--- title: Client Commands sidebarTitle: Client description: List tools, call them, and discover configured servers icon: satellite-dish --- import { VersionBadge } from '/snippets/version-badge.mdx' The CLI can act as an MCP client — connecting to any server (local or remote) to list what it exposes and call its tools directly. This is useful for development, debugging, scripting, and giving shell-capable LLM agents access to MCP servers. ## Listing Tools `fastmcp list` connects to a server and prints its tools as function signatures, showing parameter names, types, and descriptions at a glance: ```bash fastmcp list http://localhost:8000/mcp fastmcp list server.py fastmcp list weather # name-based resolution ``` When you need the full JSON Schema for a tool's inputs or outputs — for understanding nested objects, enum constraints, or complex types — opt in with `--input-schema` or `--output-schema`: ```bash fastmcp list server.py --input-schema ``` ### Resources and Prompts By default, only tools are shown. Add `--resources` or `--prompts` to include those: ```bash fastmcp list server.py --resources --prompts ``` ### Machine-Readable Output The `--json` flag switches to structured JSON with full schemas included. This is the format to use when feeding tool definitions to an LLM or building automation: ```bash fastmcp list server.py --json ``` ### Options | Option | Flag | Description | | ------ | ---- | ----------- | | Command | `--command` | Connect via stdio (e.g., `'npx -y @mcp/server'`) | | Transport | `--transport`, `-t` | Force `http` or `sse` for URL targets | | Resources | `--resources` | Include resources in output | | Prompts | `--prompts` | Include prompts in output | | Input Schema | `--input-schema` | Show full input schemas | | Output Schema | `--output-schema` | Show full output schemas | | JSON | `--json` | Structured JSON output | | Timeout | `--timeout` | Connection timeout in seconds | | Auth | `--auth` | `oauth` (default for HTTP), a bearer token, or `none` | ## Calling Tools `fastmcp call` invokes a single tool on a server. Pass arguments as `key=value` pairs — the CLI fetches the tool's schema and coerces your string values to the right types automatically: ```bash fastmcp call server.py greet name=World fastmcp call http://localhost:8000/mcp search query=hello limit=5 ``` Type coercion is schema-driven: `"5"` becomes the integer `5` when the schema expects an integer. Booleans accept `true`/`false`, `yes`/`no`, and `1`/`0`. Arrays and objects are parsed as JSON. ### Complex Arguments For tools with nested or structured parameters, `key=value` syntax gets awkward. Pass a single JSON object instead: ```bash fastmcp call server.py create_item '{"name": "Widget", "tags": ["sale"], "metadata": {"color": "blue"}}' ``` Or use `--input-json` to provide a base dictionary, then override individual keys with `key=value` pairs: ```bash fastmcp call server.py search --input-json '{"query": "hello", "limit": 5}' limit=10 ``` ### Error Handling If you misspell a tool name, the CLI suggests corrections via fuzzy matching. Missing required arguments produce a clear message with the tool's signature as a reminder. Tool execution errors are printed with a non-zero exit code, making the CLI straightforward to use in scripts. ### Structured Output `--json` emits the raw result including content blocks, error status, and structured content: ```bash fastmcp call server.py get_weather city=London --json ``` ### Interactive Elicitation Some tools request additional input during execution through MCP's elicitation mechanism. When this happens, the CLI prompts you in the terminal — showing each field's name, type, and whether it's required. You can type `decline` to skip a question or `cancel` to abort the call entirely. ### Options | Option | Flag | Description | | ------ | ---- | ----------- | | Command | `--command` | Connect via stdio | | Transport | `--transport`, `-t` | Force `http` or `sse` | | Input JSON | `--input-json` | Base arguments as JSON (merged with `key=value`) | | JSON | `--json` | Raw JSON output | | Timeout | `--timeout` | Connection timeout in seconds | | Auth | `--auth` | `oauth`, a bearer token, or `none` | ## Discovering Configured Servers `fastmcp discover` scans your machine for MCP servers configured in editors and tools. It checks: - **Claude Desktop** — `claude_desktop_config.json` - **Claude Code** — `~/.claude.json` - **Cursor** — `.cursor/mcp.json` (walks up from current directory) - **Gemini CLI** — `~/.gemini/settings.json` - **Goose** — `~/.config/goose/config.yaml` - **Project** — `./mcp.json` in the current directory ```bash fastmcp discover ``` The output groups servers by source, showing each server's name and transport. Filter by source or get machine-readable output: ```bash fastmcp discover --source claude-code fastmcp discover --source cursor --source gemini --json ``` Any server that appears here can be used by name with `list`, `call`, and other commands — so you can go from "I have a server in Claude Code" to querying it without copying URLs or paths. ## LLM Agent Integration For LLM agents that can execute shell commands but don't have native MCP support, the CLI provides a clean bridge. The agent calls `fastmcp list --json` to discover available tools with full schemas, then `fastmcp call --json` to invoke them with structured results. Because the CLI handles connection management, transport selection, and type coercion internally, the agent doesn't need to understand MCP protocol details — it just reads JSON and constructs shell commands. ## Remote Stdio Bridges For MCP hosts that expect a local stdio command but need to connect to a remote HTTP server, use [`fastmcp-remote`](/clients/fastmcp-remote). It provides a small standalone bridge for host configuration, while `fastmcp list` and `fastmcp call` remain focused on direct inspection and invocation from the terminal.