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MCP server wrapping the .NET Template Engine for AI-driven template discovery, inspection, and instantiation
MCP server wrapping the .NET Template Engine for AI-driven template discovery, inspection, and instantiation
An MCP server that lets AI agents work with dotnet new templates — search, inspect, preview, and create projects through natural conversation instead of memorizing CLI flags.
Instead of this:
dotnet new list --language C#
dotnet new webapi --help
dotnet new webapi --auth Individual --use-controllers --name MyApi --output ./MyApi
Your AI agent just says: "I need a web API with authentication and controllers" — and the MCP server figures out the rest.
Building a custom dotnet new template? template_validate catches mistakes before you publish — no more guessing if your template.json is correct:
Agent calls: template_validate("./my-template")
← Returns:
{
"valid": false,
"summary": "2 error(s), 1 warning(s), 3 suggestion(s)",
"errors": [
"Missing required field 'shortName'.",
"Parameter 'Framework': default value 'net7.0' is not in the choices list."
],
"warnings": [
"Missing 'sourceName'. Without it, the generated project name won't be customizable via --name."
],
"suggestions": [
"Consider adding a 'description' field to help users understand what this template creates.",
"Consider adding 'language' tag (e.g., 'C#') for better discoverability.",
"Consider adding 'type' tag (e.g., 'project', 'item') for filtering."
]
}
What it catches: missing required fields, invalid identity format, short name conflicts with CLI commands, parameter issues (missing defaults, empty choices, prefix collisions, type mismatches), broken computed symbols, constraint misconfiguration, and missing tags.
No existing tooling does this — most template authors discover issues only after dotnet new install fails or produces wrong output.
| Tool | What it does |
|---|---|
template_search |
Search locally and on NuGet.org — one call, ranked results |
template_list |
List what's installed, filter by language/type/classification |
template_inspect |
Parameters, constraints, post-actions — all in one shot |
template_instantiate |
Create a project. Not installed? Auto-resolves from NuGet. Elicits missing params interactively |
template_dry_run |
Preview files without touching disk |
template_install |
Install a package (idempotent — skips if already there) |
template_uninstall |
Remove a template package |
templates_installed |
Inventory of everything installed |
template_from_intent |
"web API with auth" → webapi + auth=Individual — no LLM needed |
template_create_from_existing |
Analyze a .csproj → generate a reusable template matching repo conventions |
template_compose |
Execute a sequence of templates (project + items) in one workflow |
template_suggest_parameters |
Suggest parameter values with rationale based on cross-parameter relationships |
template_validate |
Validate a local template directory for authoring issues before publishing |
template_compare |
Compare 2+ templates side by side — parameters, features, frameworks |
solution_analyze |
Analyze a solution/workspace — project structure, frameworks, CPM status |
A hosted deployment is available on Fronteir AI.
dotnet tool install --global DotnetTemplateMCP --version 1.3.0
dnx (.NET 10+)dnx -y DotnetTemplateMCP --version 1.3.0
Add to mcp.json:
{
"servers": {
"dotnet-templates": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "dnx",
"args": ["-y", "DotnetTemplateMCP", "--version", "1.3.0"]
}
}
}
📖 Claude Desktop, Cursor, and more →
Standard I/O transport for local CLI and tool usage:
template-engine-mcp # stdio is the default
template-engine-mcp --transport stdio # explicit
Streamable HTTP transport for remote, multi-tenant, or CI/CD deployment:
template-engine-mcp --transport http
# or via environment variable:
MCP_TEMPLATE_TRANSPORT=http template-engine-mcp
The HTTP server exposes:
/mcp — MCP streamable HTTP endpoint/health — Health check endpointConfigure the listen URL:
MCP_TEMPLATE_HTTP_URL=http://0.0.0.0:8080 template-engine-mcp --transport http
Connect your MCP client:
{
"servers": {
"dotnet-templates": {
"type": "http",
"url": "http://localhost:5005/mcp"
}
}
}
When a template has required parameters that weren't provided, the server asks the user interactively via MCP elicitation — instead of failing. Template parameter types are mapped to form fields:
| Template Parameter | Elicitation Field |
|---|---|
string |
Text input |
bool / boolean |
Checkbox |
int / number |
Number input |
| Choice parameter | Single-select dropdown |
Disable with MCP_TEMPLATE_ELICITATION=false.
You: "I need a web API with authentication, controllers, and Docker support"
→ template_from_intent extracts keywords: web api, authentication, controllers, docker
→ Matches: webapi (confidence: 0.85)
→ Resolves: auth=Individual, UseControllers=true, EnableDocker=true
→ template_instantiate creates the project
The server also does smart defaults (AOT → latest framework, auth → HTTPS stays on), parameter validation before writing files, constraint checking (OS, SDK, workload), interactive elicitation of missing required parameters, and auto-resolves templates from NuGet if they're not installed.
When creating a project inside a solution that uses Central Package Management, the server automatically:
Directory.Packages.props by walking up the directory treeVersion attributes from generated .csproj PackageReferences<PackageVersion> entries to Directory.Packages.propsBefore (what dotnet new generates):
<PackageReference Include="Serilog" Version="3.1.0" /> ← stale, breaks CPM
After (what template_instantiate produces):
.csproj: <PackageReference Include="Serilog" />
Directory.Packages.props: <PackageVersion Include="Serilog" Version="4.2.0" />
Works for standalone projects too — versions are updated directly in the .csproj.
Chain multiple templates in one call with template_compose:
[
{"templateName": "webapi", "name": "MyApi", "parametersJson": "{\"auth\": \"Individual\"}"},
{"templateName": "gitignore", "target": "."}
]
📖 Architecture & smart behaviors →
By default, all 14 tools are available. If your agent works better with fewer tools, set the MCP_TEMPLATE_TOOL_PROFILE environment variable:
| Profile | Tools | When to use |
|---|---|---|
full (default) |
All 14 tools | Full control — advanced workflows, composition, custom templates |
lite |
5 core tools | Simpler agents that just need to find and create projects |
Lite profile tools: template_from_intent, template_instantiate, template_inspect, template_search, template_dry_run
{
"servers": {
"dotnet-template-mcp": {
"command": "dotnet-template-mcp",
"env": {
"MCP_TEMPLATE_TOOL_PROFILE": "lite"
}
}
}
}
Non-lite tools will return a helpful message explaining they're disabled and how to enable them.
| Doc | What's in it |
|---|---|
| Configuration | VS Code, Claude Desktop, Cursor setup + troubleshooting |
| Tool Reference | Every tool's parameters, types, and examples |
| Architecture | Template cache, smart behaviors, telemetry, project structure |
| MCP vs Skills | Why MCP over Copilot Skills — benefits and downsides |
| Plain LLM vs MCP | Side-by-side: what a plain LLM does vs. the MCP tool (4 scenarios) |
| Skills Equivalent | What it'd take to cover this with Skills instead |
dotnet build
dotnet test # 185+ tests — unit, integration, and E2E
CI runs on push/PR via GitHub Actions (Ubuntu + Windows).
Contributions are welcome! Please open an issue to discuss proposed changes before submitting a PR.
# Setup
dotnet restore
dotnet build
# Run tests
dotnet test
# Pack locally
dotnet pack src/Microsoft.TemplateEngine.MCP -o nupkg/
See CHANGELOG.md for release history.
Добавь это в claude_desktop_config.json и перезапусти Claude Desktop.
{
"mcpServers": {
"dotnettemplatemcp": {
"command": "npx",
"args": []
}
}
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