05-make-your-mcp-server
Creating an MCP server in Go and serving it with Docker.
Creating an MCP Server in Go and Serving it with Docker
Introduction
Today we'll look at how to create an MCP server in Go and serve it with Docker.
Prerequisites: having read Understanding the Model Context Protocol (MCP)
To write an MCP server, there are several official SDKs:
In recent years, I've developed an appetite for Go, so I looked around to see if there was a Go implementation. On this page https://github.com/punkpeye/awesome-mcp-servers?tab=readme-ov-file#frameworks, I found several, notably https://github.com/mark3labs/mcp-go, by the creator of mcphost
(which I discuss and use in the previous blog post).
The advantage of the mcp-go
project is that it's simple and also provides tools to develop an MCP client, which will be very useful for a future blog post.
Creating an MCP Server
I won't detail or implement all the possibilities of an MCP server here. I'll just implement the essentials:
- Provide a list of tools for the LLM
- Execute these tools when the LLM invokes them
When I use an LLM, there's one thing I'd like to be able to do: give it a website link so it can find information there, make a summary for me, etc.
So I created an MCP server that calls the curl
utility with a URL parameter and returns its content. But let's look at the source code:
go.mod
:
module mcp-curl
go 1.23.4
require github.com/mark3labs/mcp-go v0.8.2
require github.com/google/uuid v1.6.0
main.go
:
package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"os/exec"
"github.com/mark3labs/mcp-go/mcp"
"github.com/mark3labs/mcp-go/server"
)
func main() {
// Create MCP server
s := server.NewMCPServer(
"mcp-curl",
"1.0.0",
)
// Add a tool
tool := mcp.NewTool("use_curl",
mcp.WithDescription("fetch this webpage"),
mcp.WithString("url",
mcp.Required(),
mcp.Description("url of the webpage to fetch"),
),
)
// Add a tool handler
s.AddTool(tool, curlHandler)
fmt.Println("๐ Server started")
// Start the stdio server
if err := server.ServeStdio(s); err != nil {
fmt.Printf("๐ก Server error: %v\n", err)
}
fmt.Println("๐ Server stopped")
}
func curlHandler(ctx context.Context, request mcp.CallToolRequest) (*mcp.CallToolResult, error) {
url, ok := request.Params.Arguments["url"].(string)
if !ok {
return mcp.NewToolResultError("url must be a string"), nil
}
cmd := exec.Command("curl", "-s", url)
output, err := cmd.Output()
if err != nil {
return mcp.NewToolResultError(err.Error()), nil
}
content := string(output)
return mcp.NewToolResultText(content), nil
}
Explanations
It's really very simple. My server will provide only one tool. The code implements a server that exposes a web "fetching" tool based on curl
using the Model Control Protocol.
- First, I create an MCP server named
mcp-curl
version1.0.0
that works with standard input/output (stdio) - Then I define a tool named
use_curl
that takes a requiredurl
parameter - Finally, I add the
handler
for this tool that executes thecurl
command with the-s
option to retrieve the webpage content - Of course, I handle errors and return the webpage content as text
Packaging the MCP Server with Docker
To make my life easier, I'll use a Dockerfile
to build a Docker image containing my MCP server. This way, I can more easily deploy it on different platforms or make it available to anyone who wants to use it.
Dockerfile
:
FROM golang:1.23.4-alpine AS builder
WORKDIR /app
COPY go.mod .
COPY main.go .
RUN <<EOF
go mod tidy
go build
EOF
FROM curlimages/curl:8.6.0
WORKDIR /app
COPY --from=builder /app/mcp-curl .
ENTRYPOINT ["./mcp-curl"]
My Dockerfile
has two parts:
- The first part builds my MCP server in Go
- The second part uses the
curlimages/curl:8.6.0
image that containscurl
and copies mymcp-curl
server into the image (somcp-curl
is the executable that callscurl
)
To build the Docker image, I run the following command:
docker build -t mcp-curl .
And now let's see how to use our new MCP server with mcphost
:
Using the MCP Server with mcphost
First, we need to create a configuration file mcp.json
for mcphost
:
{
"mcpServers": {
"mcp-curl-with-docker" :{
"command": "docker",
"args": [
"run",
"--rm",
"-i",
"mcp-curl"
]
}
}
}
Then we can use mcphost
to use our MCP server and an LLM with Ollama, like this:
mcphost --config ./mcp.json --model ollama:qwen2.5-coder:14b
The MCP server is recognized by mcphost
:
You can request the list of available tools with the /tools
command:
Now you can request the content of a webpage and analyze its content (in my example I retrieve Go code from GitHub):
Wait a little bit:
And here's the webpage content:
Conclusion
You can see that with just a few lines, it becomes really easy to give "superpowers" to your LLMs. In a future blog post, I'll show you how to create a generative AI application with Ollama and an MCP client in Go to interact with our MCP server.