A minimal MCP server built as a learning exercise. Uses the Streamable HTTP transport and demonstrates the core MCP primitives: tools and resources.
The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is an open standard for connecting AI models to external data and capabilities. An MCP server exposes three types of primitives:
| Primitive | Purpose | Initiated by |
|---|---|---|
| Tools | Do things (side effects allowed) | The model |
| Resources | Expose data (read-only) | The client/user |
| Prompts | Reusable prompt templates | The client/user |
src/
server.js # Entry point — HTTP transport
stdio.js # Entry point — stdio transport (Claude Desktop)
mcp.js # MCP server + tool/resource registration
data/
greetings.js # Shared data (language → greeting mapping)
tools/
helloWorld.js # No-input tool
helloName.js # Tool with a required string input
greetName.js # Tool with error handling and MCP logging
listLanguages.js # Tool that exposes the languages list to the model
resources/
languages.js # Static resource exposing available languages
This server uses the StreamableHTTPServerTransport from @modelcontextprotocol/sdk. It runs as a plain Node.js HTTP server and handles MCP messages at POST /mcp.
Key details:
- Runs in stateless mode (
sessionIdGenerator: undefined) — each request gets a fresh transport instance - The client must send
Accept: application/json, text/event-streamor the server will reject with 406 - The transport handles both JSON responses and SSE streams depending on the request
Tools are registered with server.registerTool(name, config, handler).
config.description— shown to the model so it knows when to use the toolconfig.inputSchema— a plain object of Zod fields; the SDK wraps it inz.object()automatically- Input is validated at the transport layer before the handler is called — invalid input returns
-32602without ever reaching your code
No inputs. Always returns "Hello, World!".
Takes a required name string. Returns "Hello, {name}!".
Takes a name string and a language string. Returns a greeting in the specified language, or an isError response if the language isn't supported. Uses sendLoggingMessage to emit info, warning, and debug log messages through the MCP protocol — visible in the MCP Inspector notifications panel.
No inputs. Returns the list of supported languages. Useful for Claude Desktop where resources aren't surfaced to the model — the model can call this tool to discover valid options when greet_name returns an error.
Resources are registered with server.registerResource(name, uri, config, reader).
- Each resource has a URI (e.g.
languages://list) that the client uses to fetch it - The reader returns
{ contents: [{ uri, text }] } - Resources are read-only — no side effects
Returns a JSON array of supported language keys. Backed by the same greetings.js data used by the greet_name tool.
npm install
npm startThe MCP endpoint will be available at http://localhost:3000/mcp.
To run on a different port:
PORT=3001 npm startClaude Desktop spawns the process itself — no server needs to be running beforehand. Add the following to ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"hello-mcp": {
"command": "node",
"args": ["/absolute/path/to/hello-mcp/src/stdio.js"]
}
}
}Quit and relaunch Claude Desktop after editing the config. Check Claude menu → Settings → Developer to confirm the server shows a green dot.
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspectorOpen the Inspector in Chrome (not Brave — its privacy settings block localhost requests), set the transport to Streamable HTTP, and enter http://localhost:3000/mcp.
You can also test with raw curl:
curl -X POST http://localhost:3000/mcp \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Accept: application/json, text/event-stream" \
-d '{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 1,
"method": "tools/list",
"params": {}
}'- Multiple transports, one server —
mcp.jsis transport-agnostic;server.js(HTTP) andstdio.js(stdio) are separate entry points that both import the same server instance - Separation of concerns —
server.jsowns the HTTP transport,mcp.jsowns the MCP server, each tool/resource lives in its own file - Single source of truth — shared data in
src/data/is imported by both tools and resources; no duplication - Zod validation is free — defining an
inputSchemagives you automatic input validation before your handler runs registerToolovertool— thetool()method is deprecated;registerTool()uses a cleaner config object pattern- Stateless vs stateful — stateless mode is simpler and sufficient for most use cases; stateful mode adds session tracking via
sessionIdGenerator - Factory pattern for server-dependent handlers — handlers that need to call
server.sendLoggingMessage()can't importserverdirectly (circular dependency). Instead, export acreateHandler(server)factory that closes over the server instance and returns the handler function.mcp.jscallscreateHandler(server)at registration time. isError: truevs throwing — returningisError: truesends the error text back to the model as readable tool output it can reason about; throwing produces a protocol-level JSON-RPC error the model can't see- MCP logging —
server.sendLoggingMessage({ level, message })sends log messages through the MCP protocol to the client; visible in MCP Inspector's notifications panel - Resources vs tools in Claude Desktop — Claude Desktop doesn't surface resources to the model; expose the same data as a tool if the model needs to access it