rosetta
Provides searchable access to MikroTik RouterOS documentation, including command tree, property definitions, hardware specs, and YouTube video transcripts, enabling AI assistants to answer questions about RouterOS configuration and troubleshooting.
Enables searching through over 518 YouTube video transcripts with timestamped chapter links, providing access to video tutorials and explanations related to MikroTik RouterOS.
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., "@rosettahow to set up a VLAN on RouterOS"
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.
rosetta
MCP server that gives AI assistants searchable access to MikroTik RouterOS documentation — 363 pages extracted live from MikroTik's official Docusaurus manual (https://manual.mikrotik.com), 4,402 properties, a 40,000-entry command tree, hardware specs for 156 current products (part of a wider 255-device overlay also covering legacy/EOL gear and accessories), 658 YouTube video transcripts, and direct links to source docs.
If you need MikroTik docs, you likely have a MikroTik. Install rosetta once as a container on your router using RouterOS /app, and any AI assistant on the network can use it. Or run it locally on your workstation. No AI required — rosetta includes a terminal browser for searching the database directly.
SQL-as-RAG
Instead of vector embeddings, rosetta uses SQLite FTS5 full-text search as the retrieval layer — SQL-as-RAG. For structured technical docs, BM25 ranking with porter stemming beats vector similarity: terms like dhcp-snooping and /ip/firewall/filter are exact tokens, not fuzzy embeddings. No API keys, no vector database — just a single SQLite file that searches in milliseconds.
Related MCP server: MTA:SA Documentation MCP Server
What's Inside
Data Source | Coverage |
Documentation pages | 363 pages (~653K words) from MikroTik's live Docusaurus manual |
Property definitions | 4,402 with types, defaults, descriptions |
Command tree | 5,114 commands, 551 dirs, 34K arguments |
Version history | 46 RouterOS versions tracked (7.9–7.23beta2) |
Hardware products | 156 current matrix devices — specs, pricing, block diagrams |
Hardware overlay | 255 devices (matrix + legacy/EOL + accessories), resolved via ~750 curated alias mappings for cross-source device lookup |
Performance benchmarks | 2,874 tests across 125 devices (ethernet + IPSec) |
YouTube transcripts | 658 videos, ~2,090 transcript segments |
Callout blocks | 943 warnings, notes, and tips |
Documentation covers RouterOS v7 only, tracking the current long-term release (~7.22). Prose is extracted live from https://manual.mikrotik.com on each release build — no more stale export to keep in sync. The site's Docusaurus CLI Reference (/console/inspect-derived command menus) isn't ingested yet; the command tree instead comes directly from inspect.json (see DESIGN.md).
Install on MikroTik (/app)
RouterOS 7.22+ includes the /app feature for running containers directly on the router. This is the simplest way to deploy rosetta — install once, and any AI assistant on your network can connect to the MCP endpoint URL shown in the router UI.
Requirements: RouterOS 7.22+, x86 or ARM64 architecture (CCR, RB5009, hAP ax series, CHR, etc.), container package installed, device-mode enabled.
1. Enable containers (two reboots required)
If you haven't already enabled the container package and device-mode:
# Install the container package (router reboots automatically)
/system/package/update/check-for-updates duration=10s
/system/package/enable container
# Apply changes restarts the routerAfter reboot:
# Enable container device-mode (requires physical power cycle or button press — follow the on-screen prompt)
/system/device-mode/update mode=advanced container=yesSee MikroTik's Container documentation for full prerequisites and troubleshooting.
2. Add the rosetta app
/app/add use-https=yes disabled=no yaml="name: rosetta
descr: \"RouterOS Docs for AI assistants - use URL as MCP server\"
page: https://tikoci.github.io/p/rosetta
category: development
icon: https://tikoci.github.io/p/rosetta.svg
default-credentials: \"none - just use 'ui-url' as the MCP server in your AI assistant\"
url-path: /mcp
auto-update: true
services:
rosetta:
image: ghcr.io/tikoci/rosetta:latest
container_name: mcp-server
ports:
- 9803:8080/tcp:web
"That's it. RouterOS downloads the container image, configures networking and firewall redirects, and starts the MCP server. The auto-update: true setting pulls the latest image on each boot.
3. Get the MCP endpoint URL
The URL to use with your AI assistant is shown as UI URL in WebFig (App → rosetta), or from the CLI:
:put [/app/get rosetta ui-url]This URL includes the /mcp path and is ready to paste into any MCP client that supports HTTP transport. With use-https=yes, the URL uses HTTPS with a MikroTik-managed *.routingthecloud.net certificate.
4. Configure your AI assistant
Point any HTTP-capable MCP client at the URL from the previous step:
{ "url": "https://app-rosetta.XXX.routingthecloud.net/mcp" }CHR note: Cloud Hosted Router in free or trial mode does not include the
/ip/cloudservice needed for HTTPS certificates. Setuse-https=noon the /app — the URL will use HTTP instead. The UI URL always reflects the correct protocol.HTTP option: On any platform, you may choose
use-https=noif you prefer HTTP or are on an isolated network.Browse the database from the router: If rosetta is running as a
/app, you can use/container/shellto access the TUI browser directly:/container/shell app-rosetta # /app/rosetta browse
Install Locally (with Bun)
Run rosetta on your workstation using Bun. The MCP server runs over stdio — no network configuration needed. The database downloads automatically on first launch (~50 MB compressed).
Quick setup
bunx @tikoci/rosetta --setupThis downloads the database and prints config snippets for all supported MCP clients. Copy-paste the config for your client and you're done.
Need to force a database reload later? Use:
bunx @tikoci/rosetta@latest --refreshPrerelease channels (optional)
New corpus builds sometimes ship first under a non-default npm dist-tag so testers can opt in without moving what everyone else gets by default:
bunx @tikoci/rosetta@next # newest prerelease of any stage (alpha/beta/rc)
bunx @tikoci/rosetta@alpha # pinned to the alpha stage's latest
bunx @tikoci/rosetta@beta # pinned to the beta stage's latest
bunx @tikoci/rosetta@rc # pinned to the rc stage's latestbunx @tikoci/rosetta (no tag) and bunx @tikoci/rosetta@latest always resolve to the default, non-prerelease channel — publishing a prerelease never moves latest.
Dist-tags, not semver ranges. A version range like
^0.11.0-alphais not equivalent to a dist-tag. npm's prerelease range matching only spans the exact[major,minor,patch]tuple written in the range, so it stops tracking new prereleases the moment a patch/minor bump happens.@next/@alpha/@beta/@rcare the actual "follow forever" mechanism — use those, not a range, to stay on a moving prerelease channel.
Configure your MCP client
Open the Command Palette (Cmd+Shift+P / Ctrl+Shift+P), choose "MCP: Add Server…", select "Command (stdio)", enter bunx as the command, and @tikoci/rosetta as the argument.
Or add to User Settings JSON (Cmd+Shift+P → "Preferences: Open User Settings (JSON)"):
"mcp": {
"servers": {
"rosetta": {
"command": "bunx",
"args": ["@tikoci/rosetta"]
}
}
}claude mcp add rosetta -- bunx @tikoci/rosettaEdit your Claude Desktop config file:
macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.jsonWindows:
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
{
"mcpServers": {
"rosetta": {
"command": "bunx",
"args": ["@tikoci/rosetta"]
}
}
}PATH note: Claude Desktop on macOS doesn't always inherit your shell PATH. If
bunxisn't found, use the full path (typically~/.bun/bin/bunx). Runbunx @tikoci/rosetta --setupto print the full-path config.
Restart Claude Desktop after editing.
Open Settings → MCP and add a new server:
{
"mcpServers": {
"rosetta": {
"command": "bunx",
"args": ["@tikoci/rosetta"]
}
}
}codex mcp add rosetta -- bunx @tikoci/rosettaNote: ChatGPT Apps require a remote HTTPS MCP endpoint. Use the MikroTik /app install or another container platform for a hosted endpoint, or Codex CLI for local stdio.
Inside a copilot session, type /mcp add:
Server Name:
routeros-rosettaServer Type: 2 (STDIO)
Command:
bunx @tikoci/rosetta
Install Bun (if you don't have it):
# macOS / Linux
curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash
# Windows
powershell -c "irm bun.sh/install.ps1 | iex"Auto-update:
bunxchecks the npm registry each session and uses the latest published version automatically. The database in~/.rosetta/ros-help.dbpersists across updates.
Browse Without AI
Rosetta includes a terminal-based "card catalog" browser — no AI assistant or MCP client required. It searches the same database the MCP tools use, with a keyboard-driven REPL modeled after a 1980s library terminal.
bunx @tikoci/rosetta browseType a search query to find documentation pages, then select a numbered result to drill in. Beyond page search, the browser covers every data source in the database:
Command | What it searches |
(bare text) | Documentation pages (default) |
| Device hardware specs, block diagrams, benchmarks |
| Command tree hierarchy |
| Property definitions (scoped to current page when viewing one) |
| Warnings, notes, and tips |
| Changelogs — |
| YouTube video transcripts with timestamped chapter links |
| Command tree diff between RouterOS versions |
| Cross-device performance benchmarks |
| Live-fetch current RouterOS versions |
Type help for the full command list. URLs are clickable in terminals that support OSC 8 hyperlinks (iTerm2, Windows Terminal, GNOME Terminal, etc.).
The browser is also useful as an audit surface — it shares core query functions with MCP and exposes every MCP tool as a raw dot-command, so gaps or rough edges visible here often point to agent-facing improvements too.
From a router: If rosetta is installed as a
/app, access the browser via/container/shell app-rosettathen/app/rosetta browse.
Try It
Ask your AI assistant questions like:
"What are the DHCP server properties in RouterOS?"
"How do I set up a bridge VLAN?"
"Is the /container command available in RouterOS 7.12?"
"Show me warnings about hardware offloading"
"Which MikroTik routers have L3HW offload, and more than 8 ports of 48V PoE? Include cost."
"Compare the RB5009 and CCR2004 IPSec throughput at 1518-byte packets."
"My BGP routes stopped working after upgrading from 7.15 to 7.22 — what changed in the routing commands?"
MCP Tools
The server exposes 14 tools designed to work together — agents start with routeros_search and drill into specific data as needed:
Tool | What it does |
| Start here. Unified search with input classifier — returns pages + related callouts, videos, properties, changelogs, devices, skills |
| Full page content by ID or title, section-aware for large pages |
| Property by exact name — type, default, description |
| Read-only explanation for a CLI command — canonical path/verb, args, warnings, docs, changelogs |
| Browse the command hierarchy ( |
| Changelogs filtered by version range, category, breaking flag |
| Which RouterOS versions include a command path |
| Added/removed commands between two RouterOS versions |
| Hardware specs — filter by architecture, RAM, PoE, wireless, etc. |
| Cross-device ethernet and IPSec benchmarks |
| FTS across archived Dude wiki docs (separate from RouterOS search) |
| Full Dude wiki page by ID or title, with screenshot metadata |
| Database health and coverage stats |
| Live-fetch current RouterOS versions from MikroTik |
Each tool description includes workflow arrows (→ next_tool) and empty-result hints so agents chain tools effectively.
The server also exposes MCP Resources for bulk data and supplemental content — CSV datasets (rosetta://datasets/...), schema documentation (rosetta://schema...), and agent skill guides (rosetta://skills/{name}) from tikoci/routeros-skills. Skills are community-created, human-reviewed guides served with provenance attribution. See MANUAL.md for details.
RTFM for Details
For additional install options, HTTP transport configuration, data source details, and the database schema, see MANUAL.md.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md for building from source, running tests, development setup, and the release process.
License
MIT
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