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solomonneas

maltego-mcp

by solomonneas

Two cooperating layers for Maltego Desktop:

  • Phase A (TypeScript MCP server): lets an LLM author Maltego .mtgx graph files and run primitive OSINT lookups (whois / DNS / ASN / crt.sh). Graphs land on disk and you open them in Maltego Desktop.

  • Phase B (Python TRX transforms in a .mtz): adds right-click pivots into MISP, TheHive, Cortex, and the bundled MITRE ATT&CK dataset directly inside Maltego Desktop. See transforms/README.md.

The two phases share the repo, nothing else. Either layer can be uninstalled without breaking the other.

Requirements

  • Node.js 20+

  • Maltego Graph Desktop (Basic, Pro, or Enterprise) for either layer to be useful

  • Phase B only: Python 3.11+ on the Maltego host

Maltego Basic compatibility

The default workflow is Basic-friendly: generate .mtgx files with Phase A, then open or import them in Maltego Graph Desktop. The included demo graph is kept under 24 entities so it stays useful on the Basic plan's per-transform result limit. Local TRX transforms are supported on Basic, but their live results are still subject to your Maltego plan and connector limits. See Maltego's current products and plans and Basic data access notes.

Related MCP server: osint-mcp-server

Tools (Phase A)

Graph authoring

  • maltego_create_graph(name) — returns graphId

  • maltego_add_entity(graphId, type, value, properties?) — returns entityId

  • maltego_add_link(graphId, from, to, label?, properties?) — returns linkId

  • maltego_save_graph(graphId, path, overwrite?) — writes .mtgx

  • maltego_load_graph(path) — parses an existing .mtgx into a new handle

Primitive lookups

  • maltego_whois(domain) — registrar, nameservers, dates

  • maltego_dns(domain) — A/AAAA/MX/NS/TXT

  • maltego_asn(ip) — Team Cymru ASN, prefix, country, org

  • maltego_crtsh(domain) — certificate transparency entries

Convenience expanders

  • maltego_expand_ip(ip, outputPath, overwrite?) — IP + ASN + netblock, saved as .mtgx

  • maltego_expand_domain(domain, outputPath, overwrite?) — domain + whois + DNS + ASN per A record

  • maltego_expand_hash(hash, outputPath, algorithm?, overwrite?) — hash entity (extend in later versions)

  • maltego_build_ioc_graph(ioc, outputPath, ...) — one IOC plus enrichment summaries from other MCPs, saved as .mtgx

Entity types

Standard Maltego ontology: IPv4Address, IPv6Address, Domain, URL, Hash, EmailAddress, Netblock, AS, Website, Company, Person. For concepts without a standard type, use Phrase with a category prefix ([T1566] Phishing, [TheHive] Case #42).

Composing with other MCPs

maltego-mcp does not embed third-party threat-intel clients. For MISP events, ATT&CK techniques, Cortex reports, etc., call the dedicated MCPs (misp-mcp, mitre-mcp, cortex-mcp, etc.) and pipe results into maltego_add_entity / maltego_add_link. Or, for in-Maltego pivots, install Phase B (below).

For the common "one IOC, many enrichments" case, use maltego_build_ioc_graph: call misp-mcp, thehive-mcp, cortex-mcp, and mitre-mcp first, summarize their results into the tool's mispEvents, thehiveCases, cortexReports, and attackTechniques arrays, then save one combined .mtgx. The tool keeps service calls out of this package while still making the graph bridge a single MCP call.

Install

npm install -g maltego-mcp

Or from source (required for Phase B transforms):

git clone https://github.com/solomonneas/maltego-mcp.git
cd maltego-mcp
npm install
npm run build

Basic-friendly demo graph

Generate a no-network .mtgx demo that shows how an IOC can connect to MISP, TheHive, Cortex, MITRE ATT&CK, and a triage playbook without requiring API keys or paid Maltego connectors:

npm run demo:basic

Output defaults to dist/maltego-mcp-basic-soc-demo.mtgx. Open that file in Maltego Graph Desktop. To choose a different path:

npm run demo:basic -- --output ~/MaltegoGraphs/basic-soc-demo.mtgx

The demo uses documentation-safe indicators such as 203.0.113.42 and example.invalid; it is meant to prove the graph format and visual workflow, not to perform live enrichment.

Configuration

Both env vars are optional.

Variable

Default

Description

MALTEGO_MCP_OUTPUT_DIR

~/MaltegoGraphs

Default output directory for .mtgx files

MALTEGO_MCP_LOOKUP_TIMEOUT_MS

30000

Per-lookup timeout in ms (currently applied to crt.sh only; whois, dns, asn use library defaults)

Claude Desktop

Add to ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json (macOS) or %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json (Windows):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "maltego": {
      "command": "maltego-mcp"
    }
  }
}

Or, when running from a source checkout instead of the global npm install:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "maltego": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": ["/absolute/path/to/maltego-mcp/dist/mcp-server.js"]
    }
  }
}

Restart Claude Desktop. The maltego_* tools should appear.

Claude Code

claude mcp add maltego -- maltego-mcp

Or from a source checkout:

claude mcp add maltego -- node /absolute/path/to/maltego-mcp/dist/mcp-server.js

Add --scope user to make it available from any directory instead of only the current project.

OpenClaw

Recommended: install as an OpenClaw plugin via ClawHub.

openclaw plugins install clawhub:maltego
systemctl --user restart openclaw-gateway
openclaw plugins list   # confirm "maltego" is registered

This installs the same package as a native OpenClaw plugin — tool calls go through the plugin SDK directly instead of spawning a separate stdio MCP process. Configure outputDir and lookupTimeoutMs in OpenClaw's plugin config UI or via the JSON config file.

Or, register as a stdio MCP server (manual):

openclaw mcp set maltego '{
  "command": "maltego-mcp"
}'

Or, when running from a source checkout:

openclaw mcp set maltego '{
  "command": "node",
  "args": ["/absolute/path/to/maltego-mcp/dist/mcp-server.js"]
}'

Then restart the OpenClaw gateway so the new server is picked up:

systemctl --user restart openclaw-gateway
openclaw mcp list   # confirm "maltego" is registered

Hermes Agent

Hermes Agent reads MCP config from ~/.hermes/config.yaml under the mcp_servers key. Add an entry:

mcp_servers:
  maltego:
    command: "maltego-mcp"

Or, when running from a source checkout:

mcp_servers:
  maltego:
    command: "node"
    args: ["/absolute/path/to/maltego-mcp/dist/mcp-server.js"]

Then reload MCP from inside a Hermes session:

/reload-mcp

Codex CLI

Codex CLI registers MCP servers via codex mcp add:

codex mcp add maltego -- maltego-mcp

Or from a source checkout:

codex mcp add maltego -- node /absolute/path/to/maltego-mcp/dist/mcp-server.js

Codex writes the entry to ~/.codex/config.toml under [mcp_servers.maltego]. Verify with:

codex mcp list

Phase B: in-Maltego transforms (.mtz)

A separate Python transform layer ships right-click pivots into MISP, TheHive, Cortex, and ATT&CK directly inside Maltego Desktop. See transforms/README.md for full setup.

Quick start (from a source checkout, on the Maltego host):

npm run setup:transforms     # creates transforms/.venv with maltego-trx pinned
npm run build:mtz            # writes dist/maltego-mcp-transforms.mtz
# Then in Maltego: Import -> Configuration -> dist/maltego-mcp-transforms.mtz

The build bakes the absolute path of transforms/.venv into the manifest, so the .mtz is tied to the host that built it. Re-run npm run build:mtz if the repo moves.

Example prompts

Build me a Maltego graph for the domain example.com with whois, DNS, and ASN expansion.

Calls maltego_expand_domain and returns the path to the saved .mtgx.

Pivot from this IP — give me ASN + netblock as a Maltego graph.

Calls maltego_expand_ip.

Look up the cert transparency log for example.com.

Calls maltego_crtsh and returns matching certificates.

Build a Maltego graph for this hash using the MISP events, TheHive cases, Cortex reports, and ATT&CK techniques we already gathered.

Calls maltego_build_ioc_graph with an input shaped like:

{
  "ioc": {
    "type": "Hash",
    "value": "d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e",
    "properties": { "algorithm": "md5" }
  },
  "outputPath": "hash-investigation.mtgx",
  "mispEvents": [{ "id": 1001, "info": "demo phishing cluster" }],
  "thehiveCases": [{ "id": 42, "title": "Phishing triage", "severity": "high" }],
  "cortexReports": [{ "analyzer": "HashLookup", "verdict": "suspicious" }],
  "attackTechniques": [{ "id": "T1566", "name": "Phishing", "tactic": "Initial Access" }]
}

Development

npm test                # Phase A unit tests (vitest)
npm run test:integration
npm run test:all
npm run typecheck
npm run test:transforms # Phase B pytest suite

License

MIT

A
license - permissive license
-
quality - not tested
A
maintenance

Maintenance

Maintainers
Response time
1dRelease cycle
3Releases (12mo)
Commit activity

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