aws glue get-partitions

Retrieves information about the partitions in a table

Options

NameDescription
--catalog-id <string>The ID of the Data Catalog where the partitions in question reside. If none is provided, the AWS account ID is used by default
--database-name <string>The name of the catalog database where the partitions reside
--table-name <string>The name of the partitions' table
--expression <string>An expression that filters the partitions to be returned. The expression uses SQL syntax similar to the SQL WHERE filter clause. The SQL statement parser JSQLParser parses the expression. Operators: The following are the operators that you can use in the Expression API call: = Checks whether the values of the two operands are equal; if yes, then the condition becomes true. Example: Assume 'variable a' holds 10 and 'variable b' holds 20. (a = b) is not true. < > Checks whether the values of two operands are equal; if the values are not equal, then the condition becomes true. Example: (a < > b) is true. > Checks whether the value of the left operand is greater than the value of the right operand; if yes, then the condition becomes true. Example: (a > b) is not true. < Checks whether the value of the left operand is less than the value of the right operand; if yes, then the condition becomes true. Example: (a < b) is true. >= Checks whether the value of the left operand is greater than or equal to the value of the right operand; if yes, then the condition becomes true. Example: (a >= b) is not true. <= Checks whether the value of the left operand is less than or equal to the value of the right operand; if yes, then the condition becomes true. Example: (a <= b) is true. AND, OR, IN, BETWEEN, LIKE, NOT, IS NULL Logical operators. Supported Partition Key Types: The following are the supported partition keys. string date timestamp int bigint long tinyint smallint decimal If an invalid type is encountered, an exception is thrown. The following list shows the valid operators on each type. When you define a crawler, the partitionKey type is created as a STRING, to be compatible with the catalog partitions. Sample API Call:
--next-token <string>A continuation token, if this is not the first call to retrieve these partitions
--segment <structure>The segment of the table's partitions to scan in this request
--max-results <integer>The maximum number of partitions to return in a single response
--exclude-column-schema
--no-exclude-column-schema
--cli-input-json <string>Performs service operation based on the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by ``--generate-cli-skeleton``. If other arguments are provided on the command line, the CLI values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally
--starting-token <string>A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken from a previously truncated response. For usage examples, see Pagination in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide
--page-size <integer>The size of each page to get in the AWS service call. This does not affect the number of items returned in the command's output. Setting a smaller page size results in more calls to the AWS service, retrieving fewer items in each call. This can help prevent the AWS service calls from timing out. For usage examples, see Pagination in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide
--max-items <integer>The total number of items to return in the command's output. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified, a NextToken is provided in the command's output. To resume pagination, provide the NextToken value in the starting-token argument of a subsequent command. Do not use the NextToken response element directly outside of the AWS CLI. For usage examples, see Pagination in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide
--generate-cli-skeleton <string>Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value ``input``, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for ``--cli-input-json``. If provided with the value ``output``, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command