Strapi gives you the option to choose the most appropriate database for your project. It currently supports **PostgreSQL**, **MongoDB**, **SQLite**, **MySQL** and
**MariaDB**. The following documentation covers how to install these databases locally (for development purposes) and on various hosted or cloud server solutions (for staging or production purposes).
This will create a new project and launch it in the browser. (The [Quick Start Guide](/3.0.0-beta.x/getting-started/quick-start.html) is a complete step-by-step tutorial.)
In order to use Strapi with [MongoDB](https://www.mongodb.com/) in production, you must have and use MongoDB on your local development environment. These instructions show how to start using Strapi with a MongoDB database.
### 1. Install MongoDB on your development environment
If you already have MongoDB installed locally and running as a background service, you may skip to [Install Strapi locally with MongoDB](#install-strapi-locally-with-mongodb). (If you have additional questions, please see the official [MongoDB documentation](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/installation/#tutorial-installation). )
Please complete the installation steps appropriate to your operating system.
Follow these steps to [install MongoDB onto your Windows 10](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/tutorial/install-mongodb-on-windows/) environment (The Windows Sub-System for Linux (WSL) is unsupported by MongoDB):
1. Download the `MongoDB Community Edition Server` for Windows [here](https://www.mongodb.com/download-center/community?jmp=docs). Select `MongoDB Community Server` and verify the options that match your computer. Then `Download` the package and follow the installation instructions to complete the process.
2. After successfully installing MongoDB, the MongoDB service is started. To begin using MongoDB, connect a mongo.exe shell to the running MongoDB instance.
2. Next, add the repository for 18.04. Repositories for other versions of Ubuntu are found [here](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/tutorial/install-mongodb-on-ubuntu/).
You have successfully installed Strapi with MongoDB on your local development environment. You are now ready to [create your first user](/3.0.0-beta.x/getting-started/quick-start.html#_3-create-an-admin-user).
Follow these steps to configure a local Strapi project to use a [MongoDB Atlas](https://www.mongodb.com/cloud/atlas) free 512 MB account in production. (Please see [MongoDB Atlas Documentation](https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/getting-started/) if you have any questions.)
- You must have already created a [free MongoDB Atlas account](https://www.mongodb.com/cloud/atlas).
1. Log in to your account to create a **Project** and a **Cluster**
- First you need to `Create a new Project`.
- Then click `Build a Cluster`, from the options page:
- Choose **AWS** as your **Cloud Provider & Region**.
- Select a **Region**. (Note: some **Regions** do not have a _free tier_.)
- In **Cluster Tier**, select **Shared Sandbox**, _Tier_`MO`.
- In **Cluster Name**, name your cluster.
- Click the green `Create Cluster` button. You will get a message that says, "_Your cluster is being created..._"
2. Next, click on the `Security` tab (next to `Overview`):
- Click the green `+ ADD NEW USER` button:
- Enter a `username`.
- Enter a `password`.
- Under `User Privileges` ensure **`Read and write to any database`** is selected. Then click `Add User` to save.
3. Then `whitelist` your IP address. Under `Security`, click to `IP Whitelist`
- Click the green `+ ADD IP ADDRESS`
- Next click `ALLOW ACCESS FROM ANYWHERE`. **Note:** In permanent projects you would configure this with the appropriate IP addresses.
- Click `Confirm`. Then wait until the status turns from `Pending` to `Active`.
4. Retrieve database credentials
MongoDB Atlas automatically exposes the database credentials into a single environment variable accessible by your app. To locate it, follow these steps:
- Under the `Overview` tab, click `CONNECT` and then `Connect Your Application`.
- Under `1. Choose your driver version`, select **DRIVER** as `Node.js` and **VERSION** as `2.2.12 or later`.
- This should show a **Connection String Only** similar to this:
- You created earlier a `cluster name`, `username` and `password`. These are the other variables needed to configure your project to connect to MongoDB Atlas.
Keep these five MongoDB Atlas database variables from your MongoDB Atlas account ready and available.
5. Update your database config file
Replace the contents of `database.json` with the following: