2019-07-22 17:40:35 +02:00

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Databases

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).

(Deploying Strapi itself is covered in the Deployment Guide.)

Table of contents:


SQLite Installation

SQLite is the default (Quick Start) and recommended database to quickly create an app locally.

Install SQLite locally

Simply use the strapi new my-project --quickstart command.

strapi new my-project --quickstart

This will create a new project and launch it in the browser. (The Quick Start Guide is a complete step-by-step tutorial.)

MongoDB Installation

Install MongoDB locally

In order to use Strapi with MongoDB 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. (If you have additional questions, please see the official MongoDB documentation. )

Please complete the installation steps appropriate to your operating system.

:::: tabs cache-lifetime="10" :options="{ useUrlFragment: false }"

::: tab "Windows 10" id="windows-mongodb"

Install MongoDB on Windows 10

Follow these steps to install MongoDB onto your Windows 10 environment (The Windows Sub-System for Linux (WSL) is unsupported by MongoDB):

  1. Download the MongoDB Community Edition Server for Windows here. 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.

"C:\Program Files\MongoDB\Server\4.0\bin\mongo.exe"

You can exit the MongoDB shell with CTRL + C.

You have now installed MongoDB for Windows 10. You are now ready to install Strapi with MongoDB locally.

:::

::: tab "Mac O/S 10.14 Mojave" id="mac-mongodb"

Install MongoDB on Mac

Follow these steps to install MongoDB onto your Mac developer environment:

  1. Use brew to tap the official MongoDB formula repository and add it to the formula list:
brew tap mongodb/brew
  1. Now install MongoDB
brew install mongodb-community@4.0
  1. Get the mongod process running in order to connect and use MongoDB:
mongod --config /usr/local/etc/mongod.conf

You have now installed MongoDB for Mac. You are now ready to install Strapi with MongoDB locally.

:::

::: tab "Ubuntu 18.04" id="ubuntu-mongodb"

Install MongoDB on Ubuntu

Follow these steps to install MongoDB onto your Ubuntu environment:

  1. Import a public key to ensure your MongoDB is authentic:

sudo apt-key adv --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com:80 --recv 9DA31620334BD75D9DCB49F368818C72E52529D4
  1. Next, add the repository for 18.04. Repositories for other versions of Ubuntu are found here.

echo "deb [ arch=amd64 ] https://repo.mongodb.org/apt/ubuntu bionic/mongodb-org/4.0 multiverse" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/mongodb-org-4.0.list
  1. Reload the local package database:
sudo apt-get update
  1. Install the stable release MongoDB package
sudo apt-get install -y mongodb-org
  1. Get the mongod process running in order to connect and use MongoDB:
sudo service mongod start
  1. Confirm the MongoDB status:
service mongod status
  1. The last step is to enable automatically starting MongoDB when your computer boots:
sudo systemctl enable mongod

You have now installed MongoDB for Linux. You are now ready to install Strapi with MongoDB locally.

:::

::::

2. Install Strapi locally with MongoDB

Follow these steps to create a Strapi project locally using the MongoDB database.

Note: MongoDB must already be running in the background.

  1. Create a new Strapi project

Path: ./

strapi new my-project
  • Use your down arrow key and select Custom (manual settings) and press enter:
? Choose your installation type
  Quickstart (recommended)
 Custom (manual settings)
  • Select MongoDB and press enter:
? Choose your installation type Custom (manual settings)
? Choose your main database:
  SQLite
 MongoDB
  MySQL
  Postgres
  • Press enter to select the remaining default options. It will look something like this:

? Choose your installation type Custom (manual settings)
? Choose your main database: MongoDB
? Database name: my-project
? Host: 127.0.0.1
? +srv connection: false
? Port (It will be ignored if you enable +srv): 27017
? Username:
? Password:
? Authentication database (Maybe "admin" or blank):
? Enable SSL connection: false

⏳ Testing database connection...
The app has been connected to the database successfully!

🏗  Application generation:
✔ Copy dashboard
✔ Installed dependencies.

👌 Your new application my-project is ready at /Users/david/Desktop/Projects/my-project.

⚡️ Change directory:
$ cd my-project

⚡️ Start application:
$ strapi develop

You have successfully installed Strapi with MongoDB on your local development environment. You are now ready to create your first user.


Install on Atlas: MongoDB Atlas

Follow these steps to configure a local Strapi project to use a MongoDB Atlas free 512 MB account in production. (Please see MongoDB Atlas Documentation if you have any questions.)

  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..."
  1. Next, click on the Database Access in the left menu (under 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.
  1. Then whitelist your IP address. Click into Network Access, under Security in the left menu:
  • Click the green + ADD IP ADDRESS

    • Click ADD CURRENT IP ADDRESS or manually enter in an IP address to whitelist.
    • Leave a comment to label this IP Address. E.g. Office.
    • Then click the green Confirm button.
    • Delete the 0.0.0.0/0 configuration after testing the connection.

    NOTE: If for any reason you need to test the configuration or other aspect of your connection to the database, you may want to set back the Allow Access from Anywhere. Follow this steps:

    • Click the green + ADD IP ADDRESS
      • Next add 0.0.0.0/0 in the Whitelist Entry. Note: In permanent projects you would configure this with the appropriate IP addresses.
      • Leave a comment to label this IP Address. E.g. Anywhere.
      • Click Confirm. Then wait until the status turns from Pending to Active.

    OPTIONAL: If you are serving you Strapi project from a known IP Address then follow the following steps to allow Network Access:

    • Manually enter in an IP address to whitelist, for your Strapi server.
    • Leave a comment to label this IP Address. E.g. Heroku Server
    • Then click the green Confirm button.
  1. 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 Atlas in the left-hand, click on Clusters. This should take you to your cluster. Next, 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. IMPORTANT: You must use Version: 2.2.12 or later.
  • This should show a Connection String Only similar to this:

mongodb://paulbocuse:<password>@strapi-heroku-shard-00-00-oxxxo.mongodb.net:27017,strapi-heroku-shard-00-01-oxxxo.mongodb.net:27017,strapi-heroku-shard-00-02-oxxxo.mongodb.net:27017/test?ssl=true&replicaSet=Strapi-Heroku-shard-0&authSource=admin&retryWrites=true&w=majority

IMPORTANT: Please note the <password> after your username. In this example, after mongodb://paulbocuse:. You will need to replace the <password> with the password you created earlier for this user in your MongoDB Atlas account.

  1. Update and replace your existing /database.json config file for the appropriate environment (development | production).

Replace the contents of /database.json with the following and replace < password > with the password of the user of your database you created earlier:

Path: ./config/environments/(development|production)/database.json.

{
  "defaultConnection": "default",
  "connections": {
    "default": {
      "connector": "strapi-hook-mongoose",
      "settings": {
        "uri": "mongodb://paulbocuse:<password>@strapidatabase-shard-00-00-fxxx6c.mongodb.net:27017,strapidatabase-shard-00-01-fxxxc.mongodb.net:27017,strapidatabase-shard-00-02-fxxxc.mongodb.net:27017/test?ssl=true&replicaSet=strapidatabase-shard-0&authSource=admin&retryWrites=true&w=majority"
      },
      "options": {
        "ssl": true
      }
    }
  }
}

::: warning Note The above configuration will create a database called strapi, the default database Strapi sets for any MongoDB database. If you would like to name your database something else, add the following key:value pair into your "settings": located in your database.json file.

"database": "my-database-name"

:::

::: danger Warning We recommend replacing sensitive (eg. "URI string" above) information in your database.json files before uploading your project to a public repository such as GitHub. For more information about using environment variables, please read dynamic configurations.

:::

You are now ready use Strapi locally or to deploy your project to an external hosting provider and use MongoDB Atlas as your database server.