Provides OAuth-protected MCP server deployment using Cloudflare ZeroTrust Access for authentication and authorization
Enables deployment of secure MCP servers as Cloudflare Workers with container-based mcp-proxy and Durable Objects for persistent state management
Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server + Access OAuth Template
This is a template for a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that supports remote MCP connections, with Access OAuth built-in and container-based mcp-proxy.
Key Feature: You can run any stdio MCP server in a container and protect it with Cloudflare ZeroTrust Access.
You can deploy it to your own Cloudflare account, and after you create your own Access for SaaS OIDC app, you'll have a fully functional remote MCP server that you can build off. Users will be able to connect to your MCP server by signing in with your connected Access Identity Provider.
Getting Started
Create a new worker from this template:
Then install dependencies: npm install
For Production
Create a new Access for SaaS OIDC App:
For the Authorization callback URL, specify
https://secure-mcp-server.<your-subdomain>.workers.dev/callback
andhttp://localhost:8788/callback
if you are developing locally.Note your Client ID and Client secret.
Put the secrets in
.env
file after creating the applicationSet secrets via Wrangler using the provided script:
Or manually:
Set up a KV namespace
Create the KV namespace:
wrangler kv:namespace create "OAUTH_KV"
Update the Wrangler file with the KV ID
Deploy & Test
Deploy the MCP server to make it available on your workers.dev domain
wrangler deploy
Test the remote server using Inspector:
Enter https://secure-mcp-server.<your-subdomain>.workers.dev/sse
and hit connect. Once you go through the authentication flow, you'll see the Tools working:
You now have a remote MCP server deployed!
Access Control
This MCP server uses Cloudflare ZeroTrust Access for authentication and authorization. Access control is managed through Cloudflare ZeroTrust Policy rather than hardcoded configurations in the code.
Access the remote MCP server from Claude Desktop
Open Claude Desktop and navigate to Settings -> Developer -> Edit Config. This opens the configuration file that controls which MCP servers Claude can access.
Replace the content with the following configuration. Once you restart Claude Desktop, a browser window will open showing your OAuth login page. Complete the authentication flow to grant Claude access to your MCP server. After you grant access, the tools will become available for you to use.
Once the Tools (under 🔨) show up in the interface, you can ask Claude to use them. For example: "Could you use the math tool to add 23 and 19?". Claude should invoke the tool and show the result generated by the MCP server.
For Local Development
If you'd like to iterate and test your MCP server, you can do so in local development.
For the Homepage URL, specify
http://localhost:8788
For the Authorization callback URL, specify
http://localhost:8788/callback
Note your Client ID and generate a Client secret.
Create a
.dev.vars
file in your project root with:
Develop & Test
Run the server locally to make it available at http://localhost:8788
wrangler dev
To test the local server, enter http://localhost:8788/sse
into Inspector and hit connect. Once you follow the prompts, you'll be able to "List Tools".
Using Claude and other MCP Clients
When using Claude to connect to your remote MCP server, you may see some error messages. This is because Claude Desktop doesn't yet support remote MCP servers, so it sometimes gets confused. To verify whether the MCP server is connected, hover over the 🔨 icon in the bottom right corner of Claude's interface. You should see your tools available there.
Using Cursor and other MCP Clients
To connect Cursor with your MCP server, choose Type
: "Command" and in the Command
field, combine the command and args fields into one (e.g. npx mcp-remote https://<your-worker-name>.<your-subdomain>.workers.dev/sse
).
Note that while Cursor supports HTTP+SSE servers, it doesn't support authentication, so you still need to use mcp-remote
(and to use a STDIO server, not an HTTP one).
You can connect your MCP server to other MCP clients like Windsurf by opening the client's configuration file, adding the same JSON that was used for the Claude setup, and restarting the MCP client.
How does it work?
OAuth Provider
The OAuth Provider library serves as a complete OAuth 2.1 server implementation for Cloudflare Workers. It handles the complexities of the OAuth flow, including token issuance, validation, and management. In this project, it plays the dual role of:
Authenticating MCP clients that connect to your server
Managing the connection to Access's OAuth services
Securely storing tokens and authentication state in KV storage
Durable MCP
Durable MCP extends the base MCP functionality with Cloudflare's Durable Objects, providing:
Persistent state management for your MCP server
Secure storage of authentication context between requests
Access to authenticated user information via
this.props
Support for conditional tool availability based on user identity
MCP Remote
The MCP Remote library enables your server to expose tools that can be invoked by MCP clients like the Inspector. It:
Defines the protocol for communication between clients and your server
Provides a structured way to define tools
Handles serialization and deserialization of requests and responses
Maintains the Server-Sent Events (SSE) connection between clients and your server
This server cannot be installed
remote-capable server
The server can be hosted and run remotely because it primarily relies on remote services or has no dependency on the local environment.
A template for creating secure, remotely accessible MCP servers with OAuth authentication and Cloudflare ZeroTrust Access protection. Enables deployment of containerized MCP servers that can be safely accessed by Claude Desktop and other MCP clients through authenticated connections.