whois-mcp

whois-mcp avatar

by bharathvaj-ganesan

Community Servers

MCP Server for whois lookups.

What is whois-mcp

Whois MCP

Model Context Protocol server for whois lookups.

Cursor IDE Demo

https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/57a82adc-3f30-453f-aabd-7138c2e6a21d

Claude Desktop Demo

https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d30a1f45-fdaf-4280-80f2-d5d4fc9743b1

Overview

This MCP server allows AI agents like Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf,.. etc to perform WHOIS lookups and retrieve domain details.

Purpose You can directly ask the AI to check if a domain is available, who owns it, when it was registered, and other important details. No need to go to browser and search.

What is a WHOIS Lookup? A WHOIS lookup is the process of querying a WHOIS database to retrieve registration details about a domain name, IP address, or autonomous system. It helps users find out who owns a domain, when it was registered, when it expires, and other important details.

What Information Can a WHOIS Lookup Provide?

When you perform a WHOIS lookup, you can retrieve details such as:

  • Domain Name – The specific domain queried
  • Registrar Name – The company managing the domain registration (e.g., GoDaddy, Namecheap)
  • Registrant Details – The name, organization, and contact details of the domain owner (unless protected by WHOIS privacy)
  • Registration & Expiry Date – When the domain was registered and when it will expire
  • Name Servers – The DNS servers the domain is using
  • Domain Status – Active, expired, locked, or pending deletion
  • Contact Information – Administrative, technical, and billing contacts (if not hidden)

Available Tools

Tool Description
whois_domain Looksup whois information about the domain
whois_tld Looksup whois information about the Top Level Domain (TLD)
whois_ip Looksup whois information about the IP
whois_as Looksup whois information about the Autonomous System Number (ASN)

Using with Cursor

Installation - Globally

Run the MCP server using npx:

npx -y @bharathvaj/whois-mcp@latest

In your Cursor IDE

  1. Go to Cursor Settings > MCP
  2. Click + Add New MCP Server
  3. Fill in the form:
    • Name: Whois Lookup (or any name you prefer)
    • Type: command
    • Command: npx -y @bharathvaj/whois-mcp@latest

Installation - Project-specific

Add an .cursor/mcp.json file to your project:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "whois": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": [
        "-y",
        "@bharathvaj/whois-mcp@latest"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Usage

Once configured, the whois tools will be automatically available to the Cursor AI Agent. You can:

  1. The tool will be listed under Available Tools in MCP settings
  2. Agent will automatically use it when relevant
  3. You can explicitly ask Agent to send notifications

Using with Roo Code

Access the MCP settings by clicking “Edit MCP Settings” in Roo Code settings or using the “Roo Code: Open MCP Config” command in VS Code's command palette.

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "whois": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": [
        "-y",
        "@bharathvaj/whois-mcp@latest"
      ]
    }
  }
}
  1. The whois capabilities will be available to Roo Code's AI agents

Development

# Install dependencies
pnpm install

# Build
pnpm build

Debugging the Server

To debug your server, you can use the MCP Inspector.

First build the server

pnpm build

Run the following command in your terminal:

# Start MCP Inspector and server with all tools
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector node dist/index.js

License

MIT

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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.