Nanoleaf MCP Server

Nanoleaf MCP Server

A Model Context Protocol server that enables controlling Nanoleaf smart lights through Warp terminal or any MCP-compatible client, providing tools for device discovery, authorization, and control of lights, brightness, colors, and effects.

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Tools

get_nanoleaf_info

Get information about the Nanoleaf device

turn_on_nanoleaf

Turn on the Nanoleaf lights

turn_off_nanoleaf

Turn off the Nanoleaf lights

set_brightness

Set the brightness of the Nanoleaf lights

set_color

Set the color of the Nanoleaf lights

set_effect

Set an effect on the Nanoleaf lights

get_effects

Get list of available effects

discover_nanoleaf

Discover Nanoleaf devices on the network

connect_to_ip

Connect to a Nanoleaf device at a specific IP address

authorize_nanoleaf

Authorize connection to Nanoleaf device (device must be in pairing mode)

README

Nanoleaf MCP Server

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for controlling Nanoleaf smart lights. This server provides tools to control your Nanoleaf devices through Warp terminal or any MCP-compatible client.

<a href="https://glama.ai/mcp/servers/@srnetadmin/nanoleaf-mcp-server"> <img width="380" height="200" src="https://glama.ai/mcp/servers/@srnetadmin/nanoleaf-mcp-server/badge" alt="Nanoleaf Server MCP server" /> </a>

Features

  • 🔍 Auto-discovery of Nanoleaf devices on your network
  • 🔗 Direct IP connection for specific device targeting
  • 🔐 Authorization support for secure device pairing
  • 💡 Full control of lights, brightness, colors, and effects
  • 🐳 Dockerized for easy deployment
  • 🖥️ Warp terminal integration

Available Tools

  • get_nanoleaf_info - Get detailed device information
  • turn_on_nanoleaf / turn_off_nanoleaf - Control power state
  • set_brightness - Adjust brightness (0-100)
  • set_color - Set color using hue (0-360) and saturation (0-100)
  • set_effect - Apply lighting effects
  • get_effects - List all available effects
  • discover_nanoleaf - Discover devices on network
  • connect_to_ip - Connect to specific IP address
  • authorize_nanoleaf - Authorize with device in pairing mode

Quick Setup Guide

Automated Setup (Recommended)

For the easiest setup experience, use the included setup script:

./setup.sh

This script will:

  1. Build the Docker image
  2. Scan for Nanoleaf devices on your network
  3. Help you get the authorization token
  4. Create all configuration files
  5. Test the setup
  6. Generate your Warp configuration

Manual Setup

Prerequisites

  • Docker installed on your system
  • Nanoleaf device(s) on your network
  • Warp terminal (optional, for MCP integration)

Step 1: Clone and Build

git clone <repository-url>
cd nanoleaf-mcp-server
docker build -t nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server .

Step 2: Find Your Nanoleaf Device

Option A: Auto-discovery

docker run --rm -i --network=host nanoleaf-mcp-server echo '{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id": 1, "method": "tools/call", "params": {"name": "discover_nanoleaf", "arguments": {}}}'

Option B: Manual IP scan

# Scan your network for devices responding on Nanoleaf port
nmap -p 16021 192.168.1.0/24

Option C: Check router admin panel for connected devices

Step 3: Get Authorization Token

  1. Put your Nanoleaf device in pairing mode:

    • Hold the power button on your Nanoleaf device for 5-7 seconds
    • Look for pairing indicator (usually a flashing light)
  2. Get the auth token immediately (within 30 seconds):

    # Replace 192.168.1.100 with your device's IP
    curl -X POST http://192.168.1.100:16021/api/v1/new
    

    You should get a response like:

    {"auth_token":"YourAuthTokenHere123456789"}
    

Step 4: Configure Environment

Create a .env file in the project directory:

NANOLEAF_IP=192.168.1.100
NANOLEAF_AUTH_TOKEN=YourAuthTokenHere123456789
NANOLEAF_PORT=16021
NANOLEAF_PROTOCOL=http

Step 5: Test Your Setup

# Test with environment variables
docker run --rm -i --network=host --env-file .env nanoleaf-mcp-server echo '{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id": 1, "method": "tools/call", "params": {"name": "get_nanoleaf_info", "arguments": {}}}'

If successful, you'll see detailed information about your Nanoleaf device!

Step 6: Run Examples (Optional)

Test all functionality with the example script:

./examples.sh

This will demonstrate all available features including turning lights on/off, changing colors, and applying effects.

Working Example

Here's a complete working example with real values (replace with your own):

  1. Device discovered at: <DEVICE_IP>:16021
  2. Auth token obtained: <AUTH_TOKEN>
  3. Warp configuration:
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "nanoleaf": {
      "command": "docker",
      "args": [
        "run", "--rm", "-i", "--network=host",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_IP=<DEVICE_IP>",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_AUTH_TOKEN=<AUTH_TOKEN>",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_PORT=16021",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_PROTOCOL=http",
        "nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server"
      ],
      "env": {}
    }
  }
}
  1. Test command:
echo '{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id": 1, "method": "tools/call", "params": {"name": "set_effect", "arguments": {"effect": "Cyberpunk 2077"}}}' | docker run --rm -i --network=host -e NANOLEAF_IP=<DEVICE_IP> -e NANOLEAF_AUTH_TOKEN=<AUTH_TOKEN> nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server

Warp Terminal Integration

Add to Warp MCP Configuration

Add this to your Warp MCP servers configuration (replace the values with your actual device IP and auth token):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "nanoleaf": {
      "command": "docker",
      "args": [
        "run", "--rm", "-i", "--network=host",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_IP=192.168.1.100",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_AUTH_TOKEN=YourAuthTokenHere123456789",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_PORT=16021",
        "-e", "NANOLEAF_PROTOCOL=http",
        "nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server"
      ],
      "env": {}
    }
  }
}

Important:

  • Replace 192.168.1.100 with your Nanoleaf device's IP address
  • Replace YourAuthTokenHere123456789 with your actual auth token
  • Make sure you've built the Docker image with tag nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server

Alternative Configuration (if path issues occur)

If you encounter path-related issues, you can also use this alternative approach:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "nanoleaf": {
      "command": "bash",
      "args": ["-c", "cd /path/to/nanoleaf-mcp-server && docker run --rm -i --network=host --env-file .env nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server"],
      "env": {}
    }
  }
}

Using in Warp

Once configured, you can use the Nanoleaf tools directly in Warp:

  • Ask to turn lights on/off
  • Change brightness and colors
  • Apply cool effects like "Northern Lights" or "Cyberpunk"
  • Get device information

Manual Usage Examples

Turn lights on/off

# Turn on
curl -X PUT http://your-ip:16021/api/v1/your-token/state \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"on":{"value":true}}'

# Turn off  
curl -X PUT http://your-ip:16021/api/v1/your-token/state \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"on":{"value":false}}'

Set brightness

curl -X PUT http://your-ip:16021/api/v1/your-token/state \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"brightness":{"value":50}}'

Apply an effect

curl -X PUT http://your-ip:16021/api/v1/your-token/effects \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"select":"Northern Lights"}'

Troubleshooting

Device Not Found

  • Ensure device is on the same network
  • Check firewall settings
  • Try manual IP scanning: nmap -p 16021 192.168.1.0/24

Authorization Failed

  • Device must be in pairing mode (hold power button 5-7 seconds)
  • Pairing mode only lasts ~30 seconds
  • Make sure no other devices are already controlling it

Connection Issues

  • Verify IP address is correct
  • Check if device uses HTTPS (some newer models)
  • Ensure Docker has network access (--network=host)

Environment Variables Not Working

  • Check .env file exists and has correct values
  • Verify Docker command includes --env-file .env
  • Make sure file paths are absolute in Warp config

Warp Terminal Issues

"The system cannot find the path specified" error

  • Use the direct environment variable configuration instead of --env-file
  • Make sure your Docker image tag matches exactly: nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server
  • Try the alternative bash configuration if path issues persist

MCP server not responding in Warp

  • Verify the Docker image is built with the correct tag
  • Check that your IP address and auth token are correct in the configuration
  • Test the Docker command manually first:
    echo '{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id": 1, "method": "tools/call", "params": {"name": "get_nanoleaf_info", "arguments": {}}}' | docker run --rm -i --network=host -e NANOLEAF_IP=your-ip -e NANOLEAF_AUTH_TOKEN=your-token nanoleaf-mcp-server-nanoleaf-mcp-server
    

"MCP server exited" in logs

  • This usually indicates a configuration issue
  • Check that all environment variables are properly set
  • Ensure the Docker image exists: docker images | grep nanoleaf

Device Compatibility

Tested with:

  • Nanoleaf Canvas
  • Nanoleaf Light Panels
  • Nanoleaf Hexagons

Should work with most Nanoleaf devices that support the v1 API.

Contributing

Feel free to submit issues, feature requests, or pull requests!

License

MIT License - see LICENSE file for details.

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