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Productive Io

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Enables interaction with Productive.io task management platform, allowing users to retrieve tasks and filter by assignee, status, or project.

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About

Enables interaction with Productive.io task management platform, allowing users to retrieve tasks and filter by assignee, status, or project.

README

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for interacting with Productive.io task management platform.

Features

  • 🔧 Extensible Architecture - Plugin-based tool system for easy extension
  • 📦 Modular Design - Clean separation of concerns with TypeScript
  • 🔒 Type-Safe - Full TypeScript support with strict type checking
  • ⚙️ Configuration Management - Environment-based configuration
  • 🎯 Easy to Extend - Add new tools by creating a single class

Installation

# Install dependencies
pnpm install

# Build the project
npm run build

Configuration

For Claude Desktop

Add the MCP server to your Claude Desktop config file with environment variables:

Location:

  • macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
  • Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json

Configuration:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "productive.io": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": ["/Users/joelkrause/dev/productive-mcp/build/index.js"],
      "env": {
        "PRODUCTIVE_API_TOKEN": "your-api-token-here",
        "PRODUCTIVE_ORGANIZATION_ID": "your-organization-id",
        "PRODUCTIVE_USER_ID": "your-user-id"
      }
    }
  }
}

For Development/Testing

You can also use a .env file (use .env.example as a template):

cp .env.example .env

Required environment variables:

  • PRODUCTIVE_API_TOKEN - Your Productive.io API token
  • PRODUCTIVE_ORGANIZATION_ID - Your organization ID
  • PRODUCTIVE_USER_ID - Your user ID

Available Tools

get_task

Get a single task from Productive.io by URL.

Parameters:

  • url (string) - Productive.io task URL

get_tasks

Get multiple tasks with optional filters.

Parameters:

  • assignee_id (string, optional) - Filter by assignee ID
  • status (number, optional) - Filter by status (1=Open, 2=Closed)
  • project_id (string, optional) - Filter by project ID

Project Structure

src/
├── config/           # Configuration management
│   └── index.ts      # Environment-based config loader
├── services/         # API clients and services
│   └── ProductiveApiClient.ts  # Typed Productive.io API client
├── tools/           # MCP tools (plugins)
│   ├── base/        # Base tool class
│   │   └── BaseTool.ts
│   ├── get-task/    # Individual tool modules
│   │   ├── index.ts    # Tool implementation
│   │   ├── handler.ts  # Business logic (includes URL extraction)
│   │   └── schema.ts   # Zod validation schema
│   ├── get-tasks/
│   │   ├── index.ts
│   │   ├── handler.ts
│   │   └── schema.ts
│   └── index.ts     # Tool registry and auto-registration
├── types/           # TypeScript type definitions
│   ├── config.types.ts
│   ├── productive.types.ts
│   └── tool.types.ts
└── index.ts         # Main entry point

Adding a New Tool

Adding a new tool is simple with the extensible architecture:

1. Create a new tool directory

mkdir -p src/tools/your-tool

2. Create the schema (src/tools/your-tool/schema.ts)

import { z } from "zod";

export const YourToolSchema = z.object({
  param1: z.string().describe("Description of param1"),
  param2: z.number().optional().describe("Optional param2"),
});

export type YourToolInput = z.infer<typeof YourToolSchema>;

3. Create the handler (src/tools/your-tool/handler.ts)

import { ProductiveApiClient } from "../../services/ProductiveApiClient.js";
import { ToolResponse } from "../../types/tool.types.js";

export async function handleYourTool(
  input: YourToolInput,
  apiClient: ProductiveApiClient
): Promise<ToolResponse> {
  try {
    // Your logic here
    const result = await apiClient.someMethod();

    return {
      content: [{ type: "text", text: "Success!" }],
    };
  } catch (error) {
    return {
      content: [
        {
          type: "text",
          text: `Error: ${error instanceof Error ? error.message : "Unknown"}`,
        },
      ],
      isError: true,
    };
  }
}

4. Create the tool class (src/tools/your-tool/index.ts)

import { BaseTool } from "../base/BaseTool.js";
import { ProductiveApiClient } from "../../services/ProductiveApiClient.js";
import { ToolResponse } from "../../types/tool.types.js";
import { YourToolSchema, YourToolInput } from "./schema.js";
import { handleYourTool } from "./handler.js";

export class YourTool extends BaseTool<YourToolInput> {
  readonly name = "your_tool";
  readonly description = "Description of what your tool does";
  readonly schema = YourToolSchema;

  private apiClient: ProductiveApiClient;

  constructor(apiClient?: ProductiveApiClient) {
    super();
    this.apiClient = apiClient || new ProductiveApiClient();
  }

  async execute(input: YourToolInput): Promise<ToolResponse> {
    return handleYourTool(input, this.apiClient);
  }
}

5. Register the tool (src/tools/index.ts)

import { YourTool } from "./your-tool/index.js";

export function getAllTools(): Tool[] {
  return [
    new GetTaskTool(),
    new GetTasksTool(),
    new YourTool(), // Add your tool here
  ];
}

That's it! Your new tool will be automatically registered and available.

Development

# Build the project
npm run build

# Watch mode for development
npm run dev

# Type checking only
npm run typecheck

# Clean build directory
npm run clean

# Clean and rebuild
npm run rebuild

Architecture Benefits

Extensibility

  • Plugin-based: New tools are self-contained modules
  • Auto-registration: Tools are automatically registered from the registry
  • No core changes: Adding tools doesn't require modifying the main server code

Type Safety

  • Full TypeScript: Strict type checking enabled
  • Type inference: Zod schemas provide runtime validation and compile-time types
  • API types: Fully typed Productive.io API responses

Maintainability

  • Separation of concerns: Each tool has its own directory with schema, handler, and implementation
  • Reusable components: BaseTool provides common functionality
  • Clear structure: Easy to navigate and understand

Best Practices

  • Error handling: Consistent error responses across all tools
  • Configuration: Environment-based configuration management
  • Documentation: JSDoc comments throughout the codebase

License

MIT

from github.com/dotcollective-joel/productive-mcp

Install Productive Io in Claude Desktop, Claude Code & Cursor

Recommended · one command, every IDE
unyly install productive-io-mcp

Installs into Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor & VS Code — handles npx, uvx and build-from-source repos for you.

First time? Get the CLI: curl -fsSL https://unyly.org/install | sh

Or configure manually

Run in your terminal:

claude mcp add productive-io-mcp -- npx -y productive-mcp

FAQ

Is Productive Io MCP free?

Yes, Productive Io MCP is free — one-click install via Unyly at no cost.

Does Productive Io need an API key?

No, Productive Io runs without API keys or environment variables.

Is Productive Io hosted or self-hosted?

A hosted option is available: Unyly runs the server in the cloud, no local setup required.

How do I install Productive Io in Claude Desktop, Claude Code or Cursor?

Open Productive Io on unyly.org, pick your client tab (Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor) and press Install — the config is generated automatically, no JSON editing.

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