Skip to content

Obsidian Knowledge-Management MCP (Model Context Protocol) server that enables AI agents and development tools to interact with an Obsidian vault. It provides a comprehensive suite of tools for reading, writing, searching, and managing notes, tags, and frontmatter, acting as a bridge to the Obsidian Local REST API plugin.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

cyanheads/obsidian-mcp-server

Repository files navigation

Obsidian MCP Server

TypeScript Model Context Protocol Version License Status GitHub

Empower your AI agents and development tools with seamless Obsidian integration!

An MCP (Model Context Protocol) server providing comprehensive access to your Obsidian vault. Enables LLMs and AI agents to read, write, search, and manage your notes and files through the Obsidian Local REST API plugin.

Built on the cyanheads/mcp-ts-template, this server follows a modular architecture with robust error handling, logging, and security features.

🚀 Core Capabilities: Obsidian Tools 🛠️

This server equips your AI with specialized tools to interact with your Obsidian vault:

Tool Name Description Key Features
obsidian_read_note Retrieves the content and metadata of a specified note. - Read in markdown or json format.
- Case-insensitive path fallback.
- Includes file stats (creation/modification time).
obsidian_update_note Modifies notes using whole-file operations. - append, prepend, or overwrite content.
- Can create files if they don't exist.
- Targets files by path, active note, or periodic note.
obsidian_search_replace Performs search-and-replace operations within a target note. - Supports string or regex search.
- Options for case sensitivity, whole word, and replacing all occurrences.
obsidian_global_search Performs a search across the entire vault. - Text or regex search.
- Filter by path and modification date.
- Paginated results.
obsidian_list_notes Lists notes and subdirectories within a specified vault folder. - Filter by file extension or name regex.
- Provides a formatted tree view of the directory.
obsidian_manage_frontmatter Atomically manages a note's YAML frontmatter. - get, set, or delete frontmatter keys.
- Avoids rewriting the entire file for metadata changes.
obsidian_manage_tags Adds, removes, or lists tags for a note. - Manages tags in both YAML frontmatter and inline content.
obsidian_delete_note Permanently deletes a specified note from the vault. - Case-insensitive path fallback for safety.

Table of Contents

| Overview | Features | Configuration | | Project Structure | Vault Cache Service | | Tools | Resources | Development | License |

Overview

The Obsidian MCP Server acts as a bridge, allowing applications (MCP Clients) that understand the Model Context Protocol (MCP) – like advanced AI assistants (LLMs), IDE extensions, or custom scripts – to interact directly and safely with your Obsidian vault.

Instead of complex scripting or manual interaction, your tools can leverage this server to:

  • Automate vault management: Read notes, update content, manage frontmatter and tags, search across files, list directories, and delete files programmatically.
  • Integrate Obsidian into AI workflows: Enable LLMs to access and modify your knowledge base as part of their research, writing, or coding tasks.
  • Build custom Obsidian tools: Create external applications that interact with your vault data in novel ways.

Built on the robust mcp-ts-template, this server provides a standardized, secure, and efficient way to expose Obsidian functionality via the MCP standard. It achieves this by communicating with the powerful Obsidian Local REST API plugin running inside your vault.

Developer Note: This repository includes a .clinerules file that serves as a developer cheat sheet for your LLM coding agent with quick reference for the codebase patterns, file locations, and code snippets.

Features

Core Utilities

Leverages the robust utilities provided by cyanheads/mcp-ts-template:

  • Logging: Structured, configurable logging (file rotation, console, MCP notifications) with sensitive data redaction.
  • Error Handling: Centralized error processing, standardized error types (McpError), and automatic logging.
  • Configuration: Environment variable loading (dotenv) with comprehensive validation.
  • Input Validation/Sanitization: Uses zod for schema validation and custom sanitization logic.
  • Request Context: Tracking and correlation of operations via unique request IDs.
  • Type Safety: Strong typing enforced by TypeScript and Zod schemas.
  • HTTP Transport Option: Built-in Hono server with SSE, session management, CORS support, and pluggable authentication strategies (JWT and OAuth 2.1).

Obsidian Integration

  • Obsidian Local REST API Integration: Communicates directly with the Obsidian Local REST API plugin via HTTP requests managed by the ObsidianRestApiService.
  • Comprehensive Command Coverage: Exposes key vault operations as MCP tools (see Tools section).
  • Vault Interaction: Supports reading, updating (append, prepend, overwrite), searching (global text/regex, search/replace), listing, deleting, and managing frontmatter and tags.
  • Targeting Flexibility: Tools can target files by path, the currently active file in Obsidian, or periodic notes (daily, weekly, etc.).
  • Vault Cache Service: An intelligent in-memory cache that improves performance and resilience. It caches vault content, provides a fallback for the global search tool if the live API fails, and periodically refreshes to stay in sync.
  • Safety Features: Case-insensitive path fallbacks for file operations, clear distinction between modification types (append, overwrite, etc.).

Installation

Prerequisites

  1. Obsidian: You need Obsidian installed.
  2. Obsidian Local REST API Plugin: Install and enable the Obsidian Local REST API plugin within your Obsidian vault.
  3. API Key: Configure an API key within the Local REST API plugin settings in Obsidian. You will need this key to configure the server.
  4. Node.js & npm: Ensure you have Node.js (v18 or later recommended) and npm installed.

Configuration

MCP Client Settings

Add the following to your MCP client's configuration file (e.g., cline_mcp_settings.json). This configuration uses npx to run the server, which will automatically download & install the package if not already present:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "obsidian-mcp-server": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["obsidian-mcp-server"],
      "env": {
        "OBSIDIAN_API_KEY": "YOUR_API_KEY_FROM_OBSIDIAN_PLUGIN",
        "OBSIDIAN_BASE_URL": "http://127.0.0.1:27123",
        "OBSIDIAN_VERIFY_SSL": "false",
        "OBSIDIAN_ENABLE_CACHE": "true"
      },
      "disabled": false,
      "autoApprove": []
    }
  }
}

Note: Verify SSL is set to false here because the Obsidian Local REST API plugin uses a self-signed certificate by default. If you are deploying this in a production environment, consider using the encrypted HTTPS endpoint and set OBSIDIAN_VERIFY_SSL to true after configuring your server to trust the self-signed certificate.

If you installed from source, change command and args to point to your local build:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "obsidian-mcp-server": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": ["/path/to/your/obsidian-mcp-server/dist/index.js"],
      "env": {
        "OBSIDIAN_API_KEY": "YOUR_OBSIDIAN_API_KEY",
        "OBSIDIAN_BASE_URL": "http://127.0.0.1:27123",
        "OBSIDIAN_VERIFY_SSL": "false",
        "OBSIDIAN_ENABLE_CACHE": "true"
      }
    }
  }
}

Environment Variables

Configure the server using environment variables. These environmental variables are set within your MCP client config/settings (e.g. cline_mcp_settings.json for Cline, claude_desktop_config.json for Claude Desktop).

Variable Description Required Default
OBSIDIAN_API_KEY API Key from the Obsidian Local REST API plugin. Yes undefined
OBSIDIAN_BASE_URL Base URL of your Obsidian Local REST API. Yes http://127.0.0.1:27123
MCP_TRANSPORT_TYPE Server transport: stdio or http. No stdio
MCP_HTTP_PORT Port for the HTTP server. No 3010
MCP_HTTP_HOST Host for the HTTP server. No 127.0.0.1
MCP_ALLOWED_ORIGINS Comma-separated origins for CORS. Set for production. No (none)
MCP_AUTH_MODE Authentication strategy: jwt or oauth. No (none)
MCP_AUTH_SECRET_KEY 32+ char secret for JWT. Required for jwt mode. Yes (if jwt) undefined
OAUTH_ISSUER_URL URL of the OAuth 2.1 issuer. Yes (if oauth) undefined
OAUTH_AUDIENCE Audience claim for OAuth tokens. Yes (if oauth) undefined
OAUTH_JWKS_URI URI for the JSON Web Key Set (optional, derived from issuer if omitted). No (derived)
MCP_LOG_LEVEL Logging level (debug, info, error, etc.). No info
OBSIDIAN_VERIFY_SSL Set to false to disable SSL verification. No true
OBSIDIAN_ENABLE_CACHE Set to true to enable the in-memory vault cache. No true
OBSIDIAN_CACHE_REFRESH_INTERVAL_MIN Refresh interval for the vault cache in minutes. No 10

Connecting to the Obsidian API

To connect the MCP server to your Obsidian vault, you need to configure the base URL (OBSIDIAN_BASE_URL) and API key (OBSIDIAN_API_KEY). The Obsidian Local REST API plugin offers two ways to connect:

  1. Encrypted (HTTPS) - Default:

    • The plugin provides a secure https:// endpoint (e.g., https://127.0.0.1:27124).
    • This uses a self-signed certificate, which will cause connection errors by default.
    • To fix this, you must set the OBSIDIAN_VERIFY_SSL environment variable to "false". This tells the server to trust the self-signed certificate.
  2. Non-encrypted (HTTP) - Recommended for Simplicity:

    • In the plugin's settings within Obsidian, you can enable the "Non-encrypted (HTTP) Server".
    • This provides a simpler http:// endpoint (e.g., http://127.0.0.1:27123).
    • When using this URL, you do not need to worry about SSL verification.

Example env configuration for your MCP client:

Using the non-encrypted HTTP URL (recommended):

"env": {
  "OBSIDIAN_API_KEY": "YOUR_API_KEY_FROM_OBSIDIAN_PLUGIN",
  "OBSIDIAN_BASE_URL": "http://127.0.0.1:27123"
}

Using the encrypted HTTPS URL:

"env": {
  "OBSIDIAN_API_KEY": "YOUR_API_KEY_FROM_OBSIDIAN_PLUGIN",
  "OBSIDIAN_BASE_URL": "https://127.0.0.1:27124",
  "OBSIDIAN_VERIFY_SSL": "false"
}

Project Structure

The codebase follows a modular structure within the src/ directory:

src/
├── index.ts           # Entry point: Initializes and starts the server
├── config/            # Configuration loading (env vars, package info)
│   └── index.ts
├── mcp-server/        # Core MCP server logic and capability registration
│   ├── server.ts      # Server setup, transport handling, tool/resource registration
│   ├── resources/     # MCP Resource implementations (currently none)
│   ├── tools/         # MCP Tool implementations (subdirs per tool)
│   └── transports/    # Stdio and HTTP transport logic
│       └── auth/      # Authentication strategies (JWT, OAuth)
├── services/          # Abstractions for external APIs or internal caching
│   └── obsidianRestAPI/ # Typed client for Obsidian Local REST API
├── types-global/      # Shared TypeScript type definitions (errors, etc.)
└── utils/             # Common utility functions (logger, error handler, security, etc.)

For a detailed file tree, run npm run tree or see docs/tree.md.

Vault Cache Service

This server includes an intelligent in-memory cache designed to enhance performance and resilience when interacting with your vault.

Purpose and Benefits

  • Performance: By caching file content and metadata, the server can perform search operations much faster, especially in large vaults. This reduces the number of direct requests to the Obsidian Local REST API, resulting in a snappier experience.
  • Resilience: The cache acts as a fallback for the obsidian_global_search tool. If the live API search fails or times out, the server seamlessly uses the cache to provide results, ensuring that search functionality remains available even if the Obsidian API is temporarily unresponsive.
  • Efficiency: The cache is designed to be efficient. It performs an initial build on startup and then periodically refreshes in the background by checking for file modifications, ensuring it stays reasonably up-to-date without constant, heavy API polling.

How It Works

  1. Initialization: When enabled, the VaultCacheService builds an in-memory map of all .md files in your vault, storing their content and modification times.
  2. Periodic Refresh: The cache automatically refreshes at a configurable interval (defaulting to 10 minutes). During a refresh, it only fetches content for files that are new or have been modified since the last check.
  3. Proactive Updates: After a file is modified through a tool like obsidian_update_file, the service proactively updates the cache for that specific file, ensuring immediate consistency.
  4. Search Fallback: The obsidian_global_search tool first attempts a live API search. If this fails, it automatically falls back to searching the in-memory cache.

Configuration

The cache is enabled by default but can be configured via environment variables:

  • OBSIDIAN_ENABLE_CACHE: Set to true (default) or false to enable or disable the cache service.
  • OBSIDIAN_CACHE_REFRESH_INTERVAL_MIN: Defines the interval in minutes for the periodic background refresh. Defaults to 10.

Tools

The Obsidian MCP Server provides a suite of tools for interacting with your vault, callable via the Model Context Protocol.

Tool Name Description Key Arguments
obsidian_read_note Retrieves the content and metadata of a note. filePath, format?, includeStat?
obsidian_update_note Modifies a file by appending, prepending, or overwriting. targetType, content, targetIdentifier?, wholeFileMode
obsidian_search_replace Performs search-and-replace operations in a note. targetType, replacements, useRegex?, replaceAll?
obsidian_global_search Searches the entire vault for content. query, searchInPath?, useRegex?, page?, pageSize?
obsidian_list_notes Lists notes and subdirectories in a folder. dirPath, fileExtensionFilter?, nameRegexFilter?
obsidian_manage_frontmatter Gets, sets, or deletes keys in a note's frontmatter. filePath, operation, key, value?
obsidian_manage_tags Adds, removes, or lists tags in a note. filePath, operation, tags
obsidian_delete_note Permanently deletes a note from the vault. filePath

Note: All tools support comprehensive error handling and return structured JSON responses.

Resources

MCP Resources are not implemented in this version.

This server currently focuses on providing interactive tools for vault manipulation. Future development may introduce resource capabilities (e.g., exposing notes or search results as readable resources).

Development

Build and Test

To get started with development, clone the repository, install dependencies, and use the following scripts:

# Install dependencies
npm install

# Build the project (compile TS to JS in dist/ and make executable)
npm run rebuild

# Start the server locally using stdio transport
npm start:stdio

# Start the server using http transport
npm run start:http

# Format code using Prettier
npm run format

# Inspect the server's capabilities using the MCP Inspector tool
npm run inspect:stdio
# or for the http transport:
npm run inspect:http

License

This project is licensed under the Apache License 2.0 - see the LICENSE file for details.


Built with the Model Context Protocol

About

Obsidian Knowledge-Management MCP (Model Context Protocol) server that enables AI agents and development tools to interact with an Obsidian vault. It provides a comprehensive suite of tools for reading, writing, searching, and managing notes, tags, and frontmatter, acting as a bridge to the Obsidian Local REST API plugin.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Sponsor this project

  •  

Packages

No packages published