Awesome
Tools
Tools are for LLMs to request, i.e. Claude Desktop app. Claude Sonnet 3.5 intelligently uses both tools, I was pleasantly surprised.
run_command
- run a command, i.e.hostname
orls -al
orecho "hello world"
etc- Returns STDOUT and STDERR as text
run_script
- run a script! (i.e.fish
,bash
,zsh
,python
)- Let your LLM run the code it writes!
- script is passed over STDIN
run_script
==run_command
+ script over STDIN- Claude has been pretty creative with this, i.e. using
cat
as the interpreter to create new files!
[!WARNING] Be careful what you ask this server to run! In Claude Desktop app, use
Approve Once
(notAllow for This Chat
) so you can review each command, useDeny
if you don't trust the command. Permissions are dictated by the user that runs the server. DO NOT run withsudo
.
Video walkthrough
<a href="https://youtu.be/0-VPu1Pc18w"><img src="https://img.youtube.com/vi/0-VPu1Pc18w/maxresdefault.jpg" width="480" alt="YouTube Thumbnail"></a>
Prompts
Prompts are for users to include in chat history, i.e. via Zed
's slash commands (in its AI Chat panel)
run_command
- generate a prompt message with the command output
Development
Install dependencies:
npm install
Build the server:
npm run build
For development with auto-rebuild:
npm run watch
Installation
To use with Claude Desktop, add the server config:
On MacOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
On Windows: %APPDATA%/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Use the published npm package
Published to npm as mcp-server-commands using this workflow
{
"mcpServers": {
"mcp-server-commands": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["mcp-server-commands"]
}
}
}
Use a local build (repo checkout)
{
"mcpServers": {
"mcp-server-commands": {
// works b/c of shebang in index.js
"command": "/path/to/mcp-server-commands/build/index.js"
}
}
}
Logging
Claude Desktop app writes logs to ~/Library/Logs/Claude/mcp-server-mcp-server-commands.log
By default, only important messages are logged (i.e. errors).
If you want to see more messages, add --verbose
to the args
when configuring the server.
By the way, logs are written to STDERR
because that is what Claude Desktop routes to the log files.
In the future, I expect well formatted log messages to be written over the STDIO
transport to the MCP client (note: not Claude Desktop app).
Debugging
Since MCP servers communicate over stdio, debugging can be challenging. We recommend using the MCP Inspector, which is available as a package script:
npm run inspector
The Inspector will provide a URL to access debugging tools in your browser.