Skip to main content
Glama
wteja

exchange-ai-connector

by wteja

exchange-ai-connector

An MCP server that lets an AI agent read and act on your Microsoft 365 / Outlook email and calendar, with every state-changing action (sending mail, creating an event) gated by your MCP client's confirmation prompt.

On PyPI: uvx exchange-ai-connector or pipx install exchange-ai-connector. See Setup.

Tools

Tool

Kind

What it does

list_emails

read-only

List messages in a folder (default inbox)

read_email

read-only

Read one message in full

read_thread

read-only

Read a whole conversation, oldest → newest

send_email

gated

Send or reply — client confirms first

list_events

read-only

List upcoming calendar events

read_event

read-only

Read one event in full

check_availability

read-only

Free/busy for you (+ others) — work/school only

create_event

gated

Create an event, optionally inviting attendees

Related MCP server: MCP Outlook Server

How the human-in-the-loop gate works

The read-only tools run freely. The two gated tools (send_email, create_event) are the only ones that change the outside world; they are annotated as destructive, so your MCP client (e.g. Claude Desktop) shows you the exact arguments — recipients, subject, body / event details — and waits for your approval before running. The draft you review is the agent's proposed arguments; nothing is stored half-sent. Reject and it vanishes.

Account-type support

Account type

Email

Calendar read/create

check_availability

Work / school (Microsoft 365)

Personal (outlook.com / hotmail)

❌¹

¹ Graph's getSchedule (free/busy) is not available on personal Microsoft accounts. check_availability returns a readable error there; every other tool works.


Setup

1. Register an app in Microsoft Entra ID

  1. Go to https://entra.microsoft.comIdentity → Applications → App registrationsNew registration.

  2. Name: anything (e.g. exchange-ai-connector).

  3. Supported account types: Accounts in any organizational directory (multitenant) and personal Microsoft accounts.

  4. Redirect URI: platform Public client/native (mobile & desktop), value http://localhost:8400.

  5. Click Register, then copy the Application (client) ID from the overview page — you'll need it below.

2. Add Microsoft Graph permissions

  1. In your app → API permissionsAdd a permissionMicrosoft GraphDelegated permissions.

  2. Add: Mail.Read, Mail.Send, Calendars.ReadWrite.

  3. Personal account: nothing more — you consent in the browser on first run. Work/school account: a tenant admin may need to click Grant admin consent.

Adding Calendars.ReadWrite later (e.g. after using email-only) triggers a one-time browser re-consent on the next run. See Re-consent below.

3. Install

Pick one:

uvx (recommended — no clone, no venv). Requires uv. Nothing to install ahead of time — uvx fetches and runs the command in a throwaway environment. It's used directly in the Claude Desktop config below, so you can skip straight to that section.

pipx — puts the exchange-ai-connector command on your PATH globally:

pipx install exchange-ai-connector
# or an unreleased version straight from source:
pipx install git+https://github.com/wteja/exchange-ai-connector

From source (for development):

git clone https://github.com/wteja/exchange-ai-connector
cd exchange-ai-connector
python -m venv .venv && source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -e ".[dev]"
which exchange-ai-connector   # note this path for the Claude Desktop config

4. Configure environment

export EXCHANGE_AI_CLIENT_ID="<your-app-client-id>"

# optional — pin to one tenant instead of the multi-tenant default:
# export EXCHANGE_AI_AUTHORITY="https://login.microsoftonline.com/<tenant-id>"

# optional — override the auto-detected timezone (default: /etc/localtime, else UTC):
# export EXCHANGE_AI_TIMEZONE="Asia/Bangkok"

EXCHANGE_AI_CLIENT_ID is required; the other two are optional.


Claude Desktop setup

Edit (on macOS) ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json and add an exchange-ai server under mcpServers. The uvx form needs no clone or venv — it fetches exchange-ai-connector from PyPI and runs it:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "exchange-ai": {
      "command": "/opt/homebrew/bin/uvx",
      "args": ["exchange-ai-connector"],
      "env": {
        "EXCHANGE_AI_CLIENT_ID": "<your-app-client-id>",
        "EXCHANGE_AI_TIMEZONE": "Asia/Bangkok"
      }
    }
  }
}

Use the absolute path to uvx (which uvx — e.g. /opt/homebrew/bin/uvx on Apple-Silicon Homebrew). Claude Desktop is a GUI app and does not inherit your shell's PATH, so a bare "uvx" won't be found.

Useful variants for the args:

  • Pin a version (reproducible; uses uv's cache without re-resolving — handy if your network can't always reach PyPI): ["exchange-ai-connector@0.2.0"]

  • Run an unreleased version from GitHub: ["--from", "git+https://github.com/wteja/exchange-ai-connector", "exchange-ai-connector"]

If you installed from source into a venv instead, point command at the binary's absolute path (same PATH reason as above):

"command": "/ABSOLUTE/PATH/TO/.venv/bin/exchange-ai-connector"

Claude Code (.mcp.json)

For Claude Code, put the same server under mcpServers in a .mcp.json at your project root (Claude Code expands ${VAR} from your environment):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "exchange-ai": {
      "command": "uvx",
      "args": ["exchange-ai-connector"],
      "env": { "EXCHANGE_AI_CLIENT_ID": "${EXCHANGE_AI_CLIENT_ID}" }
    }
  }
}

Then fully quit Claude Desktop (Cmd+Q) and reopen it. The exchange-ai server and its tools should appear in the tools/connector list.

On the first tool call a browser opens for sign-in and consent; the token is cached in your OS keychain and refreshed silently afterward.

Suggested approvals: allow the read-only tools (list_emails, read_email, read_thread, list_events, read_event, check_availability) to run without asking, but leave send_email and create_event on ask every time — that's the human-in-the-loop gate doing its job.

Run standalone (without a client)

exchange-ai-connector

It's a stdio MCP server, so it waits silently for a client to connect — there's no interactive output. This is mainly useful for confirming it starts.


Example usage (sample prompts)

Once it's wired into Claude Desktop, drive it in plain language. Examples:

Reading email

  • "List my latest 10 emails."

  • "Show me unread emails from this week."

  • "Read the full email from Alice about the invoice."

  • "Show me the whole thread for that conversation."

Sending email (gated — you'll approve the draft)

  • "Reply to Alice's email saying I'll have the report by Friday."

  • "Send an email to bob@example.com, subject 'Lunch?', asking if he's free Thursday."

  • "Forward the invoice email to accounting@example.com with a short note."

Reading the calendar

  • "What's on my calendar this week?"

  • "Read the details of my 2pm meeting tomorrow."

  • "Am I free tomorrow 2–3pm?" (work/school accounts only)

  • "When are alice@contoso.com and I both free Thursday afternoon?" (work/school only)

Creating events (gated — you'll approve the details)

  • "Create a 30-minute event tomorrow at 2pm titled 'Project sync'."

  • "Schedule a 1-hour meeting Friday 10am called 'Design review', invite alice@contoso.com and bob@contoso.com."

  • "Block 9–11am Monday for focus time."

For the gated actions, Claude Desktop shows the exact send_email(...) / create_event(...) arguments and waits for your Approve / Deny. Want a change? Tell the agent ("make it 45 minutes", "cc my manager") and it re-proposes.


Audit log

Every gated action appends one JSON line to ~/.exchange-ai-connector/audit.log:

  • Sends: {ts, to, subject[, reply_to_id]}

  • Events: {ts, kind:"event", subject, start[, attendees]}

Append-only JSONL, grep-able:

grep '"kind": "event"' ~/.exchange-ai-connector/audit.log

The OAuth token is cached in your OS keychain (service exchange-ai-connector, account msal-token-cache) and refreshed silently. The cached token only carries the scopes you consented to. If you add a scope (e.g. enabling calendar after email-only), clear the cache so the next run re-prompts the browser with the new scopes:

python -c "import keyring; keyring.delete_password('exchange-ai-connector','msal-token-cache')"

("Not found" just means there was no cache to clear.) Then restart your client.


Scope

  • v1: email — list/read/thread + gated send.

  • v2 (this release): calendar — list/read events, free/busy availability, and gated create_event.

A standalone web approval UI, app-only auth, and multi-account approval remain deliberately out of scope; see the design specs under docs/superpowers/specs/.

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

Maintenance

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

Resources

Unclaimed servers have limited discoverability.

Looking for Admin?

If you are the server author, to access and configure the admin panel.

Latest Blog Posts

MCP directory API

We provide all the information about MCP servers via our MCP API.

curl -X GET 'https://glama.ai/api/mcp/v1/servers/wteja/exchange-ai-connector'

If you have feedback or need assistance with the MCP directory API, please join our Discord server