GitHub - mcpdotdirect/evm-mcp-server: MCP server that provides LLM with tools for interacting with EVM networks (original) (raw)

EVM MCP Server

License: MIT EVM Networks TypeScript Viem

A comprehensive Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that provides blockchain services across multiple EVM-compatible networks. This server enables AI agents to interact with Ethereum, Optimism, Arbitrum, Base, Polygon, and many other EVM chains with a unified interface.

📋 Contents

🔭 Overview

The MCP EVM Server leverages the Model Context Protocol to provide blockchain services to AI agents. It supports a wide range of services including:

All services are exposed through a consistent interface of MCP tools and resources, making it easy for AI agents to discover and use blockchain functionality. Every tool that accepts Ethereum addresses also supports ENS names, automatically resolving them to addresses behind the scenes.

✨ Features

Blockchain Data Access

Token services

Smart Contract Interactions

Comprehensive Transaction Support

🌐 Supported Networks

Mainnets

Testnets

🛠️ Prerequisites

📦 Installation

Clone the repository

git clone https://github.com/mcpdotdirect/mcp-evm-server.git cd mcp-evm-server

Install dependencies with Bun

bun install

Or with npm

npm install

⚙️ Server Configuration

The server uses the following default configuration:

These values are hardcoded in the application. If you need to modify them, you can edit the following files:

🚀 Usage

Using npx (No Installation Required)

You can run the MCP EVM Server directly without installation using npx:

Run the server in stdio mode (for CLI tools)

npx @mcpdotdirect/evm-mcp-server

Run the server in HTTP mode (for web applications)

npx @mcpdotdirect/evm-mcp-server --http

Running the Server Locally

Start the server using stdio (for embedding in CLI tools):

Start the stdio server

bun start

Development mode with auto-reload

bun dev

Or start the HTTP server with SSE for web applications:

Start the HTTP server

bun start:http

Development mode with auto-reload

bun dev:http

Connecting to the Server

Connect to this MCP server using any MCP-compatible client. For testing and debugging, you can use the MCP Inspector.

Connecting from Cursor

To connect to the MCP server from Cursor:

  1. Open Cursor and go to Settings (gear icon in the bottom left)
  2. Click on "Features" in the left sidebar
  3. Scroll down to "MCP Servers" section
  4. Click "Add new MCP server"
  5. Enter the following details:
    • Server name: evm-mcp-server
    • Type: command
    • Command: npx @mcpdotdirect/evm-mcp-server
  6. Click "Save"

Once connected, you can use the MCP server's capabilities directly within Cursor. The server will appear in the MCP Servers list and can be enabled/disabled as needed.

Using mcp.json with Cursor

For a more portable configuration that you can share with your team or use across projects, you can create an .cursor/mcp.json file in your project's root directory:

{ "mcpServers": { "evm-mcp-server": { "command": "npx", "args": [ "-y", "@mcpdotdirect/evm-mcp-server" ] }, "evm-mcp-http": { "command": "npx", "args": [ "-y", "@mcpdotdirect/evm-mcp-server", "--http" ] } } }

Place this file in your project's .cursor directory (create it if it doesn't exist), and Cursor will automatically detect and use these MCP server configurations when working in that project. This approach makes it easy to:

  1. Share MCP configurations with your team
  2. Version control your MCP setup
  3. Use different server configurations for different projects

Example: HTTP Mode with SSE

If you're developing a web application and want to connect to the HTTP server with Server-Sent Events (SSE), you can use this configuration:

{ "mcpServers": { "evm-mcp-sse": { "url": "http://localhost:3001/sse" } } }

This connects directly to the HTTP server's SSE endpoint, which is useful for:

To use this configuration:

  1. Create a .cursor directory in your project root if it doesn't exist
  2. Save the above JSON as mcp.json in the .cursor directory
  3. Restart Cursor or open your project
  4. Cursor will detect the configuration and offer to enable the server(s)

Example: Using the MCP Server in Cursor

After configuring the MCP server with mcp.json, you can easily use it in Cursor. Here's an example workflow:

  1. Create a new JavaScript/TypeScript file in your project:

// blockchain-example.js async function main() { try { // Get ETH balance for an address using ENS console.log("Getting ETH balance for vitalik.eth...");

// When using with Cursor, you can simply ask Cursor to:
// "Check the ETH balance of vitalik.eth on mainnet"
// Or "Transfer 0.1 ETH from my wallet to vitalik.eth"

// Cursor will use the MCP server to execute these operations 
// without requiring any additional code from you

// This is the power of the MCP integration - your AI assistant
// can directly interact with blockchain data and operations

} catch (error) { console.error("Error:", error.message); } }

main();

  1. With the file open in Cursor, you can ask Cursor to:
    • "Check the current ETH balance of vitalik.eth"
    • "Look up the price of USDC on Ethereum"
    • "Show me the latest block on Optimism"
    • "Check if 0x1234... is a contract address"
  2. Cursor will use the MCP server to execute these operations and return the results directly in your conversation.

The MCP server handles all the blockchain communication while allowing Cursor to understand and execute blockchain-related tasks through natural language.

Connecting using Claude CLI

If you're using Claude CLI, you can connect to the MCP server with just two commands:

Add the MCP server

claude mcp add evm-mcp-server npx @mcpdotdirect/evm-mcp-server

Start Claude with the MCP server enabled

claude

Example: Getting a Token Balance with ENS

// Example of using the MCP client to check a token balance using ENS const mcp = new McpClient("http://localhost:3000");

const result = await mcp.invokeTool("get-token-balance", { tokenAddress: "0xA0b86991c6218b36c1d19D4a2e9Eb0cE3606eB48", // USDC on Ethereum ownerAddress: "vitalik.eth", // ENS name instead of address network: "ethereum" });

console.log(result); // { // tokenAddress: "0xA0b86991c6218b36c1d19D4a2e9Eb0cE3606eB48", // owner: "0xd8dA6BF26964aF9D7eEd9e03E53415D37aA96045", // network: "ethereum", // raw: "1000000000", // formatted: "1000", // symbol: "USDC", // decimals: 6 // }

Example: Resolving an ENS Name

// Example of using the MCP client to resolve an ENS name to an address const mcp = new McpClient("http://localhost:3000");

const result = await mcp.invokeTool("resolve-ens", { ensName: "vitalik.eth", network: "ethereum" });

console.log(result); // { // ensName: "vitalik.eth", // normalizedName: "vitalik.eth", // resolvedAddress: "0xd8dA6BF26964aF9D7eEd9e03E53415D37aA96045", // network: "ethereum" // }

📚 API Reference

Tools

The server provides the following MCP tools for agents. All tools that accept address parameters support both Ethereum addresses and ENS names.

Token services

Tool Name Description Key Parameters
get-token-info Get ERC20 token metadata tokenAddress (address/ENS), network
get-token-balance Check ERC20 token balance tokenAddress (address/ENS), ownerAddress (address/ENS), network
transfer-token Transfer ERC20 tokens privateKey, tokenAddress (address/ENS), toAddress (address/ENS), amount, network
approve-token-spending Approve token allowances privateKey, tokenAddress (address/ENS), spenderAddress (address/ENS), amount, network
get-nft-info Get NFT metadata tokenAddress (address/ENS), tokenId, network
check-nft-ownership Verify NFT ownership tokenAddress (address/ENS), tokenId, ownerAddress (address/ENS), network
transfer-nft Transfer an NFT privateKey, tokenAddress (address/ENS), tokenId, toAddress (address/ENS), network
get-nft-balance Count NFTs owned tokenAddress (address/ENS), ownerAddress (address/ENS), network
get-erc1155-token-uri Get ERC1155 metadata tokenAddress (address/ENS), tokenId, network
get-erc1155-balance Check ERC1155 balance tokenAddress (address/ENS), tokenId, ownerAddress (address/ENS), network
transfer-erc1155 Transfer ERC1155 tokens privateKey, tokenAddress (address/ENS), tokenId, amount, toAddress (address/ENS), network

Blockchain services

Tool Name Description Key Parameters
get-chain-info Get network information network
get-balance Get native token balance address (address/ENS), network
transfer-eth Send native tokens privateKey, to (address/ENS), amount, network
get-transaction Get transaction details txHash, network
read-contract Read smart contract state contractAddress (address/ENS), abi, functionName, args, network
write-contract Write to smart contract contractAddress (address/ENS), abi, functionName, args, privateKey, network
is-contract Check if address is a contract address (address/ENS), network
resolve-ens Resolve ENS name to address ensName, network

Resources

The server exposes blockchain data through the following MCP resource URIs. All resource URIs that accept addresses also support ENS names, which are automatically resolved to addresses.

Blockchain Resources

Resource URI Pattern Description
evm://{network}/chain Chain information for a specific network
evm://chain Ethereum mainnet chain information
evm://{network}/block/{blockNumber} Block data by number
evm://{network}/block/latest Latest block data
evm://{network}/address/{address}/balance Native token balance
evm://{network}/tx/{txHash} Transaction details
evm://{network}/tx/{txHash}/receipt Transaction receipt with logs

Token Resources

Resource URI Pattern Description
evm://{network}/token/{tokenAddress} ERC20 token information
evm://{network}/token/{tokenAddress}/balanceOf/{address} ERC20 token balance
evm://{network}/nft/{tokenAddress}/{tokenId} NFT (ERC721) token information
evm://{network}/nft/{tokenAddress}/{tokenId}/isOwnedBy/{address} NFT ownership verification
evm://{network}/erc1155/{tokenAddress}/{tokenId}/uri ERC1155 token URI
evm://{network}/erc1155/{tokenAddress}/{tokenId}/balanceOf/{address} ERC1155 token balance

🔒 Security Considerations

📁 Project Structure

mcp-evm-server/
├── src/
│   ├── index.ts                # Main stdio server entry point
│   ├── server/                 # Server-related files
│   │   ├── http-server.ts      # HTTP server with SSE
│   │   └── server.ts           # General server setup
│   ├── core/
│   │   ├── chains.ts           # Chain definitions and utilities
│   │   ├── resources.ts        # MCP resources implementation
│   │   ├── tools.ts            # MCP tools implementation
│   │   ├── prompts.ts          # MCP prompts implementation
│   │   └── services/           # Core blockchain services
│   │       ├── index.ts        # Operation exports
│   │       ├── balance.ts      # Balance services
│   │       ├── transfer.ts     # Token transfer services
│   │       ├── utils.ts        # Utility functions
│   │       ├── tokens.ts       # Token metadata services
│   │       ├── contracts.ts    # Contract interactions
│   │       ├── transactions.ts # Transaction services
│   │       └── blocks.ts       # Block services
│   │       └── clients.ts      # RPC client utilities
├── package.json
├── tsconfig.json
└── README.md

🛠️ Development

To modify or extend the server:

  1. Add new services in the appropriate file under src/core/services/
  2. Register new tools in src/core/tools.ts
  3. Register new resources in src/core/resources.ts
  4. Add new network support in src/core/chains.ts
  5. To change server configuration, edit the hardcoded values in src/server/http-server.ts

📄 License

This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT License.