mcp-www

mcp-www

Enables MCP server discovery via DNS TXT records, allowing agents to find, browse, and install MCP servers using existing DNS infrastructure without centralized registries.

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README

mcp-www

npm version License: MIT Node.js >= 18

DNS-based MCP service discovery and installation.

Problem

Agents need to discover MCP servers, but current approaches lean on centralized registries or hardcoded configurations. This creates single points of failure, adds deployment overhead, and forces agents into walled gardens. There should be a way to discover MCP services using infrastructure that already exists everywhere: DNS.

How It Works

mcp-www is itself a standard MCP server. An agent connects to it the same way it connects to any other MCP server — no new client code, no special SDK, no registry signup.

Once connected, the agent calls discover with a domain name. mcp-www performs a standard UDP DNS TXT lookup for _mcp.{domain}, parses the records, and returns all advertised MCP servers. Then browse connects to those servers and retrieves their full manifests. Finally, install generates the config to permanently add a server to the user's MCP client.

Agent  →  mcp-www  →  discover("example.com")  →  DNS TXT lookup
                   →  browse("example.com")     →  server card GET with MCP handshake fallback
                   →  install("example.com")    →  config for Claude Desktop / VS Code / Cursor / Windsurf

No HTTP registry in the loop. The DNS infrastructure is the registry.

Install

npm install -g mcp-www

Or use directly with npx:

npx mcp-www

Claude Code / MCP Client Config

Add to your MCP client config (e.g., .mcp.json):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "mcp-www": {
      "type": "stdio",
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["mcp-www"]
    }
  }
}

Try It

korm.co publishes a live _mcp TXT record. You can discover and interact with it end-to-end:

discover("korm.co")            → DNS lookup, returns all _mcp TXT records
discover_browse("korm.co")     → DNS + server card in one call, init as fallback
browse({ domain: "korm.co" })  → server card first, MCP handshake as fallback
call_remote_tool("https://mcp.korm.co", "browse_posts")  → returns blog articles
read_remote_resource("https://mcp.korm.co", "korm://bio") → reads author bio
get_remote_prompt("https://mcp.korm.co", "recommend-post", { "topic": "AI" }) → gets prompt
install({ domain: "korm.co" }) → generates config to add to your MCP client

Key Design Points

  • Uses UDP DNS (port 53) for lookups — the lightest possible network primitive. A single UDP packet out, a single packet back.
  • The DNS infrastructure IS the registry — no additional servers to deploy, no uptime to maintain, no accounts to create. If you can publish a TXT record, you can advertise your MCP server.
  • mcp-www is a standard MCP server — any MCP-compliant agent can use it with zero new client code.
  • Multiple TXT records supported — a domain can publish multiple _mcp TXT records, each advertising a different MCP server. For example, a public content server alongside an authenticated API:
    _mcp.example.com  TXT  "v=mcp1; src=https://mcp.example.com; auth=none"
    _mcp.example.com  TXT  "v=mcp1; src=https://api.example.com/mcp; auth=oauth2"
    
    discover returns all records — the agent decides which to connect to based on auth requirements and capabilities. How agents should select between multiple servers for the same domain is an open question.
  • Works with split-horizon DNS — enterprise and private networks can publish internal _mcp records visible only inside their network.
  • Allows overriding the default system DNS resolver via environment variable: MCP_DNS_SERVER=192.168.68.133:5335 npx mcp-www

Tools

discover

DNS-only lookup. Returns all _mcp.{domain} TXT records — there can be multiple, each advertising a different MCP server. Supports single domain or batch lookup.

{ "tool": "discover", "arguments": { "domain": "example.com" } }
{ "tool": "discover", "arguments": { "domains": ["example.com", "acme.org"] } }

discover_browse

DNS lookup + server card in one call. Looks up all _mcp.{domain} TXT records, then fetches .well-known/mcp.json for server metadata. Only falls back to MCP initialize if no server card is found.

{ "tool": "discover_browse", "arguments": { "domain": "example.com" } }

browse

Inspect a domain or server URL. Tries .well-known/mcp.json (server card) first, only falls back to MCP initialize handshake if no server card is found. For domains: also performs DNS lookup for _mcp TXT records.

{ "tool": "browse", "arguments": { "domain": "example.com" } }
{ "tool": "browse", "arguments": { "url": "https://mcp.example.com" } }

call_remote_tool

Call a tool on a remote MCP server. Use browse first to discover available tools, then use this to execute them.

{
  "tool": "call_remote_tool",
  "arguments": {
    "url": "https://mcp.example.com",
    "tool": "list_articles",
    "arguments": { "limit": 5 }
  }
}

read_remote_resource

Read a resource from a remote MCP server by its URI.

{
  "tool": "read_remote_resource",
  "arguments": {
    "url": "https://mcp.example.com",
    "uri": "korm://bio"
  }
}

get_remote_prompt

Get a prompt from a remote MCP server with optional arguments.

{
  "tool": "get_remote_prompt",
  "arguments": {
    "url": "https://mcp.example.com",
    "prompt": "recommend-post",
    "arguments": { "topic": "AI vision" }
  }
}

install

Generate client configuration to permanently add a discovered MCP server. Returns config file paths and JSON entries for Claude Desktop, VS Code, Cursor, and Windsurf. The agent reads the target config file, merges the entry, and writes it back.

{ "tool": "install", "arguments": { "domain": "example.com" } }
{ "tool": "install", "arguments": { "url": "https://mcp.example.com", "name": "my-server" } }

Status

Working. The server implements DNS-based discovery, server inspection, remote tool calling, resource reading, prompt retrieval, and client installation over the Streamable HTTP transport.

Note: DNS-based MCP discovery via _mcp TXT records is currently in pre-SEP research status — it is not yet a ratified part of the Model Context Protocol specification. See Discussion #2334 and Discussion #2368 for ongoing work. The format and behavior may change as the specification evolves.

Feedback, criticism, and alternative approaches are welcome — open an issue or start a discussion.

Security

DNS-based trust model

Because mcp-www uses DNS TXT records for discovery, domain ownership is enforced by DNS infrastructure itself — only the domain owner (or their DNS provider) can publish _mcp TXT records. This is inherently stronger than centralized registries, which introduce a single point of compromise.

IDN homograph attack detection

mcp-www detects IDN homograph attacks on all domain lookups. These attacks use visually identical characters from different Unicode scripts (e.g., Cyrillic "a" vs Latin "a") to spoof legitimate domains.

Detection covers:

  • Punycode-encoded domains — labels starting with xn-- (the ASCII encoding of internationalized domain names)
  • Mixed-script labels — a single label containing characters from multiple scripts (e.g., Latin + Cyrillic)
  • Non-Latin labels — fully Cyrillic/Greek labels that could visually mimic common Latin domains

When detected, a prominent warning is surfaced as a separate content block, instructing the agent to verify the domain with the user before proceeding. Lookups are not blocked — the warning is informational.

Additional considerations

  • No implicit trust — mcp-www discovers and inspects remote servers, but tool execution (call_remote_tool) is always an explicit agent action.
  • Split-horizon DNS — private/internal _mcp records are only resolvable within the network they're published on.
  • Unicode normalization — all domain inputs are NFC-normalized before lookup.

Related

License

MIT

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