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WooCommerce MCP Server

by opestro

The WooCommerce MCP Server integrates WooCommerce with AI assistants like Claude, enabling them to fetch orders and retrieve detailed order information. It implements the Model Context Protocol for seamless compatibility.

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WooCommerce MCP Server

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for integrating WooCommerce with Claude and other AI assistants.

Overview

This server provides tools for AI assistants to interact with a WooCommerce store, allowing them to:

  • Fetch recent orders with optional filtering
  • Retrieve detailed information about specific orders by ID

The server implements the Model Context Protocol specification, making it compatible with MCP-enabled AI assistants like Claude for Desktop.

Prerequisites

  • Node.js v18 or higher
  • A WooCommerce store with REST API access
  • WooCommerce API credentials (consumer key and secret)

Installation

  1. Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/techspawn/woocommerce-mcp-server.git
cd woocommerce-mcp-server
  1. Install dependencies:
npm install

Configuration

You need to configure your WooCommerce API credentials. You can do this by:

  1. Setting environment variables when running the server:
WOOCOMMERCE_URL=https://your-store.com \
WOOCOMMERCE_CONSUMER_KEY=your-consumer-key \
WOOCOMMERCE_CONSUMER_SECRET=your-consumer-secret \
node index.js
  1. Or by editing the default values in the index.js file:
const woocommerceConfig = {
  url: process.env.WOOCOMMERCE_URL || 'https://your-store.com',
  consumerKey: process.env.WOOCOMMERCE_CONSUMER_KEY || 'your-consumer-key',
  consumerSecret: process.env.WOOCOMMERCE_CONSUMER_SECRET || 'your-consumer-secret',
  version: 'wc/v3'
};

Running the Server

To run the server directly:

node index.js

Or using the npm script:

npm start

Integration with Claude for Desktop

To connect this server to Claude for Desktop:

  1. Make sure you have Claude for Desktop installed

  2. Open your Claude Desktop configuration file located at:

    • Windows: %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
    • macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
    • Linux: ~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
  3. Add your WooCommerce MCP server configuration (create the file if it doesn't exist):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "woocommerce": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": [
        "/ABSOLUTE/PATH/TO/woocommerce-mcp-server/index.js"
      ],
      "env": {
        "WOOCOMMERCE_URL": "https://your-store.com",
        "WOOCOMMERCE_CONSUMER_KEY": "your-consumer-key",
        "WOOCOMMERCE_CONSUMER_SECRET": "your-consumer-secret"
      }
    }
  }
}
  1. Save the file and restart Claude for Desktop

Available Tools

getRecentOrders

Fetches a list of recent orders from your WooCommerce store.

Parameters:

  • status (optional): Filter orders by status (e.g., "processing", "completed", "on-hold")
  • limit (optional, default: 5): Number of orders to return

getOrderById

Retrieves detailed information about a specific order.

Parameters:

  • id: The order ID to retrieve

Building Your Own MCP Server with JavaScript

This section provides a guide to creating your own MCP server using JavaScript/Node.js.

1. Set up a new project

mkdir my-mcp-server
cd my-mcp-server
npm init -y

2. Install dependencies

npm install @modelcontextprotocol/sdk axios zod

3. Create your server file (index.js)

Start with the basic structure:

import { McpServer } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/mcp.js";
import { StdioServerTransport } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/stdio.js";
import { z } from "zod";

// Initialize server
const server = new McpServer({
  name: "My MCP Service",
  version: "1.0.0",
});

// Define and register your tools
server.tool(
  "myToolName",
  {
    // Define parameters using Zod schemas
    param1: z.string().describe("Description of param1"),
    param2: z.number().optional().describe("Optional parameter")
  },
  async ({ param1, param2 }) => {
    // Tool implementation logic here
    const result = `Processed ${param1} with value ${param2 || 'none'}`;
    
    // Return result in the expected format
    return {
      content: [
        {
          type: "text",
          text: result
        }
      ]
    };
  }
);

// Connect the server
const transport = new StdioServerTransport();
await server.connect(transport);

4. Make your package.json ES module compatible

{
  "type": "module",
  "scripts": {
    "start": "node index.js"
  }
}

5. Define tools

MCP tools are defined with three components:

  • Name: A unique identifier for the tool
  • Parameters: Schema for input parameters (using Zod)
  • Handler: Async function that processes the inputs and returns results

Example:

server.tool(
  "calculateTotal",
  {
    items: z.array(
      z.object({
        name: z.string(),
        price: z.number(),
        quantity: z.number().int().positive()
      })
    ).describe("Array of items to calculate total for")
  },
  async ({ items }) => {
    const total = items.reduce((sum, item) => sum + (item.price * item.quantity), 0);
    
    return {
      content: [
        {
          type: "text",
          text: `Total: $${total.toFixed(2)}`
        }
      ]
    };
  }
);

6. Testing locally

You can test your MCP server locally using the stdio transport:

node index.js

7. Debugging tips

  • Use console.error() for debugging, not console.log() which interferes with stdio transport
  • Check the logs in Claude for Desktop for errors
  • Ensure your tool handlers properly handle exceptions

Resources

License

MIT