# Spring AI MCP Weather Server Sample with WebMVC Starter This sample project demonstrates how to create an MCP server using the Spring AI MCP Server Boot Starter with WebMVC transport. It implements a weather service that exposes tools for retrieving weather information using the National Weather Service API. For more information, see the [MCP Server Boot Starter](https://docs.spring.io/spring-ai/reference/api/mcp/mcp-server-boot-starter-docs.html) reference documentation. ## Overview The sample showcases: - Integration with `spring-ai-mcp-server-webmvc-spring-boot-starter` - Support for both SSE (Server-Sent Events) and STDIO transports - Automatic tool registration using Spring AI's `@Tool` annotation - Two weather-related tools: - Get weather forecast by location (latitude/longitude) - Get weather alerts by US state ## Dependencies The project requires the Spring AI MCP Server WebMVC Boot Starter: ```xml org.springframework.ai spring-ai-mcp-server-webmvc-spring-boot-starter ``` This starter provides: - HTTP-based transport using Spring MVC (`WebMvcSseServerTransport`) - Auto-configured SSE endpoints - Optional STDIO transport - Included `spring-boot-starter-web` and `mcp-spring-webmvc` dependencies ## Building the Project Build the project using Maven: ```bash ./mvnw clean install -DskipTests ``` ## Running the Server The server supports two transport modes: ### WebMVC SSE Mode (Default) ```bash java -jar target/mcp-weather-starter-webmvc-server-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar ``` ### STDIO Mode To enable STDIO transport, set the appropriate properties: ```bash java -Dspring.ai.mcp.server.stdio=true -Dspring.main.web-application-type=none -jar target/mcp-weather-starter-webmvc-server-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar ``` ## Configuration Configure the server through `application.properties`: ```properties # Server identification spring.ai.mcp.server.name=my-weather-server spring.ai.mcp.server.version=0.0.1 # Server type (SYNC/ASYNC) spring.ai.mcp.server.type=SYNC # Transport configuration spring.ai.mcp.server.stdio=false spring.ai.mcp.server.sse-message-endpoint=/mcp/message # Change notifications spring.ai.mcp.server.resource-change-notification=true spring.ai.mcp.server.tool-change-notification=true spring.ai.mcp.server.prompt-change-notification=true # Logging (required for STDIO transport) spring.main.banner-mode=off logging.file.name=./target/starter-webmvc-server.log ``` ## Available Tools ### Weather Forecast Tool - Name: `getWeatherForecastByLocation` - Description: Get weather forecast for a specific latitude/longitude - Parameters: - `latitude`: double - Latitude coordinate - `longitude`: double - Longitude coordinate ### Weather Alerts Tool - Name: `getAlerts` - Description: Get weather alerts for a US state - Parameters: - `state`: String - Two-letter US state code (e.g., CA, NY) ## Server Implementation The server uses Spring Boot and Spring AI's tool annotations for automatic tool registration: ```java @SpringBootApplication public class McpServerApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { SpringApplication.run(McpServerApplication.class, args); } @Bean public ToolCallbackProvider weatherTools(WeatherService weatherService){ return MethodToolCallbackProvider.builder().toolObjects(weatherService).build(); } } ``` The `WeatherService` implements the weather tools using the `@Tool` annotation: ```java @Service public class WeatherService { @Tool(description = "Get weather forecast for a specific latitude/longitude") public String getWeatherForecastByLocation(double latitude, double longitude) { // Implementation using weather.gov API } @Tool(description = "Get weather alerts for a US state. Input is Two-letter US state code (e.g., CA, NY)") public String getAlerts(String state) { // Implementation using weather.gov API } } ``` ## MCP Clients You can connect to the weather server using either STDIO or SSE transport: ### Manual Clients #### WebMVC SSE Client For servers using SSE transport: ```java var transport = new HttpClientSseClientTransport("http://localhost:8080"); var client = McpClient.sync(transport).build(); ``` #### STDIO Client For servers using STDIO transport: ```java var stdioParams = ServerParameters.builder("java") .args("-Dspring.ai.mcp.server.stdio=true", "-Dspring.main.web-application-type=none", "-Dspring.main.banner-mode=off", "-Dlogging.pattern.console=", "-jar", "target/mcp-weather-starter-webmvc-server-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar") .build(); var transport = new StdioClientTransport(stdioParams); var client = McpClient.sync(transport).build(); ``` The sample project includes example client implementations: - [SampleClient.java](src/test/java/org/springframework/ai/mcp/sample/client/SampleClient.java): Manual MCP client implementation - [ClientStdio.java](src/test/java/org/springframework/ai/mcp/sample/client/ClientStdio.java): STDIO transport connection - [ClientSse.java](src/test/java/org/springframework/ai/mcp/sample/client/ClientSse.java): SSE transport connection For a better development experience, consider using the [MCP Client Boot Starters](https://docs.spring.io/spring-ai/reference/api/mcp/mcp-client-boot-starter-docs.html). These starters enable auto-configuration of multiple STDIO and/or SSE connections to MCP servers. See the [starter-default-client](../../client-starter/starter-default-client) project for examples. ### Boot Starter Clients Let's use the [starter-default-client](../../client-starter/starter-default-client) client to connect to our weather `starter-webmvc-server`. Follow the `starter-default-client` readme instruction to build a `mcp-starter-default-client-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar` client application. #### STDIO Transport 1. Create a `mcp-servers-config.json` configuration file with this content: ```json { "mcpServers": { "weather-starter-webmvc-server": { "command": "java", "args": [ "-Dspring.ai.mcp.server.stdio=true", "-Dspring.main.web-application-type=none", "-Dlogging.pattern.console=", "-jar", "/absolute/path/to/mcp-weather-starter-webmvc-server-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar" ] } } } ``` 2. Run the client using the configuration file: ```bash java -Dspring.ai.mcp.client.stdio.servers-configuration=file:mcp-servers-config.json \ -Dai.user.input='What is the weather in NY?' \ -Dlogging.pattern.console= \ -jar mcp-starter-default-client-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar ``` #### SSE (WebMVC) Transport 1. Start the `mcp-weather-starter-webmvc-server`: ```bash java -jar mcp-weather-starter-webmvc-server-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar ``` starts the MCP server on port 8080. 2. In another console start the client configured with SSE transport: ```bash java -Dspring.ai.mcp.client.sse.connections.weather-server.url=http://localhost:8080 \ -Dlogging.pattern.console= \ -Dai.user.input='What is the weather in NY?' \ -jar mcp-starter-default-client-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar ``` ## Additional Resources * [Spring AI Documentation](https://docs.spring.io/spring-ai/reference/) * [MCP Server Boot Starter](https://docs.spring.io/spring-ai/reference/api/mcp/mcp-server-boot-starter-docs.html) * [MCP Client Boot Starter](https://docs.spring.io/spring-ai/reference/api/mcp/mcp-server-boot-client-docs.html) * [Model Context Protocol Specification](https://modelcontextprotocol.github.io/specification/) * [Spring Boot Auto-configuration](https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/features.html#features.developing-auto-configuration)