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    Mcp Redis

    The official Redis MCP Server is a natural language interface designed for agentic applications to manage and search data in Redis efficiently

    316 stars
    Python
    Updated Nov 4, 2025
    database
    genai
    llm
    mcp
    mcp-server
    redis

    Table of Contents

    • Overview
    • Table of Contents
    • Features
    • Tools
    • Installation
    • From PyPI (recommended)
    • URL specification
    • Testing the PyPI package
    • From GitHub
    • Development Installation
    • With Docker
    • Configuration
    • Redis ACL
    • Configuration via command line arguments
    • Configuration via Environment Variables
    • EntraID Authentication for Azure Managed Redis
    • Authentication Providers
    • EntraID Configuration Variables
    • Key Features
    • Example Configuration
    • Logging
    • Integrations
    • OpenAI Agents SDK
    • Augment
    • Claude Desktop
    • VS Code with GitHub Copilot
    • Suppressing uvx Installation Messages
    • Testing
    • Example Use Cases
    • Contributing
    • License
    • Badges
    • Contact

    Table of Contents

    • Overview
    • Table of Contents
    • Features
    • Tools
    • Installation
    • From PyPI (recommended)
    • URL specification
    • Testing the PyPI package
    • From GitHub
    • Development Installation
    • With Docker
    • Configuration
    • Redis ACL
    • Configuration via command line arguments
    • Configuration via Environment Variables
    • EntraID Authentication for Azure Managed Redis
    • Authentication Providers
    • EntraID Configuration Variables
    • Key Features
    • Example Configuration
    • Logging
    • Integrations
    • OpenAI Agents SDK
    • Augment
    • Claude Desktop
    • VS Code with GitHub Copilot
    • Suppressing uvx Installation Messages
    • Testing
    • Example Use Cases
    • Contributing
    • License
    • Badges
    • Contact

    Documentation

    Redis MCP Server

    Integration

    PyPI - Version

    Python Version

    MIT licensed

    Verified on MseeP

    Docker Image Version

    codecov

    Discord

    Twitch

    YouTube

    Twitter

    Stack Exchange questions

    Overview

    The Redis MCP Server is a natural language interface designed for agentic applications to efficiently manage and search data in Redis. It integrates seamlessly with MCP (Model Content Protocol) clients, enabling AI-driven workflows to interact with structured and unstructured data in Redis. Using this MCP Server, you can ask questions like:

    • "Store the entire conversation in a stream"
    • "Cache this item"
    • "Store the session with an expiration time"
    • "Index and search this vector"

    Table of Contents

    • Overview
    • Features
    • Tools
    • Installation
    • From PyPI (recommended)
    • Testing the PyPI package
    • From GitHub
    • Development Installation
    • With Docker
    • Configuration
    • Redis ACL
    • Configuration via command line arguments
    • Configuration via Environment Variables
    • EntraID Authentication for Azure Managed Redis
    • Logging
    • Integrations
    • OpenAI Agents SDK
    • Augment
    • Claude Desktop
    • VS Code with GitHub Copilot
    • Testing
    • Example Use Cases
    • Contributing
    • License
    • Badges
    • Contact

    Features

    • Natural Language Queries: Enables AI agents to query and update Redis using natural language.
    • Seamless MCP Integration: Works with any MCP client for smooth communication.
    • Full Redis Support: Handles hashes, lists, sets, sorted sets, streams, and more.
    • Search & Filtering: Supports efficient data retrieval and searching in Redis.
    • Scalable & Lightweight: Designed for high-performance data operations.
    • EntraID Authentication: Native support for Azure Active Directory authentication with Azure Managed Redis.
    • The Redis MCP Server supports the stdio transport. Support to the stremable-http transport will be added in the future.

    Tools

    This MCP Server provides tools to manage the data stored in Redis.

    • string tools to set, get strings with expiration. Useful for storing simple configuration values, session data, or caching responses.
    • hash tools to store field-value pairs within a single key. The hash can store vector embeddings. Useful for representing objects with multiple attributes, user profiles, or product information where fields can be accessed individually.
    • list tools with common operations to append and pop items. Useful for queues, message brokers, or maintaining a list of most recent actions.
    • set tools to add, remove and list set members. Useful for tracking unique values like user IDs or tags, and for performing set operations like intersection.
    • sorted set tools to manage data for e.g. leaderboards, priority queues, or time-based analytics with score-based ordering.
    • pub/sub functionality to publish messages to channels and subscribe to receive them. Useful for real-time notifications, chat applications, or distributing updates to multiple clients.
    • streams tools to add, read, and delete from data streams. Useful for event sourcing, activity feeds, or sensor data logging with consumer groups support.
    • JSON tools to store, retrieve, and manipulate JSON documents in Redis. Useful for complex nested data structures, document databases, or configuration management with path-based access.

    Additional tools.

    • docs tool to search Redis documentation, tutorials, and best practices using natural language questions (backed by the MCP_DOCS_SEARCH_URL HTTP API).
    • query engine tools to manage vector indexes and perform vector search
    • server management tool to retrieve information about the database

    Installation

    The Redis MCP Server is available as a PyPI package and as direct installation from the GitHub repository.

    From PyPI (recommended)

    Configuring the latest Redis MCP Server version from PyPI, as an example, can be done importing the following JSON configuration in the desired framework or tool.

    The uvx command will download the server on the fly (if not cached already), create a temporary environment, and then run it.

    commandline
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "RedisMCPServer": {
          "command": "uvx",
          "args": [
            "--from",
            "redis-mcp-server@latest",
            "redis-mcp-server",
            "--url",
            "\"redis://localhost:6379/0\""
          ]
        }
      }
    }

    URL specification

    The format to specify the --url argument follows the redis and rediss schemes:

    commandline
    redis://user:secret@localhost:6379/0?foo=bar&qux=baz

    As an example, you can easily connect to a localhost server with:

    commandline
    redis://localhost:6379/0

    Where 0 is the logical database you'd like to connect to.

    For an encrypted connection to the database (e.g., connecting to a Redis Cloud database), you'd use the rediss scheme.

    commandline
    rediss://user:secret@localhost:6379/0?foo=bar&qux=baz

    To verify the server's identity, specify ssl_ca_certs.

    commandline
    rediss://user:secret@hostname:port?ssl_cert_reqs=required&ssl_ca_certs=path_to_the_certificate

    For an unverified connection, set ssl_cert_reqs to none

    commandline
    rediss://user:secret@hostname:port?ssl_cert_reqs=none

    Configure your connection using the available options in the section "Available CLI Options".

    Testing the PyPI package

    You can install the package as follows:

    sh
    pip install redis-mcp-server

    And start it using uv the package in your environment.

    sh
    uv python install 3.14
    uv sync
    uv run redis-mcp-server --url redis://localhost:6379/0

    However, starting the MCP Server is most useful when delegate to the framework or tool where this MCP Server is configured.

    From GitHub

    You can configure the desired Redis MCP Server version with uvx, which allows you to run it directly from GitHub (from a branch, or use a tagged release).

    It is recommended to use a tagged release, the main branch is under active development and may contain breaking changes.

    As an example, you can execute the following command to run the 0.2.0 release:

    commandline
    uvx --from git+https://github.com/redis/mcp-redis.git@0.2.0 redis-mcp-server --url redis://localhost:6379/0

    Check the release notes for the latest version in the Releases section.

    Additional examples are provided below.

    sh
    # Run with Redis URI
    uvx --from git+https://github.com/redis/mcp-redis.git redis-mcp-server --url redis://localhost:6379/0
    
    # Run with Redis URI and SSL
    uvx --from git+https://github.com/redis/mcp-redis.git redis-mcp-server --url "rediss://:@:?ssl_cert_reqs=required&ssl_ca_certs="
    
    # Run with individual parameters
    uvx --from git+https://github.com/redis/mcp-redis.git redis-mcp-server --host localhost --port 6379 --password mypassword
    
    # See all options
    uvx --from git+https://github.com/redis/mcp-redis.git redis-mcp-server --help

    Development Installation

    For development or if you prefer to clone the repository:

    sh
    # Clone the repository
    git clone https://github.com/redis/mcp-redis.git
    cd mcp-redis
    
    # Install dependencies using uv
    uv venv
    source .venv/bin/activate
    uv sync
    
    # Run with CLI interface
    uv run redis-mcp-server --help
    
    # Or run the main file directly (uses environment variables)
    uv run src/main.py

    Once you cloned the repository, installed the dependencies and verified you can run the server, you can configure Claude Desktop or any other MCP Client to use this MCP Server running the main file directly (it uses environment variables). This is usually preferred for development.

    The following example is for Claude Desktop, but the same applies to any other MCP Client.

    1. Specify your Redis credentials and TLS configuration

    2. Retrieve your uv command full path (e.g. which uv)

    3. Edit the claude_desktop_config.json configuration file

    • on a MacOS, at ~/Library/Application\ Support/Claude/
    json
    {
        "mcpServers": {
            "redis": {
                "command": "",
                "args": [
                    "--directory",
                    "",
                    "run",
                    "src/main.py"
                ],
                "env": {
                    "REDIS_HOST": "",
                    "REDIS_PORT": "",
                    "REDIS_PWD": "",
                    "REDIS_SSL": True|False,
                    "REDIS_SSL_CA_PATH": "",
                    "REDIS_CLUSTER_MODE": True|False
                }
            }
        }
    }

    You can troubleshoot problems by tailing the log file.

    commandline
    tail -f ~/Library/Logs/Claude/mcp-server-redis.log

    With Docker

    You can use a dockerized deployment of this server. You can either build your own image or use the official Redis MCP Docker image.

    If you'd like to build your own image, the Redis MCP Server provides a Dockerfile. Build this server's image with:

    commandline
    docker build -t mcp-redis .

    Finally, configure the client to create the container at start-up. An example for Claude Desktop is provided below. Edit the claude_desktop_config.json and add:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "redis": {
          "command": "docker",
          "args": ["run",
                    "--rm",
                    "--name",
                    "redis-mcp-server",
                    "-i",
                    "-e", "REDIS_HOST=",
                    "-e", "REDIS_PORT=",
                    "-e", "REDIS_USERNAME=",
                    "-e", "REDIS_PWD=",
                    "mcp-redis"]
        }
      }
    }

    To use the official Redis MCP Docker image, just replace your image name (mcp-redis in the example above) with mcp/redis.

    Configuration

    The Redis MCP Server can be configured in two ways: via command line arguments or via environment variables.

    The precedence is: command line arguments > environment variables > default values.

    Redis ACL

    You can configure Redis ACL to restrict the access to the Redis database. For example, to create a read-only user:

    code
    127.0.0.1:6379> ACL SETUSER readonlyuser on >mypassword ~* +@read -@write

    Configure the user via command line arguments or environment variables.

    Configuration via command line arguments

    When using the CLI interface, you can configure the server with command line arguments:

    sh
    # Basic Redis connection
    uvx --from redis-mcp-server@latest redis-mcp-server \
      --host localhost \
      --port 6379 \
      --password mypassword
    
    # Using Redis URI (simpler)
    uvx --from redis-mcp-server@latest redis-mcp-server \
      --url redis://user:pass@localhost:6379/0
    
    # SSL connection
    uvx --from redis-mcp-server@latest redis-mcp-server \
      --url rediss://user:pass@redis.example.com:6379/0
    
    # See all available options
    uvx --from redis-mcp-server@latest redis-mcp-server --help

    Available CLI Options:

    • --url - Redis connection URI (redis://user:pass@host:port/db)
    • --host - Redis hostname (default: 127.0.0.1)
    • --port - Redis port (default: 6379)
    • --db - Redis database number (default: 0)
    • --username - Redis username
    • --password - Redis password
    • --ssl - Enable SSL connection
    • --ssl-ca-path - Path to CA certificate file
    • --ssl-keyfile - Path to SSL key file
    • --ssl-certfile - Path to SSL certificate file
    • --ssl-cert-reqs - SSL certificate requirements (default: required)
    • --ssl-ca-certs - Path to CA certificates file
    • --cluster-mode - Enable Redis cluster mode

    Configuration via Environment Variables

    If desired, you can use environment variables. Defaults are provided for all variables.

    NameDescriptionDefault Value
    REDIS_HOSTRedis IP or hostname"127.0.0.1"
    REDIS_PORTRedis port6379
    REDIS_DBDatabase0
    REDIS_USERNAMEDefault database username"default"
    REDIS_PWDDefault database password""
    REDIS_SSLEnables or disables SSL/TLSFalse
    REDIS_SSL_CA_PATHCA certificate for verifying serverNone
    REDIS_SSL_KEYFILEClient's private key file for client authenticationNone
    REDIS_SSL_CERTFILEClient's certificate file for client authenticationNone
    REDIS_SSL_CERT_REQSWhether the client should verify the server's certificate"required"
    REDIS_SSL_CA_CERTSPath to the trusted CA certificates fileNone
    REDIS_CLUSTER_MODEEnable Redis Cluster modeFalse

    EntraID Authentication for Azure Managed Redis

    The Redis MCP Server supports EntraID (Azure Active Directory) authentication for Azure Managed Redis, enabling OAuth-based authentication with automatic token management.

    Authentication Providers

    Service Principal Authentication - Application-based authentication using client credentials:

    bash
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW=service_principal
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_CLIENT_ID=your-client-id
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_CLIENT_SECRET=your-client-secret
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_TENANT_ID=your-tenant-id

    Managed Identity Authentication - For Azure-hosted applications:

    bash
    # System-assigned managed identity
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW=managed_identity
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_IDENTITY_TYPE=system_assigned
    
    # User-assigned managed identity
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW=managed_identity
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_IDENTITY_TYPE=user_assigned
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_USER_ASSIGNED_CLIENT_ID=your-identity-client-id

    Default Azure Credential - Automatic credential discovery (recommended for development):

    bash
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW=default_credential
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_SCOPES=https://redis.azure.com/.default

    EntraID Configuration Variables

    NameDescriptionDefault Value
    REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOWAuthentication flow typeNone (EntraID disabled)
    REDIS_ENTRAID_CLIENT_IDService Principal client IDNone
    REDIS_ENTRAID_CLIENT_SECRETService Principal client secretNone
    REDIS_ENTRAID_TENANT_IDAzure tenant IDNone
    REDIS_ENTRAID_IDENTITY_TYPEManaged identity type"system_assigned"
    REDIS_ENTRAID_USER_ASSIGNED_CLIENT_IDUser-assigned managed identity client IDNone
    REDIS_ENTRAID_SCOPESOAuth scopes for Default Azure Credential"https://redis.azure.com/.default"
    REDIS_ENTRAID_RESOURCEAzure Redis resource identifier"https://redis.azure.com/"

    Key Features

    • Automatic token renewal - Background token refresh with no manual intervention
    • Graceful fallback - Falls back to standard Redis authentication when EntraID not configured
    • Multiple auth flows - Supports Service Principal, Managed Identity, and Default Azure Credential
    • Enterprise ready - Designed for Azure Managed Redis with centralized identity management

    Example Configuration

    For local development with Azure CLI:

    bash
    # Login with Azure CLI
    az login
    
    # Configure MCP server
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW=default_credential
    export REDIS_URL=redis://your-azure-redis.redis.cache.windows.net:6379

    For production with Service Principal:

    bash
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW=service_principal
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_CLIENT_ID=your-app-client-id
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_CLIENT_SECRET=your-app-secret
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_TENANT_ID=your-tenant-id
    export REDIS_URL=redis://your-azure-redis.redis.cache.windows.net:6379

    For Azure-hosted applications with Managed Identity:

    bash
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW=managed_identity
    export REDIS_ENTRAID_IDENTITY_TYPE=system_assigned
    export REDIS_URL=redis://your-azure-redis.redis.cache.windows.net:6379

    There are several ways to set environment variables:

    1. **Using a .env File**:

    Place a .env file in your project directory with key-value pairs for each environment variable. Tools like python-dotenv, pipenv, and uv can automatically load these variables when running your application. This is a convenient and secure way to manage configuration, as it keeps sensitive data out of your shell history and version control (if .env is in .gitignore).

    For example, create a .env file with the following content from the .env.example file provided in the repository:

    bash
    cp .env.example .env

    Then edit the .env file to set your Redis configuration:

    OR,

    2. Setting Variables in the Shell:

    You can export environment variables directly in your shell before running your application. For example:

    sh
    export REDIS_HOST=your_redis_host
    export REDIS_PORT=6379
    # Other variables will be set similarly...

    This method is useful for temporary overrides or quick testing.

    Logging

    The server uses Python's standard logging and is configured at startup. By default it logs at WARNING and above. You can change verbosity with the MCP_REDIS_LOG_LEVEL environment variable.

    • Accepted values (case-insensitive): DEBUG, INFO, WARNING, ERROR, CRITICAL, NOTSET
    • Aliases supported: WARN → WARNING, FATAL → CRITICAL
    • Numeric values are also accepted, including signed (e.g., "10", "+20")
    • Default when unset or unrecognized: WARNING

    Handler behavior

    • If the host (e.g., uv, VS Code, pytest) already installed console handlers, the server will NOT add its own; it only lowers overly-restrictive handler thresholds so your chosen level is not filtered out. It will never raise a handler's threshold.
    • If no handlers are present, the server adds a single stderr StreamHandler with a simple format.

    Examples

    bash
    # See normal lifecycle messages
    MCP_REDIS_LOG_LEVEL=INFO uv run src/main.py
    
    # Very verbose for debugging
    MCP_REDIS_LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG uvx --from redis-mcp-server@latest redis-mcp-server --url redis://localhost:6379/0

    In MCP client configs that support env, add it alongside your Redis settings. For example:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "redis": {
          "command": "uvx",
          "args": ["--from", "redis-mcp-server@latest", "redis-mcp-server", "--url", "redis://localhost:6379/0"],
          "env": {
            "REDIS_HOST": "localhost",
            "REDIS_PORT": "6379",
            "MCP_REDIS_LOG_LEVEL": "INFO"
          }
        }
      }
    }

    Integrations

    Integrating this MCP Server to development frameworks like OpenAI Agents SDK, or with tools like Claude Desktop, VS Code, or Augment is described in the following sections.

    OpenAI Agents SDK

    Integrate this MCP Server with the OpenAI Agents SDK. Read the documents to learn more about the integration of the SDK with MCP.

    Install the Python SDK.

    commandline
    pip install openai-agents

    Configure the OpenAI token:

    commandline
    export OPENAI_API_KEY=""

    And run the application.

    commandline
    python3.14 redis_assistant.py

    You can troubleshoot your agent workflows using the OpenAI dashboard.

    Augment

    The preferred way of configuring the Redis MCP Server in Augment is to use the Easy MCP feature.

    You can also configure the Redis MCP Server in Augment manually by importing the server via JSON:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "Redis MCP Server": {
          "command": "uvx",
          "args": [
            "--from",
            "redis-mcp-server@latest",
            "redis-mcp-server",
            "--url",
            "redis://localhost:6379/0"
          ]
        }
      }
    }

    Claude Desktop

    The simplest way to configure MCP clients is using uvx. Add the following JSON to your claude_desktop_config.json, remember to provide the full path to uvx.

    Basic Redis connection:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "redis-mcp-server": {
            "type": "stdio",
            "command": "/Users/mortensi/.local/bin/uvx",
            "args": [
                "--from", "redis-mcp-server@latest",
                "redis-mcp-server",
                "--url", "redis://localhost:6379/0"
            ]
        }
      }
    }

    Azure Managed Redis with EntraID authentication:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "redis-mcp-server": {
            "type": "stdio",
            "command": "/Users/mortensi/.local/bin/uvx",
            "args": [
                "--from", "redis-mcp-server@latest",
                "redis-mcp-server",
                "--url", "redis://your-azure-redis.redis.cache.windows.net:6379"
            ],
            "env": {
                "REDIS_ENTRAID_AUTH_FLOW": "default_credential",
                "REDIS_ENTRAID_SCOPES": "https://redis.azure.com/.default"
            }
        }
      }
    }

    VS Code with GitHub Copilot

    To use the Redis MCP Server with VS Code, you must nable the agent mode tools. Add the following to your settings.json:

    json
    {
      "chat.agent.enabled": true
    }

    You can start the GitHub desired version of the Redis MCP server using uvx by adding the following JSON to your mcp.json file:

    json
    "servers": {
      "redis": {
        "type": "stdio",
        "command": "uvx",
        "args": [
          "--from", "redis-mcp-server@latest",
          "redis-mcp-server",
          "--url", "redis://localhost:6379/0"
        ]
      },
    }

    Suppressing uvx Installation Messages

    If you want to suppress uvx installation messages that may appear as warnings in MCP client logs, use the -qq flag:

    json
    "servers": {
      "redis": {
        "type": "stdio",
        "command": "uvx",
        "args": [
          "-qq",
          "--from", "redis-mcp-server@latest",
          "redis-mcp-server",
          "--url", "redis://localhost:6379/0"
        ]
      },
    }

    The -qq flag enables silent mode, which suppresses "Installed X packages" messages that uvx writes to stderr during package installation.

    Alternatively, you can start the server using uv and configure your mcp.json. This is usually desired for development.

    json
    // mcp.json
    {
      "servers": {
        "redis": {
          "type": "stdio",
          "command": "",
          "args": [
            "--directory",
            "",
            "run",
            "src/main.py"
          ],
          "env": {
            "REDIS_HOST": "",
            "REDIS_PORT": "",
            "REDIS_USERNAME": "",
            "REDIS_PWD": "",
          }
        }
      }
    }

    For more information, see the VS Code documentation.

    Tip: You can prompt Copilot chat to use the Redis MCP tools by including #redis in your message.

    Note: Starting with VS Code v1.102,

    MCP servers are now stored in a dedicated mcp.json file instead of settings.json.

    Testing

    You can use the MCP Inspector for visual debugging of this MCP Server.

    sh
    npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector uv run src/main.py

    Example Use Cases

    • AI Assistants: Enable LLMs to fetch, store, and process data in Redis.
    • Chatbots & Virtual Agents: Retrieve session data, manage queues, and personalize responses.
    • Data Search & Analytics: Query Redis for real-time insights and fast lookups.
    • Event Processing: Manage event streams with Redis Streams.

    Contributing

    1. Fork the repo

    2. Create a new branch (feature-branch)

    3. Commit your changes

    4. Push to your branch and submit a PR!

    License

    This project is licensed under the MIT License.

    Badges

    Contact

    For questions or support, reach out via GitHub Issues.

    Alternatively, you can join the Redis Discord server and ask in the #redis-mcp-server channel.

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