RayBridge
Bridges locally installed Raycast extensions to any MCP-compatible client via stdio or HTTP. It enables headless execution of extension logic by shimming UI components and leveraging existing OAuth tokens.
README
RayBridge
MCP server that bridges Raycast extensions to any MCP-compatible client.
Discovers locally installed Raycast extensions, loads their tool definitions, and serves them over the Model Context Protocol via stdio or HTTP.

How it works
- Scans
~/.config/raycast/extensions/for installed extensions withtoolsdefinitions - Loads OAuth tokens from Raycast's encrypted SQLite database
- Registers tools as MCP tools accessible to any MCP client
Extensions that use Raycast UI APIs (List, Detail, Form, etc.) are supported — the UI components are shimmed to no-ops so the underlying tool logic can execute headlessly. Extensions whose tools perform background work (API calls, data lookups, transformations) work best.
Setup
Prerequisites
- Bun
- Raycast installed with extensions
sqlcipherCLI (for OAuth token access):brew install sqlcipher
Install
bun install
Configure MCP client
Claude Code (~/.claude/settings.json):
{
"mcpServers": {
"raybridge": {
"command": "bun",
"args": ["run", "src/index.ts"],
"cwd": "/path/to/raybridge"
}
}
}
Cursor (~/.cursor/mcp.json):
{
"mcpServers": {
"raybridge": {
"command": "bun",
"args": ["run", "src/index.ts"],
"cwd": "/path/to/raybridge"
}
}
}
HTTP Transport
The server can also run as an HTTP server for remote MCP clients.
Start the server:
# Default: http://0.0.0.0:3000
bun run start:http
# Custom host/port
MCP_PORT=8080 MCP_HOST=0.0.0.0 bun run start:http
# With API key authentication
MCP_API_KEY=your-secret-key bun run start:http
# CLI flags also work
bun run src/index.ts --http --port 8080 --host 0.0.0.0
Endpoints:
| Endpoint | Method | Description |
|---|---|---|
/health |
GET | Health check (no auth required) |
/mcp |
POST | MCP requests (requires auth if MCP_API_KEY set) |
/mcp |
DELETE | Terminate session |
Authentication:
When MCP_API_KEY is set, requests to /mcp must include a Bearer token (per MCP spec):
Authorization: Bearer your-secret-key
Example session:
# 1. Initialize session (capture session ID from response header)
curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:3000/mcp \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Accept: application/json, text/event-stream" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer your-secret-key" \
-d '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"method":"initialize","params":{
"protocolVersion":"2024-11-05",
"capabilities":{},
"clientInfo":{"name":"my-client","version":"1.0"}
}}'
# Response includes: mcp-session-id header
# 2. List available tools
curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:3000/mcp \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Accept: application/json, text/event-stream" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer your-secret-key" \
-H "mcp-session-id: <session-id-from-step-1>" \
-d '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":2,"method":"tools/list","params":{}}'
# 3. Call a tool
curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:3000/mcp \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Accept: application/json, text/event-stream" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer your-secret-key" \
-H "mcp-session-id: <session-id-from-step-1>" \
-d '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":3,"method":"tools/call","params":{
"name":"web",
"arguments":{"tool_name":"read_page","input":{"url":"https://example.com"}}
}}'
Sessions auto-expire after 30 minutes of inactivity.
CLI
RayBridge includes a CLI for managing which extensions and tools are exposed:
bun link # Register the raybridge command (one-time setup)
raybridge # Launch interactive TUI
raybridge config # Launch interactive TUI
raybridge list # List all extensions and their status
raybridge help # Show help
The TUI allows you to:
- Toggle extensions on/off
- Expand extensions to toggle individual tools
- Switch between blocklist mode (all enabled by default) and allowlist mode
- Save configuration to
~/.config/raybridge/tools.json
Configuration
Tools configuration
Control which extensions and tools are exposed via ~/.config/raybridge/tools.json:
{
"mode": "blocklist",
"extensions": {
"extension-name": {
"enabled": false
},
"another-extension": {
"enabled": true,
"tools": ["specific-tool-1", "specific-tool-2"]
}
}
}
- blocklist mode (default): All extensions enabled unless explicitly disabled
- allowlist mode: All extensions disabled unless explicitly enabled
Extension preferences
Extensions that require configuration (API keys, personal access tokens, etc.) read from:
~/.config/raybridge/preferences.json
{
"extension-name": {
"personalAccessToken": "your-token",
"apiKey": "your-key"
}
}
The extension name matches the name field in the extension's package.json.
Architecture
src/
├── index.ts # MCP server, tool registration, request dispatch
├── http-server.ts # HTTP transport with session management
├── cli.ts # CLI entry point (config, list, help commands)
├── tui.tsx # Interactive TUI for extension configuration
├── config.ts # Tools configuration (blocklist/allowlist)
├── discovery.ts # Scans ~/.config/raycast/extensions/ for tool definitions
├── loader.ts # Executes local tools with Raycast API shims
├── shims.ts # Fake @raycast/api, react, react/jsx-runtime modules
├── auth.ts # Keychain access, SQLcipher DB decryption, OAuth tokens
└── watcher.ts # Watches extension directories for changes, triggers reloads
Tool discovery
Local extensions are discovered from ~/.config/raycast/extensions/. Each extension's package.json must have a tools array defining available tools with names, descriptions, and input schemas. Compiled tool code lives at tools/{toolName}.js within each extension directory.
When duplicates exist (same extension name in multiple directories), the most recently modified version wins.
Tool execution
Tools are loaded by installing Raycast API shims into Node's module system, then requiring the tool's compiled JS file and calling its default export with the provided input.
Raycast API shims
The following @raycast/api features are shimmed:
| Feature | Behavior |
|---|---|
OAuth.PKCEClient |
Returns tokens from Raycast's encrypted DB |
getPreferenceValues() |
Returns values from preferences.json |
environment |
Provides extension name, paths, version info |
Cache |
In-memory key-value store |
showToast, showHUD |
No-op (logs to stderr in some cases) |
open, closeMainWindow, popToRoot |
No-op |
confirmAlert |
Returns undefined |
UI components (List, Detail, Form, etc.) |
Return null |
LocalStorage |
No-op |
Clipboard |
No-op |
React and JSX runtime are also shimmed with minimal mocks (createElement → null, hooks are no-ops).
Authentication
OAuth tokens are read from Raycast's encrypted SQLite database at:
~/Library/Application Support/com.raycast.macos/raycast-enc.sqlite
The database key is retrieved from macOS Keychain and derived with a salt via SHA256. Tokens are extracted per-extension and provided to tools through the OAuth.PKCEClient shim.
MCP tool schema
Extensions are grouped — each extension becomes one MCP tool. The input schema follows this pattern:
{
"tool_name": "which-tool-to-run",
"input": { "param": "value" }
}
Tool descriptions include per-tool documentation, parameter details, and any extension-wide AI instructions from the extension's ai.instructions field.
Limitations
- No interactive UI — extensions that depend on rendering Lists, Forms, or other visual components to the user won't behave meaningfully
- No persistent LocalStorage — shimmed as no-op; extensions relying on it lose state between calls
- OAuth tokens are not refreshed — expired tokens will cause failures until Raycast refreshes them
- macOS only — depends on macOS Keychain and Raycast's macOS app paths
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