| name | building-mcp-servers |
| description | Build Celigo MCP server resources -- endpoints that expose Tools and builder-mode APIs to external AI agents and MCP clients. Use when creating MCP servers, linking tools or APIs, or configuring annotations and overrides. |
Building MCP Servers
An MCP server is a Model Context Protocol endpoint that exposes Celigo Tools and builder-mode APIs as callable tools for external AI agents and MCP clients. Concerns when building an MCP server:
- Endpoint identity -- unique
relativeURI that forms the server's URL path
- Tool selection -- which Tool resources to expose, each with an MCP-compatible name
- API selection -- which builder-mode API resources to expose (script-mode APIs are not supported)
- Annotations -- MCP-standard behavior hints (
readOnlyHint, destructiveHint, idempotentHint, openWorldHint) that help AI agents decide when and how to call a tool
- Overrides -- per-server customization of a tool's connections, exports, imports, and routers without modifying the underlying tool definition
- Name uniqueness -- tool names must be unique across all
tools[] and apis[] entries within the server
MCP servers do not have their own authentication mechanism. Incoming MCP requests authenticate via the Celigo API token; outbound calls to external systems use the connections referenced by the underlying tools and APIs.
Used alongside tools and APIs. The MCP server is a thin exposure layer -- all processing logic lives in the referenced Tool and API resources.
Composition Patterns
MCP servers combine two types of entries:
Tool Entries (tools[])
Reference Celigo Tool resources. Each tool becomes an MCP tool endpoint. The tool's input.schema must have type: "object" at the root to comply with the MCP specification. Tool entries support annotations (behavior hints) and overrides (per-server connection/resource customization).
API Entries (apis[])
Reference Celigo builder-mode API resources. Each API becomes an MCP tool endpoint. Only type: "builder" APIs are supported -- script-mode and legacy APIs cannot be exposed via MCP. API entries do not support annotations or overrides.
Typical Compositions
In production, most MCP servers expose APIs only. Servers that combine both tools and APIs are less common but valid for mixed read/write patterns (e.g., tools for writes with annotations, APIs for lookups).
Quick Reference
Decision Matrix
| You need to... | Use tool entry | Use API entry |
|---|
| Expose reusable logic with connection flexibility | Yes | -- |
| Hint behavior to AI agents (read-only, destructive) | Yes (annotations) | -- |
| Swap connections per-server without modifying the resource | Yes (overrides) | -- |
| Expose a builder-mode API as an MCP endpoint | -- | Yes |
| Expose a script-mode or legacy API | Not supported | Not supported |
Minimum Required Fields
Every MCP server needs at minimum:
name -- human-readable label
relativeURI -- unique URI path segment (must start with /, single segment, alphanumeric + underscores + hyphens)
Each tool entry needs: _toolId, name
Each API entry needs: _apiId, name
Schema Index
All schemas are in references/schemas/:
| Schema | What it defines |
|---|
| request.yml | Top-level MCP server fields (name, relativeURI, description, disabled, tools, apis) |
| response.yml | MCP server response shape (includes _id, timestamps, sandbox) |
| io-tool.yml | Tool entry schema (_toolId, name, disabled, annotations, overrides) |
| api-tool.yml | API entry schema (_apiId, name, disabled) |
| annotations.yml | MCP behavior hints (title, readOnlyHint, destructiveHint, idempotentHint, openWorldHint) |
| overrides.yml | Per-server overrides for connections, exports, imports, and routers |
Related Skills
How to Build an MCP Server
1. Plan what the server exposes
Before creating anything, determine what capabilities the MCP server should offer to AI agents. Each capability maps to either a Tool or a builder-mode API. Group related capabilities under a single server with a meaningful relativeURI.
2. Check for existing resources
Look for tools and APIs that can be reused before creating new ones.
celigo account search "<keyword>"
celigo tools list
celigo apis list
celigo mcp-servers list
3. Build the underlying resources (bottom-up)
MCP servers reference tools and APIs -- these must exist first. Build order:
- Connections -- create or reuse connections to target systems
- Exports + Imports -- data sources and destinations for tool/API pipelines
- Tools -- reusable logic blocks (use
building-tools skill). Ensure input.schema has type: "object" at root for MCP compatibility
- APIs -- builder-mode endpoints (use
building-apis skill). Ensure type: "builder" is set
- MCP Server -- the exposure layer that references tools and APIs
4. Choose tool names
Each entry (tool or API) needs a name that becomes the MCP tool name visible to AI agents. Names must:
- Be unique across all
tools[] and apis[] entries in the server
- Contain only alphanumeric characters, underscores, hyphens, and dots
- Be descriptive enough for an AI agent to understand the tool's purpose (e.g.,
get_customer, create_order, validate.input)
5. Configure annotations (tool entries only)
Annotations are optional MCP-standard hints that help AI agents decide when and how to call a tool. Set them based on what the underlying tool actually does:
readOnlyHint: true -- tool only reads data, no side effects (e.g., a lookup)
destructiveHint: true -- tool deletes or permanently modifies data
idempotentHint: true -- calling multiple times with the same input produces the same result
openWorldHint: true -- tool interacts with external APIs where results may vary between calls
Annotations are hints only -- they are not enforced by the server.
6. Configure overrides (tool entries only)
Overrides let you customize a tool's internal resources for this specific MCP server without modifying the tool definition. This enables reusing the same tool across multiple servers with different configurations.
The most common override is connection overrides -- mapping the tool's abstract connection references to concrete connections for this server. Override entries use _abstractId (the connection ID in the tool definition) and _id (the concrete connection to use instead).
Export, import, and router overrides are also available but rarely used in practice.
7. Build the MCP server JSON
Reference the Schema Index for exact field schemas. Every MCP server needs at minimum: name and relativeURI. Add tools[] and/or apis[] entries to expose capabilities. Set disabled: false to enable the server (at least one tool or API entry must also be enabled).
CLI Commands
celigo mcp-servers list
celigo mcp-servers get <id>
celigo mcp-servers create < mcp-server.json
celigo mcp-servers update <id> < mcp-server.json
celigo mcp-servers set <id> key=value [key2=value2 ...]
celigo mcp-servers delete <id>
celigo account search "<keyword>"
celigo tools list
celigo apis list
Pre-Submit Checklist
Before creating or updating an MCP server, verify:
Gotchas
- PUT erases omitted fields. Always GET first, modify, then PUT. The
set command handles this automatically.
- Script-mode and legacy APIs cannot be exposed. Only
type: "builder" APIs work in MCP servers. If you get a validation error on an API entry, verify the referenced API has type: "builder" set.
- Tool input schema must be
type: "object". The MCP specification requires tool inputs to be JSON objects. If a tool's input.schema has a different root type (e.g., array, string), it cannot be exposed via MCP.
- Annotations are hints, not enforcement. Setting
readOnlyHint: true does not prevent the tool from writing data. The AI agent may ignore annotations entirely.
- Name uniqueness spans both arrays. A tool named
get_customer in tools[] conflicts with an API also named get_customer in apis[]. Names must be unique across the combined set.
- Overrides only apply to tool entries. API entries in
apis[] do not support annotations or overrides. To customize an API's behavior per-server, modify the API resource itself.
- Enabling the server requires at least one enabled entry. Setting
disabled: false on the server alone is not sufficient -- at least one tool or API within it must also have disabled: false.
- Preview and logs endpoints are session-auth only. The
/preview and /logs endpoints for MCP servers are not accessible via bearer token -- they require the UI session.
Common Errors
| Error | Cause | Fix |
|---|
| 422 on create/update | Missing required fields or invalid relativeURI format | Check name and relativeURI; ensure URI starts with / and is a single valid segment |
422 _toolId not found | Referenced tool does not exist or was deleted | Verify the tool exists with celigo tools get <id> |
422 _apiId not found | Referenced API does not exist or was deleted | Verify the API exists with celigo apis get <id> |
422 duplicate tool name | Two entries share the same name | Ensure all names across tools[] and apis[] are unique |
422 relativeURI already in use | Another MCP server in the account uses the same URI | Choose a different relativeURI; check with celigo mcp-servers list |
422 invalid API type | API entry references a script-mode or legacy API | Only type: "builder" APIs are supported; check with celigo apis get <id> |
422 input schema invalid | Tool's input.schema root type is not object | Update the tool's input schema to have type: "object" at root |
| Server enabled but not accessible | All tool/API entries are disabled | Enable at least one entry with disabled: false |