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Interactive UI Tools for MCP Servers

Project description

Gdansk: React Frontends for Python MCP Servers

[!WARNING] This project is currently in beta. The APIs are subject to change leading up to v1.0. The v1.0 release will coincide with the v2.0 release of the python mcp sdk

Installation

uv add gdansk

Skill for Coding Agents

If you use coding agents such as Claude Code or Cursor, add the gdansk skills to your repository:

npx skills add mplemay/gdansk

Then use:

  • $use-gdansk to bootstrap gdansk in a new repo or add another widget to an existing integration.
  • $debug-gdansk to diagnose widget path, bundling, render, and runtime failures in an existing gdansk setup.

Compatibility

  • Python: gdansk currently requires >=3.12,<3.15.
  • Frontend package: use an ESM package with @gdansk/vite, vite, @vitejs/plugin-react, react, react-dom, and @modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps.
  • Runtime tooling: gdansk starts the frontend through uv run deno .... If you run frontend package scripts directly, the published @gdansk/vite package currently declares Node >=22.

Examples

  • FastAPI: Mounting the MCP app inside an existing FastAPI service.
  • get-time: Small copyable widget example for first-time adoption in another repo.
  • production: Minimal production-rendered and hydrated widget example with a single tool.
  • shadcn: Multi-tool todo app with structured_output=True and shadcn/ui.

Quick Start

Here's a complete example showing how to build a simple greeting tool with a React UI:

Project Structure:

my-mcp-server/
├── server.py
└── frontend/
    ├── package.json
    ├── vite.config.ts
    └── widgets/
        └── hello/
            └── widget.tsx

The frontend folder name is only an example. Pass any frontend package root to Vite(...). That frontend package owns its own vite.config.ts; import @gdansk/vite there alongside any framework plugins.

server.py:

from collections.abc import AsyncIterator
from contextlib import asynccontextmanager
from pathlib import Path

import uvicorn
from mcp.server import MCPServer
from mcp.types import TextContent
from starlette.middleware.cors import CORSMiddleware

from gdansk import Ship, Vite

frontend_path = Path(__file__).parent / "frontend"
ship = Ship(vite=Vite(frontend_path))


@ship.widget(path=Path("hello/widget.tsx"), name="greet")
def greet(name: str) -> list[TextContent]:
    """Greet someone by name."""
    return [TextContent(type="text", text=f"Hello, {name}!")]


@asynccontextmanager
async def lifespan(app: MCPServer) -> AsyncIterator[None]:
    async with ship.mcp(app=app, watch=True):
        yield


mcp = MCPServer(name="Hello World Server", lifespan=lifespan)


def main() -> None:
    app = mcp.streamable_http_app()
    app.add_middleware(
        CORSMiddleware,
        allow_origins=["*"],
        allow_methods=["*"],
        allow_headers=["*"],
    )
    app.mount(path=ship.assets_path, app=ship.assets)
    uvicorn.run(app, port=3000)


if __name__ == "__main__":
    main()

frontend/widgets/hello/widget.tsx:

import { useApp } from "@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps/react";
import { useState } from "react";

export default function App() {
  const [name, setName] = useState("");
  const [greeting, setGreeting] = useState("");

  const { app, error } = useApp({
    appInfo: { name: "Greeter", version: "1.0.0" },
    capabilities: {},
  });

  if (error) return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>;
  if (!app) return <div>Connecting...</div>;

  return (
    <main>
      <h2>Say Hello</h2>
      <input
        value={name}
        onChange={(e) => setName(e.target.value)}
        placeholder="Enter your name..."
      />
      <button
        onClick={async () => {
          const result = await app.callServerTool({
            name: "greet",
            arguments: { name },
          });
          const text = result.content?.find((c) => c.type === "text");
          if (text && "text" in text) setGreeting(text.text);
        }}
      >
        Greet Me
      </button>
      {greeting && <p>{greeting}</p>}
    </main>
  );
}

frontend/package.json:

{
  "name": "my-mcp-frontend",
  "private": true,
  "type": "module",
  "dependencies": {
    "@gdansk/vite": "^0.1.0",
    "@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps": "^1.5.0",
    "@vitejs/plugin-react": "^6.0.1",
    "react": "^19.2.5",
    "react-dom": "^19.2.5",
    "vite": "^8.0.8"
  },
  "devDependencies": {
    "@types/react": "^19.2.14",
    "@types/react-dom": "^19.2.3"
  }
}

frontend/vite.config.ts:

import react from "@vitejs/plugin-react";
import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import gdansk from "@gdansk/vite";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [gdansk({ refresh: true }), react()],
});

@gdansk/vite now provides a default @ alias that points at the frontend package root, so you only need a manual alias when you want @ to resolve somewhere else. Use refresh: true to trigger full browser reloads when nearby Python or Jinja files change during development.

ship.mcp(..., watch=...) controls how the frontend is prepared:

  • watch=True — runs the Vite dev server in the background with React refresh; JS/CSS load from the Vite origin.
  • watch=False (default) — runs vite build on startup, then serves static hydration assets and the gdansk manifest from ship.assets.
  • watch=None — skips Vite/Deno entirely and loads an existing gdansk-manifest.json under the assets directory. Use this when assets are prebuilt (for example in CI) to avoid cold-start build cost.

If you need a non-default build output directory, keep the Vite plugin and Python runtime aligned. Widget sources always live under widgets/ at the frontend package root (Vite(root=...) / Vite root).

ship = Ship(
    vite=Vite(
        Path(__file__).parent / "frontend",
        build_directory="public/ui",
    ),
)
export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    gdansk({
      buildDirectory: "public/ui",
      refresh: true,
    }),
    react(),
  ],
});

Production widgets load their hydration assets from ship.assets_path. Mount ship.assets at that path on the public app; with the default settings this is /dist.

The default production output now mirrors Vite/Laravel conventions more closely:

  • standard Vite manifest: dist/manifest.json
  • gdansk runtime manifest: dist/gdansk-manifest.json
  • stable widget entries: dist/<widget>/client.js and dist/<widget>/client.css
  • shared hashed assets and chunks: dist/assets/*

If your MCP client renders widget HTML on a different origin, pass base_url to Ship so production asset URLs point back to your public app instead of the client host:

ship = Ship(vite=Vite(Path(__file__).parent / "frontend"), base_url="https://example.com")

If you want a different dev runtime host or port, configure both sides explicitly:

from gdansk import Ship, Vite

ship = Ship(vite=Vite(Path(__file__).parent / "frontend", host="127.0.0.1", port=14000))
export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [gdansk({ host: "127.0.0.1", port: 14000, refresh: true }), react()],
});

Install the frontend package dependencies from frontend/ after editing them:

cd frontend
uv run deno install

Gdansk mounts your default export into #root automatically and wraps it with React.StrictMode.

Run the server with uv run python server.py, configure it in your MCP client (like Claude Desktop), and you'll have an interactive greeting tool ready to use.

Why Use Gdansk?

  1. Python Backend, React Frontend — Use familiar technologies you already know. Write your logic in Python with type hints, build your UI in React/TypeScript. No need to learn a new framework-specific language.

  2. Built for MCP — Composes with MCPServer from the official Python SDK: register widget tools and HTML resources via Ship, wire them in with ship.mcp(app=...), and integrate with Claude Desktop and other MCP clients.

  3. Fast bundling with Rolldown — The Rolldown bundler processes your TypeScript/JSX automatically. Hot-reload in development mode means you see changes instantly without manual rebuilds.

  4. Type-Safe — Full type safety across the stack. Python type hints on the backend, TypeScript on the frontend, with automatic type checking via ruff and TypeScript compiler.

  5. Developer-Friendly — Simple decorator API (@ship.widget()), automatic resource registration, dev mode on ship.mcp(...), and comprehensive error messages. Get started in minutes, not hours.

  6. Production Ready — Comprehensive test suite covering Python 3.12+ across Linux, macOS, and Windows. Used in production MCP servers with proven reliability.

Credits

Gdansk builds on the shoulders of giants:

Special thanks to the Model Context Protocol team at Anthropic for creating the MCP standard and the @modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps package.

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