Use client-side timestamps in queries in Amazon Keyspaces
After you have turned on client-side timestamps, you can pass the timestamp in your
INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statements with the
USING TIMESTAMP clause.
The timestamp value is a bigint
representing a number of microseconds since the standard base time known as the
epoch: January 1 1970 at 00:00:00 GMT. A timestamp that is supplied
by the client has to fall between the range of 2 days in the past and 5 minutes in the
future from the current wall clock time.
Amazon Keyspaces keeps timestamp metadata for the life of
the data. You can use the WRITETIME function to look up timestamps that
occurred years in the past. For more information about CQL syntax, see DML statements (data manipulation language) in Amazon Keyspaces.
The following CQL statement is an example of how to use a timestamp as an
update_parameter.
INSERT INTOcatalog.book_awards(year, award, rank, category, book_title, author, publisher) VALUES (2022, 'Wolf', 4, 'Non-Fiction', 'Science Update', 'Ana Carolina Silva', 'SomePublisher') USING TIMESTAMP 1669069624;
If you do not specify a timestamp in your CQL query, Amazon Keyspaces uses the timestamp passed by your client driver. If no timestamp is supplied by the client driver, Amazon Keyspaces assigns a server-side timestamp for your write operation.
To see the timestamp value that is
stored for a specific column, you can use the WRITETIME function in a
SELECT statement as shown in the following example.
SELECT year, award, rank, category, book_title, author, publisher, WRITETIME(year), WRITETIME(award), WRITETIME(rank), WRITETIME(category), WRITETIME(book_title), WRITETIME(author), WRITETIME(publisher) from catalog.book_awards;