Knowledge Base MCP Server

Knowledge Base MCP Server

By jeanibarz GitHub

This MCP server provides tools for listing and retrieving content from different knowledge bases.

Overview

what is Knowledge Base MCP Server?

Knowledge Base MCP Server is a server application that provides tools for listing and retrieving content from various knowledge bases, enabling efficient access to information.

how to use Knowledge Base MCP Server?

To use the Knowledge Base MCP Server, clone the repository, install dependencies, configure environment variables, build the server, and add it to the MCP settings. You can then use the provided tools through the MCP interface.

key features of Knowledge Base MCP Server?

  • Lists available knowledge bases.
  • Retrieves similar content based on queries using semantic search.
  • Automatically updates the FAISS index for efficient searching.

use cases of Knowledge Base MCP Server?

  1. Managing company knowledge bases for easy access to information.
  2. Providing IT support documentation retrieval.
  3. Facilitating onboarding processes with relevant content.

FAQ from Knowledge Base MCP Server?

  • What are the prerequisites for running the server?

You need Node.js (version 16 or higher) and npm installed on your system.

  • How does the semantic search work?

The server uses a FAISS index to perform semantic searches, returning the most relevant chunks of information based on the query.

  • Can I customize the knowledge bases?

Yes! You can create subdirectories for different knowledge bases and add content in text files.

Content

Knowledge Base MCP Server

This MCP server provides tools for listing and retrieving content from different knowledge bases.

Knowledge Base Server MCP server

Setup Instructions

These instructions assume you have Node.js and npm installed on your system.

Prerequisites

  • Node.js (version 16 or higher)
  • npm (Node Package Manager)
  1. Clone the repository:

    git clone <repository_url>
    cd knowledge-base-mcp-server
    
  2. Install dependencies:

    npm install
    
  3. Configure environment variables:

    • The server requires the HUGGINGFACE_API_KEY environment variable to be set. This is the API key for the Hugging Face Inference API, which is used to generate embeddings for the knowledge base content. You can obtain a free API key from the Hugging Face website (https://huggingface.co/).
    • The server requires the KNOWLEDGE_BASES_ROOT_DIR environment variable to be set. This variable specifies the directory where the knowledge base subdirectories are located. If you don't set this variable, it will default to $HOME/knowledge_bases, where $HOME is the current user's home directory.
    • The server supports the FAISS_INDEX_PATH environment variable to specify the path to the FAISS index. If not set, it will default to $HOME/knowledge_bases/.faiss.
    • The server supports the HUGGINGFACE_MODEL_NAME environment variable to specify the Hugging Face model to use for generating embeddings. If not set, it will default to sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2.
    • You can set these environment variables in your .bashrc or .zshrc file, or directly in the MCP settings.
  4. Build the server:

    npm run build
    
  5. Add the server to the MCP settings:

    • Edit the cline_mcp_settings.json file located at /home/jean/.vscode-server/data/User/globalStorage/saoudrizwan.claude-dev/settings/.
    • Add the following configuration to the mcpServers object:
    "knowledge-base-mcp": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": [
        "/path/to/knowledge-base-mcp-server/build/index.js"
      ],
      "disabled": false,
      "autoApprove": [],
      "env": {
        "KNOWLEDGE_BASES_ROOT_DIR": "/path/to/knowledge_bases",
        "HUGGINGFACE_API_KEY": "YOUR_HUGGINGFACE_API_KEY",
      },
      "description": "Retrieves similar chunks from the knowledge base based on a query."
    },
    
    • Replace /path/to/knowledge-base-mcp-server with the actual path to the server directory.
    • Replace /path/to/knowledge_bases with the actual path to the knowledge bases directory.
  6. Create knowledge base directories:

    • Create subdirectories within the KNOWLEDGE_BASES_ROOT_DIR for each knowledge base (e.g., company, it_support, onboarding).
    • Place text files (e.g., .txt, .md) containing the knowledge base content within these subdirectories.
  • The server recursively reads all text files (e.g., .txt, .md) within the specified knowledge base subdirectories.
  • The server skips hidden files and directories (those starting with a .).
  • For each file, the server calculates the SHA256 hash and stores it in a file with the same name in a hidden .index subdirectory. This hash is used to determine if the file has been modified since the last indexing.
  • The file content is splitted into chunks using the MarkdownTextSplitter from langchain/text_splitter.
  • The content of each chunk is then added to a FAISS index, which is used for similarity search.
  • The FAISS index is automatically initialized when the server starts. It checks for changes in the knowledge base files and updates the index accordingly.

Usage

The server exposes two tools:

  • list_knowledge_bases: Lists the available knowledge bases.
  • retrieve_knowledge: Retrieves similar chunks from the knowledge base based on a query. Optionally, if a knowledge base is specified, only that one is searched; otherwise, all available knowledge bases are considered. By default, at most 10 document chunks are returned with a score below a threshold of 2. A different threshold can optionally be provided using the threshold parameter.

You can use these tools through the MCP interface.

The retrieve_knowledge tool performs a semantic search using a FAISS index. The index is automatically updated when the server starts or when a file in a knowledge base is modified.

The output of the retrieve_knowledge tool is a markdown formatted string with the following structure:

## Semantic Search Results

**Result 1:**

[Content of the most similar chunk]

**Source:**
```json
{
  "source": "[Path to the file containing the chunk]"
}
```

---

**Result 2:**

[Content of the second most similar chunk]

**Source:**
```json
{
  "source": "[Path to the file containing the chunk]"
}
```

> **Disclaimer:** The provided results might not all be relevant. Please cross-check the relevance of the information.

Each result includes the content of the most similar chunk, the source file, and a similarity score.

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