Joplin
STDIOJoplin笔记应用集成管理MCP服务器
Joplin笔记应用集成管理MCP服务器
This is a Node.js implementation of an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server for Joplin.
Install via npx (no installation required):
npx joplin-mcp-server --help
Create a .env file with the following variables:
JOPLIN_HOST=127.0.0.1
JOPLIN_PORT=41184
JOPLIN_TOKEN=your_joplin_token
You can find your Joplin token in the Joplin desktop app under: Tools > Options > Web Clipper
If you're running the MCP server in WSL and Joplin on Windows, you'll need to set up port forwarding because Joplin binds to 127.0.0.1 (localhost only) by default.
This is the simplest solution that requires no Joplin configuration changes and persists across reboots.
On Windows (PowerShell as Administrator):
# Forward port 41184 to allow WSL access to Joplin netsh interface portproxy add v4tov4 listenport=41184 listenaddress=0.0.0.0 connectport=41184 connectaddress=127.0.0.1 # Verify the port forward is active netsh interface portproxy show all
Configure your .env file in WSL:
# Use your Windows machine's LAN IP address JOPLIN_HOST=192.168.0.40 # Replace with your actual Windows IP JOPLIN_PORT=41184 JOPLIN_TOKEN=your_joplin_token
To find your Windows IP address:
# From WSL cat /etc/resolv.conf | grep nameserver | awk '{print $2}' # This gives the WSL bridge IP (e.g., 10.255.255.254) # Or use your Windows LAN IP (usually 192.168.x.x) # Check in Windows: ipconfig (look for IPv4 Address)
To remove the port forward later (if needed):
netsh interface portproxy delete v4tov4 listenport=41184 listenaddress=0.0.0.0
Note: This port forwarding rule persists across reboots - you only need to set it up once!
If you prefer to configure Joplin directly instead of using port forwarding:
Find your Joplin configuration file:
C:\Users\YourUsername\.config\joplin-desktop\settings.jsonAdd this configuration to settings.json:
{ "clipperServer.host": "0.0.0.0" }
Restart Joplin for the changes to take effect
Set your .env file in WSL:
JOPLIN_HOST=10.255.255.254  # WSL bridge IP from /etc/resolv.conf
JOPLIN_PORT=41184
JOPLIN_TOKEN=your_joplin_token
Security Note: This makes Joplin accessible on your entire local network. The API token is still required for all operations.
Test connectivity from WSL:
# Test if Joplin is reachable from WSL curl http://192.168.0.40:41184/ping # Should return: JoplinClipperServer # If using WSL bridge IP: curl http://10.255.255.254:41184/ping
Common issues:
netsh interface portproxy show all (on Windows)ipconfig on Windows (look for IPv4 Address on your active network adapter)OPTIONS:
  --env-file <file>    Load environment variables from file
  --host <hostname>    Joplin hostname or IP (default: 127.0.0.1)
  --port <port>        Joplin port (default: 41184)
  --token <token>      Joplin API token
  --transport <type>   Transport type: stdio (default) or http
  --http-port <port>   HTTP server port (default: 3000, only used with --transport http)
  --help, -h           Show help message
# Using command line arguments npx joplin-mcp-server --token your_joplin_token # Using environment file npx joplin-mcp-server --env-file /path/to/your/.env # WSL: Connect to Windows host npx joplin-mcp-server --host 192.168.0.40 --token your_token # HTTP mode (for testing with MCP Inspector) npx joplin-mcp-server --transport http --token your_token
Important: Claude Desktop does NOT support environment variable expansion (${VAR} syntax). You must provide values directly.
Option 1: Using env Section (Recommended)
Add to your claude_desktop_config.json:
{ "mcpServers": { "joplin": { "command": "npx", "args": ["joplin-mcp-server"], "env": { "JOPLIN_TOKEN": "your_actual_token_here", "JOPLIN_PORT": "41184", "JOPLIN_HOST": "127.0.0.1" } } } }
Option 2: Using Command-Line Arguments
{ "mcpServers": { "joplin": { "command": "npx", "args": ["joplin-mcp-server", "--token", "your_actual_token_here", "--port", "41184", "--host", "127.0.0.1"] } } }
Restart Claude Desktop after updating the configuration.
Claude Code supports environment variable expansion in .mcp.json.
1. Set environment variables in your shell (add to ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc):
export JOPLIN_TOKEN="your_actual_token_here" export JOPLIN_PORT="41184" # Optional, defaults to 41184 export JOPLIN_HOST="127.0.0.1" # Optional, defaults to 127.0.0.1
2. Use the included .mcp.json configuration:
The repository includes a working .mcp.json file that uses environment variable expansion:
{ "mcpServers": { "joplin": { "command": "npx", "args": ["joplin-mcp-server"], "env": { "JOPLIN_TOKEN": "${JOPLIN_TOKEN}" } } } }
The server will automatically use JOPLIN_PORT and JOPLIN_HOST from your shell environment, or use the defaults (127.0.0.1:41184).
Most MCP clients support environment variable expansion (${VAR} syntax).
With environment variables:
{ "mcpServers": { "joplin": { "command": "npx", "args": ["joplin-mcp-server"], "env": { "JOPLIN_TOKEN": "${JOPLIN_TOKEN}", "JOPLIN_PORT": "${JOPLIN_PORT}", "JOPLIN_HOST": "${JOPLIN_HOST}" } } } }
With direct values:
{ "mcpServers": { "joplin": { "command": "npx", "args": ["joplin-mcp-server", "--token", "your_joplin_token", "--port", "41184", "--host", "127.0.0.1"] } } }
Using environment file:
{ "mcpServers": { "joplin": { "command": "npx", "args": ["joplin-mcp-server", "--env-file", "/path/to/your/.env"] } } }
The server logs all incoming commands and outgoing responses. Logs are stored in two places:
logs directory with timestampsYou can adjust the log level by setting the LOG_LEVEL environment variable:
LOG_LEVEL=debug npm start
Available log levels (from most to least verbose):
debug: All messages including detailed command and response datainfo: Standard operational messages (default)warn: Warnings and errors onlyerror: Only error messagesRetrieves the complete notebook hierarchy from Joplin.
# Example output:
Notebook 1 (id: "abc123")
  Subnotebook 1.1 (id: "def456")
  Subnotebook 1.2 (id: "ghi789")
Notebook 2 (id: "jkl012")
Searches for notes in Joplin and returns matching notebooks.
Parameters:
query: The search query string# Example usage:
search_notes query="project meeting"
# Example output:
Found 2 notes matching query: "project meeting"
NOTE: To read a notebook, use the notebook ID (not the note title)
- Note: "Weekly Project Meeting" (note_id: "abc123")
  Notebook: "Work" (notebook_id: "58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a")
  Updated: 3/15/2025, 10:30:45 AM
  Snippet: Notes from our weekly project meeting. Topics discussed: timeline, resources, next steps...
  To read this notebook: read_notebook notebook_id="58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a"
- Note: "Project Kickoff Meeting" (note_id: "def456")
  Notebook: "Projects" (notebook_id: "72b1c45d89ef3212a67b98f4e5d23a1b")
  Updated: 3/10/2025, 2:15:30 PM
  Snippet: Initial project meeting with stakeholders. Key decisions: project scope, team members...
  To read this notebook: read_notebook notebook_id="72b1c45d89ef3212a67b98f4e5d23a1b"
Important: Note the difference between note titles and IDs. When using the
read_notebookcommand, you must use the notebook ID (a long alphanumeric string), not the notebook title.
Reads the contents of a specific notebook.
Parameters:
notebook_id: The ID of the notebook to read# Example usage:
read_notebook notebook_id="58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a"
# Example output:
# Notebook: "Work" (notebook_id: "58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a")
Contains 3 notes:
NOTE: This is showing the contents of notebook "Work", not a specific note.
- Note: "Weekly Project Meeting" (note_id: "def456")
  Updated: 3/15/2025, 10:30:45 AM
- ✅ Note: "Call client" (note_id: "ghi789")
  Updated: 3/14/2025, 3:45:12 PM
- ☐ Note: "Prepare presentation" (note_id: "jkl012")
  Updated: 3/13/2025, 9:20:33 AM
Common Error: If you try to use a note title (like "todo") instead of a notebook ID, you'll get an error. Always use the notebook ID (the long alphanumeric string) shown in the search results or notebook list.
Reads the full content of a specific note.
Parameters:
note_id: The ID of the note to read# Example usage:
read_note note_id="def456"
# Example output:
# Note: "Weekly Project Meeting"
Note ID: def456
Notebook: "Work" (notebook_id: "58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a")
Created: 3/15/2025, 10:00:12 AM
Updated: 3/15/2025, 10:30:45 AM
---
# Weekly Project Meeting
## Agenda
1. Project status update
2. Timeline review
3. Resource allocation
4. Next steps
## Notes
- Project is on track for Q2 delivery
- Need to allocate additional resources to the UI team
- Next meeting scheduled for next Friday
---
Related commands:
- To view the notebook containing this note: read_notebook notebook_id="58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a"
- To search for more notes: search_notes query="your search term"
Note: The
read_notecommand shows the full content of a specific note, while theread_notebookcommand shows a list of notes in a notebook. Usesearch_notesto find notes and get their IDs.
Reads the full content of multiple notes at once.
Parameters:
note_ids: An array of note IDs to read# Example usage:
read_multinote note_ids=["def456", "ghi789", "jkl012"]
# Example output:
# Reading 3 notes
## Note 1 of 3 (ID: def456)
### Note: "Weekly Project Meeting"
Notebook: "Work" (notebook_id: "58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a")
Created: 3/15/2025, 10:00:12 AM
Updated: 3/15/2025, 10:30:45 AM
---
# Weekly Project Meeting
## Agenda
1. Project status update
2. Timeline review
---
## Note 2 of 3 (ID: ghi789)
### Note: "Call client"
Notebook: "Work" (notebook_id: "58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a")
Status: Completed
Created: 3/14/2025, 3:00:00 PM
Updated: 3/14/2025, 3:45:12 PM
---
Discussed project timeline and next steps.
Client is happy with progress.
---
## Note 3 of 3 (ID: jkl012)
### Note: "Prepare presentation"
Notebook: "Work" (notebook_id: "58a0a29f68bc4141b49c99f5d367638a")
Status: Not completed
Due: 3/20/2025, 9:00:00 AM
Created: 3/13/2025, 9:00:00 AM
Updated: 3/13/2025, 9:20:33 AM
---
# Presentation Outline
- Introduction
- Project overview
- Timeline
- Budget
- Next steps
---
# Summary
Total notes requested: 3
Successfully retrieved: 3
Tip: When you search for notes or view a notebook, you'll see a suggestion for using
read_multinotewith the exact IDs of the notes found. This makes it easy to read multiple related notes at once.
# Install dependencies pnpm install # Build the project pnpm build # Run tests pnpm test # Format code pnpm format # Run linter pnpm lint # Run validation (format + lint + test + build) pnpm validate
# Link for local development npm link # Test the CLI npx joplin-mcp-server --help # Unlink when done npm unlink -g joplin-mcp-server
MIT