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12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Paolo Ricciuti
1f296e5277 Merge pull request #35 from sveltejs/changeset-release/main 2025-10-03 22:42:11 +02:00
github-actions[bot]
121395e98e Version Packages 2025-10-03 20:38:35 +00:00
paoloricciuti
8e7c881838 fix: just build we can figure out later if we want to avoid it 2025-10-03 22:38:08 +02:00
Paolo Ricciuti
91c396e675 Merge pull request #25 from sveltejs/setup-changesets 2025-10-03 22:35:50 +02:00
Rich Harris
4201627f53 Merge pull request #31 from sveltejs/docs
docs: add documentation for svelte.dev
2025-10-03 15:22:59 -04:00
paoloricciuti
9a70fbe3aa feat: redirect to docs in case someone visits via browser 2025-10-03 21:12:42 +02:00
Paolo Ricciuti
dc16a42c65 chore: apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Rich Harris <hello@rich-harris.dev>
2025-10-03 19:11:14 +02:00
Paolo Ricciuti
3b50014b09 chore: apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Rich Harris <hello@rich-harris.dev>
2025-10-03 18:43:56 +02:00
Paolo Ricciuti
e9214bc470 chore: apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Rich Harris <hello@rich-harris.dev>
2025-10-03 18:33:31 +02:00
Paolo Ricciuti
3106305902 chore: apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Rich Harris <hello@rich-harris.dev>
2025-10-03 18:24:35 +02:00
paoloricciuti
3c14872068 fix: LLM -> model 2025-10-03 17:20:38 +02:00
paoloricciuti
216a470bd2 docs: add documentation for svelte.dev 2025-10-03 16:49:43 +02:00
15 changed files with 348 additions and 8 deletions

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---
'@sveltejs/mcp': patch
---
feat: latest version

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package-manager-cache: true # caches pnpm via packageManager field in package.json
- name: install
run: pnpm install --frozen-lockfile --prefer-offline --ignore-scripts
- name: publint
run: pnpm check:publint
- name: build
run: pnpm run --filter ./packages/mcp-stdio/ build
- name: Create Release Pull Request or Publish to npm
id: changesets

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@@ -1,7 +1,19 @@
import { http_transport } from '$lib/mcp/index.js';
import { db } from '$lib/server/db/index.js';
import { redirect } from '@sveltejs/kit';
export async function handle({ event, resolve }) {
if (event.request.method === 'GET') {
const accept = event.request.headers.get('accept');
if (accept) {
const accepts = accept.split(',');
if (!accepts.includes('text/event-stream')) {
// the request it's a browser request, not an MCP client request
// it means someone probably opened it from the docs...we should redirect to the docs
redirect(302, 'https://svelte.dev/docs/mcp/overview');
}
}
}
const mcp_response = await http_transport.respond(event.request, {
db,
});

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---
title: Overview
---
The Svelte MCP ([Model Context Protocol](https://modelcontextprotocol.io/docs/getting-started/intro)) server can help your LLM or agent of choice write better Svelte code. It works by providing documentation relevant to the task at hand, and statically analysing generated code so that it can suggest fixes and best practices.
## Setup
The setup varies based on the version of the MCP you prefer — remote or local — and your chosen MCP client (e.g. Claude Code, Codex CLI or GitHub Copilot):
- [local setup](local-setup) using `@sveltejs/mcp`
- [remote setup](remote-setup) using [mcp.svelte.dev/mcp](https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp)
## Usage
To get the most out of the MCP server we recommend including the following prompt in your `AGENTS.md` (or `CLAUDE.md`, if using Claude Code). This will tell the LLM which tools are available and when it's appropriate to use them.
```md
You are able to use the Svelte MCP server, where you have access to comprehensive Svelte 5 and SvelteKit documentation. Here's how to use the available tools effectively:
## Available MCP Tools:
### 1. list-sections
Use this FIRST to discover all available documentation sections. Returns a structured list with titles, use_cases, and paths.
When asked about Svelte or SvelteKit topics, ALWAYS use this tool at the start of the chat to find relevant sections.
### 2. get-documentation
Retrieves full documentation content for specific sections. Accepts single or multiple sections.
After calling the list-sections tool, you MUST analyze the returned documentation sections (especially the use_cases field) and then use the get-documentation tool to fetch ALL documentation sections that are relevant for the user's task.
### 3. svelte-autofixer
Analyzes Svelte code and returns issues and suggestions.
You MUST use this tool whenever writing Svelte code before sending it to the user. Keep calling it until no issues or suggestions are returned.
### 4. playground-link
Generates a Svelte Playground link with the provided code.
After completing the code, ask the user if they want a playground link. Only call this tool after user confirmation and NEVER if code was written to files in their project.
```
If your MCP client supports it, we also recommend using the [svelte-task](prompts#svelte-task) prompt to instruct the LLM on the best way to use the MCP server.

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---
title: Introduction
---

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---
title: Local setup
---
The local (or stdio) version of the MCP server is available via the [`@sveltejs/mcp`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@sveltejs/mcp) npm package. You can either install it globally and then reference it in your configuration or run it with `npx`:
```bash
npx -y @sveltejs/mcp
```
Here's how to set it up in some common MCP clients:
## Claude Code
To include the local MCP version in Claude Code, simply run the following command:
```bash
claude mcp add -t stdio -s [scope] svelte npx -y @sveltejs/mcp
```
The `[scope]` must be `user`, `project` or `local`.
## Claude Desktop
In the Settings > Developer section, click on Edit Config. It will open the folder with a `claude_desktop_config.json` file in it. Edit the file to include the following configuration:
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"svelte": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@sveltejs/mcp"]
}
}
}
```
## Codex CLI
Add the following to your `config.toml` (which defaults to `~/.codex/config.toml`, but refer to [the configuration documentation](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/main/docs/config.md) for more advanced setups):
```toml
[mcp_servers.svelte]
command = "npx"
args = ["-y", "@sveltejs/mcp"]
```
## Gemini CLI
To include the local MCP version in Gemini CLI, simply run the following command:
```bash
gemini mcp add -t stdio -s [scope] svelte npx -y @sveltejs/mcp
```
The `[scope]` must be `user`, `project` or `local`.
## OpenCode
Run the command:
```bash
opencode mcp add
```
and follow the instructions, selecting 'Local' under the 'Select MCP server type' prompt:
```bash
opencode mcp add
┌ Add MCP server
◇ Enter MCP server name
│ svelte
◇ Select MCP server type
│ Local
◆ Enter command to run
│ npx -y @sveltejs/mcp
```
## VS Code
- Open the command palette
- Select "MCP: Add Server..."
- Select "Command (stdio)"
- Insert `npx -y @sveltejs/mcp` in the input and press `Enter`
- When prompted for a name, insert `svelte`
- Select if you want to add it as a `Global` or `Workspace` MCP server
## Cursor
- Open the command palette
- Select "View: Open MCP Settings"
- Click on "Add custom MCP"
It will open a file with your MCP servers where you can add the following configuration:
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"svelte": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@sveltejs/mcp"]
}
}
}
```
## Other clients
If we didn't include the MCP client you are using, refer to their documentation for `stdio` servers and use `npx` as the command and `-y @sveltejs/mcp` as the arguments.

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---
title: Remote setup
---
The remote version of the MCP server is available on `https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp`.
Here's how to set it up in some common MCP clients:
## Claude Code
To include the remote MCP version in Claude Code, simply run the following command:
```bash
claude mcp add -t http -s [scope] svelte https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp
```
You can choose your preferred `scope` (it must be `user`, `project` or `local`) and `name`.
## Claude Desktop
- Open Settings > Connectors
- Click on Add Custom Connector
- When prompted for a name, enter `svelte`
- Under the Remote MCP server URL input, use `https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp`
- Click Add
## Codex CLI
Add the following to your `config.toml` (which defaults to `~/.codex/config.toml`, but refer to [the configuration documentation](https://github.com/openai/codex/blob/main/docs/config.md) for more advanced setups):
```toml
experimental_use_rmcp_client = true
[mcp_servers.svelte]
url = "https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp"
```
## Gemini CLI
To use the remote MCP server with Gemini CLI, simply run the following command:
```bash
gemini mcp add -t http -s [scope] svelte https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp
```
The `[scope]` must be `user`, `project` or `local`.
## OpenCode
Run the command:
```bash
opencode mcp add
```
and follow the instructions, selecting 'Remote' under the 'Select MCP server type' prompt:
```bash
opencode mcp add
┌ Add MCP server
◇ Enter MCP server name
│ svelte
◇ Select MCP server type
│ Remote
◇ Enter MCP server URL
│ https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp
```
## VS Code
- Open the command palette
- Select "MCP: Add Server..."
- Select "HTTP (HTTP or Server-Sent-Events)"
- Insert `https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp` in the input and press `Enter`
- Insert your preferred name
- Select if you want to add it as a `Global` or `Workspace` MCP server
## Cursor
- Open the command palette
- Select "View: Open MCP Settings"
- Click on "Add custom MCP"
It will open a file with your MCP servers where you can add the following configuration:
```json
{
"mcpServers": {
"svelte": {
"url": "https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp"
}
}
}
```
## Other clients
If we didn't include the MCP client you are using, refer to their documentation for `remote` servers and use `https://mcp.svelte.dev/mcp` as the URL.

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---
title: Setup
---

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---
title: Tools
---
The following tools are provided by the MCP server to the model, which can decide to call one or more of them during a session:
## list-sections
Provides a list of all the available documentation sections.
## get-documentation
Allows the model to get the full (and up-to-date) documentation for the requested sections directly from [svelte.dev/docs](/docs).
## svelte-autofixer
Uses static analysis to provide suggestions for the generated code. It should be invoked in a loop by the model until all issues and suggestions are resolved.
## playground-link
Generates an ephemeral playground link with the generated code. It's useful when the generated code is not written to a file in your project and you want to quickly test the generated solution. The code is not stored anywhere except the URL itself (which will often, as a consequence, be quite large).

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---
title: Resources
---
This is the list of available resources provided by the MCP server. Resources are included by the user (not by the LLM) and are useful if you want to include specific knowledge in your session. For example, if you know that the component will need to use transitions you can include the transition documentation directly without asking the LLM to do it for you.
## doc-section
This dynamic resource allows you to add every section of the Svelte documentation as a resource. The URI looks like this `svelte://slug-of-the-docs.md` and the returned resource will contain the `llms.txt` version of the specific page you selected.

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---
title: Prompts
---
This is the list of available prompts provided by the MCP server. Prompts are selected by the user and are sent as a user message. They can be useful to write repetitive instructions for the LLM on how to properly use the MCP server.
## svelte-task
This prompt should be used whenever you are asking the model to work on some Svelte-related task. It will instruct the LLM on which documentation sections are available, which tool to invoke, when to invoke it, and how to interpret the result. It will ask you for the description of the task and the returned value will look like this:
```
You are a Svelte expert tasked to build components and utilities for Svelte developers. If you need documentation for anything related to Svelte you can invoke the tool \`get-documentation\` with one of the following paths:
<available-docs-paths>
[all available docs]
</available-docs-paths>
Every time you write a Svelte component or a Svelte module you MUST invoke the \`svelte-autofixer\` tool providing the code. The tool will return a list of issues or suggestions. If there are any issues or suggestions you MUST fix them and call the tool again with the updated code. You MUST keep doing this until the tool returns no issues or suggestions. Only then you can return the code to the user.
This is the task you will work on:
<task>
[your task here]
</task>
If you are not writing the code into a file, once you have the final version of the code ask the user if they want to generate a playground link to quickly check the code in it and if they answer yes call the \`playground-link\` tool and return the url to the user nicely formatted. The playground link MUST be generated only once you have the final version of the code and you are ready to share it, it MUST include an entry point file called \`App.svelte\` where the main component should live. If you have multiple files to include in the playground link you can include them all at the root.
```

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---
title: Capabilities
---

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---
title: MCP
---

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# @sveltejs/mcp
## 0.0.2
### Patch Changes
- feat: latest version ([#25](https://github.com/sveltejs/mcp/pull/25))

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{
"name": "@sveltejs/mcp",
"version": "0.0.1",
"version": "0.0.2",
"type": "module",
"license": "MIT",
"homepage": "https://github.com/sveltejs/mcp#readme",