example-mcp-server-sse

example-mcp-server-sse

example-mcp-server-sse

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Calculator Learning Demo - SSE (Legacy) Transport

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MCP Version TypeScript Status License

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<p align="center"> <strong>⚠️ DEPRECATED TRANSPORT ⚠️</strong><br/> This repository demonstrates the legacy HTTP + SSE transport for <strong>educational purposes only</strong>.<br/> For new projects, please use the modern <a href="https://github.com/yigitkonur/mcp-server-examples/tree/main/streamable-http">Streamable HTTP transport</a>. </p>

🎯 Overview

This repository provides a reference implementation of an MCP server using the classic two-endpoint HTTP + Server-Sent Events (SSE) transport. It is intentionally designed to teach the concepts, complexities, and limitations of this deprecated pattern compared to modern, single-endpoint transports.

🔧 Educational Echo Tool

This server includes an optional educational tool for learning MCP concepts:

  • Tool Name: Configurable via SAMPLE_TOOL_NAME environment variable
  • Functionality: Simple echo tool that demonstrates basic MCP tool patterns
  • Usage: Set SAMPLE_TOOL_NAME=your_tool_name to add the tool to the server
  • Purpose: Provides a minimal example for understanding MCP tool registration and execution

Key Characteristics

  • Asymmetric Channels: Utilizes GET /sse for a persistent server-to-client event stream and a separate POST /messages endpoint for client-to-server commands.
  • Ephemeral Session State: Each connection establishes a new, isolated session on the server. All state (e.g., calculation history) is stored in memory and is lost when the connection closes.
  • No Resumability: If the SSE connection is lost, the session cannot be recovered. The client must establish a new session.
  • Network Dependency: Requires careful handling of network proxies and firewalls that may buffer or block SSE streams.

📊 Transport Comparison

This table compares the four primary MCP transport mechanisms demonstrated in the learning series. The implementation in this repository is highlighted.

Dimension STDIO SSE (Legacy) Streamable HTTP (Stateful) Streamable HTTP (Stateless)
Transport Layer Local Pipes (stdin/stdout) 2 × HTTP endpoints (GET+POST) Single HTTP endpoint /mcp Single HTTP endpoint /mcp
Bidirectional Stream ✅ Yes (full duplex) ⚠️ Server→Client only ✅ Yes (server push + client stream) ✅ Yes (within each request)
State Management Ephemeral (Process Memory) Ephemeral (Session Memory) Persistent (Session State) ❌ None (Stateless)
Resumability ❌ None None ✅ Yes (Last-Event-Id) ❌ None (by design)
Scalability ⚠️ Single Process Multi-Client ✅ Horizontal (Sticky Sessions) ♾️ Infinite (Serverless)
Security 🔒 Process Isolation 🌐 Network Exposed 🌐 Network Exposed 🌐 Network Exposed
Ideal Use Case CLI Tools, IDE Plugins Legacy Web Apps Enterprise APIs, Workflows Serverless, Edge Functions

📐 Architecture and Flow

The legacy SSE transport pattern requires a two-step communication flow. The client first establishes a long-lived GET request to the /sse endpoint to listen for events. The server responds with a unique sessionId, which the client must then include as a query parameter in all subsequent POST requests to the /messages endpoint. This allows the server to route incoming commands to the correct session and event stream.

sequenceDiagram
    participant Client
    participant Server

    Note over Client,Server: Connection Establishment
    Client->>Server: GET /sse
    Server-->>Client: Establishes text/event-stream connection
    Server-->>Client: event: endpoint\ndata: /messages?sessionId=abc-123

    Note over Client,Server: Client-to-Server Request
    Client->>Server: POST /messages?sessionId=abc-123
    Note right of Client: Body: {"jsonrpc":"2.0", "method":"tools/call", ...}
    Server-->>Client: 202 Accepted (Response will be sent via SSE stream)

    Note over Client,Server: Server-to-Client Response / Notification
    Server-->>Client: event: message\ndata: {"jsonrpc":"2.0", "id":1, "result":...}

✨ Feature Compliance

This server implements a limited subset of the MCP Latest Standard to demonstrate the core SSE pattern. Features requiring more complex state or interaction models are stubbed or not implemented.

Name Status Implementation
calculate Core ✅ Basic arithmetic operations (add, subtract, multiply, divide, power, sqrt).
batch_calculate Not Implemented Returns JSON-RPC error -32601 Method not found.
advanced_calculate Not Implemented Returns JSON-RPC error -32601 Method not found.
demo_progress Extended ✅ Simulates progress by logging to the console; designed to show how events would be pushed.
explain-calculation Core ✅ Returns a Markdown explanation prompt.
generate-problems Core ✅ Returns a Markdown practice problem prompt.
calculator-tutor Core ✅ Returns a Markdown tutoring content prompt.
solve_math_problem Stub Returns a message: "Limited support in SSE demo".
explain_formula Stub Returns a message: "Limited support in SSE demo".
calculator_assistant Stub Returns a message: "Limited support in SSE demo".
calculator://constants Core ✅ Resource for static JSON constants.
calculator://history/* Extended ✅ Resource for session-specific calculation history.
calculator://stats Extended ✅ Resource for session-specific usage statistics.
formulas://library Not Implemented This resource is not included in this example.

🚀 Getting Started

Prerequisites

  • Node.js (v18.x or higher)
  • npm or yarn

Installation

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/mcp-server-examples.git
cd mcp-server-examples/sse

# Install dependencies
npm install

# Build the project
npm run build

Running the Server

# Start the server on port 1923
npm start

# Or, run in development mode with auto-reload
npm run dev

Testing with MCP Inspector

You can interact with the running server using the official MCP Inspector CLI, which understands the two-endpoint SSE transport.

npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector --cli http://localhost:1923/sse --transport sse

📋 API Usage Examples

The following curl examples demonstrate the required two-terminal interaction.

1. Connect and Establish Session

In your first terminal, establish a persistent connection to the /sse endpoint. This terminal will now display all events sent from the server for your session.

# In Terminal 1: Keep this running to see server-sent events
# The -N flag disables buffering, showing events as they arrive.
curl -N http://localhost:1923/sse

# Server Response:
# event: endpoint
# data: /messages?sessionId=YOUR_UNIQUE_SESSION_ID

Copy the sessionId from the response data. You will need it for the next step.

2. Call a Tool

In a second terminal, use the sessionId you just received to make a POST request to the /messages endpoint.

# In Terminal 2: Send a command
# Replace YOUR_UNIQUE_SESSION_ID with the actual ID from Terminal 1.
curl -X POST 'http://localhost:1923/messages?sessionId=YOUR_UNIQUE_SESSION_ID' \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{
       "jsonrpc": "2.0",
       "id": 1,
       "method": "tools/call",
       "params": {
         "name": "calculate",
         "arguments": { "op": "multiply", "a": 7, "b": 6 }
       }
     }'

The server will respond with 202 Accepted in Terminal 2. The actual result of the calculation will appear as a message event in Terminal 1.

🧠 State Management Model

State is ephemeral and scoped to the SSE session. This model is fundamental to the transport's design and limitations.

  • Session Registry: As seen in src/server/index.ts, a global transports object maps each sessionId to its active SSEServerTransport instance. This is the core routing mechanism.
  • In-Memory Isolation: Each new connection to /sse triggers the createCalculatorServer() factory, which creates a new, isolated McpServer instance. State, such as the calculationHistory array, is local to that instance and not shared between sessions.
  • No Persistence: When a client disconnects, the transport.onclose handler in index.ts fires, which removes the session from the global registry (delete transports[sessionId]). The server instance and all its associated in-memory state are then garbage collected.

🛡️ Security Model

As a network-exposed service, this transport relies on HTTP-based security patterns.

  • Session ID: The sessionId generated by crypto.randomUUID() acts as an ephemeral bearer token for the duration of the connection. It authenticates POST requests to a specific client's event stream.
  • CORS: The server in src/server/index.ts is explicitly configured with cors() middleware to allow cross-origin requests, which is essential for browser-based clients. The allowed origin can be restricted for production environments via the CORS_ORIGIN environment variable.
  • Input Validation: All incoming tool parameters are rigorously validated against Zod schemas defined in src/types/calculator.ts to prevent invalid data from causing runtime errors.
  • No Resumability: While a limitation, the lack of resumability also provides a security benefit: a lost or stolen sessionId is only useful as long as the original SSE connection is active, limiting its exposure.

🧪 Testing

This project includes a test suite covering the server's functionality.

# Run all tests (51 passing, 8 skipped expected)
npm test

# Run tests with code coverage report
npm run test:coverage

# Run tests in watch mode for development
npm run test:watch

📚 Official Resources

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