| name | unifi-protect |
| description | How to manage UniFi Protect cameras and NVR — view cameras, smart detections, recordings, snapshots, lights, sensors, Known Faces, and the Alarm Manager. Use this skill when the user mentions UniFi cameras, security cameras, NVR, recordings, motion detection, person detection, face recognition, Known Faces, snapshots, RTSP streams, floodlights, sensors, chimes, arming/disarming the alarm, or any UniFi Protect task. |
UniFi Protect MCP Server
You have access to a UniFi Protect MCP server that lets you query and manage a UniFi Protect NVR. It provides 43 tools covering cameras, smart detections, recordings, snapshots, lights, sensors, chimes, Known Faces, and the Alarm Manager (arm/disarm).
Tool Discovery
The server uses lazy loading by default — only meta-tools are registered initially:
| Meta-Tool | Purpose |
|---|
protect_tool_index | Discover tools by name/description; use category, search, or include_schemas to filter |
protect_execute | Call any tool by name (essential in lazy mode) |
protect_batch | Run multiple tools in parallel |
protect_batch_status | Check async batch job status |
Workflow: Call protect_tool_index to find the right tool, then protect_execute to call it. Use protect_batch for multiple independent queries.
Safety Model
All mutations are disabled by default because Protect controls physical security hardware.
Read operations — always available. Listing cameras, events, snapshots, sensor readings — all work without permissions.
Mutations require explicit opt-in via env vars:
UNIFI_POLICY_PROTECT_CAMERAS_UPDATE=true — camera settings, recording toggle, PTZ, reboot
UNIFI_POLICY_PROTECT_LIGHTS_UPDATE=true — light brightness, PIR sensitivity
UNIFI_POLICY_PROTECT_CHIMES_UPDATE=true — chime volume, trigger
UNIFI_POLICY_PROTECT_ALARM_UPDATE=true — arm/disarm the Alarm Manager (Protect 6.1+)
UNIFI_POLICY_PROTECT_RECOGNITION_UPDATE=true — Known Face rename/merge
UNIFI_POLICY_PROTECT_RECOGNITION_DELETE=true — Known Face deletion
Confirmation flow — every mutation uses preview-then-confirm:
- Default call → returns preview of what would change
- Call with
confirm=true → executes the mutation
Always preview first and show the user before confirming.
Response Format
All tools return: {"success": true, "data": ...}, {"success": false, "error": "..."}, or {"success": true, "requires_confirmation": true, "preview": ...}. Always check success first.
Key Capabilities
- Snapshots:
protect_get_snapshot with include_image=true returns base64 JPEG inline
- RTSP streams:
protect_get_camera_streams gives stream URLs for video player integration
- Smart detections:
protect_list_smart_detections filters by type (person, vehicle, animal, package, face, licensePlate). These are the highest-signal events — prioritize over raw motion.
- Event camera names: All event responses include
camera_name alongside camera_id — no need to call protect_list_cameras separately to resolve names.
- Real-time events:
protect_recent_events reads from websocket buffer instantly (no API call). Buffer holds ~100 events with 5-minute TTL. Use protect_list_events for historical queries.
- Video export:
protect_export_clip returns metadata (not video data — too large for MCP). Max 2 hours, supports timelapse (fps: 4=60x, 8=120x, 20=300x)
- PTZ: Only zoom works via API. For pan/tilt, use
protect_ptz_preset with saved positions
- Known Faces: Use
protect_list_known_faces to inspect face groups before rename, merge, or delete mutations
Efficiency Tips
- Use
protect_batch for parallel queries — biggest performance win. Batch smart detections + events in one call.
- Prefer
protect_list_smart_detections over protect_list_events for security analysis — smart detections are pre-classified (person, vehicle, etc.) and higher signal than raw motion.
protect_recent_events is fast but small — only a few minutes of buffered data. For anything beyond real-time monitoring, use protect_list_events with time range filters.
- Limit results — event queries default to 30 but can return large payloads. Use
limit parameter to keep responses focused.
- Security digest — for comprehensive event summaries, use the
security-digest skill which handles batch calls, severity classification, and cross-product correlation.
Authentication
Username and password are required (local admin credentials, not Ubiquiti SSO). API key support exists but is experimental — limited to read-only operations and a subset of tools.
To configure, run /unifi-protect:unifi-protect-setup or set env vars manually:
UNIFI_PROTECT_HOST=192.168.1.1
UNIFI_PROTECT_USERNAME=admin
UNIFI_PROTECT_PASSWORD=your-password
Other UniFi Servers
If the user also has networking or door access control, other UniFi MCP plugins are available:
unifi-network — network devices, clients, firewall, VPN, routing
unifi-access — door locks, credentials, visitors, access policies
Cameras are network clients — if a camera appears offline, the Network server can help check connectivity via unifi_lookup_by_ip.
Tool Reference
For the complete list of all 43 tools organized by category with descriptions, tips, and common scenarios, read references/protect-tools.md.