An MCP server that seamlessly creates infrastructure diagrams for any cloud provider using the Python diagrams package DSL
Project description
Infrastructure Diagram MCP Server
Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for Multi-Cloud Infrastructure Diagrams
This MCP server seamlessly creates diagrams using the Python diagrams package DSL. Generate professional infrastructure diagrams for any cloud provider (AWS, GCP, Azure), Kubernetes, on-premises, hybrid, and multi-cloud architectures using natural language with Claude Desktop or other MCP clients.
Note: This is a derivative work based on awslabs/aws-diagram-mcp-server, extended with multi-cloud provider support and enhanced features.
Prerequisites
- Install GraphViz with development headers - Required for diagram generation and .drawio export
- Install
uvfrom Astral (recommended) or usepip - (Optional) Install Helm - Required for full Helm chart parsing with
parse_helm_chart
Installing GraphViz
macOS (Homebrew):
brew install graphviz
Ubuntu/Debian:
sudo apt-get install graphviz graphviz-dev
Windows (Chocolatey):
choco install graphviz
Or download from graphviz.org
Installing Helm (Optional)
Helm is required for full template rendering with the parse_helm_chart tool. Without Helm, the parser will use a fallback mode with limited template support.
macOS (Homebrew):
brew install helm
Ubuntu/Debian:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/helm/helm/main/scripts/get-helm-3 | bash
Windows (Chocolatey):
choco install kubernetes-helm
Or download from helm.sh/docs/intro/install
MCP Client Configuration
Configure the MCP server in your MCP client. The CFLAGS and LDFLAGS (or INCLUDE and LIB on Windows) environment variables are needed for the initial build of pygraphviz.
Claude Desktop / Cursor on macOS (~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json or ~/.cursor/mcp.json):
{
"mcpServers": {
"infrastructure-diagrams": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server"],
"env": {
"FASTMCP_LOG_LEVEL": "ERROR",
"CFLAGS": "-I/opt/homebrew/include",
"LDFLAGS": "-L/opt/homebrew/lib"
}
}
}
}
Note:
/opt/homebrewis the default Homebrew prefix on Apple Silicon Macs. For Intel Macs, use/usr/localinstead.
Linux (e.g., ~/.config/claude/claude_desktop_config.json):
{
"mcpServers": {
"infrastructure-diagrams": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server"],
"env": {
"FASTMCP_LOG_LEVEL": "ERROR"
}
}
}
}
Note: On Linux, install
graphviz-devfirst (sudo apt-get install graphviz graphviz-dev), then no extra env vars are needed.
Windows (e.g., %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json):
{
"mcpServers": {
"infrastructure-diagrams": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server"],
"env": {
"FASTMCP_LOG_LEVEL": "ERROR",
"INCLUDE": "C:\\Program Files\\Graphviz\\include",
"LIB": "C:\\Program Files\\Graphviz\\lib"
}
}
}
}
Note: Adjust the Graphviz path if you installed it in a different location.
Other MCP Clients (e.g., Kiro - ~/.kiro/settings/mcp.json):
{
"mcpServers": {
"infrastructure-diagrams": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server"],
"env": {
"FASTMCP_LOG_LEVEL": "ERROR",
"CFLAGS": "-I/opt/homebrew/include",
"LDFLAGS": "-L/opt/homebrew/lib"
},
"autoApprove": [],
"disabled": false
}
}
}
Docker Installation
Build and run with Docker:
docker build -t infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server .
Then configure your MCP client:
{
"mcpServers": {
"infrastructure-diagrams": {
"command": "docker",
"args": [
"run",
"--rm",
"--interactive",
"--env",
"FASTMCP_LOG_LEVEL=ERROR",
"infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server:latest"
]
}
}
}
Features
The Infrastructure Diagram MCP Server provides the following capabilities:
- Multi-Provider Support: Create diagrams for AWS, GCP, Azure, Kubernetes, on-premises, and hybrid/multi-cloud architectures
- 2000+ Icons: Access to icons across all major cloud providers and services
- Multiple Diagram Types: Infrastructure architecture, sequence diagrams, flow charts, class diagrams, and more
- Rich Examples: 27+ pre-built templates for AWS, GCP, Azure, K8s, hybrid, and multi-cloud patterns
- Customization: Customize diagram appearance, layout, styling, colors, and connections
- Security: Built-in code scanning to ensure secure diagram generation
- Seamless Display: Diagrams appear inline in Claude Desktop with automatic rendering
- Flexible Output: Save diagrams to PNG format in your workspace directory
- Editable Export: Automatically generates .drawio files for editing in diagrams.net/draw.io
- IaC Parsing: Parse Kubernetes manifests, Helm charts, and Terraform configurations to extract infrastructure information for diagram generation
How to Use
Once configured in your MCP client (e.g., Claude Desktop), you can generate diagrams using natural language:
Example Prompts:
Discover Available Icons:
List all available GCP infrastructure diagram icons
Get Example Code:
Show me examples of Azure microservices diagrams
Generate Diagrams:
Create a GCP data pipeline diagram showing Pub/Sub, Dataflow, and BigQuery
Generate an AWS serverless architecture with API Gateway, Lambda, and DynamoDB
Design a multi-cloud architecture spanning AWS, GCP, and Azure
Parse Infrastructure-as-Code:
Parse the Kubernetes manifests in ./k8s/ and show me the resources and relationships
Parse the Helm chart at ./charts/my-app/ and generate a diagram of the infrastructure
Parse the Terraform configuration in ./infrastructure/ and visualize the AWS resources
The server will automatically:
- Find the appropriate icons from the 2000+ available
- Generate Python code using the diagrams package
- Create and display the PNG diagram inline
- Save the diagram to your workspace directory
- Generate an editable .drawio file for further customization
Editable Diagrams with draw.io
Every diagram is automatically exported in two formats:
- PNG: For immediate viewing and sharing (displayed inline in Claude Desktop)
- .drawio: For editing in diagrams.net or draw.io
The .drawio files allow you to:
- Modify individual components, colors, and styles
- Add additional notes, annotations, or documentation
- Reorganize layout and positioning
- Export to other formats (SVG, PDF, JPEG, etc.)
- Collaborate with team members using a familiar tool
Simply open the generated .drawio file in your browser at diagrams.net - no installation required!
What's New
This fork extends the original AWS Diagram MCP Server with:
- ✅ Full Multi-Cloud Support: GCP, Azure, Kubernetes, hybrid, and multi-cloud architectures
- ✅ 27+ Comprehensive Examples: Ready-to-use templates across all providers
- ✅ Complete Icon Coverage: All 2000+ icons properly imported and available
- ✅ Enhanced Display: MCP ImageContent format for seamless inline rendering
- ✅ Editable Export: Automatic .drawio file generation for editing in diagrams.net/draw.io
- ✅ IaC Parsing: Parse Kubernetes manifests, Helm charts, and Terraform HCL to extract infrastructure
- ✅ Bug Fixes: Resolved double
.pngextension and read-only filesystem issues - ✅ Icon Corrections: Fixed 28+ incorrect class names in examples
Code Examples
Below are Python code examples showing the diagrams package syntax. When using with Claude Desktop, you can simply describe what you want in natural language!
AWS Serverless Application
from diagrams import Diagram
from diagrams.aws.compute import Lambda
from diagrams.aws.database import Dynamodb
from diagrams.aws.network import APIGateway
with Diagram("Serverless Application", show=False):
api = APIGateway("API Gateway")
function = Lambda("Function")
database = Dynamodb("DynamoDB")
api >> function >> database
GCP Microservices
from diagrams import Diagram, Cluster
from diagrams.gcp.compute import CloudRun
from diagrams.gcp.network import LoadBalancing
from diagrams.gcp.database import SQL
with Diagram("GCP Microservices", show=False):
lb = LoadBalancing("load balancer")
with Cluster("Services"):
services = [CloudRun("api"), CloudRun("worker")]
db = SQL("database")
lb >> services >> db
Azure Web App
from diagrams import Diagram
from diagrams.azure.web import AppService
from diagrams.azure.database import SQLServer
from diagrams.azure.storage import BlobStorage
with Diagram("Azure Web App", show=False):
AppService("web") >> SQLServer("db") >> BlobStorage("storage")
Multi-Cloud Architecture
from diagrams import Diagram, Cluster
from diagrams.aws.compute import EC2
from diagrams.gcp.compute import CloudRun
from diagrams.azure.web import AppService
with Diagram("Multi-Cloud Setup", show=False):
with Cluster("AWS"):
aws = EC2("primary")
with Cluster("GCP"):
gcp = CloudRun("backup")
with Cluster("Azure"):
azure = AppService("cdn")
aws >> [gcp, azure]
Example Diagrams Gallery
Below are complete architecture diagram examples generated using this MCP server. These demonstrate real-world patterns across different cloud providers and deployment scenarios.
AWS Serverless Architecture
A production-ready serverless architecture using AWS services.
Architecture Components:
- Users connecting via HTTPS
- API Gateway as the entry point
- Multiple Lambda functions for compute
- DynamoDB for NoSQL database storage
GCP Serverless Architecture
A serverless architecture on Google Cloud Platform with managed services.
Architecture Components:
- Users connecting via HTTPS
- Load Balancer for traffic distribution
- Cloud Functions for serverless compute
- Firestore for document database
Azure Serverless Architecture
A serverless architecture on Microsoft Azure featuring fully managed services.
Architecture Components:
- Users connecting via HTTPS
- Application Gateway for routing and load balancing
- Function Apps for serverless execution
- Cosmos DB for globally distributed database
Kubernetes Architecture
A containerized application deployment on Kubernetes with full storage support.
Architecture Components:
- Ingress for external access and routing
- Service for internal load balancing
- Multiple Pods running containerized applications
- Persistent Volumes and Claims for stateful storage
Multi-Cloud Architecture
A distributed architecture spanning AWS, GCP, and Azure with global DNS routing for high availability.
Architecture Components:
- Global DNS (Route53) for intelligent traffic routing
- AWS Region: ELB → Lambda → DynamoDB
- GCP Region: Load Balancer → Cloud Functions → Firestore
- Azure Region: Load Balancer → Function Apps → Cosmos DB
Hybrid Cloud Architecture
An enterprise hybrid cloud setup connecting on-premises infrastructure to AWS cloud.
Architecture Components:
- On-premises application server and PostgreSQL database
- VPN Gateway for secure encrypted connectivity
- AWS VPC with EC2 instances
- RDS for database replication and disaster recovery
- S3 for backup and archival storage
GCP Foundation Organization Layer (from Terraform)
A comprehensive GCP organization-level infrastructure parsed from the terraform-example-foundation using the parse_terraform tool.
Architecture Components:
- Organization-level resources (VPC Service Controls, Resource Tags, Org Policies)
- Logging infrastructure (Cloud Logging, Pub/Sub, Storage, BigQuery sinks)
- Security services (Cloud KMS, Secret Manager, Security Command Center)
- CI/CD pipeline (Cloud Build, Source Repos, Artifact Registry)
- Network hub (Hub VPC, Cloud NAT, Cloud Router, Interconnects)
- Environment-specific shared VPCs (Dev, NonProd, Prod)
Milvus Vector Database Architecture (from Helm Chart)
A production-ready Milvus deployment parsed from the official milvus-helm chart using the parse_helm_chart tool.
Architecture Components:
- Client access through Milvus SDK
- Access Layer (Service, Deployment for milvus-proxy)
- Coordinator Layer (rootcoord, querycoord, indexcoord, datacoord)
- Worker Layer (querynode, indexnode, datanode)
- Dependencies (etcd for metadata, MinIO for object storage, Pulsar for message queue)
IaC Parsing Tools
The server includes three tools for parsing Infrastructure-as-Code files:
parse_k8s_manifest
Parse Kubernetes YAML manifests to extract resources and relationships.
Parse the K8s manifests in ./manifests/ and show me what's deployed
Detects:
- All K8s resource types (Deployments, Services, ConfigMaps, Secrets, PVCs, Ingress, etc.)
- Relationships: Service→Deployment, Deployment→ConfigMap/Secret/PVC, Ingress→Service
- Namespace grouping
parse_helm_chart
Parse Helm charts with full helm template rendering or fallback mode when Helm CLI is unavailable.
Note: For best results, install Helm. Without Helm, the parser uses a fallback mode with limited Go template support.
Parse the Helm chart at ./charts/my-app/ with values from values-prod.yaml
Features:
- Full Helm template rendering (requires Helm CLI)
- Fallback mode for basic parsing without Helm
- Custom values file and inline values support
- Release name and namespace configuration
parse_terraform
Parse Terraform HCL configurations to extract resources, data sources, modules, and relationships.
Parse the Terraform configuration in ./terraform/ and visualize the infrastructure
Detects:
- Resources from AWS, GCP, Azure, and Kubernetes providers
- Data sources and module references
- Explicit
depends_onrelationships - Implicit references between resources
Development
Testing
The project includes a comprehensive test suite to ensure the functionality of the MCP server. The tests are organized by module and cover all aspects of the server's functionality.
To run the tests, use the provided script:
./run_tests.sh
This script will automatically install pytest and its dependencies if they're not already installed.
Or run pytest directly (if you have pytest installed):
pytest -xvs tests/
To run with coverage:
pytest --cov=infrastructure_diagram_mcp_server --cov-report=term-missing tests/
Development Dependencies
To set up the development environment, install the development dependencies:
uv pip install -e ".[dev]"
This will install the required dependencies for development, including pytest, pytest-asyncio, and pytest-cov.
Troubleshooting
pygraphviz build error: graphviz/cgraph.h not found
This error occurs when the GraphViz development headers are not found during installation.
macOS:
# Make sure graphviz is installed
brew install graphviz
# Set compiler flags
export CFLAGS="-I$(brew --prefix graphviz)/include"
export LDFLAGS="-L$(brew --prefix graphviz)/lib"
# Then install
uvx infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server
Linux:
# Install development headers
sudo apt-get install graphviz graphviz-dev # Ubuntu/Debian
sudo dnf install graphviz-devel # Fedora/RHEL
Windows:
# Install Graphviz with Chocolatey
choco install graphviz
# Set environment variables
$env:INCLUDE = "C:\Program Files\Graphviz\include"
$env:LIB = "C:\Program Files\Graphviz\lib"
MCP server fails to start in Claude Desktop / Cursor
- Make sure the
CFLAGS/LDFLAGS(macOS) orINCLUDE/LIB(Windows) environment variables are set in your MCP config - Try clearing the uv cache:
rm -rf ~/.cache/uv - Restart your MCP client
Diagrams not displaying inline
Make sure you're using a recent version of Claude Desktop or Cursor that supports MCP ImageContent.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request to the GitHub repository.
License
This project is licensed under the Apache License 2.0 - see the LICENSE file for details.
This is a derivative work based on awslabs/aws-diagram-mcp-server. Copyright Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.
See NOTICE file for additional attribution information.
Links
- PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/infrastructure-diagram-mcp-server/
- GitHub: https://github.com/andrewmoshu/diagram-mcp-server
- Original Project: https://github.com/awslabs/mcp/tree/main/src/aws-diagram-mcp-server
- Diagrams Library: https://diagrams.mingrammer.com/
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