Code Analysis MCP Server
A modular MCP (Model Context Protocol) server for code analysis with file operations, code search, and structure analysis capabilities.
Features
📁 File Operations
- read_file: Read contents of any code file
- list_files: List files in directories with pattern matching
- file_info: Get detailed file information (size, type, line count)
🔍 Code Search
- search_code: Search for patterns in code using regex
- find_definition: Find symbol definitions (functions, classes, variables)
📊 Code Analysis
- analyze_structure: Analyze code structure (imports, classes, functions)
Installation
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/yourusername/code-mcp.git
cd code-mcp
# Create virtual environment
python -m venv venv
# Activate environment
source venv/bin/activate # On Unix/macOS
venv\Scripts\activate # On Windows
# Install dependencies
pip install -r requirements.txt
Usage
1. With Claude Desktop
Add to your Claude Desktop configuration file:
macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
{
"mcpServers": {
"code-analyzer": {
"command": "python",
"args": ["/absolute/path/to/code-mcp/server.py"]
}
}
}
Then restart Claude Desktop.
2. With Continue.dev (VS Code)
Add to your Continue configuration:
{
"models": [...],
"mcpServers": {
"code-analyzer": {
"command": "python",
"args": ["/absolute/path/to/code-mcp/server.py"]
}
}
}
3. With Other MCP Clients
Any MCP-compatible client can use this server by pointing to the server.py file.
Available Tools
📖 read_file
Read the contents of a file.
{
"tool": "read_file",
"arguments": {
"path": "src/main.py",
"encoding": "utf-8" // optional, default: utf-8
}
}
📂 list_files
List files in a directory with optional pattern matching.
{
"tool": "list_files",
"arguments": {
"directory": "./src", // optional, default: current dir
"pattern": "*.py", // optional, default: *
"recursive": true // optional, default: false
}
}
ℹ️ file_info
Get detailed information about a file.
{
"tool": "file_info",
"arguments": {
"path": "src/main.py"
}
}
🔍 search_code
Search for patterns in code files using regex.
{
"tool": "search_code",
"arguments": {
"pattern": "def.*test", // regex pattern
"directory": "./src", // optional
"file_pattern": "*.py", // optional
"case_sensitive": false // optional, default: true
}
}
🎯 find_definition
Find where a symbol is defined.
{
"tool": "find_definition",
"arguments": {
"symbol": "MyClass",
"directory": "./src", // optional
"language": "python" // optional: python, javascript
}
}
🏗️ analyze_structure
Analyze the structure of a code file.
{
"tool": "analyze_structure",
"arguments": {
"path": "src/main.py",
"include_docstrings": true // optional, default: false
}
}
🤖 update_with_architecture
Compare old and new architecture versions and intelligently update the new file.
{
"tool": "update_with_architecture",
"arguments": {
"old_file": "src/legacy/module.py", // Reference file (old architecture)
"new_file": "src/modern/module.py", // Target file (will be updated)
"backup": true // optional, default: true
}
}
AI Configuration
To use the AI-powered tools, you need to configure your API keys:
-
Copy
.env.exampleto.env:cp .env.example .env -
Edit
.envand add your API keys:AI_PROVIDER=openai OPENAI_API_KEY=your-openai-api-key # or AI_PROVIDER=anthropic ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=your-anthropic-api-key
Thinking Models Support
The tool automatically handles "thinking" models (like o1, o1-preview) that include reasoning in their responses:
- Thinking sections are automatically removed
- Only the actual code is extracted
- Supports various thinking formats:
<think>,[thinking], etc.
-
Install AI dependencies:
pip install openai anthropic -
Test LLM connectivity:
./test_llm.sh # or python tests/test_llm.py
Examples
In Claude Desktop
After configuring, you can ask Claude:
- "Read the file src/main.py"
- "Search for all functions that contain 'test' in the src directory"
- "Find where the class 'UserModel' is defined"
- "Analyze the structure of app.py"
- "List all Python files in the project"
Programmatic Usage
# Example of calling tools programmatically
import asyncio
from mcp import Client
async def main():
client = Client()
# Read a file
result = await client.call_tool("read_file", {
"path": "src/main.py"
})
# Search for patterns
result = await client.call_tool("search_code", {
"pattern": "TODO|FIXME",
"directory": "./",
"recursive": True
})
# Analyze structure
result = await client.call_tool("analyze_structure", {
"path": "src/main.py",
"include_docstrings": True
})
asyncio.run(main())
Architecture
The server follows a modular architecture:
├── server.py # Main MCP server
├── tools/ # Tool definitions
│ ├── file_tools.py # File operations
│ └── code_tools.py # Code analysis tools
├── handlers/ # Request handlers
│ ├── file_handler.py
│ ├── search_handler.py
│ └── analyze_handler.py
└── core/ # Core services
├── file_system.py # File system operations
└── code_parser.py # Code parsing logic
Supported Languages
- Python (.py)
- JavaScript/TypeScript (.js, .ts, .jsx, .tsx)
- Java (.java)
- C/C++ (.c, .cpp, .h)
- Go (.go)
- Rust (.rs)
- Ruby (.rb)
- And more...
Security
- File access is restricted to prevent directory traversal
- Large files are handled efficiently with streaming
- Search results are limited to prevent memory issues
Contributing
Feel free to submit issues and enhancement requests!
License
MIT