| name | setup-metabase-instance |
| description | Set up and run a local Metabase instance. Downloads the JAR (if Java 21+ is available) or runs via Docker. Also handles stopping running instances. |
Set Up a Local Metabase Instance
This skill helps users run a local Metabase instance for development, testing, or exploration.
Important: Network Access Required
This skill requires network access. All curl, java, and docker commands must be run outside the Cursor sandbox. Request full network access or run outside the sandbox before attempting these commands. Do not run them inside the sandbox as they will fail.
Prerequisites Check
Run these checks in order. Stop at the first successful path.
1. Check for Java 21+
Expand PATH first to avoid the macOS stub at /usr/bin/java:
export PATH=”/opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk/bin:/opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk@21/bin:/opt/homebrew/bin:/usr/local/opt/openjdk/bin:/usr/local/opt/openjdk@21/bin:/usr/local/bin:$PATH”
java -version 2>&1 | head -1
If the output shows Java 21 or higher → use Section A (JAR). Keep this PATH export for all subsequent commands.
If not found or version < 21 → check Docker (step 2).
2. Check for Docker
docker --version 2>&1
If Docker is available: Use the Docker method (Section B).
If neither Java 21+ nor Docker is available: Direct the user to install Docker:
Tell them to re-run this skill after installing Docker.
Section A: JAR Method (Java 21+)
A1. Check for existing Metabase directory
ls -la ./metabase 2>/dev/null
If ./metabase exists and contains files, ask the user:
- "A
./metabase directory already exists. Should I use it (preserving existing data) or remove it and start fresh?"
If the user wants to start fresh:
rm -rf ./metabase
A2. Create directory and download JAR
mkdir -p ./metabase
Get the latest OSS release URL and download:
curl -sL -o ./metabase/metabase.jar https://downloads.metabase.com/latest/metabase.jar
Tell the user this may take a minute (the JAR is ~400MB).
A3. Check if port 3000 is in use
lsof -i :3000 2>/dev/null | grep LISTEN
If the port is in use, ask the user:
- "Port 3000 is already in use. Would you like to use a different port?"
- Suggest port 3001, 3002, etc.
Store the chosen port as $PORT (default: 3000).
A4. Start Metabase in the background
Use the same PATH as in the Java prerequisite step when the agent uses a fresh shell (prepend the macOS Homebrew line again if unsure). Optionally set JAVA_CMD=$(command -v java) after that export so you invoke the same binary you version-checked.
export PATH="/opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk/bin:/opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk@21/bin:/opt/homebrew/bin:/usr/local/opt/openjdk/bin:/usr/local/opt/openjdk@21/bin:/usr/local/bin:$PATH"
cd ./metabase && \
MB_DB_FILE=./metabase.db \
MB_JETTY_PORT=$PORT \
nohup java -jar metabase.jar > metabase.log 2>&1 &
echo $! > metabase.pid
Tell the user: "Metabase is starting in the background. I'll check when it's ready..."
Also mention:
- "View logs:
tail -f ./metabase/metabase.log"
- "The process ID is saved in
./metabase/metabase.pid"
A5. Wait for Metabase to be ready
Poll the health endpoint every 5 seconds until it returns {"status":"ok"}:
curl -s http://localhost:$PORT/api/health
Keep polling until the response is {"status":"ok"}. Metabase usually starts within 30-60 seconds.
If the health check keeps failing after 2 minutes, check if the process is still running:
ps -p $(cat ./metabase/metabase.pid 2>/dev/null) > /dev/null 2>&1 && echo "Running" || echo "Not running"
tail -50 ./metabase/metabase.log
Once healthy, tell the user: "Metabase is ready at http://localhost:$PORT"
Section B: Docker Method
B1. Check for existing Metabase directory
ls -la ./metabase 2>/dev/null
If ./metabase exists and contains files, ask the user:
- "A
./metabase directory already exists. Should I use it (preserving existing data) or remove it and start fresh?"
If the user wants to start fresh:
rm -rf ./metabase
B2. Create directory for data persistence
mkdir -p ./metabase
B3. Check if port 3000 is in use
lsof -i :3000 2>/dev/null | grep LISTEN
If the port is in use, ask the user for an alternative port. Store as $PORT (default: 3000).
B4. Check for existing Metabase container
docker ps -a --filter "name=metabase-local" --format "{{.Names}} {{.Status}}"
If a container named metabase-local exists:
- If running: Ask if they want to stop it and start fresh, or keep using it
- If stopped: Ask if they want to remove it and start fresh, or restart it
To remove an existing container:
docker rm -f metabase-local 2>/dev/null
B5. Get the latest Metabase version
The latest tag on Docker Hub is often outdated. Get the actual latest version from GitHub:
curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/metabase/metabase/releases/latest | grep '"tag_name"' | head -1
This returns something like "tag_name": "v0.52.5". Extract the version (e.g., v0.52.5).
Verify the Docker image exists:
docker manifest inspect metabase/metabase:$VERSION 2>&1 | head -5
If it doesn't exist, fall back to latest.
B6. Start Metabase container
docker run -d \
--name metabase-local \
-p $PORT:3000 \
-v "$(pwd)/metabase:/metabase.db" \
-e MB_DB_FILE=/metabase.db/metabase.db \
-e MB_JETTY_HOST=0.0.0.0 \
-e MB_ENABLE_EMBEDDING_SDK=true \
-e MB_ENABLE_EMBEDDING_SIMPLE=true \
metabase/metabase:$VERSION
Tell the user: "Metabase is starting via Docker. I'll check when it's ready..."
B7. Wait for Metabase to be ready
Poll the health endpoint every 5 seconds until it returns {"status":"ok"}:
curl -s http://localhost:$PORT/api/health
Keep polling until the response is {"status":"ok"}. Metabase usually starts within 30-60 seconds.
If the health check keeps failing after 2 minutes, check the container status and logs:
docker ps --filter "name=metabase-local" --format "{{.Status}}"
docker logs metabase-local 2>&1 | tail -50
Once healthy, tell the user:
- "Metabase is ready at
http://localhost:$PORT"
- "View logs:
docker logs -f metabase-local"
Next Steps: MCP Setup
Once the health check passes and Metabase is ready, ask the user:
"Would you like to set up the Metabase MCP so you can query your data directly from the IDE?"
-
If they agree, invoke the setup-metabase-mcp skill. The MCP setup will:
- Configure the MCP server with the local instance URL (
http://localhost:$PORT)
- Guide them through authentication
- Enable querying tables, metrics, and dashboards from the IDE
-
If they decline, let them know they can set up the MCP later by asking for "Metabase MCP setup".
Stopping Metabase
When the user asks to stop Metabase, determine which method was used.
Stop JAR-based Metabase
if [ -f ./metabase/metabase.pid ]; then
kill $(cat ./metabase/metabase.pid) 2>/dev/null && rm ./metabase/metabase.pid && echo "Metabase stopped"
else
pkill -f "metabase.jar" && echo "Metabase stopped"
fi
Stop Docker-based Metabase
docker stop metabase-local && echo "Metabase stopped"
To also remove the container (but keep data):
docker rm metabase-local
Checking Metabase Status
Check JAR status
if [ -f ./metabase/metabase.pid ] && ps -p $(cat ./metabase/metabase.pid) > /dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "Metabase (JAR) is running with PID $(cat ./metabase/metabase.pid)"
else
echo "Metabase (JAR) is not running"
fi
Check Docker status
docker ps --filter "name=metabase-local" --format "{{.Names}}: {{.Status}}"
Environment Variables Reference
These can be customized when starting Metabase:
| Variable | Default | Description |
|---|
MB_DB_FILE | ./metabase.db | H2 database file location |
MB_JETTY_PORT | 3000 | Port Metabase listens on |
MB_JETTY_HOST | localhost | Network interface (use 0.0.0.0 for Docker) |
For all options, see the Metabase Environment Variables documentation.
Troubleshooting
"Address already in use"
Another process is using the port. Either stop that process or choose a different port.
"Java version too old"
Install Java 21+ or use the Docker method instead.
"Unable to locate a Java Runtime" on macOS
You are likely hitting /usr/bin/java (stub). Prepend Homebrew OpenJDK to PATH as in Check for Java 21+, or call the real binary explicitly, e.g. /opt/homebrew/bin/java -version.
Metabase starts but is slow
First startup takes longer as it initializes the database. Subsequent starts are faster.
"Cannot connect to Docker daemon"
Make sure Docker Desktop is running (macOS/Windows) or the Docker service is started (Linux).