
Bitso MCP Server
Enables access to Bitso cryptocurrency exchange data through comprehensive withdrawal and funding transaction tools. Features production-ready authentication, caching, and complete API integration for monitoring exchange activities.
README
Bitso MCP Server
An MCP server for the Bitso API that provides tools to access withdrawals and fundings data. Built with TypeScript, featuring comprehensive testing, dual transport support, and production-ready best practices.
Features
🏦 Bitso API Integration
- Complete Withdrawals API support (list, get by ID, get by multiple IDs, get by origin IDs)
- Complete Fundings API support (list, get by ID)
- Proper authentication with API key/secret and HMAC signature
- Support for all API filtering and pagination parameters
🚀 Production Ready
- Dual transport support (stdio for Claude Desktop, HTTP for development)
- Comprehensive error handling and logging
- Type-safe configuration with Zod validation
- Project-root-aware file logging system
🧪 Comprehensive Testing
- Two-tier testing strategy (unit + integration tests)
- Real MCP protocol testing (not mocked functions)
- MSW for consistent API mocking
- High test coverage with Vitest
🛠️ Developer Experience
- Hot reloading with TypeScript watch mode
- Tool generation script
- ESM support with proper module resolution
- CI/CD pipeline with GitHub Actions
📦 Best Practices
- Modular tool organization
- Zod schema validation for all inputs
- Structured logging with file output
- Caching with configurable TTL
Quick Start
1. Setup
npm install
2. Configure Environment
cp .env.example .env
# Edit .env with your Bitso API credentials
Required environment variables:
BITSO_API_KEY
: Your Bitso API keyBITSO_API_SECRET
: Your Bitso API secret
3. Build and Test
# Build the project
npm run build
# Run tests
npm run test
# Start development server (HTTP mode)
npm run start:http
4. Add to Claude Desktop
Add to your Claude Desktop configuration (claude_desktop_config.json
):
{
"mcpServers": {
"bitso-mcp-server": {
"command": "node",
"args": ["/path/to/bitso-mcp-server/dist/src/index.js"],
"env": {
"BITSO_API_KEY": "your-bitso-api-key",
"BITSO_API_SECRET": "your-bitso-api-secret"
}
}
}
}
Available Tools
The server provides 6 tools to interact with the Bitso API:
Withdrawals Tools
-
list_withdrawals
- List withdrawals with optional filtering- Parameters:
currency
,limit
,marker
,method
,origin_id
,status
,wid
- Parameters:
-
get_withdrawal
- Get specific withdrawal by ID- Parameters:
wid
(required)
- Parameters:
-
get_withdrawals_by_ids
- Get multiple withdrawals by comma-separated IDs- Parameters:
wids
(required, e.g., "wid1,wid2,wid3")
- Parameters:
-
get_withdrawals_by_origin_ids
- Get withdrawals by client-supplied origin IDs- Parameters:
origin_ids
(required, e.g., "origin1,origin2,origin3")
- Parameters:
Fundings Tools
-
list_fundings
- List fundings with optional filtering- Parameters:
limit
,marker
,method
,status
,fids
- Parameters:
-
get_funding
- Get specific funding by ID- Parameters:
fid
(required)
- Parameters:
Development Guide
Project Structure
src/
├── tools/ # MCP tool implementations
│ └── bitso-tools.ts # Bitso API tools
├── utils/ # Shared utilities
│ └── logging.ts # Project-root-aware logging
├── client.ts # Bitso API client with authentication
├── config.ts # Environment configuration
├── types.ts # TypeScript type definitions
└── index.ts # Main server entry point
tests/
├── unit/ # Fast unit tests with MSW mocking
├── integration/ # Real MCP protocol tests
├── helpers/ # Test utilities
│ ├── mcp-test-helper.ts
│ ├── test-server-factory.ts
│ └── test-config.ts
├── mocks/ # MSW request handlers
└── setup.ts # Test environment setup
Creating New Tools
Use the built-in tool generator:
npm run build
npm run create-tool
Or create manually following the pattern in src/tools/bitso-tools.ts
:
import { McpServer } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/mcp.js";
import { z } from "zod";
const MyToolSchema = z.object({
param: z.string().min(1, "Parameter is required"),
});
export function registerMyTools(server: McpServer, client: BitsoApiClient): void {
server.tool(
"my_tool",
{
description: "Description of what the tool does",
inputSchema: {
type: "object",
properties: {
param: {
type: "string",
description: "Parameter description",
},
},
required: ["param"],
},
},
async (params): Promise<ToolResult> => {
try {
const validatedParams = MyToolSchema.parse(params);
// Your tool logic here
return {
content: [
{
type: "text",
text: "Tool response"
}
]
};
} catch (error) {
// Error handling
return {
content: [
{
type: "text",
text: `Error: ${error instanceof Error ? error.message : String(error)}`
}
]
};
}
}
);
}
Testing Strategy
This template uses a two-tier testing approach:
Unit Tests (tests/unit/
)
- Test business logic in isolation
- Mock external APIs using MSW
- Fast execution, run frequently during development
- Focus on data transformations, caching, validation
Integration Tests (tests/integration/
)
- Test through real MCP protocol
- Use actual MCP server instances
- Validate tool registration and MCP compliance
- Ensure proper request/response formatting
# Run unit tests (fast)
npm run test:unit
# Run integration tests (slower, full MCP protocol)
npm run test:integration
# Run all tests with coverage
npm run test:coverage
Transport Modes
Stdio Transport (Production)
Used by Claude Desktop and other MCP clients:
npm start
# or
node dist/src/index.js
HTTP Transport (Development)
Useful for debugging and development:
npm run start:http
# Server available at http://localhost:3000/mcp
Logging and Debugging
The template includes a sophisticated logging system:
- Debug logs: Written to
mcp-debug.log
in project root - Project-root-aware: Works from both source and compiled code
- Structured logging: JSON formatting for complex data
- Console output: Errors also logged to stderr
Check logs during development:
tail -f mcp-debug.log
Configuration Management
Configuration uses Zod for type-safe validation:
// src/config.ts
const ConfigSchema = z.object({
apiKey: z.string().min(1, 'API_KEY environment variable is required'),
apiEndpoint: z.string().url().default('https://api.example.com'),
// ... other config
});
Environment variables are validated on startup with clear error messages.
API Integration
Client Pattern
The template includes a robust API client pattern:
// Automatic caching
const resources = await client.getResources(); // Cached for 5 minutes
// Error handling
try {
const resource = await client.getResource(id);
} catch (error) {
// Errors are logged and can be handled
}
// Connection testing
const isHealthy = await client.testConnection();
Bitso API Authentication
The server uses HMAC-SHA256 authentication required by the Bitso API:
// Authentication headers are automatically generated
const authHeaders = {
'key': config.apiKey,
'signature': hmacSignature, // Generated using API secret
'nonce': timestamp
};
Each request is signed using:
- API Secret (from environment)
- HTTP method
- Request path
- Request body (if any)
- Current timestamp as nonce
Deployment
Building for Production
npm run build
npm test
CI/CD
The template includes a GitHub Actions workflow (.github/workflows/ci.yml
):
- Unit tests: Fast feedback on basic functionality
- Integration tests: Full MCP protocol validation
- Coverage reporting: Ensure code quality
- Build validation: Verify compilation
Environment Variables
Production deployment requires:
BITSO_API_KEY=your-production-api-key
BITSO_API_SECRET=your-production-api-secret
BITSO_API_ENDPOINT=https://api.bitso.com # Production endpoint
CACHE_TTL_SECONDS=300
TIMEOUT=30000
Best Practices
Tool Development
- Always use Zod schemas for parameter validation
- Return MCP-compliant responses with
{ content: [...] }
format - Handle errors gracefully with user-friendly messages
- Log extensively for debugging and monitoring
- Test through MCP protocol using integration tests
Error Handling
// Good: MCP-compliant error response
return {
content: [
{
type: "text",
text: `Error: ${error.message}`
}
]
};
// Bad: Throwing unhandled errors
throw new Error("Something went wrong");
Performance
- Use caching for expensive API calls
- Implement request timeouts
- Log performance metrics
- Monitor API rate limits
Troubleshooting
Common Issues
Tool not appearing in Claude:
- Check build succeeded:
npm run build
- Restart Claude Desktop
- Check
mcp-debug.log
for errors - Verify
claude_desktop_config.json
configuration
Tests failing:
- Run unit tests first:
npm run test:unit
- Check MSW handlers match your API expectations
- Verify integration tests use real MCP server instances
API connection issues:
- Verify environment variables are set
- Test API credentials manually
- Check network connectivity and firewalls
- Review API endpoint URLs
Debug Mode
Enable detailed logging:
DEBUG=true npm start
Contributing
- Fork the repository
- Create a feature branch
- Add tests for new functionality
- Ensure all tests pass:
npm test
- Build successfully:
npm run build
- Submit a pull request
License
MIT License. See LICENSE for details.
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