What is ReqRes?
ReqRes offers a comprehensive backend infrastructure that developers can access through simple fetch() calls. The platform provides collections, authentication, and logging capabilities without requiring users to build or deploy any servers. By delivering a ready-to-use URL endpoint, ReqRes handles database operations, authentication workflows, API hosting, and log management seamlessly.
The service supports various frontend applications including iOS apps, React applications, and other web platforms. It utilizes industry-standard technologies like Postgres for databases, OAuth for authentication, Express for API routing, AWS for hosting, and Datadog for logging. This enables developers to focus on building their frontend applications while ReqRes manages the backend complexity.
Features
- Single URL Access: All backend functionality accessible through one endpoint
- Complete Backend Stack: Database, authentication, API, hosting, and logs in one platform
- No Server Management: Eliminates need for DevOps or backend team involvement
- Frontend Integration: Works with any frontend using standard fetch() calls
- Industry Standard Technologies: Built on Postgres, OAuth, Express, AWS, and Datadog
Use Cases
- Building MVPs and prototypes without backend development
- Creating client-only SaaS applications
- Frontend developers implementing full-stack functionality
- QA engineers testing with predictable data and logs
- Educators teaching HTTP, authentication, and REST concepts
FAQs
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What technologies does ReqRes use for its backend infrastructure?
ReqRes utilizes Postgres for databases, OAuth for authentication, Express for API routing, AWS for hosting, and Datadog for logging to provide a complete backend solution. -
How does ReqRes compare to tools like Supabase or Firebase?
ReqRes serves as a backend solution for prototypes, demos, QA, and client-only apps, while Supabase is a production database you own and Firebase is a full Google platform with SDKs and security rules. -
What types of applications can integrate with ReqRes?
ReqRes works with iOS apps, React applications, and any frontend that can make HTTP requests using standard fetch() calls or similar methods.
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ReqRes Uptime Monitor
Average Uptime
99.58%
Average Response Time
400.03 ms