A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that enables AI agents to access and understand package documentation through a structured interface.
- Automatically generates MCP tools from documentation structure
- Supports multiple documentation modules (hooks, components, utilities, etc.)
- Configurable naming patterns for documentation files and module folders
- Provides listing, overview, and detailed documentation access
- Dynamic tool generation based on configured modules
- Fallback to package.json for version information
- Customizable documentation path
- Fuzzy search capability to find files by keyword with smart prioritization
This MCP server has two distinct usage modes:
-
Read Documentation Mode (
read-docs-{name}
): When bothname
andgit-repo-path
are provided, the server functions as a document reader for the specified repository, generating tools to access the documentation. -
Create Documentation Mode (
create-read-docs
): When no repository information is provided, the server functions as a guide for creating documentation structure, providing instructions on how to set up documentation files.
The MCP supports the following command-line arguments:
-
--name
: Name of the package/library (required for Read Documentation Mode) -
--git-repo-path
: Path to the git repository (http or ssh) (required for Read Documentation Mode)- If not provided, the MCP server will only provide construction instructions
-
--personal-token
: Personal access token for git authentication (optional)- Recommended for private repositories
- Supports GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, and generic Git hosting
-
--branch
: Branch to read the docs from- Default:
main
- Default:
-
--docs-path
: Path to the docs folder- Default:
docs
- Default:
-
--clone-location
: Path to clone the git repository- Default: {os home directory}/.temp-repo
-
--mode
: Operating mode for the MCP server- Options:
normal
(default),two-step
- See Operating Modes section for details
- Options:
This MCP requires direct cloning of the target git repository. You must ensure you have proper access to the repository before using this tool. For private repositories, you have several authentication options:
-
Using Personal Access Token (Recommended): Pass your personal access token using the
--personal-token
argument. This is the most reliable method and works with all major Git hosting providers. - SSH Keys: Configure SSH keys on your local machine for SSH URLs
- Git Credential Storage: Configure Git credential storage on your machine for HTTPS URLs
Using Personal Access Token:
# With HTTPS URL
npx -y read-docs-mcp --name=MyDocs --git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/private-repo --personal-token=your_personal_access_token_here
# With SSH URL (automatically converted to HTTPS)
npx -y read-docs-mcp --name=MyDocs --git-repo-path=git@gitlab.service-hub.tech:frontend/private-repo.git --personal-token=your_personal_access_token_here
The MCP supports personal access tokens for both HTTPS and SSH URLs:
HTTPS URLs:
- GitHub: Uses the token directly in the HTTPS URL
- GitLab (including self-hosted): Uses OAuth2 format with the token
- Bitbucket: Uses token-auth format
- Generic Git Hosting: Uses OAuth2 format (GitLab-style)
SSH URLs: When a personal token is provided, SSH URLs are automatically converted to HTTPS with proper authentication:
-
SSH:
git@gitlab.service-hub.tech:frontend/repo.git
-
HTTPS:
https://oauth2:token@gitlab.service-hub.tech/frontend/repo.git
Without proper authentication, the MCP will fail to clone private repositories.
You can specify different modes when running the MCP server using the --mode argument:
npx -y read-docs-mcp --name=MyDocs --git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/repo
# or explicitly:
npx -y read-docs-mcp --name=MyDocs --git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/repo --mode=normal
In normal mode, the server creates individual tools for each module and operation (e.g., get-hooks-list, get-hooks-details, get-components-list, etc.).
npx -y read-docs-mcp --name=MyDocs --git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/repo --mode=two-step
In two-step mode, instead of creating individual tools for each module, the server creates these 5 generic tools:
- get-overview - Get overview of the project (same as normal mode)
- get-overall-list - Get a list of all available modules
- get-module-overview - Get overview of a specific module (takes module name as parameter)
- get-module-list - Get list of items in a specific module (takes module name as parameter)
- get-module-detail - Get details of a specific item in a module (takes module and item name as parameters)
This approach reduces the total number of tools significantly when you have many modules, making the MCP server more efficient and easier to manage.
To use this MCP in Cursor, add the following configuration to your Cursor settings:
{
"mcpServers": {
"read-docs-{name}": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"read-docs-mcp",
"--git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/repo",
"--name=YourLibName"
]
}
}
}
{
"mcpServers": {
"create-read-docs": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "read-docs-mcp"]
}
}
}
{
"mcpServers": {
"read-docs-{name}": {
"command": "cmd",
"args": [
"/c",
"npx",
"-y",
"read-docs-mcp",
"--git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/repo",
"--name=YourLibName"
]
}
}
}
{
"mcpServers": {
"create-read-docs": {
"command": "cmd",
"args": ["/c", "npx", "-y", "read-docs-mcp"]
}
}
}
If you want to specify a custom documentation directory:
{
"mcpServers": {
"read-docs-{name}": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"read-docs-mcp",
"--git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/repo",
"--name=YourLibName",
"--docs-path=documentation"
]
}
}
}
To use two-step mode for better efficiency with large documentation sets:
{
"mcpServers": {
"read-docs-{name}": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"read-docs-mcp",
"--git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/repo",
"--name=YourLibName",
"--mode=two-step"
]
}
}
}
To access private repositories using a personal access token:
{
"mcpServers": {
"read-docs-{name}": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"read-docs-mcp",
"--git-repo-path=https://github.com/user/private-repo",
"--name=YourLibName",
"--personal-token=your_personal_access_token_here"
]
}
}
}
For self-hosted GitLab instances using SSH URLs:
{
"mcpServers": {
"read-docs-{name}": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"read-docs-mcp",
"--git-repo-path=git@gitlab.some-host.com:some-group/your-repo.git",
"--name=YourLibName",
"--personal-token=your_gitlab_access_token_here"
]
}
}
}
Security Note: Store your personal access token securely. Consider using environment variables instead of hardcoding the token in your configuration.
The MCP server expects the following structure for Read Documentation Mode:
repository/
├── docs/ (configurable)
│ ├── read-docs-mcp.json
│ ├── hooks/
│ │ ├── read-module-docs-mcp.json
│ │ ├── list.md
│ │ ├── overview.md
│ │ ├── use-state.md
│ │ └── ...
│ ├── components/
│ │ ├── read-module-docs-mcp.json
│ │ └── ...
│ └── ...
└── package.json
{
"name": "SomeLibrary",
"description": "A library for some purpose",
"version": "1.0.1",
"moduleList": ["hooks", "components", "directives", "utils"],
"fileName": "overview.md",
"moduleFolderNamingPattern": "kebab"
}
-
name
,description
: Used in MCP server construction -
version
: If not provided, falls back to version in package.json, or defaults to "0.1.0" -
moduleList
: List of documentation modules; if not provided, all folders in the docs directory are used -
fileName
: The file to use for the overview. If not provided, defaults to "overview.md" -
moduleFolderNamingPattern
: Naming pattern for module folders. Can be "kebab", "camel", "snake", "pascal", or "original". Default is "kebab"
The following naming patterns are supported for module folders and detail files:
-
kebab-case (default): Words are lowercase and separated by hyphens
- Example: "form-control", "use-state", "data-table"
-
camelCase: First word is lowercase, subsequent words are capitalized with no separators
- Example: "formControl", "useState", "dataTable"
-
snake_case: Words are lowercase and separated by underscores
- Example: "form_control", "use_state", "data_table"
-
PascalCase: Each word is capitalized with no separators
- Example: "FormControl", "UseState", "DataTable"
-
original: Uses the name exactly as provided in the moduleList, with no conversion
- Example: Names in moduleList will be used as-is for directory names
{
"get-all": {
"name": "get-hook-list",
"description": "Get a list of hooks",
"fileName": "list.md"
},
"get-details": {
"name": "get-hook-details",
"description": "Get details of a hook",
"paramDescription": "A hook name",
"namingPattern": "kebab"
},
"get-overview": {
"name": "get-hook-overview",
"description": "Get an overview of the hook module",
"fileName": "overview.md"
}
}
When you have set up the MCP server with a repository, you can use it to explore documentation:
Using the read-docs-{YourLibName} MCP, I'd like to explore the documentation for {YourLibName}. Can you:
1. Get an overview of the available modules
2. Show me the list of hooks available
3. Provide details on a specific hook
4. Give me an overview of the components module
When you use the MCP server without a repository, you can ask for help creating documentation:
Using the create-read-docs MCP, I need to create documentation for my library that can be used with read-docs-mcp.
Can you help me set up the required structure and files?
Using the read-docs-{PackageName} MCP, I'd like to explore the documentation for [Package Name]. Can you:
1. Get an overview of the available modules
2. Show me the list of hooks available
3. Provide details on the useAuth hook
4. Give me an overview of the components module
I'm particularly interested in understanding how authentication works in this library.
Using the read-docs-{PackageName} MCP, I need to implement a form with validation using the [Package Name] library. Please:
1. Show me the available components
2. Get details on the Form component
3. Get details on the Input component
4. Explain how to use form validation with these components
If there are any code examples in the documentation, please highlight those.
Using the read-docs-{PackageName} MCP, I'm looking for documentation about authentication in the library. Can you:
1. Use fuzzy search to find all files related to "auth"
2. Based on the search results, get the details for the most relevant authentication documentation
3. Show me how to implement authentication using the library
The fuzzy search should help us quickly locate the relevant documentation files.
Using the create-read-docs MCP, I need to set up documentation for my React component library. Can you help me create the folder structure and necessary configuration files?
Using the create-read-docs MCP, I've started creating documentation for my utility functions. How should I structure the detailed documentation for individual utility functions?
The MCP dynamically generates tools based on the documentation structure and operating mode. All tools are prefixed with the package name to avoid conflicts when multiple read-docs-mcp instances are used.
In normal mode, for each module in the moduleList
, up to three tools can be generated:
Get a list of all items in the module.
Parameters:
- None
Returns:
- Content of the list file (default:
list.md
)
Get details about a specific item in the module.
Parameters:
-
name
(string): Name of the item to get details for
Returns:
- Content of the details file, named according to the
namingPattern
(default is kebab-case)
Get an overview of the module.
Parameters:
- None
Returns:
- Content of the overview file (default:
overview.md
)
Search for files by keyword with intelligent prioritization.
Parameters:
-
keyword
(string): The keyword to search for in file names and content
Returns:
- Formatted list of matching files with the following priority:
- Exact match in file name
- Partial match in file name
- Exact match in file content
- Partial match in file content
Results are formatted as:
type: module
name: someModule
or
type: detail
name: someDetail
module: someModule
In two-step mode, the MCP generates 5 generic tools instead of individual tools for each module:
Get overview of the project.
Parameters:
- None
Returns:
- Content of the main overview file
Get a list of all available modules.
Parameters:
- None
Returns:
- List of all modules available in the documentation
Get an overview of a specific module.
Parameters:
-
module
(string): Name of the module
Returns:
- Content of the module's overview file
Get a list of items in a specific module.
Parameters:
-
module
(string): Name of the module
Returns:
- Content of the module's list file
Get details of a specific item in a module.
Parameters:
-
module
(string): Name of the module -
name
(string): Name of the item to get details for
Returns:
- Content of the item's details file
Search for files by keyword with intelligent prioritization.
Parameters:
-
keyword
(string): The keyword to search for in file names and content
Returns:
- Formatted list of matching files with the same priority system and format as described in the Normal Mode section above
The MCP provides a single tool to help with creating documentation:
Get detailed instructions for creating documentation structure.
Parameters:
- None
Returns:
- Detailed instructions on setting up documentation files and structure
You can either manually create the documentation structure or use the Create Documentation Mode to get guidance. Follow these steps to create documentation that can be accessed by the Read Documentation Mode:
Create a read-docs-mcp.json
file in your documentation directory:
{
"name": "YourLibrary",
"description": "Description of your library",
"version": "1.0.0",
"moduleList": ["hooks", "components", "utils"],
"moduleFolderNamingPattern": "kebab"
}
The moduleFolderNamingPattern
determines how your module folder names will be converted. For example, if your moduleList contains ["FormControl", "useHooks"]
and you choose "kebab" pattern, the folders will be created as form-control/
and use-hooks/
.
For each module, create a directory and a read-module-docs-mcp.json
file:
{
"get-all": {
"name": "get-component-list",
"description": "Get a list of components",
"fileName": "list.md"
},
"get-details": {
"name": "get-component-details",
"description": "Get details of a component",
"paramDescription": "A component name",
"namingPattern": "kebab"
},
"get-overview": {
"name": "get-component-overview",
"description": "Get an overview of components",
"fileName": "overview.md"
}
}
Note: The actual tool names generated will be prefixed with your package name. For example, if your package name is "MyLibrary", the tools will be named MyLibrary-get-component-list
, MyLibrary-get-component-details
, etc.
Create the necessary markdown files:
-
list.md
- List of all items in the module -
overview.md
- Overview of the module - Individual detail files (e.g.,
button.md
,input.md
, etc.)
MIT