gqai
gqai — легкий прокси-сервер, который позволяет использовать GraphQL-операции как инструменты для AI через MCP протокол. Автоматически создает MCP сервер на основе ваших GraphQL-запросов для управления из ChatGPT, Claude и др.
gqai
graphql → ai
gqai is a lightweight proxy that exposes GraphQL operations as
Model Context Protocol (MCP) tools for AI like
Claude, Cursor, and ChatGPT.
Define tools using regular GraphQL queries/mutations against your GraphQL backend, and gqai automatically
generates an MCP server for you.
🔌 Powered by your GraphQL backend
⚙️ Driven by .graphqlrc.yml
+ plain .graphql
files
✨ Features
- 🧰 Define tools using GraphQL operations
- 🗂 Automatically discover operations from
.graphqlrc.yml
- 🧾 Tool metadata compatible with OpenAI function calling / MCP
🛠️ Installation
go install github.com/fotoetienne/gqai@latest
🚀 Quick Start
- Create a .graphqlrc.yml:
schema: https://graphql.org/graphql/
documents: .
This file tells gqai where to find your GraphQL schema and operations.
Note: The schema
parameter tells gqai where to execute the operations. This must be a live server rather than a static schema file
- Add a GraphQL operation
get_all_films.graphql
:
# Get all Star Wars films
query get_all_films {
allFilms {
films {
title
episodeID
}
}
}
- Add gqai to your
mcp.json
file:
"gqai": {
"command": "gqai",
"args": [
"run",
"--config"
".graphqlrc.yml"
]
}
That's it! Your AI model can now call the get_all_films
tool.
Usage
Configuration
GraphQL Config
The graphql config
file is a YAML file that defines the GraphQL endpoint and the operations
you want to expose as tools. It should be named .graphqlrc.yml
and placed in the root of your project.
schema: https://graphql.org/graphql/
documents: operations
The schema
field specifies the GraphQL endpoint, and the documents
field specifies the directory where your GraphQL operations are located.
In this example, the operations
directory contains all the GraphQL operations you want to expose as tools.
Operations are defined in .graphql
files, and gqai will automatically discover them.
Headers
You can also specify headers to be sent with each request to the GraphQL endpoint. This is useful for authentication or other custom headers.
schema:
- https://graphql.org/graphql/:
headers:
Authorization: Bearer YOUR_TOKEN
X-Custom-Header: CustomValue
documents: .
Using Environment Variables in Headers
You can reference environment variables in header values using the ${VARNAME}
syntax. For example:
schema:
- https://graphql.org/graphql/:
headers:
Authorization: Bearer ${MY_AUTH_TOKEN}
documents: .
You can also provide a default value using the ${VARNAME:-default}
syntax:
schema:
- https://graphql.org/graphql/:
headers:
Authorization: Bearer ${MY_AUTH_TOKEN:-default-token}
documents: .
When gqai loads the config, it will substitute ${MY_AUTH_TOKEN}
with the value of the MY_AUTH_TOKEN
environment variable, or use default-token
if the variable is not set. This allows you to keep secrets out of your config files.
If the environment variable is not set and no default is provided, the value will be left as-is.
Using Environment Variables in Config
You can use environment variables in any part of your .graphqlrc.yml
config: schema URLs, document paths, include/exclude globs, and header values. Use ${VARNAME}
or ${VARNAME:-default}
syntax:
schema:
- ${MY_SCHEMA_URL:-https://default/graphql}:
headers:
Authorization: Bearer ${MY_AUTH_TOKEN}
documents:
- ${MY_DOCS_PATH:-operations/**/*.graphql}
include: ${MY_INCLUDE:-operations/include.graphql}
exclude: ${MY_EXCLUDE:-operations/exclude.graphql}
gqai will substitute these with the value of the environment variable, or use the default if not set. This keeps secrets and environment-specific paths out of your config files.
MCP Configuration
Claude Desktop
To use gqai with Claude Desktop, you need to add the following configuration to your mcp.json
file:
{
"gqai": {
"command": "gqai",
"args": [
"run",
"--config",
".graphqlrc.yml"
]
}
}
🧪 CLI Testing
Call a tool via CLI to test:
gqai tools/call get_all_films
This will execute the get_all_films
tool and print the result.
{
"data": {
"allFilms": {
"films": [
{
"id": 4,
"title": "A New Hope"
},
{
"id": 5,
"title": "The Empire Strikes Back"
},
{
"id": 6,
"title": "Return of the Jedi"
},
...
]
}
}
}
Call a tool with arguments:
Create a GraphQL operation that takes arguments, and these will be the tool inputs:
get_film_by_id.graphql
:
query get_film_by_id($id: ID!) {
film(filmID: $id) {
episodeID
title
director
releaseDate
}
}
Call the tool with arguments:
gqai tools/call get_film_by_id '{"id": "1"}'
This will execute the get_film_by_id
tool with the provided arguments.
{
"data": {
"film": {
"episodeID": 1,
"title": "A New Hope",
"director": "George Lucas",
"releaseDate": "1977-05-25"
}
}
}
Development
Prerequisites
- Go 1.20+
Build
go build -o gqai main.go
Test
go test ./...
Format
go fmt ./...
Run MCP server
./gqai run --config .graphqlrc.yml
Run CLI
./gqai tools/call get_all_films
About GQAI
🤖 Why gqai?
gqai makes it easy to turn your GraphQL backend into a model-ready tool layer — no code, no extra infra. Just define your operations and let AI call them.
📜 License
MIT — fork it, build on it, all the things.
👋 Author
Made with ❤️ and 🤖vibes by Stephen Spalding && <your-name-here>