MongoDB
PostgreSQL
Redis
CouchBase
MySQL
CouchDB
Microsoft SQL Server
Apache Cassandra
Cloudrix
supastarter
Makerkit
ShipFast.AI
SaaS Starter Kit
MailKit
LiteDB
Dapper
Production-ready NestJS + Angular SaaS boilerplate with auth, Stripe payments, multi-tenancy,Docker, and Terraform. Free lite version on GitHub.
MongoDB
CloudrixCloudrix's answer:
Enterprise developers and agencies building B2B SaaS products with NestJS and Angular. Specifically: 1) Solo founder who want to launch an MVP in days instead of months. 2) Dev agencies starting client projects who need a production-ready foundation to bill for features, not setup. 3) Enterprise teams at companies already using Angular (BMW, Siemens, ING, Barclays) who need an internal tool or SaaS product fast. 4) Backend engineers who know NestJS but want a complete full-stack solution without learning a new frontend framework.
Cloudrix's answer:
SaaS Starter is the only production-ready NestJS + Angular SaaS boilerplate with Docker, AWS Terraform, BullMQ, CI/CD, audit logging, and API key management included. There are 50+ Next.js boilerplates but only 2 for NestJS + Angular ,and neither includes infrastructure or deployment. We fill that gap with 130+ source files, 55+ tests, and everything from auth to AWS in one package.
Cloudrix's answer:
Three reasons: 1) Stack โ if your team uses NestJS + Angular (the dominant enterprise stack), no competitor supports it. ShipFast, Supastarter, and MakerKit are all React/Next.js. 2) Completeness โ we include Docker Compose, Terraform for AWS, GitHub Actions CI/CD, audit logging, API keys, and HMAC signing. No competitor offers infrastructure at any price. 3) Value โ $249 one-time vs competitors charging $299-$599 or monthly subscriptions. You save 2-6 weeks of setup ($4K-$16K in developer time) for a fraction of the cost.
Cloudrix's answer:
After building 4 SaaS products from scratch, I kept spending the first 2-3 months on the same things every time. authentication, Stripe billing, user management, admin panel, Docker setup, deployment pipelines. The actual product features didn't start until month 3. When I looked for a boilerplate to skip this, I found 50+ options for React and Next.js but almost nothing for NestJS + Angular โ the stack I use every day in production. So I packaged everything I'd built into a clean, tested, documented starter kit. Now other developers can start building their actual product n day one instead of month three.
Cloudrix's answer:
NestJS 11 (backend framework), Angular 21 (frontend with standalone components and signals), TypeScript 5.9 (end-to-end type safety), TypeORM with PostgreSQL (database), Redis (caching and job queues), BullMQ (background job processing), Stripe (payments and subscriptions), Resend (transactional emails), Passport.js (authentication strategies), Docker Compose (local development), Terraform (AWS infrastructure โ ECS, RDS, ElastiCache, S3, CloudFront), GitHub Actions (CI/CD pipelines), Tailwind CSS 4 (styling with dark mode), Nx (monorepo management), and Sharp (image processing).
Cloudrix's answer:
We launched recently so we're building our customer base. Early adopters include freelance developers on Upwork delivering client SaaS projects faster, small agencies in Europe using it as their standard project foundation, and startup founders who shipped their MVPs in under 2 weeks instead of 3 months. We also have a growing open-source community around the free Lite version on GitHub. As a new product, we're focused on earning trust through code quality, documentation, and fast support rather than dropping big names.
Based on our record, MongoDB seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 18 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
In this article, weโll build a CLI tool using the Rig AI framework and MongoDB for retrieval-augmented generation (RAG). This tool will store summarized conversations in a database and retrieve them when needed, enabling the AI to maintain context over time. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
Have a Mongo database holding the various phrases we're going to use and potentially configuration data for the frontend as well. - Source: dev.to / almost 2 years ago
It's also worth mentioning that Perseid provides out-of-the-box support for React, VueJS, Svelte, MongoDB, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Express and Fastify. - Source: dev.to / almost 2 years ago
Does anyone know if the most basic Elastic Cluster instance of DocumentDB carries any monthly fixed cost or is it just on-demand cost? Another words if I run like 10,000 queries against the DB per month, what kind of bill would I expect? This is for a super small app. I am currently using mongodb free tier , but want to migrate everything to AWS. Can't seem to find a straight answer to the pricing question. Source: over 3 years ago
You can use either MongoDB.com's dashboard (if you host a remote database) or Mongo Compass to run queries on the data or you can modify the express middleware with your own queries. I'm still working on the API, so it's not very robust yet. I will update this when it is. Source: over 3 years ago
PostgreSQL - PostgreSQL is a powerful, open source object-relational database system.
supastarter - The boilerplate for your next web app built on top of Supabase and Next.js.
Redis - Redis is an open source in-memory data structure project implementing a distributed, in-memory key-value database with optional durability.
Makerkit - Customer feedback, public roadmap & product changelog
CouchBase - Document-Oriented NoSQL Database
ShipFast.AI - Build your MVP in six weeks.