This project provides a prototype implementation of a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for Apache OFBiz® that:
- receives requests from an MCP client (usually hosted in a generative AI application such as Claude Desktop) and forwards those requests to a remote backend via RESTful API endpoints,
- exposes a template tool that invokes the findProductById OFBiz endpoint.
This project can be used as a platform to implement your own tools and enable generative AI applications to interact with any backend system that exposes REST API endpoints, such as Apache OFBiz or Moqui.
The server implements an MCP server with Streamable HTTP transport.
The project leverages the Anthropic TypeScript SDK, and requires:
- Node.js
- npm
This software is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
Apache OFBiz® is a trademark of the Apache Software Foundation
- Features
- Configuration
- Project Structure
- Build the Project
- Test the Remote MCP Server
- Inspect the MCP servers
- Containerization with Docker
The project includes an MCP server (src/server.ts) that communicates with the MCP client via MCP Streamable HTTP transport.
The server dynamically discovers MCP tools contained in the tools directory, whose path is specified as a command-line argument when the server is lauched.
Each tool is defined and implemented in its own file. For example, the sample tool tools/findProductById.ts invokes an endpoint in Apache OFBiz to retrieve product information for a given product ID. This works with an out-of-the-box (OOTB) OFBiz instance with the rest-api plugin installed.
New tools can be published by simply including their definition files in the tools folder.
The server:
- is compliant with the latest MCP specifications (2025-06-18)
- supports authorization according to the MCP recommendations (OAuth Authorization Code Flow with support for Metadata discovery, Dynamic Client Registration, etc...)
- supports the token exchange OAuth flow in order to obtain a valid token for the backend system
- performs token validation with configurable scopes and audience verification
- supports TLS connections (https)
- provides rate limiting features to protect the MCP server and the backend server from denial of service attacks
- allows CORS restrictions
Server configuration is managed via config/config.json, which defines:
MCP_SERVER_BASE_URL— the base URL of the MCP server (Protected Resource Server in OAuth)SERVER_PORT— the port on which the MCP server listens for client connections (required only for the remote server)TLS_CERT_PATH— path to the file containing the certificate for TLSTLS_KEY_PATH— path to the file containing the private key for TLSTLS_KEY_PASSPHRASE— (optional) passphrase for theTLS_KEY_PATHfileMCP_SERVER_CORS_ORIGINS— CORS origin allowedRATE_LIMIT_WINDOW_MS— time window in ms for the requests rate limiting featureRATE_LIMIT_MAX_REQUESTS— max number of requests allowed in the time windowAUTHZ_SERVER_BASE_URL— the base URL of the Authorization (Authz) server (OAuth)SCOPES_SUPPORTED— the scopes that the MCP client can requestBACKEND_API_BASE— the base URL for backend REST API callsMCP_SERVER_CLIENT_ID— Client ID required for token exchange, as registered in Authz serverMCP_SERVER_CLIENT_SECRET— the secret associated withMCP_SERVER_CLIENT_IDBACKEND_API_AUDIENCE— the OAuth audience paramenter for the backend systemBACKEND_API_RESOURCE— the OAuth resource parameter for the backend systemTOKEN_EXCHANGE_SCOPE— the list of scopes requested in the token exchangeBACKEND_API_AUTH- the URL to get the OFBiz APIs access token used if token exchange is not enabledBACKEND_AUTH_TOKEN— the token to authorize backend API calls used if token exchange is not enabled
If both TLS_CERT_PATH and TLS_KEY_PATH are configured, the MCP server will operate over HTTPS; otherwise, it falls back to HTTP.
If either MCP_SERVER_BASE_URL or AUTHZ_SERVER_BASE_URL are not set, authorization is disabled and the MCP server is publicly accessible.
If authorization is enabled, but either MCP_SERVER_CLIENT_ID or MCP_SERVER_CLIENT_SECRET are not set, token exchange is disabled.
If token exchange is not enabled, the access token for the OFBiz API can be set BACKEND_AUTH_TOKEN and can be easily generated and set by running the script:
update_token.sh <user> <password>
This script retrieves a JWT for an OOTB OFBiz instance, as specified by BACKEND_API_AUTH (e.g., https://demo-stable.ofbiz.apache.org/rest/auth/token).
mcp-server-for-apache-ofbiz/
├── config/
│ └── config.json # Server configuration (backend API base, auth token, etc.)
├── src/
│ ├── server.ts # MCP server (Streamable HTTP transport)
│ ├── toolLoader.ts # Loader of tool definitions from "tools/"
│ └── tools/
│ └── findProductById.ts # Example tool calling an Apache OFBiz REST endpoint
├── update_token.sh # Script to refresh backend auth token
├── package.json
├── tsconfig.json
└── README.md # This readme file
└── LICENSE # Apache License, Version 2.0
npm install
npm run buildStart the server:
node ./build/server.js ./config ./build/toolsYou can test the MCP server with the free version of Claude Desktop.
Edit or create the Claude Desktop configuration file:
~/Library/Application\ Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.jsonAdd your MCP server configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"Apache OFBiz": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "mcp-remote", "http://localhost:3000/mcp", "--allow-http"]
}
}
}After updating the configuration file, launch Claude Desktop and try the following sample prompts:
- "Can you provide some information about the product WG-1111?"
- "Create a SEO friendly description for the product with ID GZ-1000"
- "Can you provide some information about a product?"
(Claude will ask for a product ID before invoking the tool.) - "Can you compare two products?"
(Claude will ask for two product IDs, invoke the tool twice, and then compare the results.)
You can use Anthropic’s Inspector to easily test interactions with the local and remote MCP servers. You can do this also when a remote server is executed in your local host or private network, without requiring valid certificates or deploying the server on a publicly accessible host.
Run (and install) the Inspector with:
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspectorThis will open a browser window ready to test your MCP servers.
The following instructions describe how to containerize the application using Docker.
First, build a Docker image:
docker build -t mcp-server-for-apache-ofbiz .If your target environment uses a different CPU architecture than your development machine (for example, if you're working on an Apple M1 but deploying to an amd64 platform), make sure to build the image for the correct target architecture:
docker build --platform=linux/amd64 -t mcp-server-for-apache-ofbiz .After building the image, create a container
docker create --name my-mcp-server-for-apache-ofbiz -p 3000:3000 -v ${PWD}/config:/usr/src/app/config -v ${PWD}/build/tools:/usr/src/app/build/tools test1 ./config ./build/toolsand run it
docker start my-mcp-server-for-apache-ofbizThe MCP server will be available at http://localhost:3000/mcp.
If you wish, you can push the image to your registry by running
docker push myregistry.com/apache-ofbiz-mcp-server