LogMCP
LogMCP
MCP server — read-only log access for AI assistants. Debug your Linux server with AI, without giving the AI shell access.
No SSH. No write permissions. The AI reads your logs over HTTPS and helps you diagnose problems, while your server stays fully under your control.
LogMCP is an open-source MCP server that exposes log files on a remote Linux server to AI assistants (Claude Code, VS Code, Claude Desktop). Access is read-only, token-authenticated, and fully audited via syslog.
Get Started
Option A: Quickstart (no root required)
Try LogMCP in under a minute — no config file, no root, no systemd:
logmcp quickstartThe command checks your group memberships (adm, systemd-journal), generates a bearer token and a self-signed TLS certificate, starts the server, and prints a ready-to-paste claude mcp add command.
Running as root? Pass --user <name> and LogMCP will add the user to the required groups and re-launch as that user — root is not needed for future starts.
Note: Token and certificate are ephemeral. The token changes on every start. For a permanent setup use Option B.
logmcp quickstart --port 7789 --token mytoken # optional flagsAfter testing, remove the server from Claude Code:
claude mcp remove logmcp-quickstartOption B: Permanent installation (recommended)
1. Install
go install github.com/kascada/logmcp@latestOr install the pre-built .deb (replace x.y.z with the latest version):
curl -LO https://github.com/kascada/logmcp/releases/download/vx.y.z/logmcp_x.y.z_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i logmcp_x.y.z_amd64.deb2. Run the setup wizard
sudo logmcp setupGuides you through TLS mode, bearer token, and systemd service — then prints a ready-to-paste client config snippet.
3. Add to your AI client
logmcp client-config claude-code # or: vscode | claude-desktopPaste the output into your MCP client config. Done — your AI can now read the server's logs.
Related MCP server: log-mcp
The Key Advantage: Let the AI Debug Without Touching Your Server
You give the AI a read-only window into your logs. That's it.
No SSH access required — the AI connects like any HTTPS client
No write permissions — the AI cannot change, delete, or execute anything
No shell access — not even read access beyond the whitelisted log paths
Works from anywhere — your laptop, Claude Desktop, a remote CI agent
Every access is audited via syslog on the server
This makes LogMCP ideal for situations where you need AI-assisted debugging but cannot or do not want to grant shell access: production servers, customer machines, hardened environments, or any setup where least-privilege matters.
SSH is also supported. If your AI client is Claude Code running locally with an SSH key, you can use LogMCP over an SSH tunnel instead of a public HTTPS endpoint. See SSH Tunnel Setup below.
Features
Read-only access to log files — the AI cannot modify anything
Whitelist/blacklist glob patterns for fine-grained access control
systemd journal (
journald://) as a virtual log sourceMulti-token auth — per-client bearer tokens with revocation
External authenticator support — delegate token verification to any CLI program
TLS support: self-signed, custom cert, or behind Caddy reverse proxy
Audit trail via syslog (access only, no log content)
Guided interactive setup wizard
Systemd service integration
Extensions — expose external CLI tools or Redis-RPC workers as additional MCP tools
Macros — define composite MCP tools as YAML files, no code required
fail2ban integration and in-process rate limiting
Setup Details
The wizard (sudo logmcp setup) covers:
Deployment mode (direct TLS or behind Caddy)
Port and bearer token configuration
Systemd service installation
Client configuration snippets for Claude Code, VS Code, and Claude Desktop
Whitelist/blacklist and journald are configured directly in /etc/logmcp/config.yaml after setup.
Environment variable substitution
Any value in config.yaml can reference environment variables using ${VAR} or $VAR syntax. The substitution happens before the file is parsed, so it works everywhere — tokens, paths, DSNs, etc.
auth:
tokens:
- name: claude
token: ${LOGMCP_TOKEN}
scopes: [read]
extensions:
clitool:
- name: switchboard
command: /usr/local/bin/switchboard
timeout_seconds: 10Unset variables expand to an empty string. To keep a literal $ in a value, use $$.
After setup, start the server:
sudo systemctl start logmcpCommands
Command | Description |
| Start the MCP server (default) |
| Start instantly without config file (no root required) |
| Interactive setup wizard |
| Verify configuration and environment |
| List configured bearer tokens |
| Add a new bearer token |
| Remove a bearer token |
| Generate a new value for an existing token |
| List accessible log files |
| Read a log file or |
| Search a log file or |
| Show log file metadata |
| Install systemd service |
| Remove systemd service |
| Show service status |
| Print Caddyfile configuration |
| Print Claude Code MCP config |
| Print VS Code MCP config |
| Print Claude Desktop MCP config |
| Install fail2ban filter and jail for logmcp |
MCP Tools
These are the tools LogMCP exposes to AI assistants:
Tool | Description |
| List all log files the server has been configured to expose |
| Read lines from a log file — head, tail, offset, or time window |
| Search a log file by regexp with optional context lines and time filter |
| File metadata: size, line count, last modified |
| Server-side health checks (config, TLS, whitelist, syslog, databases) |
| Show current server configuration and optional parameters at their defaults |
| Runtime status of the MCP layer and registered extensions |
Extensions may add further tools — their names are prefixed with the extension name (e.g. myapp_status for an extension named myapp).
Extensions — Wrapping External Tools as MCP
LogMCP can expose any external program or service as additional MCP tools — no custom MCP server required. The AI sees them alongside the built-in log tools.
CLI extension
Any program that implements the clitool interface (list / call subcommands) can be registered. LogMCP calls <command> list at startup to discover tools, and forwards each tool call to <command> call <tool> --token-stdin.
extensions:
clitool:
- name: myapp
command: /usr/local/bin/myapp-ctl
timeout_seconds: 10This spawns a subprocess per call — suitable for any program on the same or a remote host.
RPC extension (Redis)
For programs running on the same host, the RPC variant avoids the per-call process-startup overhead (relevant for Python programs where interpreter startup and imports add noticeable latency). Instead of spawning a subprocess, LogMCP pushes a request onto a Redis list and waits for the worker's reply.
extensions:
clitool:
- name: myapp
command: /usr/local/bin/myapp-ctl # still used for `list` at startup
mode: rpc
redis_addr: "127.0.0.1:6379"
timeout_seconds: 5The worker reads requests from a Redis list and pushes its reply to a per-request reply key. See docs/RPC.md for the full protocol.
Auth flow
The bearer token from each incoming MCP request is forwarded to the extension — either via stdin (CLI mode) or as caller metadata in the RPC envelope. The extension can verify it or trust the pre-resolved identity.
Case Studies
Real-world scenarios where LogMCP makes the difference — see docs/case-studies.md:
SSH Tunnel Setup
If you are using Claude Code locally and already have SSH access to the server, you can run LogMCP without a public HTTPS endpoint:
# Forward remote port 7788 to localhost
ssh -L 7788:127.0.0.1:7788 user@yourserver
# Then point your MCP client at https://localhost:7788LogMCP still requires a bearer token over the tunnel — the SSH layer adds transport security, the token controls which client can connect.
License
MIT License — see LICENSE.
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