DynamoDB PartiQL for ad-hoc query when SQL syntax hurts you
| Service | Amazon DynamoDB |
|---|---|
| Cloud | Amazon Web Services (AWS) |
| Guide type | Procedure |
| Skill level | Intermediate to advanced |
| Time | 15 - 60 minutes depending on account size |
If you hit DynamoDB PartiQL for ad-hoc query when SQL syntax hurts you on Amazon DynamoDB in production, the steps below are the path most teams take in 2026. None of them require opening a support case unless your environment has a paid-tier dependency that AWS owns.
What dynamodb partiql for ad-hoc query when sql syntax hurts you actually involves on Amazon DynamoDB
This task on Amazon DynamoDB is one of the more searched operational topics on AWS in the last 12 months. The procedure below is the path that works in a current AWS account with default IAM and standard VPC config.
The rest of this page is the structured fix path. Start with diagnose, then remediation, then the automation options so you do not have to do this by hand the next time it surfaces. Verify and safety sections at the end are the discipline that keeps the fix from regressing in production.
Spot the symptom
Check the AWS Health Dashboard at health.aws.amazon.com for ongoing service events in your region. About one in ten user-reported outages turn out to be region-scoped AWS service degradation already being tracked. AWS Health also exposes an API and EventBridge events, so you can wire a Lambda hook that pages on-call only when the failure correlates with an active AWS Health event in the same region and service.
Reproduce the failure with the AWS CLI in --debug mode. The full SigV4 request payload it emits, plus the exact endpoint URL it resolved to, is what AWS Support uses to verify policy, region, or parameter issues without you having to share IAM credentials. Save the debug output to a file with aws ... --debug 2> debug.log and you can search it for the failed aws.request entry.
Look at the CloudTrail event for the failed call, even if you are not enrolled in CloudTrail Lake. The basic 90-day event history works for most diagnostic purposes and lives in the console under CloudTrail > Event history. Filter by event name (the API action) and time range; the event JSON shows the exact user identity, source IP, request parameters, and error code.
Solution-focused remediation path
When the failure happens in production but not in dev, do not just compare the IAM policy. Compare the SCP / RCP at the OU level, the permission boundary on the role, and the resource-based policy on the target. One of those is almost always different between accounts. AWS Config conformance packs make this comparison routine.
Most Amazon DynamoDB failures fall into one of three buckets: IAM permission gap, networking path break (security group, NACL, or VPC endpoint policy), or service-limit / quota hit. Run that mental triage first - it covers around 80 percent of real-world cases. If the failure does not fit any of the three, it is likely a service-side regression worth opening a re:Post or support ticket for.
If the issue points at IAM, do not start by adding * to a policy. Use IAM Access Analyzer (Policy Generator) against the failed action to see the minimum scope. Adding * is the fastest way to fail your next AWS Well-Architected security review, and it usually does not even fix the issue because the explicit deny is often coming from a higher level (SCP, RCP, or permission boundary), not a missing allow.
Automate this fix so you do not do it twice
Codify the fix in Terraform or CloudFormation
When you reach for the console to fix the same issue twice, the third occurrence should be solved in IaC, not in the console. Terraform's terraform import and CloudFormation's resource importer let you adopt the existing resource into state without recreating it. Lock the corrected attribute behind a variable so the next operator does not have to rediscover the value. Add a moved {} block or CloudFormation resource refactor to keep the diff clean.
Wire the fix into EventBridge for self-healing
If the failure mode is recurring, automate the remediation instead of the diagnosis. EventBridge Scheduler or rules that watch CloudWatch Events for the specific error code can invoke a Lambda that runs the same fix you would run by hand. The Lambda must be idempotent (re-running it on already-healthy resources must be a no-op) and must emit a CloudWatch metric so you can track how often the auto-fix fires. A spike in auto-fix invocations is itself a signal worth alerting on.
# EventBridge rule pattern (JSON)
{ "source": ["aws.dynamodb"], "detail-type": ["AWS API Call via CloudTrail"], "detail": { "errorCode": ["AccessDenied", "ThrottlingException"] }
}Add a CloudWatch alarm so you know next time
The cheapest way to never see the same incident twice is a CloudWatch alarm on the metric that would have warned you. For Amazon DynamoDB, the relevant metrics live under AWS/dynamodb namespace or under custom metrics published by your Lambda or ECS task. Set thresholds based on observed normal range plus one or two standard deviations, not on round-number guesses. CloudWatch anomaly-detection alarms remove the threshold-guessing problem entirely for metrics with regular seasonality.
Pitfalls
A subtle pitfall on Amazon DynamoDB is that the AWS Console and the SDK can disagree about resource state during a configuration change. Console UI is cached for performance and may show the old config for up to 10 minutes after you change it via API or CloudFormation. Always confirm with describe-* CLI calls during a change window, not with screenshots from the Console.
The other pitfall: assuming that an automated remediation is correct because it succeeded. A Lambda that fires on a CloudWatch alarm and runs a remediation step should also publish a metric for every remediation; sudden surges in auto-fix invocations are themselves an outage signal. Otherwise you can hide a slow-burn regression behind a quiet remediation loop for weeks.
Full fix path
- Reproduce the original symptom path. If it still surfaces in any account or region or IAM role, you have not fixed it.
- Watch for 24 to 48 hours. AWS metrics and policy systems can mask issues with cached health for 6 to 12 hours, especially CloudFront and Route 53.
- Run a smoke test under realistic load. Happy-path tests miss race conditions and IAM session-cache issues.
- Capture the new state in a runbook so the next person on call does not have to rediscover this. Push it to Confluence or your team wiki, not into Slack.
- If the fix involved a permission change, run IAM Access Analyzer one more time to confirm you did not open a separate hole while closing this one.
Safety, rollback, blast radius
- Test in a non-production account if your environment has Control Tower or AWS Organizations. The cost of one sandbox account is cheaper than one rollback meeting.
- Export the existing config before changing it. Most Amazon DynamoDB resources support describe + export to JSON via CLI - capture that to source control before you start.
- Know your rollback path. Some Amazon DynamoDB operations are one-way (region migration, account-level feature opt-in, KMS key deletion past pending window). Confirm reversibility on the AWS doc before you commit.
- Be aware of cross-service impact. IAM role changes ripple to every service trusting that role. KMS key changes break every workload depending on that key. VPC endpoint changes affect every VPC consumer of that endpoint.
- Maintenance window discipline: if the change touches DNS, certificate rotation, or anything that emits TLS handshakes, line up a window with stakeholder notification, not a heroic mid-day swap.
FAQ
aws dynamodb describe-... first, then commit it before you change anything. A few operations are one-way (KMS key deletion past the pending window, region migration, account closure). Check the AWS doc for the specific API before you commit.aws CLI or SDK calls - those almost always still work.References
- docs.aws.amazon.com - official documentation for Amazon DynamoDB
- AWS re:Post (formerly forums) - community Q&A with AWS-staff-verified answers
- AWS Health Dashboard at health.aws.amazon.com
- AWS Service Quotas console and AWS Well-Architected Tool
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