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Foundational library for the DCC Model Context Protocol (MCP) ecosystem

Project description

dcc-mcp-core

PyPI Python License Downloads Coverage Tests PRs Welcome Latest Version

中文 | English

Production-grade foundation for AI-assisted DCC workflows — combining the Model Context Protocol (MCP 2025-03-26 Streamable HTTP) with a zero-code Skills system built on agentskills.io 1.0. A Rust-powered core with Python bindings (PyO3) delivering enterprise-grade performance, security, and scalability — all with zero runtime Python dependencies. Supports Python 3.7–3.13.

Note: This project is in active development (v0.14+). APIs may evolve; see CHANGELOG.md for version history.


The Problem & Our Solution

Why Not Just Use CLI?

CLI tools are blind to DCC state. They can't see the active scene, selected objects, or viewport context. They execute in isolation, forcing the AI to:

  • Make multiple roundtrips to gather context
  • Rebuild state from CLI outputs (fragile, slow)
  • Lack visual feedback from the viewport
  • Scale poorly with context explosion as requests grow

Why MCP (Model Context Protocol)?

MCP is AI-native, but stock MCP lacks two critical capabilities for DCC automation:

  1. Context Explosion — MCP has no mechanism to scope tools to specific sessions or instances, causing request bloat with multi-DCC setups.
  2. No Lifecycle Control — Can't discover instance state (active scene, documents, process health) or control startup/shutdown.

Our Approach: MCP + Skills System

We reuse and extend the existing MCP ecosystem, adding:

Capability Benefit
Gateway Election & Version Awareness Multi-instance load balancing; automatic handoff when a newer DCC launches
Session Isolation Each AI session talks to its own DCC instance; prevents context bleeding
Skills System (Zero-Code) Define tools as SKILL.md + sibling YAML/scripts — no Python glue code needed
Progressive Discovery Scope tools by DCC type, instance, scene, product; prevents context explosion
Instance Tracking Know active documents, PIDs, display names; enable smart routing
Structured Results Every tool returns (success, message, context, prompt) for AI reasoning
Workflow Primitive Declarative multi-step workflows with retry / timeout / idempotency / approval gates
Artefact Hand-off Content-addressed (SHA-256) file passing between tools and workflow steps
Job Lifecycle + SSE tools/call opt-in async dispatch, $/dcc.jobUpdated notifications, SQLite persistence

This isn't reinventing MCP — it's solving MCP's blind spots for desktop automation.

For production pipelines, skills can be distributed as Rez packages and composed into context bundles before a DCC starts. A resolved launch context sets DCC_MCP_* environment variables for project, task, asset, provenance, and skill paths; the adapter records those values in gateway metadata so clients discover only the active project/task/asset surface instead of every studio tool. See Context Bundles and Rez Skill Packages.


Why dcc-mcp-core Over Alternatives?

Aspect dcc-mcp-core Generic MCP CLI Tools Browser Extensions
DCC State Awareness Scenes, docs, instance IDs No No Partial
Multi-Instance Support Gateway election + session isolation Single endpoint No No
Context Scoping By DCC / scene / product Global tools No Limited
Zero-Code Tools SKILL.md + sibling files Full Python required Scripts only No
Performance Rust + zero-copy + IPC Python overhead Process overhead Network overhead
Security Sandbox + audit log Manual Manual None
Cross-Platform Windows / macOS / Linux Yes Limited Browser only

AI-friendly docs: AGENTS.md · docs/guide/agents-reference.md · .agents/skills/dcc-mcp-core/SKILL.md


Architecture: The Three-Layer Stack

+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
|  AI Agent (Claude, GPT, etc.)                                   |
|  Calls tools via MCP protocol (tools/list, tools/call)          |
+-------------------------------+---------------------------------+
                                |
                        MCP Streamable HTTP
                                |
+-------------------------------v---------------------------------+
|  Gateway Server (Rust / HTTP)                                   |
|  +-- Version-aware instance election                            |
|  +-- Session isolation & routing                                |
|  +-- Tool discovery (skills-derived)                            |
|  +-- Job lifecycle + SSE notifications                          |
|  +-- Workflow execution engine                                  |
+-------------------------------+---------------------------------+
                                |
                 IPC (Named Pipe / Unix Socket) via DccLink
                                |
          +---------------------+---------------------+
          |                     |                     |
  +-------v-------+     +-------v-------+     +-------v-------+
  |  Maya Adapter  |     | Blender Adapter|     | Houdini Adapter|
  |  (_core.pyd)   |     |  (_core.so)    |     |  (_core.so)   |
  +-------+--------+     +-------+--------+     +-------+-------+
          |                      |                      |
    Python 3.7+             Python 3.7+            Python 3.7+
    (zero deps)             (zero deps)            (zero deps)
  • Layer 1 — AI Agent: Calls tools via standard MCP protocol (tools/list, tools/call, notifications).
  • Layer 2 — Gateway: Orchestrates discovery, session isolation, request routing, job lifecycle, and workflow execution. Maintains a __gateway__ sentinel for version-aware election.
  • Layer 3 — DCC Adapters: DCC-side Python packages (Maya, Blender, Photoshop, Houdini…) that embed the _core native extension plus the Skills system. WebView-host adapters (AuroraView, Electron panels) and WebSocket bridges (Photoshop, ZBrush) use narrower capability surfaces.

Quick Start

Installation

# From PyPI (pre-built wheels for Python 3.7+)
pip install dcc-mcp-core

# Or from source (requires Rust 1.85+)
git clone https://github.com/loonghao/dcc-mcp-core.git
cd dcc-mcp-core
vx just dev           # recommended — uses the project's canonical feature set
# or: pip install -e .

Serve a DCC over MCP — Skills-First (recommended)

create_skill_server wires up the full Skills-First entry point: tools/list returns six core tools plus one stub per unloaded skill. Agents call search_skillsload_skill to activate the tools they need, keeping the context window small.

from dcc_mcp_core import create_skill_server, McpHttpConfig

server = create_skill_server(
    "maya",
    McpHttpConfig(port=8765),
)
handle = server.start()
print(handle.mcp_url())   # "http://127.0.0.1:8765/mcp"
# ... later ...
handle.shutdown()

Low-level: register tools manually

import json
from dcc_mcp_core import (
    ToolRegistry, ToolDispatcher, EventBus,
    McpHttpServer, McpHttpConfig,
    success_result, scan_and_load,
)

skills, skipped = scan_and_load(dcc_name="maya")
print(f"Loaded {len(skills)} skills, skipped {len(skipped)}")

registry = ToolRegistry()
registry.register(
    name="get_scene",
    description="Return the active Maya scene path",
    category="scene",
    dcc="maya",
    version="1.0.0",
)

dispatcher = ToolDispatcher(registry)
dispatcher.register_handler(
    "get_scene",
    lambda params: success_result("OK", path="/proj/shots/sh010.ma").to_dict(),
)

# Optional: observe lifecycle events
bus = EventBus()
bus.subscribe("action.after_execute", lambda **kw: print(f"done: {kw['action_name']}"))

result = dispatcher.dispatch("get_scene", json.dumps({}))
print(result["output"])   # {"success": True, "message": "OK", "context": {"path": ...}}

# Expose registry over MCP (register ALL handlers before .start())
server = McpHttpServer(registry, McpHttpConfig(port=8765))
handle = server.start()

Core Concepts

ToolResult — Structured Results for AI

All skill execution results use ToolResult, designed to be AI-friendly with structured context and follow-up guidance.

from dcc_mcp_core import ToolResult, success_result, error_result

# Factory functions (recommended). Extra kwargs land in `context`.
ok = success_result(
    "Sphere created",
    prompt="Consider adding materials or adjusting UVs",
    object_name="sphere1",
    position=[0, 1, 0],
)
# ok.context == {"object_name": "sphere1", "position": [0, 1, 0]}

err = error_result(
    "Failed to create sphere",
    "Radius must be positive",
)

# Direct construction
result = ToolResult(
    success=True,
    message="Operation completed",
    context={"key": "value"},
)

result.success   # bool
result.message   # str
result.prompt    # Optional[str] — AI next-step suggestion
result.error     # Optional[str] — error details
result.context   # dict — arbitrary structured data
result.to_json() # JSON-safe serialization for transport

ToolRegistry & Dispatcher

import json
from dcc_mcp_core import ToolRegistry, ToolDispatcher, EventBus

registry = ToolRegistry()
registry.register(name="my_tool", description="My tool", category="tools", version="1.0.0")

dispatcher = ToolDispatcher(registry)
dispatcher.register_handler("my_tool", lambda params: {"done": True})

result = dispatcher.dispatch("my_tool", json.dumps({}))
# result == {"action": "my_tool", "output": {"done": True}, "validation_skipped": True}

bus = EventBus()
sub_id = bus.subscribe("action.before_execute", lambda **kw: print(f"before: {kw}"))
bus.publish("action.before_execute", action_name="test")
bus.unsubscribe("action.before_execute", sub_id)

Skills System — Zero-Code MCP Tool Registration

The Skills system lets you register any script (Python, MEL, MaxScript, Batch, Shell, PowerShell, JavaScript, TypeScript) as an MCP tool with zero Python glue code. Aligned with the agentskills.io 1.0 specification.

Architectural Rule — Sibling-File Pattern (v0.15+)

Every dcc-mcp-core extension — tools, groups, workflows, prompts, next-tools, etc. — lives in a sibling file pointed at by a metadata.dcc-mcp.<feature> key. The SKILL.md frontmatter itself only carries the six standard agentskills.io fields (name, description, license, compatibility, metadata, allowed-tools).

my-automation/
├── SKILL.md                      # frontmatter + human-readable body
├── tools.yaml                    # tool definitions + annotations + groups
├── workflows/
│   └── vendor_intake.workflow.yaml
├── prompts/
│   └── review_scene.prompt.yaml
└── scripts/
    ├── cleanup.py
    └── publish.sh

Five Minutes to Your First Skill

1. Create maya-cleanup/SKILL.md:

---
name: maya-cleanup
description: >-
  Domain skill — Scene optimisation and cleanup tools for Maya.
  Not for authoring new geometry — use maya-geometry for that.
license: MIT
compatibility: "Maya 2024+, Python 3.7+"
metadata:
  dcc-mcp:
    layer: domain
    dcc: maya
    tools: tools.yaml
    search-hint: "cleanup, optimise, unused nodes"
    depends: [dcc-diagnostics]
---
# Maya Scene Cleanup

Automated tools for optimising and validating Maya scenes.

2. Create maya-cleanup/tools.yaml:

tools:
  - name: cleanup
    description: "Remove unused nodes from the active scene."
    script: scripts/cleanup.py
    annotations:
      read_only_hint: false
      destructive_hint: true
      idempotent_hint: true
    next-tools:
      on-success: [maya_cleanup__validate]
      on-failure: [dcc_diagnostics__screenshot, dcc_diagnostics__audit_log]

  - name: validate
    description: "Validate scene integrity after cleanup."
    script: scripts/validate.mel
    annotations:
      read_only_hint: true

3. Create maya-cleanup/scripts/cleanup.py:

#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Clean unused nodes from the scene."""
from __future__ import annotations

import json
import sys


def main() -> int:
    result = {"success": True, "message": "Cleaned up 42 unused nodes"}
    print(json.dumps(result))
    return 0


if __name__ == "__main__":
    sys.exit(main())

4. Register and call:

import os
os.environ["DCC_MCP_SKILL_PATHS"] = "/path/to/maya-cleanup/.."

from dcc_mcp_core import create_skill_server, McpHttpConfig

server = create_skill_server("maya", McpHttpConfig(port=8765))
handle = server.start()
# Agent calls search_skills("cleanup") → load_skill("maya-cleanup") → maya_cleanup__cleanup

That's it — no Python glue code, just SKILL.md + tools.yaml + scripts.

Supported Script Types

Extension Type Execution
.py Python subprocess with system Python
.mel MEL (Maya) Via DCC adapter
.ms MaxScript Via DCC adapter
.bat, .cmd Batch cmd /c
.sh, .bash Shell bash
.ps1 PowerShell powershell -File
.js, .jsx JavaScript node
.ts TypeScript node (via ts-node or tsx)

See examples/skills/ for complete reference packages.

Bundled Skills — Zero Configuration Required

dcc-mcp-core ships two core skills directly inside the wheel. They are available immediately after pip install dcc-mcp-core — no repository clone or DCC_MCP_SKILL_PATHS configuration needed.

Skill Tools Purpose
dcc-diagnostics screenshot, audit_log, tool_metrics, process_status Observability & debugging for any DCC
workflow run_chain Multi-step action chaining with context propagation
from dcc_mcp_core import get_bundled_skills_dir, get_bundled_skill_paths

print(get_bundled_skills_dir())
# /path/to/site-packages/dcc_mcp_core/skills

paths = get_bundled_skill_paths()                       # default ON
paths = get_bundled_skill_paths(include_bundled=False)  # opt-out

DCC adapters (e.g. dcc-mcp-maya) include the bundled skills by default. To opt out: start_server(include_bundled=False).


Solving MCP Context Explosion

The problem: Stock MCP returns all tools in tools/list, even those irrelevant to the current task or DCC instance. With 3 DCC instances × 50 skills × 5 scripts = 750 tools, the context window fills instantly.

Progressive discovery — dcc-mcp-core shrinks this to what the agent actually needs:

  1. Skill stubstools/list returns six meta-tools plus one stub per unloaded skill (__skill__<name>). Agents call search_skills(query)load_skill(name) to activate the real tools.
  2. Instance awareness — Each DCC registers its active documents, PID, display name, scope level.
  3. Smart tool scoping — Tools filter by DCC type, trust scope (Repo < User < System < Admin), product whitelist, and policy.
  4. Session isolation — An AI session is pinned to one DCC instance; it sees only that instance's tools.
  5. Gateway election — When a newer DCC version launches, traffic automatically hands off to it.

Stock MCP:

tools/list response:
  100 Maya + 100 Houdini + 100 Blender + 250 shared = 550 tool definitions

With dcc-mcp-core (Skills-First):

tools/list response (Maya session, nothing loaded yet):
  6 core tools + 22 skill stubs = 28 entries
→ agent loads only the 3 skills it needs → ~30 tools in context

Highlights

  • Rust-powered performance — Zero-copy serialisation (rmp-serde), LZ4 shared memory, lock-free data structures.
  • Zero runtime Python deps — Everything compiled into the native extension.
  • Skills-First MCP servercreate_skill_server() gives a ready-to-use MCP 2025-03-26 Streamable HTTP endpoint with progressive discovery.
  • Workflow primitiveWorkflowSpec / WorkflowExecutor: declarative multi-step workflows with retry, timeout, idempotency keys, approval gates, foreach / parallel / branch steps, SQLite-backed recovery.
  • Scheduler — Cron + webhook (HMAC-SHA256) triggered workflows via sibling schedules.yaml (opt-in feature).
  • Artefact hand-off — Content-addressed (SHA-256) FileRef + ArtefactStore for passing files between tools and workflow steps.
  • Job lifecycle & notifications — Opt-in async tools/call, SSE channels (notifications/progress, $/dcc.jobUpdated, $/dcc.workflowUpdated), optional SQLite persistence surviving restarts.
  • Resources & Prompts primitives — Live DCC state (scene://current, capture://current_window, audit://recent, artefact://sha256/<hex>) and reusable prompt templates from sibling YAML.
  • Thread affinityDeferredExecutor routes main-thread-only tools to the DCC's event loop safely; Tokio workers handle the rest.
  • Gateway & multi-instance — Version-aware first-wins election, SSE multiplex across sessions, async dispatch + wait-for-terminal passthrough.
  • Resilient IPC — DccLink framing over ipckit (Named Pipe / Unix Socket): IpcChannelAdapter, GracefulIpcChannelAdapter, SocketServerAdapter.
  • Process management — Launch, monitor, auto-recover DCC processes.
  • Sandbox security — Policy-based access control with audit logging; ToolAnnotations safety hints; ToolValidator schema validation.
  • Screen capture — Full-screen or per-window (HWND PrintWindow) viewport capture for AI visual feedback.
  • USD integration — Universal Scene Description read/write bridge.
  • Structured telemetry — Tracing, recording, optional Prometheus /metrics exporter.
  • ~180 public Python symbols with full type stubs (python/dcc_mcp_core/_core.pyi).

Architecture Overview — 18 Rust Crates

dcc-mcp-core is organised as a Rust workspace of 18 crates, compiled into a single native Python extension (_core) via PyO3 / maturin:

Crate Responsibility Key Types
dcc-mcp-naming SEP-986 naming validators validate_tool_name, validate_action_id, TOOL_NAME_RE
dcc-mcp-models Data models ToolResult, SkillMetadata, ToolDeclaration
dcc-mcp-actions Tool execution lifecycle ToolRegistry, ToolDispatcher, ToolValidator, ToolPipeline, EventBus
dcc-mcp-skills Skills discovery & loading SkillScanner, SkillCatalog, SkillWatcher, dependency resolver
dcc-mcp-protocols MCP protocol types ToolDefinition, ResourceDefinition, PromptDefinition, ToolAnnotations, BridgeKind
dcc-mcp-transport IPC communication DccLinkFrame, IpcChannelAdapter, GracefulIpcChannelAdapter, SocketServerAdapter, FileRegistry
dcc-mcp-process Process management PyDccLauncher, PyProcessMonitor, PyProcessWatcher, PyCrashRecoveryPolicy, HostDispatcher
dcc-mcp-sandbox Security SandboxPolicy, SandboxContext, InputValidator, AuditLog
dcc-mcp-shm Shared memory PySharedBuffer, PySharedSceneBuffer, LZ4 compression
dcc-mcp-capture Screen capture Capturer, WindowFinder, HWND / DXGI / X11 / Mock backends
dcc-mcp-telemetry Observability TelemetryConfig, ToolRecorder, ToolMetrics, optional Prometheus
dcc-mcp-usd USD integration UsdStage, UsdPrim, scene_info_json_to_stage
dcc-mcp-http MCP Streamable HTTP server McpHttpServer, McpHttpConfig, McpServerHandle, gateway, job manager
dcc-mcp-server Binary entry point dcc-mcp-server CLI, gateway runner
dcc-mcp-workflow Workflow engine (opt-in) WorkflowSpec, WorkflowExecutor, WorkflowHost, StepPolicy, RetryPolicy
dcc-mcp-scheduler Cron + webhook scheduler (opt-in) ScheduleSpec, TriggerSpec, SchedulerService, HMAC verification
dcc-mcp-artefact Content-addressed artefact store FileRef, FilesystemArtefactStore, InMemoryArtefactStore
dcc-mcp-utils Infrastructure Filesystem helpers, type wrappers, constants, JSON

Selected APIs

Transport Layer — Inter-Process Communication

from dcc_mcp_core import DccLinkFrame, IpcChannelAdapter, SocketServerAdapter

# Server: create channel and wait for client
server = IpcChannelAdapter.create("dcc-mcp-maya")
server.wait_for_client()

# Client: connect to server
client = IpcChannelAdapter.connect("dcc-mcp-maya")
client.send_frame(DccLinkFrame(msg_type="Call", seq=1, body=b'{"method":"ping"}'))
reply = client.recv_frame()      # DccLinkFrame(msg_type, seq, body)

# Multi-client socket server (for bridge-mode DCCs)
sock_server = SocketServerAdapter("/tmp/dcc-mcp.sock",
                                  max_connections=10,
                                  connection_timeout_secs=30)

Process Management — DCC Lifecycle Control

from dcc_mcp_core import (
    PyDccLauncher, PyProcessMonitor, PyProcessWatcher, PyCrashRecoveryPolicy,
)

launcher = PyDccLauncher(dcc_type="maya", version="2025")
process = launcher.launch(
    script_path="/path/to/startup.py",
    working_dir="/project",
    env_vars={"MAYA_RENDER_THREADS": "4"},
)

monitor = PyProcessMonitor()
monitor.track(process)
stats = monitor.stats(process)     # CPU, memory, uptime

watcher = PyProcessWatcher(
    recovery_policy=PyCrashRecoveryPolicy(max_restarts=3, cooldown_sec=10),
)
watcher.watch(process)

Sandbox Security — Policy-Based Access Control

from dcc_mcp_core import SandboxContext, SandboxPolicy, InputValidator

policy = SandboxPolicy()
ctx = SandboxContext(policy)
validator = InputValidator(ctx)

allowed, reason = validator.validate("delete_all_files")
if not allowed:
    print(f"Blocked by policy: {reason}")

# Audit trail
for entry in ctx.audit_log.entries():
    print(f"{entry.action} -> {entry.outcome}")

Workflow & Artefact Hand-off (v0.14+)

from dcc_mcp_core import (
    WorkflowSpec, BackoffKind,
    artefact_put_bytes, artefact_get_bytes,
)

spec = WorkflowSpec.from_yaml_str(yaml_text)
spec.validate()                    # static idempotency_key + template check
print(spec.steps[0].policy.retry.next_delay_ms(2))

ref = artefact_put_bytes(b"hello", mime="text/plain")
print(ref.uri)                     # "artefact://sha256/<hex>"
assert artefact_get_bytes(ref.uri) == b"hello"

See AGENTS.md for the full feature matrix and decision tree.


Development Setup

git clone https://github.com/loonghao/dcc-mcp-core.git
cd dcc-mcp-core

# Recommended: use vx (universal dev tool manager) — https://github.com/loonghao/vx
vx just dev            # build + install dev wheel (uses canonical feature set)
vx just test           # run Python tests
vx just test-rust      # run Rust unit/integration tests
vx just lint           # full lint check (Rust + Python)
vx just preflight      # pre-commit checks (cargo check + clippy + fmt + test-rust)
vx just ci             # full local CI pipeline

Without vx

python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate   # Windows: venv\Scripts\activate
pip install maturin pytest pytest-cov ruff mypy

# The canonical feature list lives in the root justfile — see `just print-dev-features`.
maturin develop --features "$(just print-dev-features)"
pytest tests/ -v
ruff check python/ tests/ examples/
cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings

The feature list is the single source of truth in justfile (OPT_FEATURES, DEV_FEATURES, WHEEL_FEATURES, WHEEL_FEATURES_PY37). CI, local dev, and release wheels all read from the same place.


Release Process

This project uses Release Please to automate versioning and releases:

  1. Develop: Create a branch from main and commit using Conventional Commits.
  2. Merge: Open a PR and merge to main.
  3. Release PR: Release Please automatically creates / updates a release PR that bumps the version and updates CHANGELOG.md.
  4. Publish: When the release PR merges, a GitHub Release is created and the wheel is published to PyPI.

Commit Message Format

Prefix Description Version Bump
feat: New feature Minor (0.x.0)
fix: Bug fix Patch (0.0.x)
feat!: or BREAKING CHANGE: Breaking change Major (x.0.0)
docs: Documentation only No release
chore: Maintenance No release
ci: CI/CD changes No release
refactor: Code refactoring No release
test: Adding tests No release
build: Build system / dependency changes No release
git commit -m "feat: add batch skill execution support"
git commit -m "fix: resolve middleware chain ordering issue"
git commit -m "feat!: redesign skill registry API"
git commit -m "feat(skills): add PowerShell script support"
git commit -m "docs: update API reference"

Contributing

Contributions are welcome — please open a Pull Request.

  1. Fork the repository and clone your fork.
  2. Create a feature branch: git checkout -b feat/my-feature.
  3. Make your changes following the coding standards below.
  4. Run tests and linting:
    vx just lint        # check code style
    vx just test        # run tests
    vx just preflight   # run all pre-commit checks
    
  5. Commit using Conventional Commits.
  6. Push and open a Pull Request against main.

Coding Standards

  • Style: Rust via cargo fmt, Python via ruff format (line length 120, double quotes).
  • Type hints: All public Python APIs must have type annotations; Rust uses thiserror for errors and tracing for logging.
  • Docstrings: Google-style docstrings for all public modules, classes, and functions.
  • Testing: New features must include tests; maintain or improve coverage.
  • Imports (Python): from __future__ import annotations first, then stdlib → third-party → local with section comments.

License

MIT — see the LICENSE file.


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