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Showing content from https://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/bp-switching-capacity-modes.html below:

Considerations when switching capacity modes in DynamoDB

Considerations when switching capacity modes in DynamoDB

When you create a DynamoDB table, you must select either on-demand or provisioned capacity mode.

You can switch tables from provisioned capacity mode to on-demand mode up to four times in a 24-hour rolling window. You can switch tables from on-demand mode to provisioned capacity mode at any time.

Switching from provisioned capacity mode to on-demand capacity mode

In provisioned mode, you set read and write capacity based on your expected application needs. When you update a table from provisioned to on-demand mode, you don't need to specify how much read and write throughput you expect your application to perform. DynamoDB on-demand offers simple pay-per-request pricing for read and write requests so that you only pay for what you use, making it easy to balance costs and performance. You can optionally configure maximum read or write (or both) throughput for individual on-demand tables and associated global secondary indexes to help keep costs and usage bounded. For more information about setting maximum throughput for a specific table or index, see DynamoDB maximum throughput for on-demand tables.

When you switch from provisioned capacity mode to on-demand capacity mode, DynamoDB makes several changes to the structure of your table and partitions. This process can take several minutes. During the switching period, your table delivers throughput that is consistent with the previously provisioned write capacity unit and read capacity unit amounts.

Initial throughput for on-demand capacity mode

If you recently switched an existing table to on-demand capacity mode for the first time, the table has the following previous peak settings, even though the table has not served traffic previously using on-demand capacity mode.

Following are examples of possible scenarios:

Auto scaling settings

When you update a table from provisioned to on-demand mode:

Switching from on-demand capacity mode to provisioned capacity mode

When switching from on-demand capacity mode back to provisioned capacity mode, your table delivers throughput consistent with the previous peak reached when the table was set to on-demand capacity mode.

Managing capacity

Consider the following when you update a table from on-demand to provisioned mode:

Managing auto scaling

When you update a table from on-demand to provisioned mode:


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