Access and manage ActiveCampaign data through the CData JDBC Driver.
CData's Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server for ActiveCampaign
:heavy_exclamation_mark: This project builds a read-only MCP server. For full read, write, update, delete, and action capabilities and a simplified setup, check out our free CData MCP Server for ActiveCampaign (beta).
We created this read-only MCP Server to allow LLMs (like Claude Desktop) to query live data ActiveCampaign supported by the CData JDBC Driver for ActiveCampaign.
CData JDBC Driver connects to ActiveCampaign by exposing them as relational SQL models.
This server wraps that driver and makes ActiveCampaign data available through a simple MCP interface, so LLMs can retrieve live information by asking natural language questions — no SQL required.
git clone https://github.com/cdatasoftware/activecampaign-mcp-server-by-cdata.git
cd activecampaign-mcp-server-by-cdata
mvn clean install
This creates the JAR file: CDataMCP-jar-with-dependencies.jarlib
folder in the installation directory, typically:
C:\Program Files\CData\CData JDBC Driver for ActiveCampaign\
/Applications/CData JDBC Driver for ActiveCampaign/
java -jar cdata.jdbc.activecampaign.jar --license
Run the command java -jar cdata.jdbc.activecampaign.jar
to open the Connection String utility.
Configure the connection string and click "Test Connection"
Note: If the data sources uses OAuth, you will need to authenticate in your browser.
Once successful, copy the connection string for use later.
.prp
file for your JDBC connection (e.g. activecampaign.prp
) using the following properties and format:
Prefix=activecampaign
ServerName=CDataActiveCampaign
ServerVersion=1.0
DriverPath=PATH\TO\cdata.jdbc.activecampaign.jar
DriverClass=cdata.jdbc.activecampaign.ActiveCampaignDriver
JdbcUrl=jdbc:activecampaign:InitiateOAuth=GETANDREFRESH;
Tables=
Create the config file for Claude Desktop ( claude_desktop_config.json) to add the new MCP server, using the format below. If the file already exists, add the entry to the mcpServers
in the config file.
Windows
{
"mcpServers": {
"{classname_dash}": {
"command": "PATH\\TO\\java.exe",
"args": [
"-jar",
"PATH\\TO\\CDataMCP-jar-with-dependencies.jar",
"PATH\\TO\\activecampaign.prp"
]
},
...
}
}
Linux/Mac
{
"mcpServers": {
"{classname_dash}": {
"command": "/PATH/TO/java",
"args": [
"-jar",
"/PATH/TO/CDataMCP-jar-with-dependencies.jar",
"/PATH/TO/activecampaign.prp"
]
},
...
}
}
If needed, copy the config file to the appropriate directory (Claude Desktop as the example). Windows
cp C:\PATH\TO\claude_desktop_config.json %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
Linux/Mac
cp /PATH/TO/claude_desktop_config.json /Users/{user}/Library/Application\ Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json'
Run or refresh your client (Claude Desktop).
Note: You may need to fully exit or quit your Claude Desktop client and re-open it for the MCP Servers to appear.
java -jar /PATH/TO/CDataMCP-jar-with-dependencies.jar /PATH/TO/Salesforce.prp
Note: The server uses
stdio
so can only be used with clients that run on the same machine as the server.
Once the MCP Server is configured, the AI client will be able to use the built-in tools to read, write, update, and delete the underlying data. In general, you do not need to call the tools explicitly. Simply ask the client to answer questions about the underlying data system. For example:
The list of tools available and their descriptions follow:
In the definitions below, {servername}
refers to the name of the MCP Server in the config file (e.g. {classname_dash}
above).
{servername}_get_tables
- Retrieves a list of tables available in the data source. Use the {servername}_get_columns
tool to list available columns on a table. The output of the tool will be returned in CSV format, with the first line containing column headers.{servername}_get_columns
- Retrieves a list of columns for a table. Use the {servername}_get_tables
tool to get a list of available tables. The output of the tool will be returned in CSV format, with the first line containing column headers.{servername}_run_query
- Execute a SQL SELECT queryIf you are scripting out the requests sent to the MCP Server instead of using an AI Client (e.g. Claude), then you can refer to the JSON payload examples below – following the JSON-RPC 2.0 specification - when calling the available tools.
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 1,
"method": "tools/call",
"params": {
"name": "source_get_tables",
"arguments": {}
}
}
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 2,
"method": "tools/call",
"params": {
"name": "source_get_columns",
"arguments": {
"table": "Account"
}
}
}
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 3,
"method": "tools/call",
"params": {
"name": "source_run_query",
"arguments": {
"sql": "SELECT * FROM [Account] WHERE [IsDeleted] = true"
}
}
}
This MCP server is licensed under the MIT License. This means you are free to use, modify, and distribute the software, subject to the terms and conditions of the MIT License. For more details, please see the LICENSE file in the project repository.
MCP server for dbt-core (OSS) users as the official dbt MCP only supports dbt Cloud. Supports project metadata, model and column-level lineage and dbt documentation.
Embeddings, vector search, document storage, and full-text search with the open-source AI application database
Official CoinGecko API MCP Server for Crypto Price & Market Data, across 200+ blokchain networks and 8M+ tokens.
A lightweight server to connect AI assistants with Kintone applications and data.
A bridge to the Drug Gene Interaction Database (DGIdb) API, enabling AI clients to query drug-gene interaction data.
An MCP server for interacting with Azure Table Storage, requiring an Azure Storage connection string.
Interact with StarRocks
Access real-time DEX analytics across 20+ blockchains with DexPaprika API, tracking 5M+ tokens, pools, volumes, and historical market data. Built by CoinPaprika.
A standardized interface for AI assistants to interact with a SurrealDB database.
Snowflake database integration with read/write capabilities and insight tracking