photo, we will show the total number of Likes for that Photo.
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A Comment represents a User commenting on a particular Photo. There is no limit to the number of Comments on a Photo by a given User. When showing a Photo, we will show the total number of Comments for that Photo.
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A Follow represents one User choosing to follow another User. By following another User, you will receive updates from that User in your timeline (not implemented in this demo). A Follow is a one-way relationship -- a User can follow another User without the second User following in return. For a particular User, we want to show the number of other Users following them and the number of Users they're following, as well as the ability to show the lists of Followers and Followees.
Below are a few patterns demonstrated in this repository that can be useful for using DynamoDB in your application:
-
Abstract base class for entities. It defines common methods that need to be implemented for each entity --
PK
&SK
values;toItem()
method; etc. -
getClient()
function to return a DynamoDB client. This returns a singleton DynamoDB client to enable re-use of the underlying HTTP connection across Lambda invocations. Also, it includes common client parameters like timeouts to ensure proper configuration. -
Using ULIDs as unique, sortable identifiers. A ULID provides the uniqueness of a UUID but is prefixed with the creation-time timestamp. This allows for lexicographic sorting of the IDs based on creation time.
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ConditionExpressions when creating a User. This ensures uniquness of usernames for all Users.
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Query operation to fetch all Comments for a Photo. The Query operation allows us to fetch an array of items when we only know the partition key (the PhotoId).
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Using a DynamoDB Transaction to ensure uniquness + track reference counts. When creating a Like, we will add the Like with a ConditionExpression to ensure this User hasn't already liked the given Photo. Additionally, we will increment the
likesCount
attribute on the Photo. -
Using multiple requests in many-to-many relationships. When retrieving the followers for a particular User, we make two requests. First, we make a Query operation to find all the Follow records for a particular User. Second, we make a BatchGetItem operation to hydrate all the User entities for each follower.