| name | convert-web-app |
| description | This skill should be used when the user asks to "add MCP App support to my web app", "turn my web app into a hybrid MCP App", "make my web page work as an MCP App too", "wrap my existing UI as an MCP App", "convert iframe embed to MCP App", "turn my SPA into an MCP App", or needs to add MCP App support to an existing web application while keeping it working standalone. Provides guidance for analyzing existing web apps and creating a hybrid web + MCP App with server-side tool and resource registration. |
Add MCP App Support to a Web App
Add MCP App support to an existing web application so it works both as a standalone web app and as an MCP App that renders inline in MCP-enabled hosts like Claude Desktop — from a single codebase.
How It Works
The existing web app stays intact. A thin initialization layer detects whether the app is running inside an MCP host or as a regular web page, and fetches parameters from the appropriate source. A new MCP server wraps the app's bundled HTML as a resource and registers a tool to display it.
Standalone: Browser loads page → App reads URL params / APIs → renders
MCP App: Host calls tool → Server returns result → Host renders app in iframe → App reads MCP lifecycle → renders
The app's rendering logic is shared — only the data source changes.
Getting Reference Code
Clone the SDK repository for working examples and API documentation:
git clone --branch "v$(npm view @modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps version)" --depth 1 https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps.git /tmp/mcp-ext-apps
API Reference (Source Files)
Read JSDoc documentation directly from /tmp/mcp-ext-apps/src/:
| File | Contents |
|---|
src/app.ts | App class, handlers (ontoolinput, ontoolresult, onhostcontextchanged, onteardown), lifecycle |
src/server/index.ts | registerAppTool, registerAppResource, tool visibility options |
src/spec.types.ts | All type definitions: McpUiHostContext, CSS variable keys, display modes |
src/styles.ts | applyDocumentTheme, applyHostStyleVariables, applyHostFonts |
src/react/useApp.tsx | useApp hook for React apps |
src/react/useHostStyles.ts | useHostStyles, useHostStyleVariables, useHostFonts hooks |
Framework Templates
Learn and adapt from /tmp/mcp-ext-apps/examples/basic-server-{framework}/:
| Template | Key Files |
|---|
basic-server-vanillajs/ | server.ts, src/mcp-app.ts, mcp-app.html |
basic-server-react/ | server.ts, src/mcp-app.tsx (uses useApp hook) |
basic-server-vue/ | server.ts, src/App.vue |
basic-server-svelte/ | server.ts, src/App.svelte |
basic-server-preact/ | server.ts, src/mcp-app.tsx |
basic-server-solid/ | server.ts, src/mcp-app.tsx |
Reference Examples
| Example | Relevant Pattern |
|---|
examples/map-server/ | External API integration + CSP (connectDomains, resourceDomains) |
examples/sheet-music-server/ | Library that loads external assets (soundfonts) |
examples/pdf-server/ | Binary content handling + app-only helper tools |
Step 1: Analyze the Existing Web App
Before writing any code, examine the existing web app to plan what needs to change.
What to Investigate
- Data sources — How does the app get its data? (URL params, API calls, props, hardcoded, localStorage)
- External dependencies — CDN scripts, fonts, API endpoints, iframe embeds, WebSocket connections
- Build system — Current bundler (Webpack, Vite, Rollup, none), framework (React, Vue, vanilla), entry points
- User interactions — Does the app have inputs/forms that should map to tool parameters?
- Runtime detection — How to tell if the app is running inside an MCP host (e.g., check the current origin, a query param, or whether
window.parent !== window)
Present findings to the user and confirm the approach.
Data Source Mapping
In hybrid mode, the app keeps its existing data sources for standalone use and adds MCP equivalents:
| Standalone data source | MCP App equivalent |
|---|
| URL query parameters | ontoolinput / ontoolresult arguments or structuredContent |
| REST API calls | app.callServerTool() to server-side tools, or keep direct API calls with CSP connectDomains |
| Props / component inputs | ontoolinput arguments |
| localStorage / sessionStorage | Not available in sandboxed iframe — pass via structuredContent or server-side state |
| WebSocket connections | Keep with CSP connectDomains, or convert to polling via app-only tools |
| Hardcoded data | Move to tool structuredContent to make it dynamic |
Step 2: Investigate CSP Requirements
MCP Apps HTML runs in a sandboxed iframe with no same-origin server. Every external origin must be declared in CSP — missing origins fail silently.
Before writing any code, build the app and investigate all origins it references:
- Build the app using the existing build command
- Search the resulting HTML, CSS, and JS for every origin (not just "external" origins — every network request will need CSP approval)
- For each origin found, trace back to source:
- If it comes from a constant → universal (same in dev and prod)
- If it comes from an env var or conditional → note the mechanism and identify both dev and prod values
- Check for third-party libraries that may make their own requests (analytics, error tracking, etc.)
Document your findings as three lists, and note for each origin whether it's universal, dev-only, or prod-only:
- resourceDomains: origins serving images, fonts, styles, scripts
- connectDomains: origins for API/fetch requests
- frameDomains: origins for nested iframes
If no origins are found, the app may not need custom CSP domains.
Step 3: Set Up the MCP Server
Create a new MCP server with tool and resource registration. This wraps the existing web app for MCP hosts.
Dependencies
npm install @modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps @modelcontextprotocol/sdk zod
npm install -D tsx vite vite-plugin-singlefile
Use npm install to add dependencies rather than manually writing version numbers. This lets npm resolve the latest compatible versions. Never specify version numbers from memory.
Server Code
Create server.ts:
import { McpServer } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/mcp.js";
import { StdioServerTransport } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/stdio.js";
import { registerAppTool, registerAppResource, RESOURCE_MIME_TYPE } from "@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps/server";
import fs from "node:fs/promises";
import path from "node:path";
import { z } from "zod";
const server = new McpServer({ name: "my-app", version: "1.0.0" });
const resourceUri = "ui://my-app/mcp-app.html";
registerAppTool(server, "show-app", {
description: "Displays the app with the given parameters",
inputSchema: { query: z.string().describe("The search query") },
_meta: { ui: { resourceUri } },
}, async (args) => {
return {
content: [{ type: "text", text: `Showing app for: ${args.query}` }],
structuredContent: { query: args.query },
};
});
registerAppResource(server, {
uri: resourceUri,
name: "My App UI",
mimeType: RESOURCE_MIME_TYPE,
}, async () => {
const html = await fs.readFile(
path.resolve(import.meta.dirname, "dist", "mcp-app.html"),
"utf-8",
);
return { contents: [{ uri: resourceUri, mimeType: RESOURCE_MIME_TYPE, text: html }] };
});
const transport = new StdioServerTransport();
await server.connect(transport);
Package Scripts
Add to package.json:
{
"scripts": {
"build:ui": "vite build",
"build:server": "tsc",
"build": "npm run build:ui && npm run build:server",
"serve": "tsx server.ts"
}
}
Step 4: Adapt the Build Pipeline
The MCP App build must produce a single HTML file using vite-plugin-singlefile. The standalone web app build stays unchanged.
Vite Configuration
Create or update vite.config.ts. If the app already uses Vite, add vite-plugin-singlefile and a separate entry point for the MCP App build. If it uses another bundler, add a Vite config alongside for the MCP App build only.
import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import { viteSingleFile } from "vite-plugin-singlefile";
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [viteSingleFile()],
build: {
outDir: "dist",
rollupOptions: {
input: "mcp-app.html",
},
},
});
Add framework-specific Vite plugins as needed (e.g., @vitejs/plugin-react for React, @vitejs/plugin-vue for Vue).
HTML Entry Point
Create mcp-app.html as a separate entry point for the MCP App build. This can point to the same app code — the runtime detection handles the rest:
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
<title>MCP App</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="root"></div>
<script type="module" src="./src/main.ts"></script>
</body>
</html>
Two-Phase Build
- Vite bundles the UI →
dist/mcp-app.html (single file with all assets inlined)
- Server is compiled separately (TypeScript → JavaScript)
The standalone web app continues to build and deploy as before.
Step 5: Add MCP App Initialization Alongside Existing Logic
This is the core step. Instead of replacing the app's data sources, add an alternative initialization path for MCP mode. The app detects its environment at startup and reads parameters from the right source.
The Hybrid Pattern
import { App, PostMessageTransport } from "@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps";
const isMcpApp = window.location.origin === "null";
async function getParameters(): Promise<Record<string, string>> {
if (isMcpApp) {
const app = new App({ name: "My App", version: "1.0.0" });
const params = await new Promise<Record<string, string>>((resolve) => {
app.ontoolresult = (result) => resolve(result.structuredContent ?? {});
});
await app.connect(new PostMessageTransport());
return params;
} else {
return Object.fromEntries(new URL(location.href).searchParams);
}
}
async function main() {
const params = await getParameters();
renderApp(params);
}
main().catch(console.error);
URL Parameters (Hybrid)
const query = new URL(location.href).searchParams.get("q");
renderApp(query);
async function getQuery(): Promise<string> {
if (isMcpApp) {
const app = new App({ name: "My App", version: "1.0.0" });
return new Promise((resolve) => {
app.ontoolinput = (params) => resolve(params.arguments?.q ?? "");
app.connect(new PostMessageTransport());
});
}
return new URL(location.href).searchParams.get("q") ?? "";
}
const query = await getQuery();
renderApp(query);
API Calls (Hybrid)
const data = await fetch("/api/data").then(r => r.json());
async function fetchData(): Promise<any> {
if (isMcpApp) {
const result = await app.callServerTool("fetch-data", {});
return result.structuredContent;
}
return fetch("/api/data").then(r => r.json());
}
Or keep direct API calls in both modes with CSP connectDomains:
localStorage / sessionStorage (Hybrid)
const saved = localStorage.getItem("settings");
function getSettings(): any {
if (isMcpApp) {
return null;
}
return JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem("settings") ?? "null");
}
Complete Hybrid Example
import { App, PostMessageTransport, applyDocumentTheme, applyHostStyleVariables, applyHostFonts } from "@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps";
const isMcpApp = window.location.origin === "null";
async function initMcpApp(): Promise<Record<string, any>> {
const app = new App({ name: "My App", version: "1.0.0" });
const params = await new Promise<Record<string, any>>((resolve) => {
app.ontoolinput = (input) => resolve(input.arguments ?? {});
});
app.onhostcontextchanged = (ctx) => {
if (ctx.theme) applyDocumentTheme(ctx.theme);
if (ctx.styles?.variables) applyHostStyleVariables(ctx.styles.variables);
if (ctx.styles?.css?.fonts) applyHostFonts(ctx.styles.css.fonts);
if (ctx.safeAreaInsets) {
const { top, right, bottom, left } = ctx.safeAreaInsets;
document.body.style.padding = `${top}px ${right}px ${bottom}px ${left}px`;
}
};
app.onteardown = async () => {
return {};
};
await app.connect(new PostMessageTransport());
return params;
}
async function initStandaloneApp(): Promise<Record<string, any>> {
return Object.fromEntries(new URL(location.href).searchParams);
}
async function main() {
const params = isMcpApp ? await initMcpApp() : await initStandaloneApp();
renderApp(params);
}
main().catch(console.error);
Step 6: Add Host Styling Integration (MCP Mode Only)
When running as an MCP App, integrate with host styling for theme consistency. Use CSS variable fallbacks so the app looks correct in both modes.
Vanilla JS — use helper functions:
import { applyDocumentTheme, applyHostStyleVariables, applyHostFonts } from "@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps";
app.onhostcontextchanged = (ctx) => {
if (ctx.theme) applyDocumentTheme(ctx.theme);
if (ctx.styles?.variables) applyHostStyleVariables(ctx.styles.variables);
if (ctx.styles?.css?.fonts) applyHostFonts(ctx.styles.css.fonts);
};
React — use hooks:
import { useApp, useHostStyles } from "@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps/react";
const { app } = useApp({ appInfo, capabilities, onAppCreated });
useHostStyles(app);
Using variables in CSS — use var() with fallbacks so standalone mode still looks right:
.container {
background: var(--color-background-secondary, #f5f5f5);
color: var(--color-text-primary, #333);
font-family: var(--font-sans, system-ui);
border-radius: var(--border-radius-md, 8px);
}
Key variable groups: --color-background-*, --color-text-*, --color-border-*, --font-sans, --font-mono, --font-text-*-size, --font-heading-*-size, --border-radius-*. See src/spec.types.ts for the full list.
Optional Enhancements
App-Only Helper Tools
For data the UI needs to poll or fetch that the model doesn't need to call directly:
registerAppTool(server, "refresh-data", {
description: "Fetches latest data for the UI",
_meta: { ui: { resourceUri, visibility: ["app"] } },
}, async () => {
const data = await getLatestData();
return { content: [{ type: "text", text: JSON.stringify(data) }] };
});
The UI calls these via app.callServerTool("refresh-data", {}).
Streaming Partial Input
For large tool inputs, use ontoolinputpartial to show progress during LLM generation:
app.ontoolinputpartial = (params) => {
const args = params.arguments;
renderPreview(args);
};
app.ontoolinput = (params) => {
renderFull(params.arguments);
};
Fullscreen Mode
app.onhostcontextchanged = (ctx) => {
if (ctx.availableDisplayModes?.includes("fullscreen")) {
fullscreenBtn.style.display = "block";
}
if (ctx.displayMode) {
container.classList.toggle("fullscreen", ctx.displayMode === "fullscreen");
}
};
async function toggleFullscreen() {
const newMode = currentMode === "fullscreen" ? "inline" : "fullscreen";
const result = await app.requestDisplayMode({ mode: newMode });
currentMode = result.mode;
}
Text Fallback
Always provide a content array for non-UI hosts:
return {
content: [{ type: "text", text: "Fallback description of the result" }],
structuredContent: { },
};
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Forgetting CSP declarations for external origins — fails silently in the sandboxed iframe
- Using
localStorage / sessionStorage in MCP mode — not available in sandboxed iframe; use fallbacks or pass via structuredContent
- Missing
vite-plugin-singlefile — external assets won't load in the iframe
- Registering handlers after
connect() — register ALL handlers BEFORE calling app.connect()
- Hardcoding styles without fallbacks — use host CSS variables with
var(..., fallback) so both modes look correct
- Not handling safe area insets — always apply
ctx.safeAreaInsets in onhostcontextchanged
- Forgetting text
content fallback — always provide content array for non-UI hosts
- Forgetting resource registration — the tool references a
resourceUri that must have a matching resource
- Replacing standalone logic instead of branching — keep the original data sources intact; add the MCP path alongside them
Testing
Using basic-host
Test the MCP App mode with the basic-host example:
npm run build && npm run serve
cd /tmp/mcp-ext-apps/examples/basic-host
npm install
SERVERS='["http://localhost:3001/mcp"]' npm run start
Configure SERVERS with a JSON array of your server URLs (default: http://localhost:3001/mcp).
Verify
- MCP mode: App loads in basic-host without console errors
ontoolinput handler fires with tool arguments
ontoolresult handler fires with tool result
- Host styling (theme, fonts, colors) applies correctly
- External resources load (if CSP domains are configured)
- Standalone mode: App still works when opened directly in a browser