Cryptocurrency Daemon
An MCP server for interacting with cryptocurrency daemon RPC interfaces.
Cryptocurrency Daemon MCP Server (BETA)
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for interacting with cryptocurrency daemon RPC interfaces. This server enables AI assistants to help manage and interact with cryptocurrency nodes in a controlled manner.
⚠️ IMPORTANT SECURITY WARNING ⚠️
This software allows AI systems to interact with cryptocurrency daemons. Please read this warning carefully:
-
Running this MCP server gives AI systems the ability to:
- Send transactions
- Access wallet information
- Modify wallet settings
- View private data
- Execute daemon commands
-
Potential risks include:
- Loss of funds through unauthorized transactions
- Exposure of private information
- Unintended wallet or daemon modifications
- Potential security vulnerabilities if improperly configured
-
Required Safety Measures:
- Use a separate wallet with limited funds for AI interactions
- Never give access to wallets containing significant value
- Configure strict RPC permissions
- Monitor all AI interactions with the daemon
- Regular security audits of configurations
- Keep backups of all important data
This software is in BETA. Use at your own risk.
Installation
Installing via Smithery
To install Cryptocurrency Daemon Server for Claude Desktop automatically via Smithery:
npx -y @smithery/cli install @raw391/coin_daemon_mcp --client claude
1. Install the Package
You can install the package via npm:
npm install @raw391/coin-daemon-mcp
2. Configure Claude Desktop
To use this MCP with Claude Desktop, you'll need to modify your Claude Desktop configuration. The configuration file is located at:
- Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
- macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Add the following to your configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"cryptocurrency": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@raw391/coin-daemon-mcp"
],
"env": {
"CONFIG_PATH": "path/to/your/config.json"
}
}
}
}
3. Create Configuration File
Create a configuration file for your cryptocurrency daemons. Here are some example configurations:
Basic Single Daemon Configuration
{
"daemons": [
{
"coinName": "zcash",
"nickname": "zec-main",
"rpcEndpoint": "127.0.0.1:8232",
"rpcUser": "your-rpc-user",
"rpcPassword": "your-rpc-password"
}
]
}
Multiple Daemons Configuration
{
"daemons": [
{
"coinName": "zcash",
"nickname": "zec-main",
"rpcEndpoint": "127.0.0.1:8232",
"rpcUser": "zec-user",
"rpcPassword": "zec-password"
},
{
"coinName": "bitcoin",
"nickname": "btc-main",
"rpcEndpoint": "127.0.0.1:8332",
"rpcUser": "btc-user",
"rpcPassword": "btc-password"
}
]
}
Advanced Configuration with Data Directory
For best security practices, you might want to also use a file system MCP to manage daemon data. Here's how to configure both together:
{
"mcpServers": {
"cryptocurrency": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@raw391/coin-daemon-mcp"
],
"env": {
"CONFIG_PATH": "C:/CryptoConfig/daemon-config.json"
}
},
"filesystem": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem",
"C:/CryptoData"
]
}
}
}
4. Configure Your Cryptocurrency Daemon
Make sure your cryptocurrency daemon's configuration file (e.g., zcash.conf, bitcoin.conf) has the appropriate RPC settings:
server=1
rpcuser=your-rpc-user
rpcpassword=your-rpc-password
rpcallowip=127.0.0.1
5. Start Using the MCP
After configuration, restart Claude Desktop. You should see new tools, resources, and prompts available for:
- Sending transactions
- Checking balances
- Managing wallets
- Monitoring daemon status
- Learning about cryptocurrencies
- And more
MCP Features
The server provides three types of MCP capabilities:
Tools
-
Transaction Management
send-coins: Send transparent transactionszsend-coins: Send shielded transactions (for privacy coins)shield-coins: Convert transparent to shielded funds
-
Wallet Operations
get-balance: Check balancesexecute-command: Execute any supported RPC command
-
Daemon Management
check-status: Get daemon information
Resources
Access valuable data and documentation:
-
Documentation Resources
crypto://{coinType}/help: Get detailed documentation for specific cryptocurrenciesdaemon://{name}/help: Get help text specific to a daemon
-
Transaction History
daemon://{name}/transactions: View recent transaction history
Prompts
Pre-built templates for common workflows:
-
Transaction Guidance
send-transaction-template: Generate a guided prompt for constructing transactions
-
Analysis Templates
balance-analysis: Analyze wallet balances and fund distributiondaemon-diagnostic: Perform a health check of a daemon
Security Best Practices
-
Separate Wallets
- Create dedicated wallets for AI interactions
- Keep minimal funds in accessible wallets
- Use test networks for development
-
RPC Security
- Use strong, unique RPC credentials
- Enable only necessary RPC commands
- Restrict RPC access to localhost
- Monitor RPC logs
-
Data Management
- Regular wallet backups
- Secure storage of configuration files
- Monitoring of all transactions
- Regular security audits
Example Usage
Here's how Claude can help with common tasks:
-
Checking Status: "What's the current status of the Zcash daemon?"
-
Managing Balances: "What's my current balance across all addresses?"
-
Learning About Cryptocurrencies: "Can you explain how Zcash shielded transactions work?"
-
Sending Transactions: "Can you help me send 0.1 ZEC to address xxx?"
Troubleshooting
-
Connection Issues
- Verify daemon is running
- Check RPC credentials
- Ensure correct port numbers
- Verify localhost access
-
Permission Problems
- Check file permissions
- Verify RPC user rights
- Ensure correct configuration paths
-
Transaction Issues
- Verify sufficient funds
- Check network connectivity
- Ensure daemon is synced
Support
- GitHub Issues: Bug reports and feature requests
- Discussions: General questions and community support
- Security Issues: Email [email protected]
License
MIT License with additional cryptocurrency operations disclaimer. See LICENSE for details.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md for contribution guidelines.
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