MCP Weather Tools

MCP Weather Tools

An MCP server that enables AI assistants to call weather tools, read resources, and use prompt templates for live weather data integration.

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README

MCP Weather Tools — AI Tool Integration System

A production-style Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that enables AI assistants to call structured tools, read external resources, and use prompt templates — demonstrated through a live weather data integration with a React frontend.

TypeScript MCP React Node.js


Problem Statement

Large Language Models are powerful at reasoning and generating text, but they cannot access live data or perform real-world actions on their own. When a user asks "What's the weather in Tokyo?", the LLM has no built-in mechanism to query a weather API and return current conditions.

Model Context Protocol (MCP) solves this by providing a standardized interface between AI assistants and external tools. This project implements a complete MCP server that:

  • Registers callable tools that the LLM invokes during a conversation
  • Exposes read-only resources the LLM can query for context
  • Provides reusable prompt templates that pre-fill structured queries
  • Returns structured JSON responses the LLM uses to generate accurate answers

Architecture Overview

flowchart LR
    User([User]) --> Client[AI Client\nCursor / React App]
    Client --> LLM[LLM\nClaude / GPT]
    LLM -->|tool_call| Client
    Client -->|JSON-RPC\nstdio| MCP1[Custom MCP\nweather-data-fetcher]
    Client -->|JSON-RPC\nstdio| MCP2[Filesystem MCP]
    Client -->|JSON-RPC\nstdio| MCP3[Memory MCP]
    MCP1 --> Tool[getWeatherDataByCity]
    MCP1 --> Resource["weather://cities\nweather://help"]
    MCP1 --> Prompt[weather-inquiry]
    Tool -->|HTTP| API[Open-Meteo API]
    API --> Tool
    MCP1 --> Client
    MCP2 --> Client
    MCP3 --> Client
    Client --> LLM
    LLM --> Client
    Client --> User

Flow: User asks a question → LLM determines which tool to use → MCP client sends JSON-RPC to the appropriate server (custom weather, filesystem, or memory) → server executes → structured response flows back → LLM composes a natural language answer.


Features

Capability Description
Custom + Official MCP Local MCP server plus Anthropic’s official servers (filesystem, memory); showcases big-company MCP integration
Tool Registration Declarative tool definitions with Zod schema validation on inputs
Structured Responses Tools return typed JSON that the LLM can reliably parse
Modular Tool Design Shared business logic (weather.ts) consumed by both MCP server and REST API
Resource Endpoints Read-only data exposed via weather:// URI scheme
Prompt Templates Pre-built prompt structures with argument interpolation
Input Validation Zod schemas enforce type safety at the protocol boundary
REST API Bridge Express server exposes MCP capabilities as HTTP endpoints for browser clients
React Frontend Interactive UI demonstrating all three MCP primitives (tools, resources, prompts)

Tech Stack

Layer Technology Purpose
MCP Server @modelcontextprotocol/sdk, TypeScript Tool registration, JSON-RPC handling, stdio transport
Validation Zod Input schema enforcement at protocol boundary
External API Open-Meteo (free, no key) Geocoding + weather forecast data
REST Bridge Express, CORS HTTP API for browser-based clients
Frontend React 19, TypeScript, Vite Interactive demo of MCP capabilities
Dev Tools tsx, concurrently Development server, parallel process management
Protocol JSON-RPC 2.0 over stdio MCP transport layer

Installation & Running

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/selva/mcp-weather-tools.git
cd mcp-weather-tools

# Install server dependencies
npm install

# Install client dependencies
cd client
npm install
cd ..

Running

npm run demo

Then open http://localhost:5173


Example Tool Call

JSON-RPC Request (MCP Client → Server)

{
  "jsonrpc": "2.0",
  "id": 1,
  "method": "tools/call",
  "params": {
    "name": "getWeatherDataByCity",
    "arguments": {
      "city": "Tokyo"
    }
  }
}

JSON-RPC Response (Server → Client)

{
  "jsonrpc": "2.0",
  "id": 1,
  "result": {
    "content": [
      {
        "type": "text",
        "text": "{\"temp\":\"22°C\",\"humidity\":\"65%\",\"weather\":\"Partly cloudy\",\"wind\":\"12 km/h\",\"city\":\"Tokyo\",\"country\":\"Japan\"}"
      }
    ]
  }
}

REST API Equivalent

curl http://localhost:3001/api/weather?city=Tokyo
{
  "temp": "22°C",
  "humidity": "65%",
  "weather": "Partly cloudy",
  "wind": "12 km/h",
  "city": "Tokyo",
  "country": "Japan"
}

Project Structure

mcp-weather-tools/
├── server.ts              # MCP server — tool, resource, prompt registration
├── weather.ts             # Shared business logic (Open-Meteo API client)
├── api/
│   └── index.ts           # Express REST API — HTTP bridge for browser clients
├── client/                # React frontend (Vite + TypeScript)
│   ├── src/
│   │   ├── App.tsx        # Main UI — weather, cities, prompt, about tabs
│   │   ├── App.css        # Dark theme styling
│   │   └── api.ts         # Typed fetch wrappers for REST endpoints
│   └── vite.config.ts     # Dev proxy /api → localhost:3001
├── docs/
│   ├── images/            # Screenshots (MCP Inspector, etc.)
│   ├── architecture.md   # Detailed MCP architecture explanation
│   ├── third-party-mcp.md # Using official MCP servers (filesystem, memory)
│   ├── adding-tools.md   # Guide: how to add new tools to this server
│   ├── request-flow.md   # Step-by-step MCP request lifecycle
│   ├── demo.md           # Example conversation walkthrough
│   └── demo-video-script.md
├── SECURITY.md            # AI tool system security considerations
├── package.json
├── tsconfig.json
└── README.md

MCP Capabilities

Tools (Actions)

Tool Input Output Description
getWeatherDataByCity { city: string } Weather JSON Geocodes city, fetches live forecast from Open-Meteo

Resources (Read-only Data)

URI MIME Type Description
weather://cities text/plain Newline-separated list of example cities
weather://help text/plain Usage instructions for the weather server

Prompts (Templates)

Prompt Arguments Description
weather-inquiry { city: string } Pre-fills: "What's the current weather in {city}?"

Cursor IDE Integration

Add to .cursor/mcp.json:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "weather-data-fetcher": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["tsx", "server.ts"],
      "cwd": "/path/to/mcp-weather-tools"
    },
    "filesystem": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem", "/path/to/your/project"]
    },
    "memory": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-memory"]
    }
  }
}

This config runs both:

  • Custom server (weather-data-fetcher) — our local MCP with getWeatherDataByCity, resources, prompts
  • Official servers (filesystem, memory) — Anthropic’s @modelcontextprotocol servers for file operations and persistent memory

Then ask in Cursor chat: "What's the weather in London?" or "Read docs/architecture.md" — the LLM can call tools from any server.


MCP Inspector

Use the MCP Inspector to debug and test the server — call tools, read resources, and try prompts without Cursor.

npm run inspector

This opens a web UI where you can list and invoke tools, read resources (weather://cities, weather://help), and test the weather-inquiry prompt with any city.

MCP Inspector — weather-inquiry prompt


Security Considerations

See SECURITY.md for a detailed analysis. Key points:

  • Input validation — All tool inputs validated through Zod schemas before execution
  • No arbitrary code execution — Tools perform specific, scoped operations only
  • External API isolation — Weather logic is the only outbound network call; no user-controlled URLs
  • Prompt injection awareness — Tool responses are structured JSON, not raw user input passed to system prompts
  • No secrets in transport — Open-Meteo requires no API keys; no credentials cross the stdio boundary

Future Improvements

Area Enhancement
Authentication API key or OAuth for REST endpoints
Rate Limiting Token bucket per client to prevent tool abuse
Sandboxed Execution Run tools in isolated containers or V8 isolates
Logging & Monitoring Structured logging with correlation IDs per request
Tool Registry Dynamic tool loading from a plugin directory
Caching TTL-based response cache for repeated city lookups
Error Classification Distinguish retriable vs. permanent failures in tool responses
Multi-tool Orchestration Chain tools (e.g., get cities → get weather for each)

Documentation

Document Description
Architecture MCP protocol deep-dive, component interaction, transport layer
Third-Party MCP Integration Using external MCP servers alongside the custom server
Adding Tools Developer guide for registering new MCP tools
Request Flow Step-by-step lifecycle of an MCP request
Demo Walkthrough Example conversations showing tool calls in action
Security Threat model and mitigation strategies for AI tool systems

License

MIT

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