--- title: Running Servers sidebarTitle: Running description: Start, develop, and configure servers from the command line icon: play --- import { VersionBadge } from '/snippets/version-badge.mdx' ## Starting a Server `fastmcp run` starts a server. Point it at a Python file, a factory function, a remote URL, or a config file: ```bash fastmcp run server.py fastmcp run server.py:create_server fastmcp run https://example.com/mcp fastmcp run fastmcp.json ``` By default, the server runs over **stdio** — the transport that MCP clients like Claude Desktop expect. To serve over HTTP instead, specify the transport: ```bash fastmcp run server.py --transport http fastmcp run server.py --transport http --host 0.0.0.0 --port 9000 ``` ### Entrypoints FastMCP supports several ways to locate and start your server: **Inferred instance** — FastMCP imports the file and looks for a variable named `mcp`, `server`, or `app`: ```bash fastmcp run server.py ``` **Explicit instance** — point at a specific variable: ```bash fastmcp run server.py:my_server ``` **Factory function** — FastMCP calls the function and uses the returned server. Useful when your server needs async setup or configuration that runs before startup: ```bash fastmcp run server.py:create_server ``` **Remote URL** — starts a local proxy that bridges to a remote server. Handy for local development against a deployed server, or for bridging a remote HTTP server to stdio: ```bash fastmcp run https://example.com/mcp ``` **FastMCP config** — uses a `fastmcp.json` file that declaratively specifies the server, its dependencies, and deployment settings. When you run `fastmcp run` with no arguments, it auto-detects `fastmcp.json` in the current directory: ```bash fastmcp run fastmcp run my-config.fastmcp.json ``` See [Server Configuration](/deployment/server-configuration) for the full `fastmcp.json` format. **MCP config** — runs servers defined in a standard MCP configuration file (any `.json` with an `mcpServers` key): ```bash fastmcp run mcp.json ``` `fastmcp run` completely ignores the `if __name__ == "__main__"` block. Any setup code in that block won't execute. If you need initialization logic to run, use a [factory function](/cli/overview#factory-functions). ### Options | Option | Flag | Description | | ------ | ---- | ----------- | | Transport | `--transport`, `-t` | `stdio` (default), `http`, or `sse` | | Host | `--host` | Bind address for HTTP (default: `127.0.0.1`) | | Port | `--port`, `-p` | Bind port for HTTP (default: `8000`) | | Path | `--path` | URL path for HTTP (default: `/mcp/`) | | Log Level | `--log-level`, `-l` | `DEBUG`, `INFO`, `WARNING`, `ERROR`, `CRITICAL` | | No Banner | `--no-banner` | Suppress the startup banner | | Auto-Reload | `--reload` / `--no-reload` | Watch for file changes and restart automatically | | Reload Dirs | `--reload-dir` | Directories to watch (repeatable) | | Skip Env | `--skip-env` | Don't set up a uv environment (use when already in one) | | Python | `--python` | Python version to use (e.g., `3.11`) | | Extra Packages | `--with` | Additional packages to install (repeatable) | | Project | `--project` | Run within a specific uv project directory | | Requirements | `--with-requirements` | Install from a requirements file | ### Dependency Management By default, `fastmcp run` uses your current Python environment directly. When you pass `--python`, `--with`, `--project`, or `--with-requirements`, it switches to running via `uv run` in a subprocess, which handles dependency isolation automatically. The `--skip-env` flag is useful when you're already inside an activated venv, a Docker container with pre-installed dependencies, or a uv-managed project — it prevents uv from trying to set up another environment layer. ## Previewing Apps `fastmcp dev apps` launches a browser-based preview UI for servers with [Prefab App tools](/apps/prefab). It starts your MCP server on one port and a local dev UI on another — giving you a live, interactive picker where you can call app tools and see their rendered output without needing a full MCP host client. ```bash fastmcp dev apps server.py fastmcp dev apps server.py:mcp --mcp-port 9000 --dev-port 9090 ``` The picker auto-generates a form from each tool's input schema. Submit the form and the result opens in a new tab as a rendered Prefab UI. Auto-reload is on by default — save a file and the MCP server restarts automatically. `fastmcp dev apps` requires `fastmcp[apps]` — install with `pip install "fastmcp[apps]"`. | Option | Flag | Description | | ------ | ---- | ----------- | | MCP Port | `--mcp-port` | Port for the MCP server (default: `8000`) | | Dev Port | `--dev-port` | Port for the dev UI (default: `8080`) | | Auto-Reload | `--reload` / `--no-reload` | Watch for file changes (default: on) | ## Development with the Inspector `fastmcp dev inspector` launches your server inside the [MCP Inspector](https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/inspector), a browser-based tool for interactively testing MCP servers. Auto-reload is on by default, so your server restarts when you save changes. ```bash fastmcp dev inspector server.py fastmcp dev inspector server.py -e . --with pandas ``` The Inspector always runs your server via `uv run` in a subprocess — it never uses your local environment directly. Specify dependencies with `--with`, `--with-editable`, `--with-requirements`, or through a `fastmcp.json` file. The Inspector connects over **stdio only**. When it launches, you may need to select "STDIO" from the transport dropdown and click connect. To test a server over HTTP, start it separately with `fastmcp run server.py --transport http` and point the Inspector at the URL. | Option | Flag | Description | | ------ | ---- | ----------- | | Editable Package | `--with-editable`, `-e` | Install a directory in editable mode | | Extra Packages | `--with` | Additional packages (repeatable) | | Inspector Version | `--inspector-version` | MCP Inspector version to use | | UI Port | `--ui-port` | Port for the Inspector UI | | Server Port | `--server-port` | Port for the Inspector proxy | | Auto-Reload | `--reload` / `--no-reload` | File watching (default: on) | | Reload Dirs | `--reload-dir` | Directories to watch (repeatable) | | Python | `--python` | Python version | | Project | `--project` | Run within a uv project directory | | Requirements | `--with-requirements` | Install from a requirements file | ## Pre-Building Environments `fastmcp project prepare` creates a persistent uv project from a `fastmcp.json` file, pre-installing all dependencies. This separates environment setup from server execution — install once, run many times. ```bash # Step 1: Build the environment (slow, does dependency resolution) fastmcp project prepare fastmcp.json --output-dir ./env # Step 2: Run using the prepared environment (fast, no install step) fastmcp run fastmcp.json --project ./env ``` The prepared directory contains a `pyproject.toml`, a `.venv` with all packages installed, and a `uv.lock` for reproducibility. This is particularly useful in deployment scenarios where you want deterministic, pre-built environments.