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    Mcp Remote

    Connect an MCP Client that only supports local (stdio) servers to a Remote MCP Server, with auth support: TypeScript-based implementation.

    1,102 stars
    TypeScript
    Updated Nov 4, 2025

    Documentation

    mcp-remote

    Connect an MCP Client that only supports local (stdio) servers to a Remote MCP Server, with auth support:

    Note: this is a working proof-of-concept but should be considered experimental.

    Why is this necessary?

    So far, the majority of MCP servers in the wild are installed locally, using the stdio transport. This has some benefits: both the client and the server can implicitly trust each other as the user has granted them both permission to run. Adding secrets like API keys can be done using environment variables and never leave your machine. And building on npx and uvx has allowed users to avoid explicit install steps, too.

    But there's a reason most software that _could_ be moved to the web _did_ get moved to the web: it's so much easier to find and fix bugs & iterate on new features when you can push updates to all your users with a single deploy.

    With the latest MCP Authorization specification, we now have a secure way of sharing our MCP servers with the world _without_ running code on user's laptops. Or at least, you would, if all the popular MCP _clients_ supported it yet. Most are stdio-only, and those that _do_ support HTTP+SSE don't yet support the OAuth flows required.

    That's where mcp-remote comes in. As soon as your chosen MCP client supports remote, authorized servers, you can remove it. Until that time, drop in this one liner and dress for the MCP clients you want!

    Usage

    All the most popular MCP clients (Claude Desktop, Cursor & Windsurf) use the following config format:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "remote-example": {
          "command": "npx",
          "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse"
          ]
        }
      }
    }

    Custom Headers

    To bypass authentication, or to emit custom headers on all requests to your remote server, pass --header CLI arguments:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "remote-example": {
          "command": "npx",
          "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
            "--header",
            "Authorization: Bearer ${AUTH_TOKEN}"
          ],
          "env": {
            "AUTH_TOKEN": "..."
          }
        },
      }
    }

    Note: Cursor and Claude Desktop (Windows) have a bug where spaces inside args aren't escaped when it invokes npx, which ends up mangling these values. You can work around it using:

    jsonc
    {
      // rest of config...
      "args": [
        "mcp-remote",
        "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
        "--header",
        "Authorization:${AUTH_HEADER}" // note no spaces around ':'
      ],
      "env": {
        "AUTH_HEADER": "Bearer " // spaces OK in env vars
      }
    },

    Multiple Instances

    To run multiple instances of the same remote server with different configurations (e.g., different Atlassian tenants), use the --resource flag to isolate OAuth sessions:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "atlassian_tenant1": {
          "command": "npx",
          "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://mcp.atlassian.com/v1/sse",
            "--resource",
            "https://tenant1.atlassian.net/"
          ]
        },
        "atlassian_tenant2": {
          "command": "npx",
          "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://mcp.atlassian.com/v1/sse",
            "--resource",
            "https://tenant2.atlassian.net/"
          ]
        }
      }
    }

    Each unique combination of server URL, resource, and custom headers will maintain separate OAuth sessions and token storage.

    Flags

    • If npx is producing errors, consider adding -y as the first argument to auto-accept the installation of the mcp-remote package.
    json
    "command": "npx",
          "args": [
            "-y"
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse"
          ]
    • To force npx to always check for an updated version of mcp-remote, add the @latest flag:
    json
    "args": [
            "mcp-remote@latest",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse"
          ]
    • To change which port mcp-remote listens for an OAuth redirect (by default 3334), add an additional argument after the server URL. Note that whatever port you specify, if it is unavailable an open port will be chosen at random.
    json
    "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
            "9696"
          ]
    • To change which host mcp-remote registers as the OAuth callback URL (by default localhost), add the --host flag.
    json
    "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
            "--host",
            "127.0.0.1"
          ]
    • To allow HTTP connections in trusted private networks, add the --allow-http flag. Note: This should only be used in secure private networks where traffic cannot be intercepted.
    json
    "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "http://internal-service.vpc/sse",
            "--allow-http"
          ]
    • To enable detailed debugging logs, add the --debug flag. This will write verbose logs to ~/.mcp-auth/{server_hash}_debug.log with timestamps and detailed information about the auth process, connections, and token refreshing.
    json
    "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
            "--debug"
          ]
    • To enable an outbound HTTP(S) proxy for mcp-remote, add the --enable-proxy flag. When enabled, mcp-remote will use the proxy settings from common environment variables (for example HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NO_PROXY).
    json
    "args": [
          "mcp-remote",
          "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
          "--enable-proxy"
        ],
        "env": {
          "HTTPS_PROXY": "http://127.0.0.1:3128",
          "NO_PROXY": "localhost,127.0.0.1"
        }
    • To ignore specific tools from the remote server, add the --ignore-tool flag. This will filter out tools matching the specified patterns from both tools/list responses and block tools/call requests. Supports wildcard patterns with *.
    json
    "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
            "--ignore-tool",
            "delete*",
            "--ignore-tool",
            "remove*"
          ]

    You can specify multiple --ignore-tool flags to ignore different patterns. Examples:

    • delete* - ignores all tools starting with "delete" (e.g., deleteTask, deleteUser)
    • *account - ignores all tools ending with "account" (e.g., getAccount, updateAccount)
    • exactTool - ignores only the tool named exactly "exactTool"
    • To change the timeout for the OAuth callback (by default 30 seconds), add the --auth-timeout flag with a value in seconds. This is useful if the authentication process on the server side takes a long time.
    json
    "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
            "--auth-timeout",
            "60"
          ]

    Transport Strategies

    MCP Remote supports different transport strategies when connecting to an MCP server. This allows you to control whether it uses Server-Sent Events (SSE) or HTTP transport, and in what order it tries them.

    Specify the transport strategy with the --transport flag:

    bash
    npx mcp-remote https://example.remote/server --transport sse-only

    Available Strategies:

    • http-first (default): Tries HTTP transport first, falls back to SSE if HTTP fails with a 404 error
    • sse-first: Tries SSE transport first, falls back to HTTP if SSE fails with a 405 error
    • http-only: Only uses HTTP transport, fails if the server doesn't support it
    • sse-only: Only uses SSE transport, fails if the server doesn't support it

    Static OAuth Client Metadata

    MCP Remote supports providing static OAuth client metadata instead of using the mcp-remote defaults.

    This is useful when connecting to OAuth servers that expect specific client/software IDs or scopes.

    Provide the client metadata as a JSON string or as a @ prefixed filepath with the --static-oauth-client-metadata flag:

    bash
    npx mcp-remote https://example.remote/server --static-oauth-client-metadata '{ "scope": "space separated scopes" }'
    # uses node readfile, so you probably want to use absolute paths if you're not sure what the cwd is
    npx mcp-remote https://example.remote/server --static-oauth-client-metadata '@/Users/username/Library/Application Support/Claude/oauth_client_metadata.json'

    Static OAuth Client Information

    Per the spec,

    servers are encouraged but not required to support OAuth dynamic client registration.

    For these servers, MCP Remote supports providing static OAuth client information instead.

    This is useful when connecting to OAuth servers that require pre-registered clients.

    Provide the client metadata as a JSON string or as a @ prefixed filepath with the --static-oauth-client-info flag:

    bash
    export MCP_REMOTE_CLIENT_ID=xxx
    export MCP_REMOTE_CLIENT_SECRET=yyy
    npx mcp-remote https://example.remote/server --static-oauth-client-info "{ \"client_id\": \"$MCP_REMOTE_CLIENT_ID\", \"client_secret\": \"$MCP_REMOTE_CLIENT_SECRET\" }"
    # uses node readfile, so you probably want to use absolute paths if you're not sure what the cwd is
    npx mcp-remote https://example.remote/server --static-oauth-client-info '@/Users/username/Library/Application Support/Claude/oauth_client_info.json'

    Claude Desktop

    Official Docs

    In order to add an MCP server to Claude Desktop you need to edit the configuration file located at:

    • macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
    • Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json

    If it does not exist yet, you may need to enable it under Settings > Developer.

    Restart Claude Desktop to pick up the changes in the configuration file.

    Upon restarting, you should see a hammer icon in the bottom right corner

    of the input box.

    Cursor

    Official Docs. The configuration file is located at ~/.cursor/mcp.json.

    As of version 0.48.0, Cursor supports unauthed SSE servers directly. If your MCP server is using the official MCP OAuth authorization protocol, you still need to add a "command" server and call mcp-remote.

    Windsurf

    Official Docs. The configuration file is located at ~/.codeium/windsurf/mcp_config.json.

    Building Remote MCP Servers

    For instructions on building & deploying remote MCP servers, including acting as a valid OAuth client, see the following resources:

    • https://developers.cloudflare.com/agents/guides/remote-mcp-server/

    In particular, see:

    • https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-oauth-provider for defining an MCP-comlpiant OAuth server in Cloudflare Workers
    • https://github.com/cloudflare/agents/tree/main/examples/mcp for defining an McpAgent using the [agents](https://npmjs.com/package/agents) framework.

    For more information about testing these servers, see also:

    • https://developers.cloudflare.com/agents/guides/test-remote-mcp-server/

    Know of more resources you'd like to share? Please add them to this Readme and send a PR!

    Troubleshooting

    Clear your ~/.mcp-auth directory

    mcp-remote stores all the credential information inside ~/.mcp-auth (or wherever your MCP_REMOTE_CONFIG_DIR points to). If you're having persistent issues, try running:

    sh
    rm -rf ~/.mcp-auth

    Then restarting your MCP client.

    Check your Node version

    Make sure that the version of Node you have installed is [18 or

    higher](https://modelcontextprotocol.io/quickstart/server). Claude

    Desktop will use your system version of Node, even if you have a newer

    version installed elsewhere.

    Restart Claude

    When modifying claude_desktop_config.json it can helpful to completely restart Claude

    VPN Certs

    You may run into issues if you are behind a VPN, you can try setting the NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS

    environment variable to point to the CA certificate file. If using claude_desktop_config.json,

    this might look like:

    json
    {
     "mcpServers": {
        "remote-example": {
          "command": "npx",
          "args": [
            "mcp-remote",
            "https://remote.mcp.server/sse"
          ],
          "env": {
            "NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS": "{your CA certificate file path}.pem"
          }
        }
      }
    }

    Check the logs

    • Follow Claude Desktop logs in real-time
    • MacOS / Linux:tail -n 20 -F ~/Library/Logs/Claude/mcp*.log
    • For bash on WSL:tail -n 20 -f "C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Claude\Logs\mcp.log"
    • Powershell: Get-Content "C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Claude\Logs\mcp.log" -Wait -Tail 20

    Debugging

    Debug Logs

    For troubleshooting complex issues, especially with token refreshing or authentication problems, use the --debug flag:

    json
    "args": [
      "mcp-remote",
      "https://remote.mcp.server/sse",
      "--debug"
    ]

    This creates detailed logs in ~/.mcp-auth/{server_hash}_debug.log with timestamps and complete information about every step of the connection and authentication process. When you find issues with token refreshing, laptop sleep/resume issues, or auth problems, provide these logs when seeking support.

    Authentication Errors

    If you encounter the following error, returned by the /callback URL:

    code
    Authentication Error
    Token exchange failed: HTTP 400

    You can run rm -rf ~/.mcp-auth to clear any locally stored state and tokens.

    "Client" mode

    Run the following on the command line (not from an MCP server):

    shell
    npx -p mcp-remote@latest mcp-remote-client https://remote.mcp.server/sse

    This will run through the entire authorization flow and attempt to list the tools & resources at the remote URL. Try this after running rm -rf ~/.mcp-auth to see if stale credentials are your problem, otherwise hopefully the issue will be more obvious in these logs than those in your MCP client.

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