
Superjolt MCP Server
Enables AI-powered infrastructure management of JavaScript applications via natural language commands, allowing users to deploy, configure, and manage cloud services through Claude Desktop.
README
<div align="center"> <img src="https://superjolt.com/superjolt-logo.svg" alt="Superjolt Logo" width="120" height="120">
Superjolt CLI (Beta)
🤖 AI-Powered Deployment Platform with MCP Support
Official command-line interface for Superjolt - Deploy and manage JavaScript applications with AI assistance. </div>
⚡ Beta Release: We're actively improving Superjolt based on your feedback. Join our Discord to share your experience!
During beta, the CLI will automatically check for critical updates to ensure compatibility with our evolving API.
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Quick Start
- 🤖 AI Integration (MCP)
- Installation
- Commands
- Configuration
- CI/CD Integration
- Examples
- Web Dashboard
- Support
- Contributing
- License
Overview
Superjolt CLI is the fastest way to deploy JavaScript applications to the cloud. With integrated AI support through Model Context Protocol (MCP), you can manage your entire infrastructure using natural language with Claude Desktop.
Key Features:
- 🚀 One-command deployment:
npx superjolt deploy
- 🤖 AI-powered infrastructure management via MCP
- 🔧 Full service lifecycle management
- 🔐 Secure environment variable handling
- 📊 Real-time logs and monitoring
- 🌐 Automatic SSL and custom domains
Quick Start
From your JavaScript framework project folder, run:
npx superjolt deploy
That's it! The CLI will guide you through authentication and deployment.
🤖 AI Integration (MCP)
Superjolt is one of the first deployment platforms with native Model Context Protocol (MCP) support, allowing you to manage your entire infrastructure through AI assistants like Claude Desktop.
Why MCP?
- Natural Language Control: Manage deployments using conversational commands
- Context-Aware Operations: AI understands your infrastructure state
- Automated Workflows: Let AI handle complex deployment sequences
- Error Resolution: Get intelligent help with deployment issues
Setup MCP
-
Install Superjolt CLI (includes MCP server):
npm install -g superjolt
-
Authenticate with Superjolt:
superjolt login
-
Add to Claude Desktop configuration:
- macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
- Windows:
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
- Linux:
~/.config/claude/claude_desktop_config.json
{ "mcpServers": { "superjolt": { "command": "superjolt-mcp", "args": [] } } }
- macOS:
-
Restart Claude Desktop
MCP Capabilities
Once configured, you can use natural language to:
Authentication & CI/CD Setup:
- "Get my authentication token for CI/CD"
- "Show me how to set up GitHub Actions"
- "Check if I'm authenticated"
Infrastructure Management:
- "Create a new production machine"
- "List all my running services"
- "Show me services that are stopped"
- "Delete all test machines"
Deployment Operations:
- "Restart my API service"
- "Stop the staging environment"
- "Show logs for the web service"
Configuration:
- "Set DATABASE_URL for my backend"
- "List all environment variables"
- "Update API keys for production"
Custom Domains:
- "Add app.example.com to my web service"
- "List all custom domains"
- "Check validation status for my domain"
- "Remove old.example.com"
Available MCP Tools
<details> <summary>View all MCP tools</summary>
Authentication
check_auth
- Check if authenticated with Superjoltget_current_user
- Get current user informationget_token
- Get authentication token for CI/CD use
Machine Management
list_machines
- List all machinescreate_machine
- Create a new machinedelete_machine
- Delete a machinerename_machine
- Rename a machineset_default_machine
- Set the default machine for deployments
Service Management
list_services
- List services (optionally filtered by machine)start_service
- Start a servicestop_service
- Stop a servicerestart_service
- Restart a servicedelete_service
- Delete a servicerename_service
- Rename a service
Environment Variables
list_env_vars
- List all environment variables for a serviceset_env_vars
- Set one or more environment variablesget_env_var
- Get a specific environment variabledelete_env_var
- Delete an environment variablepush_env_file
- Push a .env file to a service
Custom Domains
add_custom_domain
- Add a custom domain to a servicelist_custom_domains
- List custom domains for a service or all servicesremove_custom_domain
- Remove a custom domainget_custom_domain_status
- Get the status of a custom domain
Logs
get_logs
- Get logs for a service
</details>
MCP Requirements & Troubleshooting
- Node.js 16 or later is required (The MCP server uses modern JavaScript features)
- If you see
Unexpected token '??='
errors, Claude Desktop is using an old Node.js version
Solutions:
-
Set your default Node version and restart Claude Desktop:
nvm alias default 16 # or higher # Completely quit and restart Claude Desktop
-
Or use explicit paths in your Claude Desktop config:
{ "mcpServers": { "superjolt": { "command": "/path/to/node16+/bin/node", "args": ["/path/to/node16+/bin/superjolt-mcp"] } } }
Installation
You can use Superjolt CLI in several ways:
Using npx (no installation required)
npx superjolt deploy
Global Installation
Install the Superjolt CLI globally using npm:
npm install -g superjolt
Or using yarn:
yarn global add superjolt
Commands
Authentication
superjolt login
- Authenticate with your Superjolt accountsuperjolt logout
- Log out from your accountsuperjolt me
- Display current user informationsuperjolt token
- Display your authentication token for CI/CD use--show
- Show the full token (for exporting)
Deployment
superjolt deploy [options]
- Deploy your application to Superjolt-p, --path <path>
- Path to the application directory (defaults to current directory)-s, --service <serviceId>
- Deploy to existing service (optional)-m, --machine <machineId>
- Machine ID to deploy to-n, --name <name>
- Service name (defaults to package.json name for new services)-v, --verbose
- Show detailed build output and logs
Machine Management
superjolt machine:create
- Create a new machinesuperjolt machine:list
- List all your machinessuperjolt machine:delete <machine-id>
- Delete a machinesuperjolt machine:use <machine-id>
- Set the default machine for deploymentssuperjolt machine:rename [machine-id] <new-name>
- Rename a machine (uses default machine if ID omitted)
Service Management
superjolt service:list [machine-id]
- List services for a machinesuperjolt service:start <service-id>
- Start a servicesuperjolt service:stop <service-id>
- Stop a servicesuperjolt service:restart <service-id>
- Restart a servicesuperjolt service:rename <service-id> <new-name>
- Rename a service (alias:rename
)superjolt service:delete <service-id>
- Delete a service
Custom Domains
superjolt domain:add <domain> [service-id]
- Add a custom domain to a service (uses .superjolt file if service ID omitted)-p, --primary
- Set as primary domain for the service
superjolt domain:list [service-id]
- List custom domains (alias:domains
)superjolt domain:status <domain>
- Check domain validation statussuperjolt domain:remove <domain>
- Remove a custom domain (alias:domain:delete
)
Environment Variables
superjolt env:list
- List environment variablessuperjolt env:set <key> <value>
- Set an environment variablesuperjolt env:get <key>
- Get an environment variablesuperjolt env:unset <key>
- Remove an environment variablesuperjolt env:push
- Push .env file to your application
Logs
superjolt logs [service-id]
- View real-time logs for your application
Other Commands
superjolt reset
- Delete ALL machines and services (DESTRUCTIVE - requires confirmation)superjolt update
- Update CLI to the latest versionsuperjolt update --check
- Check for updates without installingsuperjolt status
- Display CLI configuration, version, and stored data (aliases:info
,config
)--show-token
- Show full authentication token
Configuration
The CLI stores authentication tokens securely using your system's keychain (keytar). If keychain access is unavailable, tokens are stored in ~/.config/superjolt/token
.
Project Configuration
The CLI automatically creates a .superjolt
file in your project root after the first deployment. This file tracks:
{
"serviceId": "clever-red-deer"
}
This allows the CLI to determine whether to update an existing deployment or create a new one.
Deployment Ignore File (.superjoltignore)
You can create a .superjoltignore
file in your project root to exclude specific files and directories from deployment. This file follows the same syntax as .gitignore
.
<details> <summary>View default exclusions and examples</summary>
Default Exclusions
The following patterns are always excluded from deployments:
node_modules/
.git/
dist/
build/
.env*
*.log
coverage/
.nyc_output/
.next/
.nuxt/
.cache/
tmp/
temp/
.superjolt
Custom Exclusions
Create a .superjoltignore
file to add your own exclusion patterns:
# Ignore test files
**/*.test.js
**/*.spec.js
__tests__/
# Ignore development files
*.dev.js
.vscode/
.idea/
# Ignore specific directories
docs/
examples/
# Ignore large assets during development
videos/
*.mp4
The patterns in .superjoltignore
are combined with the default exclusions, so you don't need to repeat them.
</details>
Port Configuration
When your application is deployed on Superjolt, the server automatically provides the port number through the PORT
environment variable. Your application should listen on this port to receive incoming requests.
// Example for Node.js/Express
const port = process.env.PORT || 3000;
app.listen(port, () => {
console.log(`Server listening on port ${port}`);
});
This is similar to other PaaS platforms like Heroku - you don't choose the port, the platform assigns it dynamically. Always use process.env.PORT
when available, with a fallback for local development.
CI/CD Integration
Superjolt CLI supports authentication via environment variables for seamless CI/CD integration.
Setting Up CI/CD Authentication
-
Get your authentication token:
superjolt token --show
-
Set the token as a secret in your CI/CD platform:
- GitHub Actions: Add as a repository secret named
SUPERJOLT_TOKEN
- GitLab CI: Add as a protected CI/CD variable
- CircleCI: Add as an environment variable in project settings
- Other platforms: Set
SUPERJOLT_TOKEN
as a secure environment variable
- GitHub Actions: Add as a repository secret named
-
Use in your CI/CD pipeline:
GitHub Actions Example
name: Deploy to Superjolt
on:
push:
branches: [main]
jobs:
deploy:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Setup Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v3
with:
node-version: '18'
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Deploy to Superjolt
env:
SUPERJOLT_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SUPERJOLT_TOKEN }}
run: npx superjolt deploy
GitLab CI Example
deploy:
stage: deploy
image: node:18
script:
- npm ci
- npx superjolt deploy
only:
- main
variables:
SUPERJOLT_TOKEN: $SUPERJOLT_TOKEN
Generic Script Example
#!/bin/bash
export SUPERJOLT_TOKEN="your-token-here"
npx superjolt deploy
Security Best Practices
- Never commit tokens to version control
- Store tokens as encrypted secrets in your CI/CD platform
- Use different tokens for different environments (staging, production)
- Rotate tokens regularly
- Tokens provide full access to your Superjolt account - handle with care
Environment Variable Authentication
When SUPERJOLT_TOKEN
is set, the CLI will:
- Skip the browser-based login flow
- Use the token for all API requests
- Work in headless environments (CI/CD, containers)
You can verify the token source with:
superjolt status
Examples
Deploy a Node.js Application
# Navigate to your project
cd my-node-app
# Login to Superjolt
superjolt login
# Deploy
superjolt deploy
# Deploy with detailed build output
superjolt deploy --verbose
Managing Environment Variables
# Set a single variable
superjolt env:set NODE_ENV production
# Push entire .env file
superjolt env:push
# List all variables
superjolt env:list
Managing Custom Domains
# Add a custom domain (uses service ID from .superjolt file)
superjolt domain:add app.example.com
# Add to a specific service
superjolt domain:add app.example.com happy-blue-fox
# Add as primary domain
superjolt domain:add www.example.com --primary
# List all domains
superjolt domain:list
# Check domain status
superjolt domain:status app.example.com
# Remove a domain
superjolt domain:remove app.example.com
Working with Machines
# Create a new machine
superjolt machine:create
# List all machines
superjolt machine:list
# Set default machine
superjolt machine:use happy-blue-fox
AI-Powered Management with Claude
Once MCP is configured, you can use natural language:
You: "Show me all my running services"
Claude: [Lists all services with their status]
You: "Restart the API service and check its logs"
Claude: [Restarts service and shows recent logs]
You: "Set up environment variables for my database connection"
Claude: [Helps configure DATABASE_URL and related variables]
Web Dashboard
Manage your deployments through our web interface at users.superjolt.com:
- 📊 View deployment metrics and usage
- 🔧 Manage services and environment variables
- 📱 Monitor your applications in real-time
- 🚀 Access deployment logs and history
Support
- Dashboard: https://users.superjolt.com
- Documentation: https://superjolt.com/docs
- Issues: https://github.com/scoritz/superjolt/issues
- Discord: https://superjolt.com/discord
- Email: support@superjolt.com
Contributing
We welcome contributions! Please see our Contributing Guide for details.
License
MIT - see LICENSE for details.
Recommended Servers
playwright-mcp
A Model Context Protocol server that enables LLMs to interact with web pages through structured accessibility snapshots without requiring vision models or screenshots.
Magic Component Platform (MCP)
An AI-powered tool that generates modern UI components from natural language descriptions, integrating with popular IDEs to streamline UI development workflow.
Audiense Insights MCP Server
Enables interaction with Audiense Insights accounts via the Model Context Protocol, facilitating the extraction and analysis of marketing insights and audience data including demographics, behavior, and influencer engagement.

VeyraX MCP
Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.
graphlit-mcp-server
The Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server enables integration between MCP clients and the Graphlit service. Ingest anything from Slack to Gmail to podcast feeds, in addition to web crawling, into a Graphlit project - and then retrieve relevant contents from the MCP client.
Kagi MCP Server
An MCP server that integrates Kagi search capabilities with Claude AI, enabling Claude to perform real-time web searches when answering questions that require up-to-date information.

E2B
Using MCP to run code via e2b.
Neon Database
MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases
Exa Search
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server lets AI assistants like Claude use the Exa AI Search API for web searches. This setup allows AI models to get real-time web information in a safe and controlled way.
Qdrant Server
This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.