MCP SysOperator

MCP SysOperator

A Model Context Protocol server enabling AI assistants to directly interact with infrastructure tools like Ansible and Terraform for executing playbooks, managing cloud resources, and performing other infrastructure operations.

Category
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Tools

aws_elb

Manage AWS Elastic Load Balancers

terraform

Execute Terraform commands (init, plan, apply, destroy, validate, output, etc.)

run_playbook

Run an Ansible playbook

aws_cloudformation

Manage AWS CloudFormation stacks

aws_iam

Manage AWS IAM roles and policies

list_inventory

List Ansible inventory hosts and groups

check_syntax

Check syntax of an Ansible playbook without executing it

list_tasks

List all tasks that would be executed by a playbook

run_ad_hoc

Run an Ansible ad-hoc command against specified hosts

aws_rds

Manage AWS RDS database instances

vault_encrypt_string

Encrypt a string using Ansible Vault

vault_decrypt_string

Decrypt a string encrypted with Ansible Vault

aws_ec2

Manage AWS EC2 instances (list, create, start, stop, terminate)

aws_s3

Manage AWS S3 buckets and objects

aws_vpc

Manage AWS VPC networks

aws_route53

Manage AWS Route53 DNS records and zones

aws_lambda

Manage AWS Lambda functions

aws_dynamic_inventory

Create AWS dynamic inventory

README

<p align="center"> <img src="https://www.tarnover.com/assets/images/logo.png" alt="SysOperator" width="500"> </p>

MCP SysOperator

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for Infrastructure as Code operations. This server allows AI assistants to interact with Ansible and Terraform, execute playbooks and Terraform plans, manage cloud resources, and perform other infrastructure operations directly.
(Project previously known as mcp-ansible)

Example Test Projects

All code in these folders was generated by Cline and mcp-sysoperator

All code was generated using Claude 3.7 Sonnet (via OpenRouter), Cline, and SysOperator

Features

  • Run Ansible Playbooks: Execute Ansible playbooks with support for parameters like inventory, extra vars, tags, and limits
  • List Inventory: View hosts and groups from an Ansible inventory file
  • Check Syntax: Validate Ansible playbook syntax without execution
  • List Tasks: Preview tasks that would be executed by a playbook
  • Access Default Inventory: Access the default Ansible inventory file via resource API
  • AWS Integration: Manage AWS resources (EC2, S3, VPC, CloudFormation, etc.)
  • Terraform Support: Execute Terraform commands (init, plan, apply, destroy, output, etc.)
  • tflocal Integration: Test Terraform configurations with LocalStack for local cloud development
  • LocalStack Support: Test AWS operations locally using LocalStack without real AWS credentials

Requirements

  • Node.js 18 or higher
  • npm or yarn
  • Ansible installed and in PATH
  • @modelcontextprotocol/sdk (installed automatically)
  • For AWS operations: AWS CLI and valid credentials
  • For LocalStack: LocalStack installed and running, awslocal CLI

Installation

1. Clone the repository

git clone https://github.com/tarnover/mcp-sysoperator.git
cd mcp-sysoperator

2. Install dependencies

npm install

3. Build the server

npm run build

4. Configure MCP settings

Add the Ansible MCP server to your MCP settings configuration file.

For VSCode with Claude extension:

  • Edit the file at ~/.config/Code/User/globalStorage/saoudrizwan.claude-dev/settings/cline_mcp_settings.json

For Claude Desktop app:

  • macOS: Edit ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
  • Windows: Edit %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
  • Linux: Edit ~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

Add the following to the mcpServers section:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "sysoperator": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": ["/absolute/path/to/mcp-sysoperator/build/index.js"],
      "env": {}
    }
  }
}

Make sure to replace /absolute/path/to/mcp-sysoperator with the actual path to your installation.

Usage Examples

Once installed and configured, the MCP server provides the following tools to the AI assistant:

1. Run a Playbook

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>run_playbook</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "playbook": "/path/to/your/playbook.yml",
  "inventory": "/path/to/inventory.ini",
  "extraVars": {
    "var1": "value1",
    "var2": "value2"
  },
  "tags": "setup,configure",
  "limit": "webservers"
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

2. List Inventory

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>list_inventory</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "inventory": "/path/to/inventory.ini"
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

3. Check Playbook Syntax

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>check_syntax</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "playbook": "/path/to/your/playbook.yml"
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

4. List Tasks in a Playbook

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>list_tasks</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "playbook": "/path/to/your/playbook.yml"
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

5. Access Default Inventory Resource

<access_mcp_resource>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<uri>sysoperator://inventory/default</uri>
</access_mcp_resource>

6. AWS S3 Operations

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>aws_s3</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "action": "list_buckets",
  "region": "us-east-1"
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

7. Terraform Init and Plan

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>terraform</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "action": "init",
  "workingDir": "/path/to/terraform/project"
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>terraform</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "action": "plan",
  "workingDir": "/path/to/terraform/project",
  "vars": {
    "instance_type": "t2.micro",
    "region": "us-west-2"
  }
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

8. Terraform Apply

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>terraform</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "action": "apply",
  "workingDir": "/path/to/terraform/project",
  "autoApprove": true,
  "vars": {
    "instance_type": "t2.micro",
    "region": "us-west-2"
  }
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

9. Terraform with LocalStack (tflocal)

<use_mcp_tool>
<server_name>sysoperator</server_name>
<tool_name>terraform</tool_name>
<arguments>
{
  "action": "apply",
  "workingDir": "/path/to/terraform/project",
  "useLocalstack": true,
  "autoApprove": true,
  "vars": {
    "instance_type": "t2.micro",
    "region": "us-west-2"
  }
}
</arguments>
</use_mcp_tool>

LocalStack Integration

This project includes integration with LocalStack for testing AWS operations locally without real AWS credentials. The LocalStack integration allows you to:

  1. Test Ansible playbooks that use AWS services locally
  2. Develop and test AWS operations without incurring AWS costs
  3. Run tests without requiring real AWS credentials
  4. Validate your infrastructure code before deploying to real AWS

Using LocalStack

See the LocalStack README for detailed instructions on using the LocalStack integration.

Quick start:

# Install LocalStack and awslocal CLI
pip install localstack awscli-local

# Start LocalStack
localstack start

# Run the sample playbook
node localstack/run_sample_playbook.mjs

Development

Project Structure

mcp-sysoperator/
├── src/
│   ├── index.ts                  # Main entry point
│   └── ansible-mcp-server/       # Will be renamed in filesystem in future updates
│       ├── index.ts              # MCP SysOperator server implementation
│       ├── common/               # Common utilities and types
│       │   ├── errors.ts         # Error definitions
│       │   ├── types.ts          # Type and schema definitions
│       │   ├── utils.ts          # Utility functions
│       │   └── version.ts        # Version information
│       └── operations/           # Operation handlers
│           ├── ad_hoc.ts         # Ansible ad-hoc commands
│           ├── aws.ts            # AWS operations
│           ├── inventory.ts      # Ansible inventory operations
│           ├── playbooks.ts      # Ansible playbook operations
│           ├── terraform.ts      # Terraform operations
│           └── vault.ts          # Ansible vault operations
├── localstack/                   # LocalStack integration
│   ├── README.md                 # LocalStack documentation
│   ├── sample_playbook.yml       # Sample playbook for LocalStack
│   ├── inventory.ini             # Sample inventory for LocalStack
│   ├── run_sample_playbook.mjs   # Script to run sample playbook
│   └── utils.localstack.ts       # Modified utils for LocalStack
├── package.json                  # Project configuration and dependencies
├── tsconfig.json                 # TypeScript configuration
└── README.md                     # Documentation

Adding New Features

To add new capabilities to the MCP server:

  1. Modify src/ansible-mcp-server/index.ts (future: src/sysoperator/index.ts)
  2. Add your new tool in the setupToolHandlers method
  3. Implement a handler function for your tool in the appropriate operations file
  4. Add the schema definition in common/types.ts
  5. Rebuild with npm run build

⚠️ Disclaimer

SysOperator is currently in active development and undergoing extensive testing. It is not recommended for use in production environments at this time. The software may experience breaking changes, incomplete features, or unexpected behavior.

Use at your own risk.

License

MIT License - See LICENSE for details

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