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MCP Toolbox for Databases is an open source MCP server for databases.

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MCP Toolbox for Databases

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[!NOTE] MCP Toolbox for Databases is currently in beta, and may see breaking changes until the first stable release (v1.0).

MCP Toolbox for Databases is an open source MCP server for databases. It enables you to develop tools easier, faster, and more securely by handling the complexities such as connection pooling, authentication, and more.

This README provides a brief overview. For comprehensive details, see the full documentation.

[!NOTE] This solution was originally named “Gen AI Toolbox for Databases” as its initial development predated MCP, but was renamed to align with recently added MCP compatibility.

Table of Contents

Why Toolbox?

Toolbox helps you build Gen AI tools that let your agents access data in your database. Toolbox provides:

  • Simplified development: Integrate tools to your agent in less than 10 lines of code, reuse tools between multiple agents or frameworks, and deploy new versions of tools more easily.
  • Better performance: Best practices such as connection pooling, authentication, and more.
  • Enhanced security: Integrated auth for more secure access to your data
  • End-to-end observability: Out of the box metrics and tracing with built-in support for OpenTelemetry.

General Architecture

Toolbox sits between your application's orchestration framework and your database, providing a control plane that is used to modify, distribute, or invoke tools. It simplifies the management of your tools by providing you with a centralized location to store and update tools, allowing you to share tools between agents and applications and update those tools without necessarily redeploying your application.

architecture

Getting Started

Installing the server

For the latest version, check the releases page and use the following instructions for your OS and CPU architecture.

To install Toolbox as a binary:

# see releases page for other versions
export VERSION=0.5.0
curl -O https://storage.googleapis.com/genai-toolbox/v$VERSION/linux/amd64/toolbox
chmod +x toolbox
# see releases page for other versions
export VERSION=0.5.0
docker pull us-central1-docker.pkg.dev/database-toolbox/toolbox/toolbox:$VERSION

To install from source, ensure you have the latest version of Go installed, and then run the following command:

go install github.com/googleapis/[email protected]

Running the server

Configure a tools.yaml to define your tools, and then execute toolbox to start the server:

./toolbox --tools-file "tools.yaml"

You can use toolbox help for a full list of flags! To stop the server, send a terminate signal (ctrl+c on most platforms).

For more detailed documentation on deploying to different environments, check out the resources in the How-to section

Integrating your application

Once your server is up and running, you can load the tools into your application. See below the list of Client SDKs for using various frameworks:

  1. Install Toolbox Core SDK:
    pip install toolbox-core
    
  2. Load tools:
    from toolbox_core import ToolboxClient
    
    # update the url to point to your server
    client = ToolboxClient("http://127.0.0.1:5000")
    
    # these tools can be passed to your application! 
    tools = await client.load_toolset("toolset_name")
    

For more detailed instructions on using the Toolbox Core SDK, see the project's README.

  1. Install Toolbox LangChain SDK:
    pip install toolbox-langchain
    
  2. Load tools:
    from toolbox_langchain import ToolboxClient
    
    # update the url to point to your server
    client = ToolboxClient("http://127.0.0.1:5000")
    
    # these tools can be passed to your application! 
    tools = client.load_toolset()
    

For more detailed instructions on using the Toolbox LangChain SDK, see the project's README.

  1. Install Toolbox Llamaindex SDK:
    pip install toolbox-llamaindex
    
  2. Load tools:
    from toolbox_llamaindex import ToolboxClient
    
    # update the url to point to your server
    client = ToolboxClient("http://127.0.0.1:5000")
    
    # these tools can be passed to your application! 
    tools = client.load_toolset()
    

For more detailed instructions on using the Toolbox Llamaindex SDK, see the project's README.

Configuration

The primary way to configure Toolbox is through the tools.yaml file. If you have multiple files, you can tell toolbox which to load with the --tools-file tools.yaml flag.

You can find more detailed reference documentation to all resource types in the Resources.

Sources

The sources section of your tools.yaml defines what data sources your Toolbox should have access to. Most tools will have at least one source to execute against.

sources:
  my-pg-source:
    kind: postgres
    host: 127.0.0.1
    port: 5432
    database: toolbox_db
    user: toolbox_user
    password: my-password

For more details on configuring different types of sources, see the Sources.

Tools

The tools section of a tools.yaml define the actions an agent can take: what kind of tool it is, which source(s) it affects, what parameters it uses, etc.

tools:
  search-hotels-by-name:
    kind: postgres-sql
    source: my-pg-source
    description: Search for hotels based on name.
    parameters:
      - name: name
        type: string
        description: The name of the hotel.
    statement: SELECT * FROM hotels WHERE name ILIKE '%' || $1 || '%';

For more details on configuring different types of tools, see the Tools.

Toolsets

The toolsets section of your tools.yaml allows you to define groups of tools that you want to be able to load together. This can be useful for defining different groups based on agent or application.

toolsets:
    my_first_toolset:
        - my_first_tool
        - my_second_tool
    my_second_toolset:
        - my_second_tool
        - my_third_tool

You can load toolsets by name:

# This will load all tools
all_tools = client.load_toolset()

# This will only load the tools listed in 'my_second_toolset'
my_second_toolset = client.load_toolset("my_second_toolset")

Versioning

This project uses semantic versioning, including a MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH version number that increments with:

  • MAJOR version when we make incompatible API changes
  • MINOR version when we add functionality in a backward compatible manner
  • PATCH version when we make backward compatible bug fixes

The public API that this applies to is the CLI associated with Toolbox, the interactions with official SDKs, and the definitions in the tools.yaml file.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome. Please, see the CONTRIBUTING to get started.

Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. See Contributor Code of Conduct for more information.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is MCP?

MCP (Model Context Protocol) is an open protocol that standardizes how applications provide context to LLMs. Think of MCP like a USB-C port for AI applications, providing a standardized way to connect AI models to different data sources and tools.

What are MCP Servers?

MCP Servers are lightweight programs that expose specific capabilities through the standardized Model Context Protocol. They act as bridges between LLMs like Claude and various data sources or services, allowing secure access to files, databases, APIs, and other resources.

How do MCP Servers work?

MCP Servers follow a client-server architecture where a host application (like Claude Desktop) connects to multiple servers. Each server provides specific functionality through standardized endpoints and protocols, enabling Claude to access data and perform actions through the standardized protocol.

Are MCP Servers secure?

Yes, MCP Servers are designed with security in mind. They run locally with explicit configuration and permissions, require user approval for actions, and include built-in security features to prevent unauthorized access and ensure data privacy.

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