
Nile Database
OfficialConnects AI applications to Nile Database services through the Model Context Protocol, enabling database operations and management directly from LLM workflows.
Integrates with Nile Database services to enable database operations through TypeScript-based server implementation supporting both stdio and HTTP communication modes for seamless database functionality in AI workflows.
What it does
- Create and delete Nile databases
- Execute SQL queries on databases
- Manage database credentials
- List available regions
- Get database details and status
Best for
About Nile Database
Nile Database is an official MCP server published by niledatabase that provides AI assistants with tools and capabilities via the Model Context Protocol. Integrate Nile Database for seamless TypeScript-based server operations, supporting stdio and HTTP for AI workflow datab It is categorized under databases.
How to install
You can install Nile Database in your AI client of choice. Use the install panel on this page to get one-click setup for Cursor, Claude Desktop, VS Code, and other MCP-compatible clients. This server runs locally on your machine via the stdio transport.
License
Nile Database is released under the MIT license. This is a permissive open-source license, meaning you can freely use, modify, and distribute the software.
Nile MCP Server
Learn more ↗️
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Issues
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server implementation for Nile database platform. This server allows LLM applications to interact with Nile platform through a standardized interface.
Features
- Database Management: Create, list, get details, and delete databases
- Credential Management: Create and list database credentials
- Region Management: List available regions for database creation
- SQL Query Support: Execute SQL queries directly on Nile databases
- MCP Protocol Support: Full implementation of the Model Context Protocol
- Type Safety: Written in TypeScript with full type checking
- Error Handling: Comprehensive error handling and user-friendly error messages
- Test Coverage: Comprehensive test suite using Jest
- Environment Management: Automatic loading of environment variables from .env file
- Input Validation: Schema-based input validation using Zod
Installation
Install the stable version:
npm install @niledatabase/nile-mcp-server
For the latest alpha/preview version:
npm install @niledatabase/nile-mcp-server@alpha
This will install @niledatabase/nile-mcp-server in your node_modules folder. For example: node_modules/@niledatabase/nile-mcp-server/dist/
Manual Installation
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/yourusername/nile-mcp-server.git
cd nile-mcp-server
# Install dependencies
npm install
# Build the project
npm run build
Other mcp package managers
- npx @michaellatman/mcp-get@latest install @niledatabase/nile-mcp-server
Starting the Server
There are several ways to start the server:
- Direct Node Execution:
node dist/index.js - Development Mode (with auto-rebuild):
npm run dev
The server will start and listen for MCP protocol messages. You should see startup logs indicating:
- Environment variables loaded
- Server instance created
- Tools initialized
- Transport connection established
To stop the server, press Ctrl+C.
Verifying the Server is Running
When the server starts successfully, you should see logs similar to:
[info] Starting Nile MCP Server...
[info] Loading environment variables...
[info] Environment variables loaded successfully
[info] Creating server instance...
[info] Tools initialized successfully
[info] Setting up stdio transport...
[info] Server started successfully
If you see these logs, the server is ready to accept commands from Claude Desktop.
Configuration
Create a .env file in the root directory with your Nile credentials:
NILE_API_KEY=your_api_key_here
NILE_WORKSPACE_SLUG=your_workspace_slug
To create a Nile API key, log in to your Nile account, click Workspaces in the top-left, select your workspace, and navigate to the Security section in the left menu.
Using with Claude Desktop
Setup
- Install Claude Desktop if you haven't already
- Build the project:
npm run build - Open Claude Desktop
- Go to Settings > MCP Servers
- Click "Add Server"
- Add the following configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"nile-database": {
"command": "node",
"args": [
"/path/to/your/nile-mcp-server/dist/index.js"
],
"env": {
"NILE_API_KEY": "your_api_key_here",
"NILE_WORKSPACE_SLUG": "your_workspace_slug"
}
}
}
}
Replace:
/path/to/your/nile-mcp-serverwith the absolute path to your project directoryyour_api_key_herewith your Nile API keyyour_workspace_slugwith your Nile workspace slug
Using with Cursor
Setup
- Install Cursor if you haven't already
- Build the project:
npm run build - Open Cursor
- Go to Settings (⌘,) > Features > MCP Servers
- Click "Add New MCP Server"
- Configure the server:
- Name:
nile-database(or any name you prefer) - Command:
Replace:env NILE_API_KEY=your_key NILE_WORKSPACE_SLUG=your_workspace node /absolute/path/to/nile-mcp-server/dist/index.jsyour_keywith your Nile API keyyour_workspacewith your Nile workspace slug/absolute/path/towith the actual path to your project
- Name:
- Click "Save"
- You should see a green indicator showing that the MCP server is connected
- Restart Cursor for the changes to take effect
Server Modes
The server supports two operational modes:
STDIO Mode (Default)
The default mode uses standard input/output for communication, making it compatible with Claude Desktop and Cursor integrations.
SSE Mode
Server-Sent Events (SSE) mode enables real-time, event-driven communication over HTTP.
To enable SSE mode:
- Set
MCP_SERVER_MODE=ssein your.envfile - The server will start an HTTP server (default port 3000)
- Connect to the SSE endpoint:
http://localhost:3000/sse - Send commands to:
http://localhost:3000/messages
Example SSE usage with curl:
# In terminal 1 - Listen for events
curl -N http://localhost:3000/sse
# In terminal 2 - Send commands
curl -X POST http://localhost:3000/messages \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"type": "function",
"name": "list-databases",
"parameters": {}
}'
Example Prompts
After setting up the MCP server in Cursor, you can use natural language to interact with Nile databases. Here are some example prompts:
Database Management
Create a new database named "my_app" in AWS_US_WEST_2 region
List all my databases
Get details for database "my_app"
Delete database "test_db"
Creating Tables
Create a users table in my_app database with columns:
- tenant_id (UUID, references tenants)
- id (INTEGER)
- email (VARCHAR, unique per tenant)
- name (VARCHAR)
- created_at (TIMESTAMP)
Create a products table in my_app database with columns:
- tenant_id (UUID, references tenants)
- id (INTEGER)
- name (VARCHAR)
- price (DECIMAL)
- description (TEXT)
- created_at (TIMESTAMP)
Querying Data
Execute this query on my_app database:
SELECT * FROM users WHERE tenant_id = 'your-tenant-id' LIMIT 5
Run this query on my_app:
INSERT INTO users (tenant_id, id, email, name)
VALUES ('tenant-id', 1, '[email protected]', 'John Doe')
Show me all products in my_app database with price > 100
Schema Management
Show me the schema for the users table in my_app database
Add a new column 'status' to the users table in my_app database
Create an index on the email column of the users table in my_app
Available Tools
The server provides the following tools for interacting with Nile databases:
Database Management
-
create-database
- Creates a new Nile database
- Parameters:
name(string): Name of the databaseregion(string): EitherAWS_US_WEST_2(Oregon) orAWS_EU_CENTRAL_1(Frankfurt)
- Returns: Database details including ID, name, region, and status
- Example: "Create a database named 'my-app' in AWS_US_WEST_2"
-
list-databases
- Lists all databases in your workspace
- No parameters required
- Returns: List of databases with their IDs, names, regions, and status
- Example: "List all my databases"
-
get-database
- Gets detailed information about a specific database
- Parameters:
name(string): Name of the database
- Returns: Detailed database information including API host and DB host
- Example: "Get details for database 'my-app'"
-
delete-database
- Deletes a database
- Parameters:
name(string): Name of the database to delete
- Returns: Confirmation message
- Example: "Delete database 'my-app'"
Credential Management
-
list-credentials
- Lists all credentials for a database
- Parameters:
databaseName(string): Name of the database
- Returns: List of credentials with IDs, usernames, and creation dates
- Example: "List credentials for database 'my-app'"
-
create-credential
- Creates new credentials for a database
- Parameters:
databaseName(string): Name of the database
- Returns: New credential details including username and one-time password
- Example: "Create new credentials for database 'my-app'"
- Note: Save the password when it's displayed, as it won't be shown again
Region Management
- list-regions
- Lists all available regions for creating databases
- No parameters required
- Returns: List of available AWS regions
- Example: "What regions are available for creating databases?"
SQL Query Execution
- execute-sql
- Executes SQL queries on a Nile database
- Parameters:
databaseName(string): Name of the database to queryquery(string): SQL query to executeconnectionString(string, optional): Pre-existing connection string to use for the query
- Returns: Query results formatted as a markdown table with column headers and row count
- Features:
- Automatic credential management (creates new if not specified)
- Secure SSL connection to database
- Results formatted as markdown tables
- Detailed error messages with hints
- Support for usi
README truncated. View full README on GitHub.
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