Windows CLI MCP Server
local-only server
The server can only run on the client’s local machine because it depends on local resources.
Windows CLI MCP Server
MCP server for secure command-line interactions on Windows systems, enabling controlled access to PowerShell, CMD, Git Bash shells, and remote systems via SSH. It allows MCP clients (like Claude Desktop) to perform operations on your system, similar to Open Interpreter.
[!IMPORTANT] This MCP server provides direct access to your system's command line interface and remote systems via SSH. When enabled, it grants access to your files, environment variables, command execution capabilities, and remote server management.
- Review and restrict allowed paths and SSH connections
- Enable directory restrictions
- Configure command blocks
- Consider security implications
See Configuration for more details.
Features
- Multi-Shell Support: Execute commands in PowerShell, Command Prompt (CMD), and Git Bash
- SSH Support: Execute commands on remote systems via SSH
- Resource Exposure: View SSH connections, current directory, and configuration as MCP resources
- Security Controls:
- Command and SSH command blocking (full paths, case variations)
- Working directory validation
- Maximum command length limits
- Command logging and history tracking
- Smart argument validation
- Configurable:
- Custom security rules
- Shell-specific settings
- SSH connection profiles
- Path restrictions
- Blocked command lists
See the API section for more details on the tools and resources the server provides to MCP clients.
Note: The server will only allow operations within configured directories, with allowed commands, and on configured SSH connections.
Usage with Claude Desktop
Add this to your claude_desktop_config.json
:
For use with a specific config file, add the --config
flag:
After configuring, you can:
- Execute commands directly using the available tools
- View configured SSH connections and server configuration in the Resources section
- Manage SSH connections through the provided tools
Configuration
The server uses a JSON configuration file to customize its behavior. You can specify settings for security controls, shell configurations, and SSH connections.
- To create a default config file, either:
a) copy config.json.example
to config.json
, or
b) run:
- Then set the
--config
flag to point to your config file as described in the Usage with Claude Desktop section.
Configuration Locations
The server looks for configuration in the following locations (in order):
- Path specified by
--config
flag - ./config.json in current directory
- ~/.win-cli-mcp/config.json in user's home directory
If no configuration file is found, the server will use a default (restricted) configuration:
Default Configuration
Note: The default configuration is designed to be restrictive and secure. Find more details on each setting in the Configuration Settings section.
Configuration Settings
The configuration file is divided into three main sections: security
, shells
, and ssh
.
Security Settings
Shell Configuration
SSH Configuration
API
Tools
- execute_command
- Execute a command in the specified shell
- Inputs:
shell
(string): Shell to use ("powershell", "cmd", or "gitbash")command
(string): Command to executeworkingDir
(optional string): Working directory
- Returns command output as text, or error message if execution fails
- get_command_history
- Get the history of executed commands
- Input:
limit
(optional number) - Returns timestamped command history with outputs
- ssh_execute
- Execute a command on a remote system via SSH
- Inputs:
connectionId
(string): ID of the SSH connection to usecommand
(string): Command to execute
- Returns command output as text, or error message if execution fails
- ssh_disconnect
- Disconnect from an SSH server
- Input:
connectionId
(string): ID of the SSH connection to disconnect
- Returns confirmation message
- create_ssh_connection
- Create a new SSH connection
- Inputs:
connectionId
(string): ID for the new SSH connectionconnectionConfig
(object): Connection configuration details including host, port, username, and either password or privateKeyPath
- Returns confirmation message
- read_ssh_connections
- Read all configured SSH connections
- Returns a list of all SSH connections from the configuration
- update_ssh_connection
- Update an existing SSH connection
- Inputs:
connectionId
(string): ID of the SSH connection to updateconnectionConfig
(object): New connection configuration details
- Returns confirmation message
- delete_ssh_connection
- Delete an SSH connection
- Input:
connectionId
(string): ID of the SSH connection to delete
- Returns confirmation message
- get_current_directory
- Get the current working directory of the server
- Returns the current working directory path
Resources
- SSH Connections
- URI format:
ssh://{connectionId}
- Contains connection details with sensitive information masked
- One resource for each configured SSH connection
- Example:
ssh://raspberry-pi
shows configuration for the "raspberry-pi" connection
- URI format:
- SSH Configuration
- URI:
ssh://config
- Contains overall SSH configuration and all connections (with passwords masked)
- Shows settings like defaultTimeout, maxConcurrentSessions, and the list of connections
- URI:
- Current Directory
- URI:
cli://currentdir
- Contains the current working directory of the CLI server
- Shows the path where commands will execute by default
- URI:
- CLI Configuration
- URI:
cli://config
- Contains the CLI server configuration (excluding sensitive data)
- Shows security settings, shell configurations, and SSH settings
- URI:
Security Considerations
Built-in Security Features (Always Active)
The following security features are hard-coded into the server and cannot be disabled:
- Case-insensitive command blocking: All command blocking is case-insensitive (e.g., "DEL.EXE", "del.cmd", etc. are all blocked if "del" is in blockedCommands)
- Smart path parsing: The server parses full command paths to prevent bypass attempts (blocking "C:\Windows\System32\rm.exe" if "rm" is blocked)
- Command parsing intelligence: False positives are avoided (e.g., "warm_dir" is not blocked just because "rm" is in blockedCommands)
- Input validation: All user inputs are validated before execution
- Shell process management: Processes are properly terminated after execution or timeout
- Sensitive data masking: Passwords are automatically masked in resources (replaced with ********)
Configurable Security Features (Active by Default)
These security features are configurable through the config.json file:
- Command blocking: Commands specified in
blockedCommands
array are blocked (default includes dangerous commands like rm, del, format) - Argument blocking: Arguments specified in
blockedArguments
array are blocked (default includes potentially dangerous flags) - Command injection protection: Prevents command chaining (enabled by default through
enableInjectionProtection: true
) - Working directory restriction: Limits command execution to specified directories (enabled by default through
restrictWorkingDirectory: true
) - Command length limit: Restricts maximum command length (default: 2000 characters)
- Command timeout: Terminates commands that run too long (default: 30 seconds)
- Command logging: Records command history (enabled by default through
logCommands: true
)
Important Security Warnings
These are not features but important security considerations to be aware of:
- Environment access: Commands may have access to environment variables, which could contain sensitive information
- File system access: Commands can read/write files within allowed paths - carefully configure
allowedPaths
to prevent access to sensitive data
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
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A Model Context Protocol server that provides secure command-line access to Windows systems, allowing MCP clients like Claude Desktop to safely execute commands in PowerShell, CMD, and Git Bash shells with configurable security controls.