Kestra Python MCP Server

Kestra Python MCP Server

A Machine Comprehension Protocol server that enables AI assistants to interact with Kestra workflows through natural language, supporting operations like flow management, executions, backfills, and other Kestra features.

Category
Visit Server

README

Kestra Python MCP Server

⚠️ Beta Notice: The Kestra MCP Server is currently in Beta and may undergo significant changes in the next few releases. API interfaces, tool names, and functionality may change without notice. We recommend testing thoroughly in development environments before using in production.

You can run the MCP Server in a Docker container. This is useful if you want to avoid managing Python environments or dependencies on your local machine.

Minimal configuration for OSS users

Paste the following configuration into your MCP settings (e.g., Cursor, Claude, or VS Code):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "kestra": {
      "command": "docker",
      "args": [
        "run",
        "-i",
        "--rm",
        "--pull",
        "always",
        "-e", "KESTRA_BASE_URL",
        "-e", "KESTRA_TENANT_ID",
        "-e", "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS",
        "ghcr.io/kestra-io/mcp-server-python:latest"
      ],
      "env": {
        "KESTRA_BASE_URL": "http://host.docker.internal:8080/api/v1",
        "KESTRA_TENANT_ID": "main",
        "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS": "ee,codegen"
      }
    }
  }
}

If you enabled Basic Auth, use:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "kestra": {
      "command": "docker",
      "args": [
        "run",
        "-i",
        "--rm",
        "--pull",
        "always",
        "-e",
        "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS",
        "-e",
        "KESTRA_BASE_URL",
        "-e",
        "KESTRA_TENANT_ID",
        "-e",
        "KESTRA_USERNAME",
        "-e",
        "KESTRA_PASSWORD",
        "ghcr.io/kestra-io/mcp-server-python:latest"
      ],
      "env": {
        "KESTRA_BASE_URL": "http://host.docker.internal:8080/api/v1",
        "KESTRA_TENANT_ID": "main",
        "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS": "ee,codegen",
        "KESTRA_USERNAME": "admin@kestra.io",
        "KESTRA_PASSWORD": "your_password"
      }
    }
  }
}

Minimal configuration for EE users

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "kestra": {
      "command": "docker",
      "args": [
        "run",
        "-i",
        "--rm",
        "--pull",
        "always",
        "-e", "KESTRA_BASE_URL",
        "-e", "KESTRA_API_TOKEN",
        "-e", "KESTRA_TENANT_ID",
        "-e", "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS",
        "ghcr.io/kestra-io/mcp-server-python:latest"
      ],
      "env": {
        "KESTRA_BASE_URL": "http://host.docker.internal:8080/api/v1",
        "KESTRA_API_TOKEN": "<your_kestra_api_token>",
        "KESTRA_TENANT_ID": "main",
        "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS": "codegen"
      }
    }
  }
}

Detailed Configuration using Docker

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "kestra": {
      "command": "docker",
      "args": [
        "run",
        "-i",
        "--rm",
        "--pull",
        "always",
        "-e", "KESTRA_BASE_URL",
        "-e", "KESTRA_API_TOKEN",
        "-e", "KESTRA_TENANT_ID",
        "-e", "KESTRA_USERNAME",
        "-e", "KESTRA_PASSWORD",
        "-e", "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS",
        "-e", "GOOGLE_GEMINI_MODEL_AGENT",
        "-e", "GOOGLE_GEMINI_MODEL_CODEGEN",
        "-e", "GOOGLE_API_KEY",
        "-e", "HELICONE_API_KEY",
        "ghcr.io/kestra-io/mcp-server-python:latest"
      ],
      "env": {
        "KESTRA_BASE_URL": "http://host.docker.internal:8080/api/v1",
        "KESTRA_API_TOKEN": "<your_kestra_api_token>",
        "KESTRA_TENANT_ID": "main",
        "KESTRA_USERNAME": "admin",
        "KESTRA_PASSWORD": "admin",
        "KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS": "ee",
        "GOOGLE_GEMINI_MODEL_AGENT": "gemini-2.0-flash",
        "GOOGLE_GEMINI_MODEL_CODEGEN": "gemini-2.5-flash",
        "GOOGLE_API_KEY": "<your_google_api_key>",
        "HELICONE_API_KEY": "<optional_for_codegen_tracing>"
      }
    }
  }
}

Notes:

  • Replace <your_kestra_api_token>, <your_google_api_key>, and <your_helicone_api_key> with your actual credentials.
  • For OSS installations, you can use KESTRA_USERNAME and KESTRA_PASSWORD instead of KESTRA_API_TOKEN.
  • To disable Enterprise Edition tools in OSS, set KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS=ee.
  • The host.docker.internal hostname allows the Docker container to access services running on your host machine (such as the Kestra API server on port 8080). This works on macOS and Windows. On Linux, you may need to use the host network mode or set up a custom bridge.
  • The -e flags pass environment variables from your MCP configuration into the Docker container.

Available Tools

  • 🔄 backfill
  • 🤖 codegen (Beta, needs Google Gemini API key)
  • ⚙️ ee (Enterprise Edition tools)
  • ▶️ execution
  • 📁 files
  • 🔀 flow
  • 🗝️ kv
  • 🌐 namespace
  • 🔁 replay
  • ♻️ restart
  • ⏸️ resume

Note: The ee tool group contains Enterprise Edition specific functionality and is only available in EE/Cloud editions. For OSS users, you can disable EE tools by adding KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS=ee to your .env file.

Optionally, you can include KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS in your .env file listing the tools that you prefer to disable. For example, if you want to disable Namespace Files tools, add this to your .env file:

KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS=files

To disable multiple tools, separate them with comma:

KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS=codegen,ee

Local development

To run the MCP Server for Kestra locally (e.g. if you want to extend it with new tools), make sure to create a virtual environment first:

uv venv --python 3.13
uv pip install -r requirements.txt

Create an .env file in the root directory of the project similar to the .env_example file. For OSS installations, you can use basic authentication with KESTRA_USERNAME and KESTRA_PASSWORD. For EE/Cloud installations, use KESTRA_API_TOKEN. To disable Enterprise Edition tools in OSS, add KESTRA_MCP_DISABLED_TOOLS=ee to your .env file.

Then, follow the instructions below explaining how to test your local server in Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code or Claude Desktop.


Usage in Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code or Claude Desktop

To use the Python MCP Server with Claude or modern IDEs, first check what is the path to uv on your machine:

which uv

Copy the path returned by which uv and paste it into the command section. Then, replace the --directory by the path where you cloned the Kestra MCP Server repository. For example:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "kestra": {
      "command": "/Users/annageller/.local/bin/uv",
      "args": [
        "--directory",
        "/Users/annageller/gh/mcp-server-python/src",
        "run",
        "server.py"
      ]
    }
  }
}

You can paste that in the Cursor MCP settings or Claud Developer settings.

VS Code setup

In your VS Code project directory, add a folder .vscode and within that folder, create a file called mcp.json. Paste your MCP configuration into that file (note that in VS Code, the key is servers instead of mcpServers):

{
  "servers": {
    "kestra": {
      "command": "/Users/annageller/.local/bin/uv",
      "args": [
        "--directory",
        "/Users/annageller/gh/mcp-server-python/src",
        "run",
        "server.py"
      ]
    }
  }
}

A small Start button should show up, click on it to start the server.

img.png

If you now navigate to the GitHub Copilot tab and switch to the Agent mode, you will be able to directly interact with the Kestra MCP Server tools. For example, try typing the prompt: "List all flows in the tutorial namespace".

img_1.png

If you click on continue, you will see the result of the command in the output window.

img_2.png

FAQ

Question: Do I have to manually start the server as an always-on process?

No, you don't have to run the server manually, as when using the stdio transport, the AI IDEs/chat-interfaces (Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code or Claude Desktop) launch the MCP server as a subprocess. This subprocess communicates with AI IDEs via JSON-RPC messages over standard input and output streams. The server receives messages through stdin and sends responses through stdout.

Question: Do I have to manually activate the virtual environment for the MCP Server?

No, because we use uv. Unlike traditional Python package managers, where virtual environment activation modifies shell variables like PATH, uv directly uses the Python interpreter and packages from the .venv directory without requiring environment variables to be set first. Just make sure you have created a uv virtual environment with uv venv and installed the required packages with uv pip install as described in the previous section.


Using the Kestra MCP Server with Google Agent SDK (ADK)

To launch the Agent Development UI, run the following commands:

source .venv/bin/activate  
cd agents/
adk web

Then, select google-mcp-client from the agent dropdown and start sending your prompts to interact with Kestra MCP Server.

Best to enable the toggle "Token Streaming" to stream responses as they are generated.

For more information, check the official adk-python repository. For Java developers, there's an equivalent adk-java.


Using the Kestra MCP Server with OpenAI Agent SDK

Let's assume we have the following Kestra flows in the company namespace:

img.png

You can run the following command from the project root to see all those dependencies visualized as an ASCII graph:

uv run agents/openai-mcp-client/agent.py -p 'List dependencies for the namespace company'

You should see a similar output:

Here's the dependency graph for the namespace `company`:

flow1 ────▶ flow2
            flow2 ────▶ flow3b
                        flow3b ────▶ flow4
                                     flow4 ────▶ flow5
                                                 flow5 ────▶ flow6
                                                             flow6
            flow2 ────▶ flow3c
                        flow3c ────▶ flow4
                        flow3c ====▶ flow3
                                     flow3
            flow2 ────▶ flow3a
                        flow3a ────▶ flow4
goodbye
hello
scheduled_flow

**Legend:**
- `────▶` FLOW_TRIGGER  (flow-trigger-based dependency)
- `====▶` FLOW_TASK     (subflow-task-based dependency)

Flows listed without arrows have no dependencies within this namespace.

Recommended Servers

playwright-mcp

playwright-mcp

A Model Context Protocol server that enables LLMs to interact with web pages through structured accessibility snapshots without requiring vision models or screenshots.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Magic Component Platform (MCP)

Magic Component Platform (MCP)

An AI-powered tool that generates modern UI components from natural language descriptions, integrating with popular IDEs to streamline UI development workflow.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
Audiense Insights MCP Server

Audiense Insights MCP Server

Enables interaction with Audiense Insights accounts via the Model Context Protocol, facilitating the extraction and analysis of marketing insights and audience data including demographics, behavior, and influencer engagement.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
VeyraX MCP

VeyraX MCP

Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.

Official
Featured
Local
graphlit-mcp-server

graphlit-mcp-server

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server enables integration between MCP clients and the Graphlit service. Ingest anything from Slack to Gmail to podcast feeds, in addition to web crawling, into a Graphlit project - and then retrieve relevant contents from the MCP client.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Kagi MCP Server

Kagi MCP Server

An MCP server that integrates Kagi search capabilities with Claude AI, enabling Claude to perform real-time web searches when answering questions that require up-to-date information.

Official
Featured
Python
E2B

E2B

Using MCP to run code via e2b.

Official
Featured
Neon Database

Neon Database

MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases

Official
Featured
Exa Search

Exa Search

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server lets AI assistants like Claude use the Exa AI Search API for web searches. This setup allows AI models to get real-time web information in a safe and controlled way.

Official
Featured
Qdrant Server

Qdrant Server

This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.

Official
Featured