Teamwork-MCP
If you are the rightful owner of Teamwork-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.
An MCP server that connects to the Teamwork API, providing a simplified interface for interacting with Teamwork projects and tasks.
Teamwork MCP
An MCP server that connects to the Teamwork API, providing a simplified interface for interacting with Teamwork projects and tasks.
Features
- Connect to Teamwork API
- Retrieve projects and tasks
- Create, update, and delete tasks
- RESTful API endpoints
- Error handling and logging
- MCP server for integration with Cursor and other applications
Prerequisites
- Node.js (v14.17 or higher, recommend 18+ or even better latest LTS version)
- npm or yarn
- Teamwork account with API access
Available Teamwork MCP Tools
The following tools are available through the MCP server:
Project Tools
getProjects
- Get all projects from TeamworkgetCurrentProject
- Gets details about the current projectcreateProject
- Create a new project in Teamwork
Task Tools
getTasks
- Get all tasks from TeamworkgetTasksByProjectId
- Get all tasks from a specific project in TeamworkgetTaskListsByProjectId
- Get all task lists from a specific project in TeamworkgetTasksByTaskListId
- Gets all tasks from a specific task list ID from TeamworkgetTaskById
- Get a specific task by ID from TeamworkcreateTask
- Create a new task in TeamworkcreateSubTask
- Create a new subtask under a parent task in TeamworkupdateTask
- Update an existing task in TeamworkdeleteTask
- Delete a task from TeamworkgetTasksMetricsComplete
- Get the total count of completed tasks in TeamworkgetTasksMetricsLate
- Get the total count of late tasks in TeamworkgetTaskSubtasks
- Get all subtasks for a specific task in TeamworkgetTaskComments
- Get comments for a specific task from Teamwork
Comment Tools
createComment
- Create a comment related to a task/message/notebook
Company Tools
getCompanies
- Get all companies from Teamwork with optional filteringgetCompanyById
- Get a specific company by IDcreateCompany
- Create a new company in TeamworkupdateCompany
- Update an existing company's informationdeleteCompany
- Delete a company from Teamwork
People Tools
getPeople
- Get all people from TeamworkgetPersonById
- Get a specific person by ID from TeamworkgetProjectPeople
- Get all people assigned to a specific project from TeamworkaddPeopleToProject
- Add people to a specific project in TeamworkdeletePerson
- Delete a person from TeamworkupdatePerson
- Update a person's information (timezone, name, email, etc.)getProjectsPeopleMetricsPerformance
- Get people metrics performancegetProjectsPeopleUtilization
- Get people utilizationgetProjectPerson
- Get a specific person on a project
Reporting Tools
getProjectsReportingUserTaskCompletion
- Get user task completion reportgetProjectsReportingUtilization
- Get utilization report in various formats CSV & HTML
Time Tools
getTime
- Get all time entriesgetProjectsAllocationsTime
- Get project allocations timegetTimezones
- Get all available timezones in Teamwork (useful when updating user timezones)
Installation
Using NPX (Recommended)
The easiest way to use Teamwork MCP is with npx. This method doesn't require cloning the repository or building the code locally:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp
You can also pass configuration options directly:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --domain=your-company --user=your-email@example.com --pass=your-password
Configuration
Setting Credentials
You can provide your Teamwork credentials in three ways:
-
Environment Variables: Set
TEAMWORK_DOMAIN
,TEAMWORK_USERNAME
, andTEAMWORK_PASSWORD
in your environment. -
.env File: Create a
.env
file with the required variables:TEAMWORK_DOMAIN=your-company TEAMWORK_USERNAME=your-email@example.com TEAMWORK_PASSWORD=your-password
-
Command Line Arguments: Pass credentials when running the application:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --teamwork-domain=your-company --teamwork-username=your-email@example.com --teamwork-password=your-password
Or using short form:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --domain=your-company --user=your-email@example.com --pass=your-password
Logging Configuration
By default, the Teamwork MCP server creates log files in a logs
directory to help with debugging and monitoring. You can disable logging completely using the following methods:
-
Command Line Arguments:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --disable-logging
Or using the alternative form:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --no-logging
-
Environment Variable:
DISABLE_LOGGING=true npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp
When logging is enabled, the server creates two log files in the logs
directory:
error.log
- Contains only error-level messagescombined.log
- Contains all log messages (info, warnings, errors)
Each log file includes a header with instructions on how to disable logging if needed.
Tool Filtering
You can control which tools are available to the MCP server using the following command-line arguments:
-
Allow List: Only expose specific tools:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --allow-tools=getProjects,getTasks,getTaskById
Or using short form:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --allow=getProjects,getTasks,getTaskById
-
Deny List: Expose all tools except those specified:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --deny-tools=deleteTask,updateTask
Or using short form:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --deny=deleteTask,updateTask
Tool Filtering with Groups
You can now specify groups of tools for filtering, allowing for more flexible control over which tools are available to the MCP server. The available groups are:
- Projects: Includes all project-related tools.
- Tasks: Includes all task-related tools.
- People: Includes all people-related tools.
- Reporting: Includes all reporting-related tools.
- Time: Includes all time-related tools.
- Comments: Includes specific comment tools.
Using Groups in Tool Filtering
You can specify these groups in the allow or deny lists to include or exclude all tools within a group. For example:
-
Allow List with Groups: Only expose specific groups of tools:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --allow-tools=Tasks,People
Or using short form:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --allow=Tasks,People
-
Deny List with Groups: Expose all tools except those in specified groups:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --deny-tools=Reporting,Time
Or using short form:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp --deny=Reporting,Time
By default, all tools are exposed if neither allow nor deny list is provided. If both are provided, the allow list takes precedence.
The tool filtering is enforced at two levels for enhanced security:
- When listing available tools (tools not in the allow list or in the deny list won't be visible)
- When executing tool calls (attempts to call filtered tools will be rejected with an error)
Setting Up Your Teamwork Project
To associate your current solution with a Teamwork project, you can use the following method:
Using a Configuration File
You can create a .teamwork
file in the root of your project with the following structure:
PROJECT_ID = YourTeamworkProjectID
This simple configuration file associates your solution with a specific Teamwork project, we may use it to store more details in the future.
Once configured, the MCP will be able to find your Teamwork project and associate it with your current solution, reducing the number of API calls needed to get the project and tasks related to the solution you are working on.
Adding to MCP Clients
Cursor
To add this MCP server to Cursor:
Versions before 0.47
- Open Cursor Settings > Features > MCP
- Click "+ Add New MCP Server"
- Enter a name for the server (e.g., "Teamwork API")
- Select "stdio" as the transport type
- Enter the command to run the server:
npx @vizioz/teamwork-mcp
and add the credentials and domain command line arguments as mentioned above.- You can include tool filtering options:
--allow=getProjects,getTasks
or--deny=deleteTask
- You can include tool filtering options:
- Click "Add"
Versions after 0.47 (editing the config manually)
"Teamwork": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@vizioz/teamwork-mcp",
"--domain",
"yourdomain",
"--user",
"youruser@yourdomain.com",
"--pass",
"yourPassword"
]
}
To disable logging in Cursor, add the --disable-logging
argument:
"Teamwork": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@vizioz/teamwork-mcp",
"--domain",
"yourdomain",
"--user",
"youruser@yourdomain.com",
"--pass",
"yourPassword",
"--disable-logging"
]
}
If you want to add the allow or deny arguments mentioned above you just add them like this, you can add any of the examples given above, you can also add both groups and individual tools as shown below:
"Teamwork": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@vizioz/teamwork-mcp",
"--domain",
"yourdomain",
"--user",
"youruser@yourdomain.com",
"--pass",
"yourPassword",
"--allow",
"Tasks,Projects",
"--deny",
"getProjectsPeopleMetricsPerformance,getProjectsPeopleUtilization"
]
}
The Teamwork MCP tools will now be available to the Cursor Agent in Composer.
Claude Desktop
To add this MCP server to Claude Desktop, edit your Claude Desktop configuration file:
Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Add the following configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"teamwork": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"@vizioz/teamwork-mcp",
"--domain",
"yourdomain",
"--user",
"youruser@yourdomain.com",
"--pass",
"yourPassword"
]
}
}
}
Windsurf
To add this MCP server to Windsurf, follow similar steps to Cursor by adding the MCP server configuration with the npx command and your credentials.
Building from Source
Note: You only need to follow these instructions if you plan to contribute to the project or submit a pull request. For regular usage, use the NPX installation method above.
Local Development Setup
-
Clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/readingdancer/teamwork-mcp.git cd teamwork-mcp
-
Install dependencies:
npm install
-
Create a
.env
file based on the.env.example
file:cp .env.example .env
-
Update the
.env
file with your Teamwork credentials:PORT=3000 NODE_ENV=development LOG_LEVEL=info TEAMWORK_DOMAIN=your-company TEAMWORK_USERNAME=your-email@example.com TEAMWORK_PASSWORD=your-password
Building the Application
Build the application:
npm run build
This will compile the TypeScript code ready to be used as an MCP Server.
Running as an MCP Server (Local Build)
To run as an MCP server for integration with Cursor and other applications, if you are using the .env file for your username, password & url, or if you have saved them in environment variables:
NOTE: Don't forget to change the drive and path details based on where you have saved the repository.
node C:/your-full-path/build/index.js
Or you can pass them using line arguments:
node C:/your-full-path/build/index.js --teamwork-domain=your-company --teamwork-username=your-email@example.com --teamwork-password=your-password
You can also use the short form:
node C:/your-full-path/build/index.js --domain=your-company --user=your-email@example.com --pass=your-password
Using the MCP Inspector
To run the MCP inspector for debugging:
npm run inspector
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
Disclaimer
This project is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Teamwork.com. The use of the name "Teamwork" in the package name (@vizioz/teamwork-mcp) is solely for descriptive purposes to indicate compatibility with the Teamwork.com API.