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@kimuson/modular-mcp

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  • License MIT

Modular MCP - Modular tool access for reducing context overhead

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    Readme

    Modular MCP

    A Model Context Protocol (MCP) proxy server that enables efficient management of large tool collections across multiple MCP servers by grouping them and loading tool schemas on-demand.

    Concept

    Traditional MCP setups can overwhelm LLM context when dealing with numerous tools from multiple servers. Modular MCP solves this by:

    • Context Efficiency: Group information is embedded in tool descriptions, so LLMs can discover available groups without making any tool calls
    • On-Demand Loading: Retrieves detailed tool schemas only when needed for specific groups
    • Separation of Concerns: Maintains clear phases between tool discovery and execution
    • Proxy Architecture: Acts as a single MCP endpoint that manages multiple upstream MCP servers

    How it works?

    1. Configuration

    Create a configuration file (e.g., modular-mcp.json) for the upstream MCP servers you want to manage. This uses the standard MCP server configuration format, with one addition: a description field for each server.

    Here's an example using Context7 and Playwright MCP servers:

    {
    + "$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/d-kimuson/modular-mcp/refs/heads/main/config-schema.json",
      "mcpServers": {
        "context7": {
    +     "description": "Use when you need to search library documentation.",
    -     "type": "stdio",
          "command": "npx",
          "args": ["-y", "@upstash/context7-mcp@latest"],
          "env": {}
        },
        "playwright": {
    +     "description": "Use when you need to control or automate web browsers.",
    -     "type": "stdio",
          "command": "npx",
          "args": ["-y", "@playwright/mcp@latest"],
          "env": {}
        }
      }
    }

    The description field is the only extension to the standard MCP configuration. It helps the LLM understand each tool group's purpose without loading detailed tool schemas.

    Note: The type field defaults to "stdio" if not specified. For stdio type servers, you can omit the type field for cleaner configuration.

    2. Register Modular MCP

    Register Modular MCP in your MCP client configuration (e.g., .mcp.json for Claude Code):

    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "modular-mcp": {
          "type": "stdio",
          "command": "npx",
          "args": ["-y", "@kimuson/modular-mcp", "modular-mcp.json"],
          "env": {}
        }
      }
    }

    3. Two Tools Registration

    When Modular MCP starts, it registers only two tools to the LLM:

    • get-modular-tools: Retrieves tool name and schemas for a specific group
    • call-modular-tool: Executes a tool from a specific group

    The get-modular-tools tool description includes information about available groups, like this:

    modular-mcp manages multiple MCP servers as organized groups, providing only the necessary group's tool descriptions to the LLM on demand instead of overwhelming it with all tool descriptions at once.
    
    Use this tool to retrieve available tools in a specific group, then use call-modular-tool to execute them.
    
    Available groups:
    - context7: Use when you need to search library documentation.
    - playwright: Use when you need to control or automate web browsers.

    This description is passed to the LLM as part of the system prompt, allowing it to discover available groups without making any tool calls.

    4. On-Demand Tool Loading

    The LLM can now load and use tools on a per-group basis:

    1. Discovery: The LLM sees available groups in the tool description (no tool calls needed)
    2. Exploration: When the LLM needs playwright tools, it calls get-modular-tools with group="playwright"
    3. Execution: The LLM uses call-modular-tool to execute specific tools like browser_navigate

    For example, to automate a web browser:

    get-modular-tools(group="playwright")
    → Returns all playwright tool schemas
    
    call-modular-tool(group="playwright", name="browser_navigate", args={"url": "https://example.com"})
    → Executes the navigation through the playwright MCP server

    This workflow keeps context usage minimal while providing access to all tools when needed.

    Benefits

    • Reduced Context Usage: Only loads tool information when actually needed
    • Scalable: Can manage dozens of MCP servers without overwhelming context
    • Flexible: Easy to add/remove tool groups without affecting others
    • Transparent: Tools execute exactly as if called directly on upstream servers

    Migration from Standard MCP Configuration

    If you already have a standard MCP configuration file (e.g., .mcp.json), you can easily migrate it to Modular MCP format using the built-in migration command.

    Using the Migration Command

    Run the migration command with your existing MCP configuration file:

    npx -y @kimuson/modular-mcp migrate <mcp-config-file-path>

    For example, if you have a .mcp.json file:

    npx -y @kimuson/modular-mcp migrate .mcp.json

    The migration command will:

    1. Generate a modular-mcp.json file with the migrated configuration (defaults to modular-mcp.json in the current directory, or use -o to specify a custom path)
    2. Replace the original file's contents with a Modular MCP server configuration that references the generated modular-mcp.json file

    OAuth Authentication for Remote MCP Servers

    Modular MCP supports OAuth-based authentication for remote MCP servers using both sse and http transports.

    Using Built-in OAuth Support (Experimental)

    Modular MCP includes an experimental OAuth client that implements the MCP Authorization specification:

    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "linear-server": {
          "description": "Use when you want to check Linear tickets, etc.",
          "type": "sse",
          "url": "https://mcp.linear.app/sse"
        }
      }
    }

    On first connection, your browser will open for OAuth authentication. Tokens are stored locally in ~/.modular-mcp/oauth-servers/ and reused automatically.

    Note: This feature is experimental. If you encounter issues, use the fallback method below.

    Fallback: Using mcp-remote via stdio

    For compatibility with all OAuth servers, you can use mcp-remote via stdio transport:

    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "linear-server": {
          "description": "Use when you want to check Linear tickets, etc.",
          "type": "stdio",
          "command": "npx",
          "args": ["-y", "mcp-remote", "https://mcp.linear.app/sse"]
        }
      }
    }

    This approach delegates OAuth handling to the mcp-remote client and is recommended if the experimental OAuth support doesn't work for your server.