ezhuk/bacnet-mcp
If you are the rightful owner of bacnet-mcp and would like to certify it and/or have it hosted online, please leave a comment on the right or send an email to henry@mcphub.com.
The BACnet MCP Server is a lightweight Model Context Protocol server that facilitates secure and standardized integration of LLM agents with BACnet devices, enabling AI-driven workflows in building automation and industrial control systems.
Read Property
Reads the content of a BACnet object property on a remote unit.
Write Property
Writes a BACnet object property on a remote device.
BACnet MCP Server
A lightweight Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that connects LLM agents to BACnet devices in a secure, standardized way, enabling seamless integration of AI-driven workflows with Building Automation (BAS), Building Management (BMS) and Industrial Control (ICS) systems, allowing agents to monitor real-time sensor data, actuate devices, and orchestrate complex automation tasks.
Getting Started
Use uv to add and manage the BACnet MCP server as a dependency in your project, or install it directly via uv pip install
or pip install
. See the Installation section of the documentation for full installation instructions and more details.
uv add bacnet-mcp
The server can be embedded in and run directly from your application. By default, it exposes a Streamable HTTP
endpoint at http://127.0.0.1:8000/mcp/
.
# app.py
from bacnet_mcp import BACnetMCP
mcp = BACnetMCP()
if __name__ == "__main__":
mcp.run(transport="http")
It can also be launched from the command line using the provided CLI
without modifying the source code.
bacnet-mcp
Or in an ephemeral, isolated environment using uvx
. Check out the Using tools guide for more details.
uvx bacnet-mcp
Configuration
For the use cases where most operations target a specific device, such as a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) or BACnet gateway, its connection settings (host
and port
) can be specified at runtime using environment variables so that all prompts that omit explicit connection parameters will be routed to this device.
export BACNET_MCP_BACNET__HOST=10.0.0.1
export BACNET_MCP_BACNET__PORT=47808
These settings can also be specified in a .env
file in the working directory.
# .env
bacnet__host=10.0.0.1
bacnet__port=47808
MCP Inspector
To confirm the server is up and running and explore available resources and tools, run the MCP Inspector and connect it to the BACnet MCP server at http://127.0.0.1:8000/mcp/
. Make sure to set the transport to Streamable HTTP
.
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector
Core Concepts
The BACnet MCP server leverages FastMCP 2.0's core building blocks - resource templates, tools, and prompts - to streamline BACnet read and write operations with minimal boilerplate and a clean, Pythonic interface.
Read Properties
Each object on a device is mapped to a resource (and exposed as a tool) and resource templates are used to specify connection details (host, port) and read parameters (instance, property).
@mcp.resource("udp://{host}:{port}/{obj}/{instance}/{prop}")
@mcp.tool(
annotations={
"title": "Read Property",
"readOnlyHint": True,
"openWorldHint": True,
}
)
async def read_property(
host: str = settings.bacnet.host,
port: int = settings.bacnet.port,
obj: str = "analogValue",
instance: str = "1",
prop: str = "presentValue",
) -> str:
"""Reads the content of a BACnet object property on a remote unit."""
...
Write Properties
Write operations are exposed as a tool, accepting the same connection details (host, port) and allowing to set the content of an object property in a single, atomic call.
@mcp.tool(
annotations={
"title": "Write Property",
"readOnlyHint": False,
"openWorldHint": True,
}
)
async def write_property(
host: str = settings.bacnet.host,
port: int = settings.bacnet.port,
obj: str = "analogValue,1",
prop: str = "presentValue",
data: str = "1.0",
) -> str:
"""Writes a BACnet object property on a remote device."""
...
Authentication
To enable Bearer Token authentication for the Streamable HTTP
transport, provide the RSA public key in PEM format in the .env
file. Check out the Bearer Token Authentication section for more details.
Interactive Prompts
Structured response messages are implemented using prompts that help guide the interaction, clarify missing parameters, and handle errors gracefully.
@mcp.prompt(name="bacnet_help", tags={"bacnet", "help"})
def bacnet_help() -> list[Message]:
"""Provides examples of how to use the BACnet MCP server."""
...
Here are some example text inputs that can be used to interact with the server.
Read the presentValue property of analogInput,1 at 10.0.0.4.
Fetch the units property of analogInput 2.
Write the value 42 to analogValue instance 1.
Set the presentValue of binaryOutput 3 to True.
Examples
The examples
folder contains sample projects showing how to integrate with the BACnet MCP server using various client APIs to provide tools and context to LLMs.
- openai-agents - shows how to connect to the BACnet MCP server using the OpenAI Agents SDK.
- openai - a minimal app leveraging remote MCP server support in the OpenAI Python library.
- pydantic-ai - shows how to connect to the BACnet MCP server using the PydanticAI Agent Framework.
Docker
The BACnet MCP server can be deployed as a Docker container as follows:
docker run -d \
--name bacnet-mcp \
--restart=always \
-p 8080:8000 \
--env-file .env \
ghcr.io/ezhuk/bacnet-mcp:latest
This maps port 8080
on the host to the MCP server's port 8000
inside the container and loads settings from the .env
file, if present.
License
The server is licensed under the MIT License.