create-mcp-app
Create MCP App
Build interactive UIs that run inside MCP-enabled hosts like Claude Desktop. An MCP App combines an MCP tool with an HTML resource to display rich, interactive content.
Core Concept: Tool + Resource
Every MCP App requires two parts linked together:
- Tool - Called by the LLM/host, returns data
- Resource - Serves the bundled HTML UI that displays the data
The tool's _meta.ui.resourceUri references the resource's URI.
Host calls tool → Host renders resource UI → Server returns result → UI receives result.
Quick Start Decision Tree
Framework Selection
| Framework | SDK Support | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| React | useApp hook provided |
Teams familiar with React |
| Vanilla JS | Manual lifecycle | Simple apps, no build complexity |
| Vue/Svelte/Preact/Solid | Manual lifecycle | Framework preference |
Project Context
Adding to existing MCP server:
- Import
registerAppTool,registerAppResourcefrom SDK - Add tool registration with
_meta.ui.resourceUri - Add resource registration serving bundled HTML
Creating new MCP server:
- Set up server with transport (stdio or HTTP)
- Register tools and resources
- Configure build system with
vite-plugin-singlefile
Getting Reference Code
Clone the SDK repository for working examples and API documentation:
git clone --branch "v$(npm view @modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps version)" --depth 1 https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps.git /tmp/mcp-ext-apps
Framework Templates
Learn and adapt from /tmp/mcp-ext-apps/examples/basic-server-{framework}/:
| Template | Key Files |
|---|---|
basic-server-vanillajs/ |
server.ts, src/mcp-app.ts, mcp-app.html |
basic-server-react/ |
server.ts, src/mcp-app.tsx (uses useApp hook) |
basic-server-vue/ |
server.ts, src/App.vue |
basic-server-svelte/ |
server.ts, src/App.svelte |
basic-server-preact/ |
server.ts, src/mcp-app.tsx |
basic-server-solid/ |
server.ts, src/mcp-app.tsx |
Each template includes:
server.tswithregisterAppToolandregisterAppResourcemain.tsentry point with HTTP and stdio transport setup- Client-side app (e.g.,
src/mcp-app.ts,src/mcp-app.tsx) with lifecycle handlers src/global.csswith global styles and host style variable fallbacksvite.config.tsusingvite-plugin-singlefilepackage.jsonwithnpm runscripts and required dependencies.gitignoreexcludingnode_modules/anddist/
API Reference (Source Files)
Read JSDoc documentation directly from /tmp/mcp-ext-apps/src/:
| File | Contents |
|---|---|
src/app.ts |
App class, handlers (ontoolinput, ontoolresult, onhostcontextchanged, onteardown, etc.), lifecycle |
src/server/index.ts |
registerAppTool, registerAppResource, helper functions |
src/spec.types.ts |
All type definitions: McpUiHostContext, McpUiStyleVariableKey (CSS variable names), McpUiResourceCsp (CSP configuration), etc. |
src/styles.ts |
applyDocumentTheme, applyHostStyleVariables, applyHostFonts |
src/react/useApp.tsx |
useApp hook for React apps |
Advanced Patterns
See /tmp/mcp-ext-apps/docs/patterns.md for detailed recipes:
- App-only tools —
visibility: ["app"], hiding tools from model - Polling — real-time dashboards, interval management
- Chunked responses — large files, pagination, base64 encoding
- Error handling —
isError, informing model of failures - Binary resources — audio/video/etc via
resources/read, blob field - Network requests — assets, fetch, CSP,
_meta.ui.csp, CORS,_meta.ui.domain - Host context — theme, styling, fonts, safe area insets
- Fullscreen mode —
requestDisplayMode, display mode changes - Model context —
updateModelContext,sendMessage, keeping model informed - View state —
viewUUID, localStorage, state recovery - Visibility-based pause — IntersectionObserver, pausing animations/WebGL
- Streaming input —
ontoolinputpartial, progressive rendering
Reference Host Implementation
/tmp/mcp-ext-apps/examples/basic-host/ shows one way an MCP Apps-capable host could be implemented. Real-world hosts like Claude Desktop are more sophisticated—use basic-host for local testing and protocol understanding, not as a guarantee of host behavior.
Critical Implementation Notes
Adding Dependencies
Always use npm install to add dependencies rather than manually writing version numbers:
npm install @modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps @modelcontextprotocol/sdk zod express cors
npm install -D typescript vite vite-plugin-singlefile concurrently cross-env @types/node @types/express @types/cors
This lets npm resolve the latest compatible versions. Never specify version numbers from memory.
TypeScript Server Execution
Unless the user has specified otherwise, use tsx for running TypeScript server files. For example:
npm install -D tsx
npm pkg set scripts.dev="cross-env NODE_ENV=development concurrently 'cross-env INPUT=mcp-app.html vite build --watch' 'tsx --watch main.ts'"
[!NOTE] The SDK examples use
bunbut generated projects should default totsxfor broader compatibility.
Handler Registration Order
Register ALL handlers BEFORE calling app.connect():
const app = new App({ name: "My App", version: "1.0.0" });
// Register handlers first
app.ontoolinput = (params) => { /* handle input */ };
app.ontoolresult = (result) => { /* handle result */ };
app.onhostcontextchanged = (ctx) => { /* handle context */ };
app.onteardown = async () => { return {}; };
// etc.
// Then connect
await app.connect();
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- No text fallback - Always provide
contentarray for non-UI hosts - Missing CSP configuration - MCP Apps HTML is served as an MCP resource with no same-origin server; ALL network requests—even to
localhost—require a CSP configuration - CSP or CORS config in wrong _meta object -
_meta.ui.cspand_meta.ui.domaingo in thecontents[]objects returned byregisterAppResource()'s read callback, not inregisterAppResource()'s config object - Handlers after app.connect() - Register ALL handlers BEFORE calling
app.connect() - No streaming for large inputs - Use
ontoolinputpartialto show progress during input generation
Testing
Using basic-host
Test MCP Apps locally with the basic-host example:
# Terminal 1: Build and run your server
npm run build && npm run serve
# Terminal 2: Run basic-host (from cloned repo)
cd /tmp/mcp-ext-apps/examples/basic-host
npm install
SERVERS='["http://localhost:3001/mcp"]' npm run start
# Open http://localhost:8080
Configure SERVERS with a JSON array of your server URLs (default: http://localhost:3001/mcp).
Debug with sendLog
Send debug logs to the host application (rather than just the iframe's dev console):
await app.sendLog({ level: "info", data: "Debug message" });
await app.sendLog({ level: "error", data: { error: err.message } });