mcp-gsuite

mcp-gsuite

MCP server to interact with Google Gmail and Calendar APIs. Supports multiple accounts, email search and drafting, and calendar event management.

Category
Visit Server

README

mcp-gsuite MCP server

smithery badge MCP server to interact with Google products.

Example prompts

Right now, this MCP server supports Gmail and Calendar integration with the following capabilities:

  1. General
  • Multiple google accounts
  1. Gmail
  • Get your Gmail user information
  • Query emails with flexible search (e.g., unread, from specific senders, date ranges, with attachments)
  • Retrieve complete email content by ID
  • Create new draft emails with recipients, subject, body and CC options
  • Delete draft emails
  • Reply to existing emails (can either send immediately or save as draft)
  • Retrieve multiple emails at once by their IDs.
  • Save multiple attachments from emails to your local system.
  1. Calendar
  • Manage multiple calendars
  • Get calendar events within specified time ranges
  • Create calendar events with:
    • Title, start/end times
    • Optional location and description
    • Optional attendees
    • Custom timezone support
    • Notification preferences
  • Delete calendar events

Example prompts you can try:

  • Retrieve my latest unread messages

  • Search my emails from the Scrum Master

  • Retrieve all emails from accounting

  • Take the email about ABC and summarize it

  • Write a nice response to Alice's last email and upload a draft.

  • Reply to Bob's email with a Thank you note. Store it as draft

  • What do I have on my agenda tomorrow?

  • Check my private account's Family agenda for next week

  • I need to plan an event with Tim for 2hrs next week. Suggest some time slots.

Quickstart

Install

Installing via Smithery

To install mcp-gsuite for Claude Desktop automatically via Smithery:

npx -y @smithery/cli install mcp-gsuite --client claude

Oauth 2

Google Workspace (G Suite) APIs require OAuth2 authorization. Follow these steps to set up authentication:

  1. Create OAuth2 Credentials:

    • Go to the Google Cloud Console
    • Create a new project or select an existing one
    • Enable the Gmail API and Google Calendar API for your project
    • Go to "Credentials" → "Create Credentials" → "OAuth client ID"
    • Select "Desktop app" or "Web application" as the application type
    • Configure the OAuth consent screen with required information
    • Add authorized redirect URIs (include http://localhost:4100/code for local development)
  2. Required OAuth2 Scopes:

   [
     "openid",
     "https://mail.google.com/",
     "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar",
     "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email"
   ]
  1. Then create a .gauth.json in your working directory with client
{
    "web": {
        "client_id": "$your_client_id",
        "client_secret": "$your_client_secret",
        "redirect_uris": ["http://localhost:4100/code"],
        "auth_uri": "https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth",
        "token_uri": "https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token"
    }
}
  1. Create a .accounts.json file with account information
{
    "accounts": [
        {
            "email": "alice@bob.com",
            "account_type": "personal",
            "extra_info": "Additional info that you want to tell Claude: E.g. 'Contains Family Calendar'"
        }
    ]
}

You can specifiy multiple accounts. Make sure they have access in your Google Auth app. The extra_info field is especially interesting as you can add info here that you want to tell the AI about the account (e.g. whether it has a specific agenda)

Note: When you first execute one of the tools for a specific account, a browser will open, redirect you to Google and ask for your credentials, scope, etc. After a successful login, it stores the credentials in a local file called .oauth.{email}.json . Once you are authorized, the refresh token will be used.

Claude Desktop

On MacOS: ~/Library/Application\ Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

On Windows: %APPDATA%/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

<details> <summary>Development/Unpublished Servers Configuration</summary>

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "mcp-gsuite": {
      "command": "uv",
      "args": [
        "--directory",
        "<dir_to>/mcp-gsuite",
        "run",
        "mcp-gsuite"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Note: You can also use the uv run mcp-gsuite --accounts-file /path/to/custom/.accounts.json to specify a different accounts file or --credentials-dir /path/to/custom/credentials to specify a different credentials directory.

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "mcp-gsuite": {
      "command": "uv",
      "args": [
        "--directory",
        "<dir_to>/mcp-gsuite",
        "run",
        "mcp-gsuite",
        "--accounts-file",
        "/path/to/custom/.accounts.json",
        "--credentials-dir",
        "/path/to/custom/credentials"
      ]
    }
  }
}

</details>

<details> <summary>Published Servers Configuration</summary>

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "mcp-gsuite": {
      "command": "uvx",
      "args": [
        "mcp-gsuite",
        "--accounts-file",
        "/path/to/custom/.accounts.json",
        "--credentials-dir",
        "/path/to/custom/credentials"
      ]
    }
  }
}

</details>

Configuration Options

The MCP server can be configured with several command-line options to specify custom paths for authentication and account information:

  • --gauth-file: Specifies the path to the .gauth.json file containing OAuth2 client configuration. Default is ./.gauth.json.
  • --accounts-file: Specifies the path to the .accounts.json file containing information about the Google accounts. Default is ./.accounts.json.
  • --credentials-dir: Specifies the directory where OAuth credentials are stored after successful authentication. Default is the current working directory with a subdirectory for each account as .oauth.{email}.json.

These options allow for flexibility in managing different environments or multiple sets of credentials and accounts, especially useful in development and testing scenarios.

Example usage:

uv run mcp-gsuite --gauth-file /path/to/custom/.gauth.json --accounts-file /path/to/custom/.accounts.json --credentials-dir /path/to/custom/credentials

This configuration is particularly useful when you have multiple instances of the server running with different configurations or when deploying to environments where the default paths are not suitable.

Development

Building and Publishing

To prepare the package for distribution:

  1. Sync dependencies and update lockfile:
uv sync
  1. Build package distributions:
uv build

This will create source and wheel distributions in the dist/ directory.

  1. Publish to PyPI:
uv publish

Note: You'll need to set PyPI credentials via environment variables or command flags:

  • Token: --token or UV_PUBLISH_TOKEN
  • Or username/password: --username/UV_PUBLISH_USERNAME and --password/UV_PUBLISH_PASSWORD

Debugging

Since MCP servers run over stdio, debugging can be challenging. For the best debugging experience, we strongly recommend using the MCP Inspector.

You can launch the MCP Inspector via npm with this command:

npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector uv --directory /path/to/mcp-gsuite run mcp-gsuite

Upon launching, the Inspector will display a URL that you can access in your browser to begin debugging.

You can also watch the server logs with this command:

tail -n 20 -f ~/Library/Logs/Claude/mcp-server-mcp-gsuite.log

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