mcp-context-protector
A security wrapper for MCP servers that provides trust-on-first-use pinning, guardrail scanning, and protection against prompt injection attacks. It acts as an intermediary layer to ensure universal compatibility and secure enforcement of server configurations across various MCP host applications.
README
mcp-context-protector
Overview
mcp-context-protector is a security wrapper for MCP servers that addresses risks associated with running untrusted MCP servers, including line jumping, unexpected server configuration changes, and other prompt injection attacks. Implementing these security controls through a wrapper (rather than through a scanner that runs before a tool is installed or by adding security features to an MCP host app) streamlines enforcement and ensures universal compatibility with all MCP apps.
Features
- Trust-on-first-use pinning of server configurations
- Automatic blocking of unapproved configuration changes
- Guardrail scanning and quarantining of tool responses
- ANSI control character sanitization
- Assisted editing of
mcp.jsonfiles
Quickstart
Installation:
# Install uv
curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh
# Download mcp-context-protector
git clone https://github.com/trailofbits/mcp-context-protector
# Install dependencies
cd mcp-context-protector
uv sync
To make it easier to launch mcp-context-protector, we recommend updating mcp-context-protector.sh to contain the full path to uv. Some MCP clients, including Claude Desktop, replace the PATH environment variable with a minimal set of paths when launching MCP servers, which can make your claude_desktop_config.json file unwieldy and hard to maintain. Including a full path to uv in the launcher helps mitigate this problem.
Now configure your client to run your MCP servers through mcp-context-protector, and tool configuration pinning will automatically be enabled. Here's a sample Claude Desktop config:
{
"mcpServers": {
"wrapped_acme_server": {
"command": "/path/to/mcp-context-protector/mcp-context-protector.sh",
"args": ["--command", "/path/to/node /path/to/acme/server.js"]
}
}
}
Alternatively, use --command-args to have mcp-context-protector concatenate all arguments that follow into one command string:
{
"mcpServers": {
"wrapped_acme_server": {
"command": "/path/to/mcp-context-protector/mcp-context-protector.sh",
"args": ["--command-args", "/path/to/node", "/path/to/acme/server.js", "--acme-enhanced"]
}
}
}
TL;DR: use --command-args if your MCP client mangles your stdio server command, but be careful with escaping of shell metacharacters.
Longer explanation: Some clients (including, as of this writing, Cursor) will construct their MCP server commands by concatenating the arguments together into a space-delimited string. That is, mcp-context-protector.sh --command "cmd arg1 arg2 --arg3" will become mcp-context-protector.sh --command cmd arg1 arg2 --arg3, and mcp-context-protector will think arg1 through --arg3 are meant as arguments to the wrapper, not to the child command. The --command-args option addresses this issue.
Security risks and controls
| Risk | Relevant control |
|---|---|
| Line jumping | Server configuration blocking, approval and pinning; guardrail evaluation of server instructions and tool descriptions |
| Server configuration changes/rug pulls | Server configuration pinning |
| User deception through ANSI control characters | ANSI control character sanitization |
| Other prompt injection attacks | Tool response guardrails and quarantining |
Server configuration pinning
mcp-context-protector uses a trust-on-first use pinning system for MCP server configurations. Any deviation from the approved/known-good server configuration will block downstream tool calls until the user explicitly approves the changed server configuration. Server approval is handled through mcp-context-protector's command-line interface.
Server configuration comparisons compare server instructions, tool descriptions, and tool input schemas to determine whether a server configuration is equivalent to any approved one. Comparisons are semantic and ignore irrelevant factors like tool order and parameter order.
The database of server configurations is stored in a JSON-encoded file whose default location is ~/.mcp-context-protector/servers.json. If a server configuration is in that file, it's approved and will run without tool blocking and without requiring user approval. The wrapper server checks downstream server configurations as soon as the connection is initiated and again whenever the wrapper receives a notification that the downstream server's tools have changed (notifications/tools/list_changed).
Servers are uniquely identified in this file by their type and an identifier, which is either a URL or the command string that launches the server. mcp-context-protector does not care about changes to a server's name in the host app's configuration (such as the claude_desktop_config.json file). If the command string (or URL) is unchanged, it's treated as the same server, and if the command string has changed, even in inconsequential ways, it's treated as a different server, and the configuration will need to be approved exactly as if mcp-context-protector were seeing the server for the first time.
To approve a server's configuration and allow the host app to connect to it, run the CLI app with the argument --review-server. The wrapper server will connect to the downstream server, retrieve its configuration, and display it in the shell. If you approve the configuration, it will be added to the database, and you can restart your host app to use it normally.
Tool response guardrails and quarantine
If mcp-context-protector is launched with a guardrail provider, it will use the chosen provider to scan every tool response for prompt injection attacks. If an attack is detected, the response will be saved in a quarantine database at ~/.mcp-context-protector/quarantine.json. The host app will receive a response that includes the guardrail provider's output.
To review the response and release it from the quarantine, run the app with the argument --review-quarantine, optionally with the --quarantine-id <ID> argument to specify which quarantined response you want to review. The app will then display the tool call and response in the shell and let you review it. If you approve the response, the LLM app can then use the quarantine_release tool to retrieve the response and continue as normal.
Configuring mcp-context-protector
mcp-context-protector is packaged with uv and can be run with uv run mcp-context-protector. To start a server through the wrapper, run the mcp-context-protector.sh launcher script with the arguments --command <COMMAND>, --command-args <CMD> <ARG1> <ARG2> or --url <URL>:
# Start the wrapper with an stdio server
/path/mcp-context-protector.sh --command "DOWNSTREAM_SERVER_COMMAND ARG1 ARG2"
# Start the wrapper with an stdio server (alternative)
/path/mcp-context-protector.sh --command-args DOWNSTREAM_SERVER_COMMAND ARG1 ARG2
# Start the wrapper with an HTTP server
/path/mcp-context-protector.sh --url DOWNSTREAM_SERVER_URL
If your downstream server requires the older SSE transport, use --sse-url <URL>.
To include support for tool response scanning, include the --guardrail-provider argument:
mcp-context-protector.sh --command DOWNSTREAM_SERVER_COMMAND --guardrail-provider LlamaFirewall
Review functions:
mcp-context-protector.sh --review-all-servers
mcp-context-protector.sh --review-quarantine --quarantine-id <ID>
Management of mcp.json files
mcp-context-protector can also help add the wrapper server to any existing configuration files that follow the mcp.json standard. To edit a specific file, use the --manage-all-mcp-json flag. All configuration files found at known locations on the filesystem will automatically be detected. Use the CLI interface to add and remove the wrapper from MCP servers. Configuration files located in project directories or code repositories will not be detected automatically. To edit a project's MCP configuration file, or any other specified file, use --manage-mcp-json-file FILENAME.
The following MCP clients' configuration files will automatically be detected:
- Claude Code
- Claude Desktop
- Continue.dev
- Cursor
- Visual Studio Code
- Windsurf
Usage
usage: mcp-context-protector [-h] [--command COMMAND] [--command-args COMMAND_ARGS [COMMAND_ARGS ...]] [--url URL] [--sse-url SSE_URL] [--list-guardrail-providers]
[--review-server] [--review-quarantine] [--review-all-servers] [--manage-mcp-json-file MANAGE_MCP_JSON_FILE] [--manage-all-mcp-json]
[--wrap-mcp-json CONFIG_FILE] [--environment ENV] [--server-config-file SERVER_CONFIG_FILE] [--guardrail-provider GUARDRAIL_PROVIDER]
[--visualize-ansi-codes] [--quarantine-id QUARANTINE_ID] [--quarantine-path QUARANTINE_PATH]
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--server-config-file SERVER_CONFIG_FILE
The path to the server config database file (default: ~/.mcp-context-protector/servers.json)
--guardrail-provider GUARDRAIL_PROVIDER
The guardrail provider to use for checking server configurations
--visualize-ansi-codes
Make ANSI escape codes visible by replacing escape characters with 'ESC'
--quarantine-id QUARANTINE_ID
The ID of a specific quarantined response to review
--quarantine-path QUARANTINE_PATH
The path to the quarantine database file (default: ~/.mcp-context-protector/quarantine.json)
--command COMMAND Start a wrapped server over the stdio transport using the specified command
--command-args COMMAND_ARGS [COMMAND_ARGS ...]
Start a wrapped server over the stdio transport using the specified command arguments (space-separated). Supports arguments with dashes (e.g.
docker run --rm -i)
--url URL Connect to a remote MCP server over streamable HTTP at the specified URL
--sse-url SSE_URL Connect to a remote MCP server over SSE at the specified URL
--list-guardrail-providers
List available guardrail providers and exit
--review-server Review and approve changes to a specific server configuration (must be used with --command, --command-args, --url or --sse-url)
--review-quarantine Review quarantined tool responses
--review-all-servers Review all unapproved server configurations
--manage-mcp-json-file MANAGE_MCP_JSON_FILE
Interactively manage an MCP JSON configuration file
--manage-all-mcp-json
Find and manage all MCP JSON configuration files from known locations
--wrap-mcp-json CONFIG_FILE
Wrap all MCP servers in the specified JSON config file with context-protector
--environment ENV, -e ENV
Select specific environment/profile for multi-environment config
License
Copyright 2025 Trail of Bits
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
Recommended Servers
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.
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.
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.
VeyraX MCP
Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.
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.
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.
E2B
Using MCP to run code via e2b.
Neon Database
MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases
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.
Qdrant Server
This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.