mcp-server-docker

mcp-server-docker avatar

by ckreiling

Community Servers

MCP server for Docker

What is mcp-server-docker

๐Ÿ‹ Docker MCP server

An MCP server for managing Docker with natural language!

๐Ÿชฉ What can it do?

  • ๐Ÿš€ Compose containers with natural language
  • ๐Ÿ” Introspect & debug running containers
  • ๐Ÿ“€ Manage persistent data with Docker volumes

โ“ Who is this for?

  • Server administrators: connect to remote Docker engines for e.g. managing a public-facing website.
  • Tinkerers: run containers locally and experiment with open-source apps supporting Docker.
  • AI enthusiasts: push the limits of that an LLM is capable of!

Demo

A quick demo showing a WordPress deployment using natural language:

https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/65e35e67-bce0-4449-af7e-9f4dd773b4b3

๐ŸŽ๏ธ Quickstart

Install

Claude Desktop

On MacOS: ~/Library/Application\ Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

On Windows: %APPDATA%/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

If you don't have uv installed, follow the installation instructions for your system: link

Then add the following to your MCP servers file:

"mcpServers": {
  "mcp-server-docker": {
    "command": "uvx",
    "args": [
      "mcp-server-docker"
    ]
  }
}

Purely for convenience, the server can run in a Docker container.

After cloning this repository, build the Docker image:

docker build -t mcp-server-docker .

And then add the following to your MCP servers file:

"mcpServers": {
  "mcp-server-docker": {
    "command": "docker",
    "args": [
      "run",
      "-i",
      "--rm",
      "-v",
      "/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock",
      "mcp-server-docker:latest"
    ]
  }
}

Note that we mount the Docker socket as a volume; this ensures the MCP server can connect to and control the local Docker daemon.

๐Ÿ“ Prompts

๐ŸŽป docker_compose

Use natural language to compose containers. See above for a demo.

Provide a Project Name, and a description of desired containers, and let the LLM do the rest.

This prompt instructs the LLM to enter a plan+apply loop. Your interaction with the LLM will involve the following steps:

  1. You give the LLM instructions for which containers to bring up
  2. The LLM calculates a concise natural language plan and presents it to you
  3. You either:
    • Apply the plan
    • Provide the LLM feedback, and the LLM recalculates the plan

Examples

  • name: nginx, containers: "deploy an nginx container exposing it on port 9000"
  • name: wordpress, containers: "deploy a WordPress container and a supporting MySQL container, exposing Wordpress on port 9000"

Resuming a Project

When starting a new chat with this prompt, the LLM will receive the status of any containers, volumes, and networks created with the given project name.

This is mainly useful for cleaning up, in-case you lose a chat that was responsible for many containers.

๐Ÿ“” Resources

The server implements a couple resources for every container:

  • Stats: CPU, memory, etc. for a container
  • Logs: tail some logs from a container

๐Ÿ”จ Tools

Containers

  • list_containers
  • create_container
  • run_container
  • recreate_container
  • start_container
  • fetch_container_logs
  • stop_container
  • remove_container

Images

  • list_images
  • pull_image
  • push_image
  • build_image
  • remove_image

Networks

  • list_networks
  • create_network
  • remove_network

Volumes

  • list_volumes
  • create_volume
  • remove_volume

๐Ÿšง Disclaimers

Sensitive Data

DO NOT CONFIGURE CONTAINERS WITH SENSITIVE DATA. This includes API keys, database passwords, etc.

Any sensitive data exchanged with the LLM is inherently compromised, unless the LLM is running on your local machine.

If you are interested in securely passing secrets to containers, file an issue on this repository with your use-case.

Reviewing Created Containers

Be careful to review the containers that the LLM creates. Docker is not a secure sandbox, and therefore the MCP server can potentially impact the host machine through Docker.

For safety reasons, this MCP server doesn't support sensitive Docker options like --privileged or --cap-add/--cap-drop. If these features are of interest to you, file an issue on this repository with your use-case.

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Configuration

This server uses the Python Docker SDK's from_env method. For configuration details, see the documentation.

๐Ÿ’ป Development

Prefer using Devbox to configure your development environment.

See the devbox.json for helpful development commands.

After setting up devbox you can configure your Claude MCP config to use it:

  "docker": {
    "command": "/path/to/repo/.devbox/nix/profile/default/bin/uv",
    "args": [
      "--directory",
      "/path/to/repo/",
      "run",
      "mcp-server-docker"
    ]
  },

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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.