MCP Hello World
A minimal MCP server mock in TypeScript for testing MCP clients, supporting both STDIO and HTTP/SSE protocols.
MCP Hello World - MCP Server Mock for Testing
This is a minimal Model Context Protocol (MCP) server implemented in TypeScript, primarily intended to serve as a Test Double / Mock Server.
Core Purpose: To provide a lightweight, controllable, and predictable MCP server environment for unit testing or integration testing client code that needs to interact with an MCP server.
Note: This project is not suitable for production environments or deployment as a general-purpose MCP server.
Why Use mcp-hello-world in Tests?
When testing code related to MCP clients, you usually don't want to depend on a real, potentially complex, and unpredictably responsive AI backend service. Using mcp-hello-world as a test double offers several advantages:
- Isolation: Focus your tests on client logic without worrying about network issues or the availability of the real server.
- Predictability: The provided
echoanddebugtools have simple, fixed behaviors, making it easy to write assertions. - Speed: Fast startup and response times, suitable for frequent use in unit tests.
- Lightweight: Few dependencies, easy to integrate into test environments.
- Protocol Coverage: Supports both
STDIOandHTTP/SSEMCP transport protocols, allowing you to test client behavior under different connection methods.
Installation
Add this package as a dev dependency to your project:
# Using pnpm
pnpm add --save-dev mcp-hello-world
# Or using bun
bun add --dev mcp-hello-world
Manual Execution (for Debugging Tests)
You might want to run the server manually sometimes to debug your tests or client behavior.
STDIO Mode
This is the simplest way to run, especially during local development and debugging.
# Ensure it's installed (globally or in the project)
# Using npx (universal)
npx mcp-hello-world
# Or using pnpm dlx
pnpm dlx mcp-hello-world
# Or using bunx
bunx mcp-hello-world
The server will listen on standard input and output MCP responses to standard output. You can use tools like MCP Inspector to connect to the process.
To configure this server in your MCP client, add the following to your configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"mcp-hello-world": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["mcp-hello-world"]
}
}
}
HTTP/SSE Mode
If you need to debug via a network interface or test HTTP-based MCP clients.
# 1. Clone the repository (if not already installed in the project)
# git clone https://github.com/lobehub/mcp-hello-world.git
# cd mcp-hello-world
# pnpm install / bun install
# 2. Build the project
# Using pnpm
pnpm build
# Or using bun
bun run build
# 3. Start the HTTP server
# Using pnpm
pnpm start:http
# Or using bun
bun run start:http
The server will start on http://localhost:3000 and provide:
- SSE endpoint:
/sse - Message endpoint:
/messages
Usage in Tests
You can programmatically start and stop the mcp-hello-world server within your test framework (like Jest, Vitest, Mocha, etc.) for automated testing.
Example: Testing with STDIO Mode (Node.js)
// test/my-mcp-client.test.ts (Example using Jest)
import { spawn } from 'child_process';
import { MCPClient } from '../src/my-mcp-client'; // Assuming this is your client code
describe('My MCP Client (STDIO)', () => {
let mcpServerProcess;
let client: MCPClient;
beforeAll(() => {
// Start the mcp-hello-world process before tests
// Using npx (or pnpm dlx / bunx) ensures the command is found and executed
mcpServerProcess = spawn('npx', ['mcp-hello-world']);
// Instantiate your client and connect to the subprocess's stdio
client = new MCPClient(mcpServerProcess.stdin, mcpServerProcess.stdout);
});
afterAll(() => {
// Shut down the mcp-hello-world process after tests
mcpServerProcess.kill();
});
it('should receive echo response', async () => {
const request = {
jsonrpc: '2.0',
id: 1,
method: 'tools/invoke',
params: { name: 'echo', parameters: { message: 'test message' } },
};
const response = await client.sendRequest(request); // Assuming your client has this method
expect(response).toEqual({
jsonrpc: '2.0',
id: 1,
result: { content: [{ type: 'text', text: 'Hello test message' }] },
});
});
it('should get greeting resource', async () => {
const request = {
jsonrpc: '2.0',
id: 2,
method: 'resources/get',
params: { uri: 'greeting://Alice' },
};
const response = await client.sendRequest(request);
expect(response).toEqual({
jsonrpc: '2.0',
id: 2,
result: { data: 'Hello Alice!' }, // Confirm return format based on actual implementation
});
});
// ... other test cases
});
Example: Testing with HTTP/SSE Mode
For HTTP/SSE, you might need to:
- Use
execorspawninbeforeAllto startpnpm start:httporbun run start:http. - Use an HTTP client (like
axios,node-fetch, or your test framework's built-in client) to connect tohttp://localhost:3000/sseand/messagesfor testing. - Ensure you shut down the started server process in
afterAll.
Provided MCP Capabilities (for Test Assertions)
mcp-hello-world provides the following fixed capabilities for interaction and assertion in your tests:
Resources
hello://world- Description: A static Hello World resource.
- Method:
resources/get - Parameters: None
- Returns:
{ data: 'Hello World!' }
greeting://{name}- Description: A dynamic greeting resource.
- Method:
resources/get - Parameters:
nameincluded in the URI, e.g.,greeting://Bob. - Returns:
{ data: 'Hello {name}!' }(e.g.,{ data: 'Hello Bob!' })
Tools
echo- Description: Echoes the input message, prefixed with "Hello ".
- Method:
tools/invoke - Parameters:
{ name: 'echo', parameters: { message: string } } - Returns:
{ content: [{ type: 'text', text: 'Hello {message}' }] }(e.g.,{ content: [{ type: 'text', text: 'Hello test' }] })
debug- Description: Lists all available MCP method definitions on the server.
- Method:
tools/invoke - Parameters:
{ name: 'debug', parameters: {} } - Returns: A JSON structure containing definitions for all registered resources, tools, and prompts.
Prompts
helpful-assistant- Description: A basic assistant prompt definition.
- Method:
prompts/get - Parameters: None
- Returns: A JSON structure for the prompt with predefined
systemanduserroles.
License
MIT
相关服务器
Alpha Vantage MCP Server
赞助Access financial market data: realtime & historical stock, ETF, options, forex, crypto, commodities, fundamentals, technical indicators, & more
Kai
Kai provides a bridge between large language models (LLMs) and your Kubernetes clusters, enabling natural language interaction with Kubernetes resources. The server exposes a comprehensive set of tools for managing clusters, namespaces, pods, deployments, services, and other Kubernetes resources
KanseiLink
MCP intelligence layer with 156 services, trust scores from real agent usage, 120 workflow recipes, intent-based discovery, and Agent Voice feedback. Global + Japanese SaaS.
Sistema de Predicción Energética con IA
An AI-powered system for analyzing and predicting domestic energy consumption. It offers precise forecasts, historical pattern analysis, and personalized optimization recommendations through a conversational interface.
PackageLens MCP
Lets your coding agent (such as Claude, Cursor, Copilot, Gemini or Codex) search package registries across multiple ecosystems (npm, PyPI, RubyGems, Crates.io, Packagist, Hex) and fetch package context (README, downloads, GitHub info, usage snippets)
MCP Expert Server
An MCP server for query generation and documentation assistance using Claude AI.
Cursor History MCP
Best MCP server for browsing, searching, backup, and exporting Cursor AI chat history.
convention.sh
Stop your AI agents from writing sloppy TypeScript.
Raymon
Stateful HTTP ingest + MCP server + terminal UI for Ray-style logs.
MCP Image Extractor
Extracts images from files, URLs, or base64 strings and converts them to base64 for LLM analysis.
Lenses
Manage, explore, transform and join data across multiple clusters using different flavours of Apache Kafka via Lenses.io (including the free Community Edition)