--- title: Stdio Transport description: Learn how to connect CrewAI to local MCP servers using the Stdio (Standard Input/Output) transport mechanism. icon: server --- ## Overview The Stdio (Standard Input/Output) transport is designed for connecting `MCPServerAdapter` to local MCP servers that communicate over their standard input and output streams. This is typically used when the MCP server is a script or executable running on the same machine as your CrewAI application. ## Key Concepts - **Local Execution**: Stdio transport manages a locally running process for the MCP server. - **`StdioServerParameters`**: This class from the `mcp` library is used to configure the command, arguments, and environment variables for launching the Stdio server. ## Connecting via Stdio You can connect to an Stdio-based MCP server using two main approaches for managing the connection lifecycle: ### 1. Fully Managed Connection (Recommended) Using a Python context manager (`with` statement) is the recommended approach. It automatically handles starting the MCP server process and stopping it when the context is exited. ```python from crewai import Agent, Task, Crew, Process from crewai_tools import MCPServerAdapter from mcp import StdioServerParameters import os # Create a StdioServerParameters object server_params=StdioServerParameters( command="python3", args=["servers/your_stdio_server.py"], env={"UV_PYTHON": "3.12", **os.environ}, ) with MCPServerAdapter(server_params) as tools: print(f"Available tools from Stdio MCP server: {[tool.name for tool in tools]}") # Example: Using the tools from the Stdio MCP server in a CrewAI Agent research_agent = Agent( role="Local Data Processor", goal="Process data using a local Stdio-based tool.", backstory="An AI that leverages local scripts via MCP for specialized tasks.", tools=tools, reasoning=True, verbose=True, ) processing_task = Task( description="Process the input data file 'data.txt' and summarize its contents.", expected_output="A summary of the processed data.", agent=research_agent, markdown=True ) data_crew = Crew( agents=[research_agent], tasks=[processing_task], verbose=True, process=Process.sequential ) result = data_crew.kickoff() print("\nCrew Task Result (Stdio - Managed):\n", result) ``` ### 2. Manual Connection Lifecycle If you need finer-grained control over when the Stdio MCP server process is started and stopped, you can manage the `MCPServerAdapter` lifecycle manually. You **MUST** call `mcp_server_adapter.stop()` to ensure the server process is terminated and resources are released. Using a `try...finally` block is highly recommended. ```python from crewai import Agent, Task, Crew, Process from crewai_tools import MCPServerAdapter from mcp import StdioServerParameters import os # Create a StdioServerParameters object stdio_params=StdioServerParameters( command="python3", args=["servers/your_stdio_server.py"], env={"UV_PYTHON": "3.12", **os.environ}, ) mcp_server_adapter = MCPServerAdapter(server_params=stdio_params) try: mcp_server_adapter.start() # Manually start the connection and server process tools = mcp_server_adapter.tools print(f"Available tools (manual Stdio): {[tool.name for tool in tools]}") # Example: Using the tools with your Agent, Task, Crew setup manual_agent = Agent( role="Local Task Executor", goal="Execute a specific local task using a manually managed Stdio tool.", backstory="An AI proficient in controlling local processes via MCP.", tools=tools, verbose=True ) manual_task = Task( description="Execute the 'perform_analysis' command via the Stdio tool.", expected_output="Results of the analysis.", agent=manual_agent ) manual_crew = Crew( agents=[manual_agent], tasks=[manual_task], verbose=True, process=Process.sequential ) result = manual_crew.kickoff() # Actual inputs depend on your tool print("\nCrew Task Result (Stdio - Manual):\n", result) except Exception as e: print(f"An error occurred during manual Stdio MCP integration: {e}") finally: if mcp_server_adapter and mcp_server_adapter.is_connected: # Check if connected before stopping print("Stopping Stdio MCP server connection (manual)...") mcp_server_adapter.stop() # **Crucial: Ensure stop is called** elif mcp_server_adapter: # If adapter exists but not connected (e.g. start failed) print("Stdio MCP server adapter was not connected. No stop needed or start failed.") ``` Remember to replace placeholder paths and commands with your actual Stdio server details. The `env` parameter in `StdioServerParameters` can be used to set environment variables for the server process, which can be useful for configuring its behavior or providing necessary paths (like `PYTHONPATH`).