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sfcc-dev-mcp

v1.0.22

Published

MCP server for Salesforce B2C Commerce Cloud development assistance including logs, debugging, and development tools

Readme

SFCC Development MCP Server

npm version License: MIT

An AI-powered Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that provides comprehensive access to Salesforce B2C Commerce Cloud development tools, documentation, and runtime diagnostics.

✨ Key Features

  • 🔍 Complete SFCC Documentation Access - Search and explore all SFCC API classes and methods
  • 🏗️ SFRA Documentation - Enhanced access to Storefront Reference Architecture documentation
  • 🧱 ISML Template Reference - Complete ISML element documentation with examples and usage guidance
  • 📊 Log Analysis Tools - Real-time error monitoring, debugging, and job log analysis for SFCC instances
  • ⚙️ System Object Definitions - Explore custom attributes and site preferences
  • 🧪 Script Debugger - Execute and inspect script-debugger endpoints in credentialed mode
  • 🚀 Cartridge Generation - Automated cartridge structure creation with workspace-bound path safety (writes stay inside workspace roots, or current working directory fallback when roots are unavailable; home-directory fallback is blocked)
  • 🧩 Agent Skill Bootstrap - Install or merge AGENTS.md and bundled skills into the current project or a temp directory for AI assistants
  • ✅ Tool Argument Validation - Runtime schema validation enforces required fields, type checks, enum constraints, integer/numeric bounds, and strict unknown-key checks for object schemas (top-level and nested) before handler execution
  • ⏱️ MCP Progress + Cancellation - Tool calls honor request cancellation signals and emit out-of-band notifications/progress updates when clients provide a progressToken

🚀 Quick Start

Option 1: Documentation-Only Mode (No SFCC credentials needed)

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "sfcc-dev": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["sfcc-dev-mcp"]
    }
  }
}

Option 2: Full Mode (With SFCC credentials for log and job analysis)

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "sfcc-dev": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["sfcc-dev-mcp", "--dw-json", "/path/to/your/dw.json"]
    }
  }
}

Create a dw.json file with your SFCC credentials. You can use either auth mode (or both):

  • Basic auth: username + password
  • OAuth: client-id + client-secret
{
  "hostname": "your-instance.sandbox.us01.dx.commercecloud.salesforce.com",
  "username": "your-username",
  "password": "your-password", 
  "client-id": "your-client-id",
  "client-secret": "your-client-secret"
}

At least one complete credential pair is required when hostname is set. If credentials are provided, hostname is also required.

Option 3: Auto-Discovery (Recommended for VS Code users)

Simply open a VS Code workspace that contains a dw.json file - the server will automatically discover and use it:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "sfcc-dev": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["sfcc-dev-mcp"]
    }
  }
}

🔧 Configuration Discovery Priority

The server discovers SFCC credentials in this order (highest priority first):

| Priority | Source | Description | |----------|--------|-------------| | 1 | --dw-json CLI parameter | Explicit path to dw.json file | | 2 | Environment variables | SFCC_HOSTNAME, SFCC_USERNAME, SFCC_PASSWORD, SFCC_CLIENT_ID, SFCC_CLIENT_SECRET | | 3 | MCP workspace roots | Automatically discovers dw.json in your VS Code workspace folder(s), and refreshes when the client sends notifications/roots/list_changed |

Note: The server no longer searches the current working directory by default, as MCP servers often start with cwd set to the user's home directory. The MCP workspace roots mechanism provides reliable project context.

🎯 Operating Modes

| Mode | Tools Available | SFCC Credentials Required | |------|----------------|---------------------------| | Documentation-Only | 18 tools | ❌ No | | Full Mode | 40 tools | ✅ Yes |

Documentation-Only Mode

Perfect for learning and development, no SFCC instance required:

  • Complete SFCC API documentation (5 tools)
  • SFRA documentation (5 tools)
  • ISML template documentation (5 tools)
  • Cartridge generation (1 tool, writes constrained to workspace roots/cwd)
  • Agent instruction bootstrap (2 tools) to copy/merge AGENTS.md and skills, or disable future prompts

Full Mode

Complete development experience with live SFCC instance access:

  • All documentation-only features (18 tools)
  • Real-time log analysis and job logs (13 tools)
  • System object definitions (6 tools)
  • Code version management (2 tools)
  • Script debugger operations (1 tool)

🏗️ Architecture Overview

This server is built around a capability-gated, modular handler architecture that cleanly separates tool routing from domain logic:

Core Layers

  • Tool Schemas (src/core/tool-schemas/): Modular, category-based tool definitions (documentation, SFRA, ISML, logs, job logs, system objects, cartridge, code versions, agent instructions, script debugger). Re-exported via tool-definitions.ts.
  • Server Orchestration Modules (src/core/server-tool-catalog.ts, src/core/server-tool-call-lifecycle.ts, src/core/server-workspace-discovery.ts): Keeps server.ts focused by extracting capability-aware tool catalog logic, tools/call lifecycle (progress/cancellation/preflight), and workspace roots reconfiguration flow.
  • Tool Argument Validator (src/core/tool-argument-validator.ts): Enforces runtime argument shape at the MCP boundary for all tools (required fields, primitive/object/array types, enum checks, integer/numeric ranges, string patterns/length, and strict unknown-key checks for object schemas at top-level and nested levels) before tool dispatch.
  • OCAPI Query Coverage (src/core/tool-schemas/shared-schemas.ts): Shared search schemas include text_query, term_query, bool_query, filtered_query, and match_all_query so MCP boundary validation aligns with supported OCAPI query patterns.
  • Handlers (src/core/handlers/): Each category has a handler extending a common base for timing, structured logging, and error normalization, with config-driven wiring via ConfiguredClientHandler to reduce repetitive boilerplate (e.g. log-handler, docs-handler, isml-handler, system-object-handler).
  • Clients (src/clients/): Encapsulate domain operations (OCAPI, SFRA docs, ISML docs, modular log analysis, script debugger, cartridge generation, agent-instruction sync). Handlers delegate to these so orchestration and computation remain separate.
  • Services (src/services/): Dependency-injected abstractions for filesystem and path operations — improves testability and isolates side effects.
  • Modular Log System (src/clients/logs/): Reader (range/tail optimization), discovery, processor (line → structured entry), analyzer (patterns & health), formatter (human output) for maintainable evolution.
  • Configuration Factory (src/config/configuration-factory.ts): Determines capabilities (canAccessLogs, canAccessOCAPI) based on provided credentials and filters exposed tools accordingly (principle of least privilege).
  • Shared Credential Validation (src/config/credential-validation.ts): Centralizes auth-pair completeness and hostname-format validation for both dw.json loading and runtime configuration creation.
  • Call-time Capability Guarding (src/core/server.ts): Rejects execution of tools that are unavailable in the current mode, so hidden tools are not callable via direct tools/call requests.
  • Call Lifecycle Signals (src/core/server.ts): tools/call handling supports cancellation via request abort signals and emits best-effort progress notifications when the caller provides _meta.progressToken.
  • Tool Error Sanitization (src/core/tool-error-response.ts): Sanitizes upstream execution errors before returning MCP tool responses, reducing accidental leakage of backend payload details.
  • Runtime WebDAV Verification (src/core/server.ts): For OAuth-only configurations (client-id/client-secret without username/password), log/job-log/script-debugger tool exposure is gated by a one-time WebDAV capability probe to avoid false-positive tool availability.
  • CLI Option Helpers (src/config/cli-options.ts): Centralizes command-line parsing and environment credential detection for predictable startup behavior.
  • Shared Path Security Policy (src/config/path-security-policy.ts): Reuses allow/block path rules across workspace-root discovery and secure dw.json loading.
  • Shared Abort Utility (src/utils/abort-utils.ts): Centralized timeout and abort-signal composition used by HTTP and debugger clients for consistent cancellation semantics and timer cleanup.

Why This Matters

  • Extensibility: Adding a new tool usually means adding a schema + minimal handler logic (or a new handler if a new domain).
  • Security: Tools that require credentials are never exposed when capability flags are false.
  • Testability: Unit tests target clients & modules; integration/MCP tests validate handler routing and response structure.
  • Performance: Tail log reads + lightweight caching (cache.ts, log-cache.ts) reduce unnecessary I/O.

Adding a New Tool (High-Level)

  1. Add schema to the appropriate file in src/core/tool-schemas/ (or create new file for new category).
  2. Export new schema from src/core/tool-schemas/index.ts if adding a new file.
  3. Implement domain logic in a client/service (avoid bloating handlers).
  4. Extend an existing handler or create a new one if it's a new category.
  5. (Only for a new category) register the new handler inside registerHandlers() in server.ts.
  6. Discover actual response shape with npx aegis query before writing tests.
  7. Add Jest unit tests + YAML MCP tests (docs vs full mode if credentials required).
  8. Update documentation (AGENTS.md + README counts if changed).

For a deeper internal view, see the Development Guide in the docs site.

🤖 AI Interface Setup

Choose your preferred AI assistant:

| Interface | Best For | Setup Guide | |-----------|----------|-------------| | Claude Desktop | Multi-turn conversations, debugging | 📖 Setup Guide | | GitHub Copilot | VS Code integration, inline suggestions | 📖 Setup Guide | | Cursor | Modern AI-powered editor | 📖 Setup Guide |

📦 Installation

Using npx (Recommended)

Tip: Add -y (or --yes) to suppress the interactive prompt npx shows before downloading a package. This prevents AI clients (Claude Desktop, Copilot, Cursor) from hanging waiting for confirmation.

# Test the server
npx -y sfcc-dev-mcp

# Use with your configuration
npx -y sfcc-dev-mcp --dw-json /path/to/your/dw.json

Global Installation

npm install -g sfcc-dev-mcp
sfcc-dev-mcp --dw-json /path/to/your/dw.json

🐛 Debug Mode & Logging

Enable Debug Logging

# Enable debug mode for detailed logging
npx -y sfcc-dev-mcp --debug

# Or with configuration file
npx -y sfcc-dev-mcp --dw-json /path/to/your/dw.json --debug

--debug accepts true/false, 1/0, or yes/no. Invalid values fail fast with a clear error message.

Log File Locations

The server writes logs to your system's temporary directory:

  • macOS: /var/folders/{user-id}/T/sfcc-mcp-logs/
  • Linux: /tmp/sfcc-mcp-logs/
  • Windows: %TEMP%\sfcc-mcp-logs\

Log Files Created:

  • sfcc-mcp-info.log - General application logs and startup messages
  • sfcc-mcp-debug.log - Detailed debug information (only when --debug is enabled)
  • sfcc-mcp-error.log - Error messages and stack traces
  • sfcc-mcp-warn.log - Warning messages

Finding Your Log Directory

// The exact path varies by system - to find yours:
node -e "console.log(require('os').tmpdir() + '/sfcc-mcp-logs')"

🧪 Release Validation (Maintainers)

The publish workflow runs MCP tests against the just-published npm artifact (npx sfcc-dev-mcp@<version>) before publishing to the MCP Registry.

You can run the same validation locally:

# Ensure docs-site tool catalog stays in sync with runtime tool definitions
npm run validate:tools-sync

# Ensure docs-site skills catalog stays in sync with bundled skills
npm run validate:skills-sync

# Ensure MCP registry metadata stays in sync with package.json
npm run validate:server-json

# In a separate terminal, start the mock server first for full-mode MCP tests
npm run test:mock-server:start

# Uses latest published version by default
npm run test:mcp:published-npx

# Or pin a specific published version
bash ./scripts/test-published-npx.sh 1.0.21

In GitHub Actions, the publish workflow manages the mock server lifecycle automatically.

📖 Documentation

📚 Complete Documentation - Comprehensive guides and references

Documentation source lives in docs-site-v2/ (VitePress). The legacy React site remains in docs-site/.

Quick Links:

🛠️ Example AI Interactions

🧑‍💻 "Create a new SFCC controller for product search"
🤖 Generates complete controller with proper imports, route handling, and SFRA patterns

🧑‍💻 "What's wrong with my checkout flow? Check the logs"  
🤖 Analyzes recent error logs, identifies issues, and suggests fixes

🧑‍💻 "Show me how to implement OCAPI hooks for order validation"
🤖 Retrieves related SFCC classes and methods, then proposes a concrete hook implementation pattern

🔒 Security Notes

  • Local Development Focus: Designed for individual developer use on local machines
  • Credential Protection: dw.json files should never be committed to version control
  • Network Security: All API calls use HTTPS with proper authentication
  • No Data Storage: Server doesn't persist any SFCC data locally

🔮 Future Plans

We're continuously improving the SFCC Development MCP Server with exciting new features planned:

🎯 Upcoming Enhancements

  • 🧠 Smarter Log Fetching - Enhanced log analysis with intelligent filtering, pattern recognition, and contextual error correlation
  • 🚀 Deployment Tools - Integration with SFCC deployment processes and code version management

🤝 We Welcome Your Contributions!

Have ideas for new features or improvements? We'd love to hear from you!

  • 💡 Feature Requests: Open an issue to discuss your ideas
  • 🐛 Bug Reports: Help us improve by reporting any issues you encounter
  • 🔧 Pull Requests: Contribute code, documentation, or examples
  • 📚 Documentation: Help expand our guides and best practices

Check out our Contributing Guide to get started, or browse our open issues to see where you can help.

Your expertise and feedback make this tool better for the entire SFCC community!

🤝 Contributing

We welcome contributions! Please see our Contributing Guide for details.

📄 License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.


🚀 Ready to supercharge your SFCC development with AI?

📖 Get Started with the Full Documentation