MariaDB Boilerplates

Explore 1 boilerplate in this collection. Find the perfect starting point for your next project.

Visit website for Gravity

Gravity

The original Node.js & React SaaS boilerplate with subscription billing, authentication, and UI components.

JavaScript
React
shadcn/ui
Amazon Redshift
MariaDB
MongoDB
MSSQL
MySQL
Oracle
PostgreSQL
SQLite
Stripe
Next.js
Node.js
React
React Native

Features:

2FA
Access Control
Admin
AI
API
Auth
Dark Mode
+11 more

Why Choose MariaDB Boilerplates?

MariaDB provides a powerful data storage solution with specific transaction models, indexing strategies, and query capabilities suited for SaaS applications. Our MariaDB boilerplates implement database-native features—from ACID transactions to advanced indexing—with schemas optimized for MariaDB's query engine and scaling characteristics.

MariaDB boilerplates are designed around the database's data modeling approach and transaction semantics. They leverage MariaDB-specific features like JSONB columns, full-text search, aggregation pipelines, or partition keys depending on the database type. The schema design follows MariaDB's best practices for normalization (SQL) or document structure (NoSQL), with strategic indexes on query-heavy columns. Migration systems use MariaDB-native tools for version-controlled schema evolution.

Key Benefits

  • MariaDB-native features (JSONB, aggregations)
  • MariaDB-optimized schema design
  • MariaDB indexing strategies
  • MariaDB transaction patterns
  • MariaDB-specific query optimization
  • MariaDB scaling architecture
  • MariaDB backup and replication
  • MariaDB migration tooling

Browse our collection of 1 MariaDB boilerplate to find the perfect starting point for your next SaaS project. Each boilerplate has been carefully reviewed to ensure quality, security, and production-readiness.

Frequently Asked Questions

What MariaDB-specific features are leveraged in these boilerplates?

MariaDB boilerplates utilize the database's native capabilities including its transaction model (ACID for SQL, eventual consistency for NoSQL), indexing strategies (B-tree, GiST, full-text search), and advanced features like JSON columns, array types, window functions, or document queries. The schema design takes advantage of MariaDB's strengths—whether that's PostgreSQL's JSONB, MySQL's full-text search, MongoDB's aggregation pipeline, or Redis's data structures.

How is the MariaDB schema designed for SaaS applications?

MariaDB boilerplates include production-tested schemas for multi-tenancy, user management, subscriptions, and billing. The design follows MariaDB's best practices for data modeling—whether that's normalized tables with foreign keys (SQL), embedded documents vs. references (MongoDB), or partition key strategies (DynamoDB). Schemas include proper constraints, default values, and relationship management optimized for MariaDB's query engine.

What MariaDB query optimization techniques are implemented?

MariaDB boilerplates implement database-specific query optimizations including strategic indexing on frequently queried columns, query plan analysis, proper use of MariaDB's query features (prepared statements, query builders, aggregations), and N+1 query prevention. Connection pooling is configured for MariaDB's optimal settings, and caching layers are positioned to reduce database load while maintaining data consistency.

How does MariaDB scale in these boilerplates?

MariaDB boilerplates are structured for horizontal and vertical scaling using the database's native scaling features. This includes read replicas, sharding strategies (if applicable), connection pool sizing, and query optimization for distributed systems. The architecture supports MariaDB's scaling patterns—whether that's PostgreSQL's logical replication, MongoDB's sharding, or DynamoDB's automatic partitioning.

What MariaDB backup and migration strategies are included?

MariaDB boilerplates include migration systems using database-specific tools (Prisma migrations, Django migrations, Flyway, Liquibase, or native tools). They follow MariaDB's best practices for zero-downtime deployments, backward-compatible schema changes, and data migrations. Backup strategies leverage MariaDB's native backup features (pg_dump, mysqldump, mongodump) with automated scheduling and point-in-time recovery configurations.