mcp-openproject
Enables AI agents to manage projects and tasks within a self-hosted OpenProject instance, facilitating CRUD operations through a serverless MCP endpoint. Supports secure environment handling and SSE client connections via proxy bridging.
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jessebautista
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MCP Server for OpenProject with Netlify Express
View the deployed MCP function endpoint: https://gilded-fudge-69ca2e.netlify.app/mcp (Note: This endpoint is intended for MCP clients, not direct browser access).
About this MCP Server
This project provides a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server, built with Express and deployed as a Netlify Function. It allows AI agents (like Langflow agents, Claude, Cursor, etc.) to interact with a self-hosted OpenProject instance via defined tools.
This example demonstrates:
- Setting up an MCP server using @modelcontextprotocol/sdk.
- Integrating with an external API (OpenProject).
- Deploying the MCP server serverlessly using Netlify Functions.
- Handling environment variables securely in Netlify.
- Providing a bridge for remote SSE clients (like cloud-hosted Langflow) to connect to the stateless Netlify function via mcp-proxy and ngrok.
Implemented OpenProject Tools
The server exposes the following tools for interacting with OpenProject:
- Projects:
openproject-create-project: Creates a new project.openproject-get-project: Retrieves a specific project by ID.openproject-list-projects: Lists all projects (supports pagination).openproject-update-project: Updates an existing project's details.openproject-delete-project: Deletes a project.
- Tasks (Work Packages):
openproject-create-task: Creates a new task within a project.openproject-get-task: Retrieves a specific task by ID.openproject-list-tasks: Lists tasks, optionally filtered by project ID (supports pagination).openproject-update-task: Updates an existing task (requireslockVersion).openproject-delete-task: Deletes a task.
Prerequisites
- Node.js (v18 or later recommended)
- npm
- Netlify CLI (
npm install -g netlify-cli) - Python 3.10 or later (required for the
mcp-proxytool used for SSE bridging) pip(Python package installer)- An OpenProject instance accessible via URL.
- An OpenProject API Key.
- (Optional)
ngrokaccount and CLI for testing remote SSE clients.
Setup Instructions
-
Clone the repository:
bash git clone git@github.com:jessebautista/mcp-openproject.git cd mcp-openproject -
Install Node.js dependencies:
bash npm install -
Install Python
mcp-proxy: (Ensure you have Python 3.10+ active)bash # Check your python version first if needed: python3 --version # Install mcp-proxy (using pip associated with Python 3.10+): python3.10 -m pip install mcp-proxy # Or python3.11, python3.12 etc. depending on your version # If pipx is installed and preferred: pipx install mcp-proxy
Local Development
-
Create Environment File:
- Create a file named
.envin the project root. - Add your OpenProject details:
dotenv OPENPROJECT_API_KEY="your_openproject_api_key_here" OPENPROJECT_URL="https://your_openproject_instance.com" OPENPROJECT_API_VERSION="v3" - (Important): Ensure
.envis listed in your.gitignorefile to avoid committing secrets.
- Create a file named
-
Run Netlify Dev Server:
- This command starts a local server, loads variables from
.env, and makes your function available.bash netlify dev - Your local MCP endpoint will typically be available at
http://localhost:8888/mcp.
- This command starts a local server, loads variables from
-
Test Locally with MCP Inspector:
- In a separate terminal, run the MCP Inspector, pointing it to your local server via
mcp-remote:bash npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector npx mcp-remote@next http://localhost:8888/mcp - Open the Inspector URL (usually
http://localhost:6274) in your browser. - Connect and use the "Tools" tab to test the OpenProject CRUD operations.
- In a separate terminal, run the MCP Inspector, pointing it to your local server via
Deployment to Netlify
-
Set Environment Variables in Netlify UI:
- Go to your site's dashboard on Netlify (
https://app.netlify.com/sites/gilded-fudge-69ca2e/configuration/env). - Under "Environment variables", add the following variables (ensure they are available to "Functions"):
OPENPROJECT_API_KEY: Your OpenProject API key.OPENPROJECT_URL: Your OpenProject instance URL (e.g.,https://project.bautistavirtualrockstars.com).OPENPROJECT_API_VERSION:v3
- (Security): The code in
netlify/mcp-server/index.tsreads these fromprocess.env. The hardcoded values should be removed (already done in our steps).
- Go to your site's dashboard on Netlify (
-
Deploy via Git:
- Commit your code changes:
bash git add . git commit -m "Deploy OpenProject MCP server updates" - Push to the branch Netlify is configured to deploy (e.g.,
main):bash git push origin main - Netlify will automatically build and deploy the new version. Monitor progress in the "Deploys" section of your Netlify dashboard.
- Commit your code changes:
Testing Deployed Version
-
Using MCP Inspector:
- Run the inspector, pointing
mcp-remoteto your live Netlify function URL:bash npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector npx mcp-remote@next https://gilded-fudge-69ca2e.netlify.app/mcp - Open the Inspector URL and test the tools. Check Netlify function logs if errors occur.
- Run the inspector, pointing
-
Connecting Remote SSE Clients (e.g., Cloud-Hosted Langflow):
-
Since the Netlify function is stateless (doesn't handle SSE connections directly via GET), and remote clients like Langflow often prefer SSE, you need a bridge. We use the Python
mcp-proxytool combined with the JSmcp-remotetool, andngrokfor a public tunnel. -
Step A: Start the Proxy Bridge Locally:
- Run this command in a terminal on your local machine (ensure Python 3.10+ is active and
mcp-proxyis installed):bash # Listen for SSE on local port 7865, run npx mcp-remote as the backend mcp-proxy --sse-port 7865 -- npx mcp-remote@next https://gilded-fudge-69ca2e.netlify.app/mcp - Keep this terminal running. Check its output to ensure it started listening and spawned the
npxcommand.
- Run this command in a terminal on your local machine (ensure Python 3.10+ is active and
-
Step B: Create a Public Tunnel with
ngrok:- In a separate terminal, run
ngrokto expose the local portmcp-proxyis listening on:bash ngrok http 7865 ngrokwill display a public "Forwarding" URL (e.g.,https://<random-string>.ngrok-free.app). Copy this HTTPS URL.
- In a separate terminal, run
-
Step C: Configure Langflow:
- In your Langflow MCP Connection component (running on
https://lang.singforhope.org/):- Mode:
SSE - MCP SSE URL: Paste the full
ngrokpublic URL including the/ssepath required bymcp-proxy(e.g.,https://<random-string>.ngrok-free.app/sse).
- Mode:
- Langflow should now be able to connect and use the tools via the
ngrok->mcp-proxy->mcp-remote-> Netlify chain.
- In your Langflow MCP Connection component (running on
-
(Note): This
ngroksetup is for testing/development. For a permanent solution, deploy themcp-proxybridge to a persistent public server.
-
Netlify Function Configuration (netlify.toml)
Ensure your netlify.toml correctly redirects requests to the /mcp path to your Express function handler:
[[redirects]]
force = true
from = "/mcp/*" # Use wildcard to catch all sub-paths if needed
status = 200
to = "/.netlify/functions/express-mcp-server"
[[redirects]] # Also redirect the base path
force = true
from = "/mcp"
status = 200
to = "/.netlify/functions/express-mcp-server"
(Adjust redirects as needed based on your Express routing)
