jmd-mcp-sql
Click on "Install Server".
Wait a few minutes for the server to deploy. Once ready, it will show a "Started" state.
In the chat, type
@followed by the MCP server name and your instructions, e.g., "@jmd-mcp-sqlList all tables in the database"
That's it! The server will respond to your query, and you can continue using it as needed.
Here is a step-by-step guide with screenshots.
jmd-mcp-sql
MCP server that exposes a SQLite database through four JMD tools — a natural language database interface for LLM-driven workflows.
What is JMD?
JMD (JSON Markdown) is a lightweight
document format that combines Markdown headings with key: value pairs. It is
designed as a structured data format that LLMs can read and write naturally —
without JSON brackets or SQL syntax. A heading line sets the document type and
target table; the body carries the data:
# Order
id: 42
status: shipped
total: 149.99A prefix on the heading selects the operation: # for data, #? for queries,
#! for schema, #- for deletes. See the
JMD specification for the full format
definition.
Related MCP server: PySqlitMCP
Tools
Tool |
|
|
|
|
| Open database / show status | — | — | — |
| SELECT by fields | SELECT with filters + aggregation | PRAGMA (describe table) | — |
| INSERT OR REPLACE | — | CREATE / ALTER TABLE | — |
| — | — | DROP TABLE | DELETE WHERE |
All inputs and outputs are JMD documents. The LLM speaks JMD — no SQL required.
Installation
Install from PyPI:
pip install jmd-mcp-sqlOr with uv (no manual install needed — uvx fetches it on demand):
uvx jmd-mcp-sqlAlternatively, install directly from GitHub:
pip install git+https://github.com/ostermeyer/jmd-mcp-sql.gitConfiguration
The server runs as a stdio-based MCP server. Without arguments it starts with the bundled Northwind demo database. Pass a path to use your own SQLite file:
jmd-mcp-sql /path/to/your.dbThe demo database ships as northwind.sql (plain text, version-controlled). On the
first run without an explicit path, the server creates northwind.db from that dump
automatically.
Claude Code
Add the server via CLI:
claude mcp add --transport stdio sql -- uvx jmd-mcp-sqlWith a custom database:
claude mcp add --transport stdio sql -- uvx jmd-mcp-sql /path/to/your.dbThis writes a .mcp.json in the project root (shareable via version control).
You can also create it manually:
{
"mcpServers": {
"sql": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["jmd-mcp-sql"]
}
}
}Claude Desktop / Cowork
Claude Cowork runs inside Claude Desktop. MCP servers configured in the Desktop config are automatically available in Cowork sessions.
Edit claude_desktop_config.json:
macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.jsonWindows:
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
{
"mcpServers": {
"sql": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["jmd-mcp-sql"]
}
}
}With a custom database:
{
"mcpServers": {
"sql": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["jmd-mcp-sql", "/path/to/your.db"]
}
}
}Restart Claude Desktop after saving the file. The server will appear as a tool in both Chat and Cowork mode.
VS Code
Create .vscode/mcp.json in the project root:
{
"servers": {
"sql": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["jmd-mcp-sql"]
}
}
}Alternatively, add it to your VS Code settings.json (user or workspace):
{
"mcp": {
"servers": {
"sql": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["jmd-mcp-sql"]
}
}
}
}JMD Document Syntax
Every document starts with a heading line that sets the document type and table name,
followed by key: value pairs (one per line):
# Product → data document (exact lookup / insert-or-replace)
#? Product → query document (filter / list / aggregate)
#! Product → schema document (describe / create / drop table)
#- Product → delete document (delete matching records)
key: value → string, integer, or float — inferred automatically
key: true/false → booleanOpening a Database
Open a different SQLite database at any time:
open("# Database\npath: /path/to/mydb.db")If the file does not exist, a new empty database is created. The previous database is closed automatically. The response uses frontmatter for metadata and lists tables in the body:
path: /path/to/mydb.db
table-count: 3
# Database
## tables[]
- Customers
- Orders
- ProductsCheck which database is currently active:
open("# Database")Path Restriction
The server reads optional settings from ~/.config/jmd/sql.jmd:
# Config
root: /Users/me/dataField | Default | Description |
| (none) | Restricts |
Without a config file, no restrictions apply and the server accepts any path.
Discovering the Database
To see which tables exist, read each table's schema:
read("#! Customers")This returns a #! document with column names, JMD types, and modifiers
(readonly = primary key, optional = nullable).
Typical Workflows
List all rows (small tables only):
read("#? Orders")Filter rows — equality:
read("#? Orders\nstatus: shipped")Filter rows — comparison:
read("#? Orders\nFreight: > 50")Filter rows — alternation (OR):
read("#? Orders\nShipCountry: Germany|France|UK")Filter rows — contains (case-insensitive substring):
read("#? Customers\nCompanyName: ~Corp")Filter rows — regex pattern:
read("#? Products\nProductName: ^Chai.*")Filter rows — negation (composes with any operator):
read("#? Orders\nShipCountry: !Germany")
read("#? Products\nProductName: !^LEGACY.*")Look up one record:
read("# Customers\nid: 42")Insert or replace a record:
write("# Orders\nid: 1\nstatus: pending\ntotal: 99.90")Create a table:
write("#! Products\nid: integer readonly\nname: string\nprice: float optional")Delete a record:
delete("#- Orders\nid: 1")Drop a table:
delete("#! OldTable")Pagination
Always use pagination when querying tables that may contain many rows.
Use frontmatter fields before the #? heading to control pagination:
read("page-size: 50\npage: 1\n\n#? Orders")The response carries pagination metadata as frontmatter — before the root heading:
total: 830
page: 1
pages: 17
page-size: 50
# Orders
## data[]
- OrderID: 10248
...Count only (no rows returned):
read("count: true\n\n#? Orders")Returns:
count: 830
# OrdersUse total and pages to determine whether to fetch more pages.
For tables with fewer than ~20 rows pagination is optional.
Field Projection
Use select: frontmatter to return only specific columns. This keeps
responses small and context windows focused.
read("select: OrderID, EmployeeID\npage-size: 50\n\n#? Orders")Works with both # (data) and #? (query) documents. When combined with
aggregation, select: filters the result columns after the GROUP BY.
Joins
Use join: frontmatter to query across multiple tables in one call.
The value is <TableName> on <JoinColumn> (INNER JOIN, equi-join on a
column that exists in both tables).
read("join: Order Details on OrderID\nsum: UnitPrice * Quantity * (1 - Discount) as revenue\ngroup: EmployeeID\nsort: revenue desc\n\n#? Orders")Multiple joins — comma-separated in a single join: value:
join: Order Details on OrderID, Employees on EmployeeIDExpression syntax — use <expression> as <alias> in aggregate functions
to compute derived values across joined columns:
sum: UnitPrice * Quantity * (1 - Discount) as revenueThe alias becomes the result column name. Without as, the default alias
<func>_<field> applies (e.g. sum_Freight).
Allowed in expressions: column names, numeric literals, arithmetic operators
(+, -, *, /), and standard SQL functions (SUM, AVG, ROUND, …).
Subqueries and SQL keywords are not permitted.
Projection rules for join queries:
Unambiguous columns (appear in exactly one table) resolve automatically.
Join key columns always resolve to the main table.
Columns present in multiple tables (other than join keys) require explicit qualification — specify them via
select:or filter on the unambiguous side.
Aggregation
Aggregation is expressed as frontmatter before the #? heading.
QBE filter fields narrow rows before aggregation (SQL WHERE).
The having: key filters after aggregation (SQL HAVING).
Key | SQL | Result column name |
| GROUP BY | grouping keys pass through unchanged |
| SUM(field) |
|
| AVG(field) |
|
| MIN(field) |
|
| MAX(field) |
|
| COUNT(*) |
|
Multiple fields per function: sum: Freight, Total → sum_Freight and sum_Total.
Frontmatter | Meaning |
| ORDER BY (multiple columns, mixed) |
| HAVING COUNT(*) > 5 |
| HAVING … AND … (comma = AND) |
having: supports: >, >=, <, <=, =.
sort: references any result column — grouping keys or aggregate aliases.
page-size: and page: apply to the aggregated result set.
Example — top 3 employees by revenue:
read("group: EmployeeID\nsum: revenue\nsort: sum_revenue desc\npage-size: 3\n\n#? OrderDetails")Error Handling
All tools return a # Error document on failure:
# Error
status: 400
code: not_found
message: No records found in OrdersCheck the code field to decide how to proceed.
Specification
The JMD format is documented at jmd-spec.
License
Copyright © 2026 Andreas Ostermeyer.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 — see LICENSE. The JMD ecosystem is open: the specification is CC BY 4.0, the Python and JavaScript reference implementations are Apache 2.0, and this server matches. No copyleft, no dual licensing, no CLA. Use it, fork it, extend it, ship it — attribution preserved per Apache 2.0 § 4.
License history
This project has changed license twice during its early development:
0.4 – 0.7.1 (MIT, yanked from PyPI as the default install target)
0.8.0 – 0.9.x (AGPL-3.0, reflecting a brief period in which a commercial deployment path was under consideration)
0.10.0 and later (Apache 2.0, aligned with the rest of the JMD ecosystem)
Users who installed any of the prior versions retain the rights those licenses granted for those specific artifacts. License changes are not retroactive. See CHANGELOG.md for the rationale.
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