| name | unifi-network |
| description | How to manage UniFi network infrastructure — devices, clients, firewall, VPN, routing, WLANs, and statistics. Use this skill when the user mentions UniFi, Ubiquiti, network management, WiFi configuration, firewall rules, port forwarding, VPN, QoS, bandwidth, connected clients, network devices, or any UniFi networking task. |
UniFi Network MCP Server
You have access to a UniFi Network MCP server that lets you query and manage a UniFi Network Controller. It provides 169 tools covering devices, clients, firewall, VPN, routing, WLANs, statistics, and more.
Tool Discovery
The server uses lazy loading by default — only meta-tools are registered initially. Use them to find and call any tool:
| Meta-Tool | Purpose |
|---|
unifi_tool_index | Discover tools by name/description; use category, search, or include_schemas to filter |
unifi_execute | Call any tool by name (essential in lazy mode) |
unifi_batch | Run multiple tools in parallel |
unifi_batch_status | Check async batch job status |
Workflow: Call unifi_tool_index to find the right tool, then unifi_execute to call it. For multiple independent queries, use unifi_batch — it's significantly faster than sequential calls.
Safety Model
The server is "secure by default" because it controls real network infrastructure.
Read operations — always available. All list_*, get_*, and query tools work without special permissions.
Mutations — permission-gated with mixed defaults:
- Enabled by default: firewall policies, port forwards, traffic routes, QoS rules, VPN clients, ACL rules, vouchers, user groups
- Disabled by default (high-risk): networks, WLANs, devices, clients, routes, VPN servers
- Delete operations — always disabled by default
If a mutation fails with a permission error, tell the user the env var to set: UNIFI_POLICY_NETWORK_<CATEGORY>_<ACTION>=true
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.
Device Classification
unifi_list_devices returns a device_category field that accurately classifies devices:
ap — real access points (excludes USP Smart Power strips that report as uap type)
switch — switches
gateway — UDM/USG gateways
pdu — smart power strips, UPS devices
wan — cable internet (UCI) devices
Use device_category (not type) when counting or filtering devices. The device_type filter parameter uses this classification.
Additional enriched fields: upgradable (bool), connection_network (VLAN name), uplink (topology), load_avg_1, mem_pct, model_eol.
Efficiency Tips
- Batch reads —
unifi_batch for parallel queries (biggest efficiency win)
unifi_lookup_by_ip — faster than listing all clients when you know the IP
- Use filters — most list tools accept time range, type, and ID parameters
unifi_get_top_clients — fastest way to find bandwidth hogs
- Check health first —
unifi_get_network_health for quick "is everything OK?"
- Device counts — use
device_category field, not type, for accurate AP/switch/PDU counts
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-network:unifi-network-setup or set env vars manually:
UNIFI_NETWORK_HOST=192.168.1.1
UNIFI_NETWORK_USERNAME=admin
UNIFI_NETWORK_PASSWORD=your-password
Other UniFi Servers
If the user also has cameras or door access control, other UniFi MCP plugins are available:
unifi-protect — security cameras, NVR, recordings, smart detections
unifi-access — door locks, credentials, visitors, access policies
Cameras and access readers appear as network clients — use unifi_lookup_by_ip to cross-reference if troubleshooting connectivity for those devices.
Tool Reference
For the complete list of all 169 tools organized by category with descriptions, tips, and common scenarios, read references/network-tools.md.