Nodit Labs/nodit-mcp-server
Built by Metorial, the integration platform for agentic AI.
Nodit Labs/nodit-mcp-server
Server Summary
Query real-time blockchain data
Analyze multi-chain blockchain data
Interact with EVM-compatible networks
Interact with non-EVM networks
Leverage Web3 Data APIs
Utilize GraphQL indexer APIs
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that connects AI agents and developers to structured, context-ready blockchain data across multiple networks through Nodit's Web3 infrastructure.
Nodit MCP Server simplifies how AI models and applications interact with blockchain ecosystems.
Instead of handling complex node RPCs, raw event logs, or chain-specific data structures, developers can access normalized, multi-chain blockchain data in a format optimized for AI reasoning and decision-making.
With Nodit's MCP, you can:
Supported networks include Ethereum, Base, Optimism, Arbitrum, Polygon, Aptos, Bitcoin, Dogecoin, TRON, XRPL, and more.
Nodit MCP Server provides tools enabling AI agents to dynamically discover, understand, and interact with Nodit's Web3 APIs and data infrastructure. The tools minimize token consumption and maintain a lightweight context by modularizing API interactions into distinct steps:
List API Categories (list_nodit_api_categories
)
Retrieve a list of high-level API categories available.
List API Operations (list_nodit_node_apis
, list_nodit_data_apis
, list_nodit_aptos_indexer_api_query_root
,list_nodit_webhook_apis
)
Fetch available operations within a selected category (Node APIs, Data APIs, Aptos Indexer APIs, Webhook APIs).
Get API Specification (get_nodit_api_spec
,get_nodit_aptos_indexer_api_spec
)
Obtain detailed information for a specific API operation (parameters, request/response schema).
Call API (call_nodit_api
,call_nodit_aptos_indexer_api
)
Execute an API call using the operationId and validated parameters.
Nodit MCP Server communicates using the standard JSON-RPC over stdio protocol, following the Model Context Protocol (MCP) conventions. Currently, only stdio-based communication is supported for server-client interactions.
The following are the key features and supported blockchain networks provided through Nodit MCP Server for AI agents and LLMs.
For detailed API specifications and usage guidelines, please refer to the Nodit Developer Documentation.
RPC Node & Node APIs
Access blockchain node endpoints through Nodit's professionally operated infrastructure.
Supports real-time network queries, transaction submissions, smart contract interactions, and more.
Web3 Data APIs
High-level APIs for accessing meticulously indexed blockchain data.
Includes processed datasets such as block and transaction details, token transfer histories, account-level transaction summaries, and asset movement details — information that would be difficult to assemble directly through raw RPC calls.
GraphQL Indexer APIs (Aptos only)
Query detailed Aptos blockchain activities through GraphQL endpoints.
Supported Networks
npx @noditlabs/nodit-mcp-server@latest
# Clone the repository
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/noditlabs/nodit-mcp-server.git
# Move into the project directory
cd nodit-mcp-server
# Install dependencies
npm install
# Build the project
npm run build
Before starting, set your Nodit API key:
export NODIT_API_KEY=your-api-key
Then start the server:
node build/index.js
Once the Nodit MCP Server is running locally, you can communicate with it using JSON-RPC over stdio.
Here’s how you can send a basic request to the server:
Example: List available tools
You can directly input the JSON-RPC payload:
{"method":"tools/list","params":{},"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1}
Or, you can pipe the request using the echo
command:
echo '{"method":"tools/list","params":{},"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1}' | node build/index.js
Example: Call a specific tool (list_nodit_api_categories)
echo '{"method":"tools/call","params":{"name":"list_nodit_api_categories","arguments":{}},"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1}' | node build/index.js
Add the following configuration to your .cursor/mcp.json
or claude_desktop_config.json
:
Cursor
~/.cursor/mcp.json
C:\Users\\.cursor\mcp.json
Claude Desktop
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
C:\Users\\AppData\Roaming\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
{
"mcpServers": {
"nodit": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["@noditlabs/nodit-mcp-server@latest"],
"env": {
"NODIT_API_KEY": "****"
}
}
}
}
🔔 Important
Replace****
with your actual Nodit API key.
If the API key is not configured properly, API requests will fail due to authentication errors.
You can also use Nodit MCP Server directly with Claude CLI for a quick setup.
Add Nodit MCP Server with the following commands:
# Add the Nodit MCP server
claude mcp add nodit-mcp-server npx @noditlabs/nodit-mcp-server
# Set API Key
export NODIT_API_KEY=your-api-key
# Start Claude with the Nodit MCP server enabled
claude
If you’re using an AI tool that supports Remote MCP integration, you can connect to Nodit’s Remote MCP Server without running a local MCP server. This allows you to use Nodit MCP features directly within your AI environment.
Use the following endpoint to connect to the Nodit Remote MCP Server. Make sure to replace INSERT_YOUR_API_KEY with your actual Nodit API Key.
https://mcp.nodit.io/sse?apiKey=INSERT_YOUR_API_KEY
If you’re on the Claude Enterprise, Pro, or Max plan, you can integrate the Remote MCP Server.
Once the integration is complete, you’ll see that Nodit MCP has been added under the Search and Tools section on the Claude main screen.
To connect Nodit MCP to Cursor IDE: 1. Open Preferences > Cursor Settings > MCP Tools. 2. Click [+ New MCP Server] to open the mcp.json configuration file.
You can also open and edit the mcp.json file directly at the following path:
~/.cursor/mcp.json
C:\Users\\.cursor\mcp.json
Add the following configuration to the mcpServers object. If you already have other MCP servers configured, separate each entry with a comma.
{
"mcpServers": {
"nodit": {
"url": "https://mcp.nodit.io/sse?apiKey=INSERT_YOUR_API_KEY"
}
}
}
Once added, go back to MCP Tools in the Cursor interface and enable the nodit MCP by toggling it on. When the status shows “9 tools enabled” in green, the connection is complete.
If you are running the MCP server in combination with Claude Desktop or other tools that rely on a local Node.js installation, you may encounter issues due to:
Follow the steps below to verify that Node.js 18+ is properly installed and recognized on your system.
Run the following command in your terminal to check the version:
node --version
You should see a version number starting with v18 or higher (e.g., v18.19.0).
If not, you may need to install a compatible version or switch to it.
[!TIP] Claude Desktop may not use the same Node.js version as your terminal. If you have multiple installations (e.g., via Homebrew, nvm, or direct installer), it may default to an unexpected version. To list all common installation paths:
# Homebrew installation ls /usr/local/bin/node ls /opt/homebrew/bin/node # nvm installations ls ~/.nvm/versions/node/ # System installation ls /usr/bin/node
If you don’t have a compatible version, install Node.js using one of the following methods:
bashbrew install node@20
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.0/install.sh | bash
nvm install 20
nvm use 20
nvm alias default 20
Claude Desktop inherits the PATH from your system environment. In your terminal, run:
which node
This displays the path of the Node.js binary currently active in your terminal. This is the path that Claude is likely to use when launched from that terminal.
nvm use 18 # Set proper version
nvm alias default 18
export PATH="/opt/homebrew/bin:$PATH" # for Apple Silicon
# or
export PATH="/usr/local/bin:$PATH" # for Intel Macs
We recommend sticking to a single installation method (e.g., either nvm or Homebrew) to avoid version conflicts.
After making changes, restart Claude Desktop to ensure it picks up the correct environment variables and Node.js version.
Once Nodit MCP is connected, you can use natural language to directly query blockchain data from multiple networks. The examples below illustrate just a few of the many possibilities — feel free to go beyond them and explore your own use cases.
Summarize the recent activity of 0xabc…def across Ethereum and Arbitrum. Include major transactions, token transfers, and NFT interactions over the past 7 days.
What fungible and non-fungible tokens does this wallet hold across Ethereum and Polygon? Include balances and token names.
Analyze the risk profile of wallet 0xabc… based on its recent on-chain behavior.
Analyze how users interacted with the contract at 0xcontract… on Ethereum over the last week.
Analyze the last 10 blocks on Arbitrum.
Based on wallet 0xabc…’s holdings, recommend optimal DeFi strategies across Ethereum and Arbitrum.
Create a daily summary report for 0xdao… including token balances, inflow/outflow, and governance activity.
Write TypeScript code using fetch to retrieve all ERC-20 transfers for 0xabc… from Ethereum using Nodit’s Node API.
Build a simple dashboard to visualize how assets have moved in recent XRPL transactions.
Build a dashboard that aggregates blockchain data across multiple chains using Nodit.
Nodit MCP Server provides structured context to help LLM-based agents utilize Nodit's APIs effectively.
Its responsibilities include:
However, the following are outside the MCP's control:
Nodit MCP Server focuses on delivering accurate and structured API context,
but does not guarantee the final reasoning outcomes or behavior of external LLMs.
This project is licensed under the Apache License 2.0.
Refer to the LICENSE file for full license terms.
Relevant legal notices are provided in the NOTICE file.
"Nodit" and the Nodit logo are trademarks of Lambda256.
Use of the name or logo without prior written permission is prohibited.
© Lambda256. All rights reserved.