Database configuration
The ./config/database.js
file (or the ./config/database.ts
file for TypeScript) is used to define database connections that will be used to store the application content.
Strapi applications are not meant to be connected to a pre-existing database, not created by a Strapi application, nor connected to a Strapi v3 database. The Strapi team will not support such attempts. Attempting to connect to an unsupported database may, and most likely will, result in lost data.
The CLI installation guide details supported database and versions.
Configuration structure
The /config/database.js|ts
file accepts 2 main configuration objects:
connection
for database configuration options passed to Knex.jssettings
for Strapi-specific database settings
connection
configuration object
Parameter | Description | Type | Default |
---|---|---|---|
client | Database client to create the connection. Accepts the following values:
| String | - |
connection | Database connection information | Knex.Config object<br />Knex.Config Function (experimental) | - |
debug | Show database exchanges and errors. | Boolean | false |
useNullAsDefault Optional, only for SQLite | Use NULL as a default value | Boolean | true |
pool Optional | Database pooling options | Object | - |
acquireConnectionTimeout Optional | How long knex will wait before throwing a timeout error when acquiring a connection (in milliseconds) | Integer | 60000 |
Strapi only supports the following client values, and will automatically rewrite the client
value to the following options before passing the configuration to Knex:
client value | Actual package used |
---|---|
sqlite | better-sqlite3 |
mysql | mysql2 |
postgres | pg |
Connection parameters
The connection.connection
object found in ./config/database.js
(or ./config/database.ts
for TypeScript) is used to pass database connection information and accepts the following parameters:
Parameter | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
connectionString | Database connection string. When set, it overrides the other connection.connection properties. To disable use an empty string: '' . Available in v4.6.2 + | String |
host | Database host name. Default value: localhost . | String |
port | Database port | Integer |
database | Database name. | String |
user | Username used to establish the connection | String |
password | Password used to establish the connection | String |
timezone | Set the default behavior for local time. Default value: utc Timezone options | String |
schema | Set the default database schema. Used only for Postgres DB. | String |
ssl | For SSL database connection. Use an object to pass certificate files as strings. | Boolean or Object |
Depending on the database client used, more parameters can be set (e.g., charset
and collation
for mysql). Check the database client documentation to know what parameters are available, for instance the pg, mysql, and better-sqlite3 documentations.
Database pooling options
The connection.pool
object optionally found in ./config/database.js
(or ./config/database.ts
for TypeScript) is used to pass Tarn.js database pooling options and accepts the following parameters:
When using Docker, change the pool min
value to 0
as Docker will kill any idle connections, making it impossible to keep any open connections to the database (see the Tarn.js pool settings used by Knex.js for more information).
Parameter | Description | Type | Default |
---|---|---|---|
min | Minimum number of database connections to keepalive | Integer | 2 |
max | Maximum number of database connections to keepalive | Integer | 10 |
acquireTimeoutMillis | Time in milliseconds before timing out a database connection attempt | Integer | 60000 |
createTimeoutMillis | Time in milliseconds before timing out a create query attempt | Integer | 30000 |
destroyTimeoutMillis | Time in milliseconds before timing out a destroy query attempt | Integer | 5000 |
idleTimeoutMillis | Time in milliseconds before free database connections are destroyed | Integer | 30000 |
reapIntervalMillis | Time in milliseconds to check for idle database connections to destroy | Integer | 1000 |
createRetryIntervalMillis | Time in milliseconds to idle before retrying failed create actions | Integer | 200 |
afterCreate | Callback function to execute custom logic when the pool acquires a new connection. See the Knex.js documentation for more information | Function | - |
settings
configuration object
The settings
object found in ./config/database.js
(or ./config/database.ts
for TypeScript) is used to configure Strapi-specific database settings and accepts the following parameters:
Parameter | Description | Type | Default |
---|---|---|---|
forceMigration | Enable or disable the forced database migration. | Boolean | true |
runMigrations | Enable or disable database migrations from running on start up. | Boolean | true |
Configuration examples
- PostgreSQL
- MySQL/MariaDB
- SQLite
module.exports = ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'postgres',
connection: {
host: env('DATABASE_HOST', '127.0.0.1'),
port: env.int('DATABASE_PORT', 5432),
database: env('DATABASE_NAME', 'strapi'),
user: env('DATABASE_USERNAME', 'strapi'),
password: env('DATABASE_PASSWORD', 'strapi'),
schema: env('DATABASE_SCHEMA', 'public'), // Not required
ssl: {
rejectUnauthorized: env.bool('DATABASE_SSL_SELF', false), // For self-signed certificates
},
},
debug: false,
},
});
Strapi is aware that there is an issue regarding SSL support for the server.
In order to fix it, you have to set the ssl:{}
object as a boolean in order to disable it. See below for example:
module.exports = ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'postgres',
connection: {
...
ssl: env('DATABASE_SSL', false)
},
},
});
Please note that if you need client side SSL CA verification you will need to use the ssl:{}
object with the fs module to convert your CA certificate to a string. You can see an example below:
const fs = require('fs');
module.exports = ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'postgres',
connection: {
...
ssl: {
ca: fs.readFileSync(`${__dirname}/path/to/your/ca-certificate.crt`).toString(),
},
},
},
});
module.exports = ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'mysql',
connection: {
host: env('DATABASE_HOST', '127.0.0.1'),
port: env.int('DATABASE_PORT', 3306),
database: env('DATABASE_NAME', 'strapi'),
user: env('DATABASE_USERNAME', 'strapi'),
password: env('DATABASE_PASSWORD', 'strapi'),
ssl: {
rejectUnauthorized: env.bool('DATABASE_SSL_SELF', false), // For self-signed certificates
},
},
debug: false,
},
});
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
module.exports = ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'sqlite',
connection: {
filename: env('DATABASE_FILENAME', '.tmp/data.db'),
},
useNullAsDefault: true,
debug: false,
},
});
import path from 'path';
export default ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'sqlite',
connection: {
filename: path.join(
__dirname,
'..',
'..',
env('DATABASE_FILENAME', path.join('.tmp', 'data.db'))
),
},
useNullAsDefault: true,
},
});
Configuration in database
Configuration files are not multi-server friendly. To update configurations in production you can use a data store to get and set settings.
Get settings
environment
(string): Sets the environment you want to store the data in. By default it's current environment (can be an empty string if your configuration is environment agnostic).type
(string): Sets if your configuration is for anapi
,plugin
orcore
. By default it'score
.name
(string): You have to set the plugin or api name iftype
isapi
orplugin
.key
(string, required): The name of the key you want to store.
// strapi.store(object).get(object);
// create reusable plugin store variable
const pluginStore = strapi.store({
environment: strapi.config.environment,
type: 'plugin',
name: 'users-permissions',
});
await pluginStore.get({ key: 'grant' });
Set settings
value
(any, required): The value you want to store.
// strapi.store(object).set(object);
// create reusable plugin store variable
const pluginStore = strapi.store({
environment: strapi.config.environment,
type: 'plugin',
name: 'users-permissions'
});
await pluginStore.set({
key: 'grant',
value: {
...
}
});
Environment variables in database configurations
Strapi version v4.6.2
and higher includes the database configuration options in the ./config/database.js
or ./config/database.ts
file. When a new project is created the environment variable DATABASE_CLIENT
with the value mysql
, postgres
, or sqlite
is automatically added to the .env
file depending on which database you choose during project creation. Additionally, all of the environment variables necessary to connect to your local development database are also added to the .env
file. The following is an example of the generated configuration file:
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
const path = require('path');
module.exports = ({ env }) => {
const client = env('DATABASE_CLIENT', 'sqlite');
const connections = {
mysql: {
connection: {
connectionString: env('DATABASE_URL'),
host: env('DATABASE_HOST', 'localhost'),
port: env.int('DATABASE_PORT', 3306),
database: env('DATABASE_NAME', 'strapi'),
user: env('DATABASE_USERNAME', 'strapi'),
password: env('DATABASE_PASSWORD', 'strapi'),
ssl: env.bool('DATABASE_SSL', false) && {
key: env('DATABASE_SSL_KEY', undefined),
cert: env('DATABASE_SSL_CERT', undefined),
ca: env('DATABASE_SSL_CA', undefined),
capath: env('DATABASE_SSL_CAPATH', undefined),
cipher: env('DATABASE_SSL_CIPHER', undefined),
rejectUnauthorized: env.bool(
'DATABASE_SSL_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED',
true
),
},
},
pool: { min: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MIN', 2), max: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MAX', 10) },
},
postgres: {
connection: {
connectionString: env('DATABASE_URL'),
host: env('DATABASE_HOST', 'localhost'),
port: env.int('DATABASE_PORT', 3306),
database: env('DATABASE_NAME', 'strapi'),
user: env('DATABASE_USERNAME', 'strapi'),
password: env('DATABASE_PASSWORD', 'strapi'),
ssl: env.bool('DATABASE_SSL', false) && {
key: env('DATABASE_SSL_KEY', undefined),
cert: env('DATABASE_SSL_CERT', undefined),
ca: env('DATABASE_SSL_CA', undefined),
capath: env('DATABASE_SSL_CAPATH', undefined),
cipher: env('DATABASE_SSL_CIPHER', undefined),
rejectUnauthorized: env.bool(
'DATABASE_SSL_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED',
true
),
},
schema: env('DATABASE_SCHEMA', 'public'),
},
pool: { min: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MIN', 2), max: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MAX', 10) },
},
sqlite: {
connection: {
filename: path.join(
__dirname,
'..',
env('DATABASE_FILENAME', 'data.db')
),
},
useNullAsDefault: true,
},
};
return {
connection: {
client,
...connections[client],
acquireConnectionTimeout: env.int('DATABASE_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT', 60000),
},
};
};
import path from 'path';
export default = ({ env }) => {
const client = env('DATABASE_CLIENT', 'sqlite');
const connections = {
mysql: {
connection: {
connectionString: env('DATABASE_URL'),
host: env('DATABASE_HOST', 'localhost'),
port: env.int('DATABASE_PORT', 3306),
database: env('DATABASE_NAME', 'strapi'),
user: env('DATABASE_USERNAME', 'strapi'),
password: env('DATABASE_PASSWORD', 'strapi'),
ssl: env.bool('DATABASE_SSL', false) && {
key: env('DATABASE_SSL_KEY', undefined),
cert: env('DATABASE_SSL_CERT', undefined),
ca: env('DATABASE_SSL_CA', undefined),
capath: env('DATABASE_SSL_CAPATH', undefined),
cipher: env('DATABASE_SSL_CIPHER', undefined),
rejectUnauthorized: env.bool(
'DATABASE_SSL_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED',
true
),
},
},
pool: { min: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MIN', 2), max: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MAX', 10) },
},
postgres: {
connection: {
connectionString: env('DATABASE_URL'),
host: env('DATABASE_HOST', 'localhost'),
port: env.int('DATABASE_PORT', 3306),
database: env('DATABASE_NAME', 'strapi'),
user: env('DATABASE_USERNAME', 'strapi'),
password: env('DATABASE_PASSWORD', 'strapi'),
ssl: env.bool('DATABASE_SSL', false) && {
key: env('DATABASE_SSL_KEY', undefined),
cert: env('DATABASE_SSL_CERT', undefined),
ca: env('DATABASE_SSL_CA', undefined),
capath: env('DATABASE_SSL_CAPATH', undefined),
cipher: env('DATABASE_SSL_CIPHER', undefined),
rejectUnauthorized: env.bool(
'DATABASE_SSL_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED',
true
),
},
schema: env('DATABASE_SCHEMA', 'public'),
},
pool: { min: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MIN', 2), max: env.int('DATABASE_POOL_MAX', 10) },
},
sqlite: {
connection: {
filename: path.join(
__dirname,
'..',
env('DATABASE_FILENAME', 'data.db')
),
},
useNullAsDefault: true,
},
};
return {
connection: {
client,
...connections[client],
acquireConnectionTimeout: env.int('DATABASE_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT', 60000),
},
};
};
The following are examples of the corresponding .env
file database-related keys for each of the possible databases:
- MySQL or MariaDB
- PostgreSQL
- SQLite
# Database
DATABASE_CLIENT=mysql
DATABASE_HOST=127.0.0.1
DATABASE_PORT=3306
DATABASE_NAME=strapi
DATABASE_USERNAME=strapi
DATABASE_PASSWORD=strap1
DATABASE_SSL=false
# Database
DATABASE_CLIENT=postgres
DATABASE_HOST=127.0.0.1
DATABASE_PORT=5432
DATABASE_NAME=strapi
DATABASE_USERNAME=strapi
DATABASE_PASSWORD=strapi
DATABASE_SSL=false
# Database
DATABASE_CLIENT=sqlite
DATABASE_FILENAME=.tmp/data.db
Environment variables for Strapi applications before v4.6.2
If you started your project with a version prior to v4.6.2
you can convert your database.js|database.ts
configuration file following this procedure:
- Update your application to
v4.6.2
or a later version. See the upgrades documentation. - Replace the contents of your
./config/database.js
or./config/database.ts
file with the preceding JavaScript or TypeScript code. - Add the environment variables from the preceding code example to your
.env
file. - (optional) Add additional environment variables such as
DATABASE_URL
and the properties of thessl
object. - Save the changes and restart your application.✋ Caution
Do not overwrite the environment variables:
HOST
,PORT
,APP_KEYS
,API_TOKEN_SALT
, andADMIN_JWT_SECRET
.
Database connections using connectionString
Many managed database solutions use the property connectionString
to connect a database to an application. Strapi v4.6.2
and later versions include the connectionString
property. The connectionString
is a concatenation of all the database properties in the connection.connection
object. The connectionString
:
- overrides the other
connection.connection
properties such ashost
andport
, - can be disabled by setting the property to an empty string:
''
.
Database management by environment
Development of a Strapi application commonly includes customization in the local development environment with a local development database, such as SQLite
. When the application is ready for another environment such as production or staging the application is deployed with a different database instance, usually MySQL
, MariaDB
, or PostgreSQL
. Database environment variables allow you to switch the attached database. To switch the database connection:
- set a minimum of the
DATABASE_CLIENT
andDATABASE_URL
forMySQL
,MariaDB
, andPostgreSQL
, - or set a minimum of
DATABASE_CLIENT
andDATABASE_FILENAME
forSQLite
.
For deployed versions of your application the database environment variables should be stored wherever your other secrets are stored. The following table gives examples of where the database environment variables should be stored:
Hosting option | environment variable storage |
---|---|
Virtual private server/virtual machine (e.g. AWS EC2) | ecosystem.config.js or .env |
DigitalOcean App Platform | Environment Variables table |
Heroku | Config vars table |
Databases installation
Strapi gives you the option to choose the most appropriate database for your project. Strapi supports PostgreSQL, SQLite, or MySQL.
SQLite
SQLite is the default (see Quick Start Guide) and recommended database to quickly create an application locally.
Install SQLite during application creation
Use one of the following commands:
- yarn
- npm
yarn create strapi-app my-project --quickstart
npx create-strapi-app@latest my-project --quickstart
This will create a new project and launch it in the browser.
Install SQLite manually
In a terminal, run the following command:
- yarn
- npm
yarn add better-sqlite3
npm install better-sqlite3
Add the following code to your /config/database.ts|js
file:
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
module.exports = ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'sqlite',
connection: {
filename: path.join(__dirname, '..', env('DATABASE_FILENAME', '.tmp/data.db')),
},
useNullAsDefault: true,
},
});
import path from 'path';
export default ({ env }) => ({
connection: {
client: 'sqlite',
connection: {
filename: path.join(__dirname, '..', '..', env('DATABASE_FILENAME', '.tmp/data.db')),
},
useNullAsDefault: true,
},
});
PostgreSQL
When connecting Strapi to a PostgreSQL database, the database user requires SCHEMA permissions. While the database admin has this permission by default, a new database user explicitly created for the Strapi application will not. This would result in a 500 error when trying to load the admin console.
To create a new PostgreSQL user with the SCHEMA permission, use the following steps:
# Create a new database user with a secure password
$ CREATE USER my_strapi_db_user WITH PASSWORD 'password';
# Connect to the database as the PostgreSQL admin
$ \c my_strapi_db_name admin_user
# Grant schema privileges to the user
$ GRANT ALL ON SCHEMA public TO my_strapi_db_user;