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Tavily Server
What is Tavily Server
Tavily-server is a TypeScript-based Model Context Protocol (MCP) server designed for managing a simple notes system. It implements core MCP concepts by providing resources for text notes, tools for creating new notes, and prompts for generating summaries.
Use cases
Use cases for tavily-server include creating and managing personal notes, summarizing project notes for quick reviews, and integrating with applications that require note-taking functionalities.
How to use
To use tavily-server, install the necessary dependencies with ‘npm install’, build the server using ‘npm run build’, and configure it with Claude Desktop by adding the server command to the specified configuration file.
Key features
Key features of tavily-server include: 1) Resources for accessing notes via ‘note://’ URIs, with each note containing a title, content, and metadata; 2) Tools for creating new notes with required parameters; 3) Prompts for summarizing all stored notes, returning structured outputs for LLM summarization.
Where to use
Tavily-server can be used in various fields such as personal note-taking, project management, and any application requiring a simple and structured way to manage text notes.
Clients Supporting MCP
The following are the main client software that supports the Model Context Protocol. Click the link to visit the official website for more information.
Overview
What is Tavily Server
Tavily-server is a TypeScript-based Model Context Protocol (MCP) server designed for managing a simple notes system. It implements core MCP concepts by providing resources for text notes, tools for creating new notes, and prompts for generating summaries.
Use cases
Use cases for tavily-server include creating and managing personal notes, summarizing project notes for quick reviews, and integrating with applications that require note-taking functionalities.
How to use
To use tavily-server, install the necessary dependencies with ‘npm install’, build the server using ‘npm run build’, and configure it with Claude Desktop by adding the server command to the specified configuration file.
Key features
Key features of tavily-server include: 1) Resources for accessing notes via ‘note://’ URIs, with each note containing a title, content, and metadata; 2) Tools for creating new notes with required parameters; 3) Prompts for summarizing all stored notes, returning structured outputs for LLM summarization.
Where to use
Tavily-server can be used in various fields such as personal note-taking, project management, and any application requiring a simple and structured way to manage text notes.
Clients Supporting MCP
The following are the main client software that supports the Model Context Protocol. Click the link to visit the official website for more information.
Content
tavily-server MCP Server
A Model Context Protocol server
This is a TypeScript-based MCP server that implements a simple notes system. It demonstrates core MCP concepts by providing:
- Resources representing text notes with URIs and metadata
- Tools for creating new notes
- Prompts for generating summaries of notes
Features
Resources
- List and access notes via
note://URIs - Each note has a title, content and metadata
- Plain text mime type for simple content access
Tools
create_note- Create new text notes- Takes title and content as required parameters
- Stores note in server state
Prompts
summarize_notes- Generate a summary of all stored notes- Includes all note contents as embedded resources
- Returns structured prompt for LLM summarization
Development
Install dependencies:
npm install
Build the server:
npm run build
For development with auto-rebuild:
npm run watch
Installation
To use with Claude Desktop, add the server config:
On MacOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
On Windows: %APPDATA%/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
{
"mcpServers": {
"tavily-server": {
"command": "/path/to/tavily-server/build/index.js"
}
}
}
Debugging
Since MCP servers communicate over stdio, debugging can be challenging. We recommend using the MCP Inspector, which is available as a package script:
npm run inspector
The Inspector will provide a URL to access debugging tools in your browser.
Dev Tools Supporting MCP
The following are the main code editors that support the Model Context Protocol. Click the link to visit the official website for more information.










