mcp-server-wsl-filesystem

mcp-server-wsl-filesystem

3.3

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Filesystem MCP Server for WSL is a Node.js server implementing the Model Context Protocol (MCP), optimized for filesystem operations in Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).

āš ļø IMPORTANT INFORMATION:
The original Filesystem MCP Server can already access WSL files by simply using the network path \\wsl.localhost\DistributionName as a parameter in the configuration.
Example:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "filesystem": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": [
        "-y",
        "@modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem",
        "\\\\wsl.localhost\\Debian",
        "C:\\path\\to\\other\\allowed\\dir"
      ]
    }
  }
}

However, this project offers an alternative implementation specifically optimized for WSL Linux distributions.

While the official server works by recursively walking directories using Node.js’s fs module, this implementation leverages native Linux commands inside WSL (such as find, grep, etc.), making file listing and content search operations significantly faster.

This can be especially useful when dealing with large directory trees or when search performance is critical.

So while the native network path may be simpler for many use cases, this project remains a valuable solution for WSL users looking for better performance or more custom control over the indexing and searching logic.


Filesystem MCP Server for WSL

Node.js server implementing the Model Context Protocol (MCP), specifically designed for filesystem operations in Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).
This project is a fork of the original Filesystem MCP Server but completely reimagined for WSL environments.
Unlike the original project, which handles generic file operations, this version focuses exclusively on seamless interaction between Windows and Linux distributions under WSL.
Both projects are compatible and can run in parallel on the same system.

Features

  • Access any WSL distribution from Windows
  • Read/write files in WSL from Windows host
  • Create/list/delete directories in WSL
  • Move files/directories across WSL filesystem
  • Search files within WSL
  • Get file metadata from the WSL filesystem
  • Support for multiple WSL distributions

Note: The server only allows operations within directories specified via args.


API

Resources

  • wsl -d <distrib>: Command for operations on WSL distributions

Tools

  • read_file

    • Read complete contents of a file from WSL
    • Input: path (string)
    • Reads content as UTF-8 text
  • read_file_by_parts

    • Read large files in parts of approximately 95,000 characters
    • Inputs:
      • path (string)
      • part_number (positive integer: 1, 2, 3, etc.)
    • Features:
      • Part 1 starts from the beginning of the file
      • Subsequent parts align to line boundaries (max 300 character adjustment)
      • Returns error with actual file size if requested part doesn't exist
      • Useful for files too large to read in one operation
  • read_multiple_files

    • Read multiple files simultaneously from WSL
    • Input: paths (string[])
    • Failed reads won't stop the entire operation
  • write_file

    • Create or overwrite a file in WSL (use with caution)
    • Inputs:
      • path (string)
      • content (string)
  • edit_file

    • Selective edits with advanced pattern matching and formatting
    • Inputs:
      • path (string)
      • edits (array of { oldText, newText })
      • dryRun (boolean, optional)
    • Features:
      • Multi-line matching
      • Indentation preservation
      • Git-style diff preview
      • Non-destructive dry run mode
  • create_directory

    • Create or ensure the existence of a directory in WSL
    • Input: path (string)
  • list_directory

    • List directory contents with [FILE] or [DIR] prefixes
    • Input: path (string)
  • directory_tree

    • Recursive JSON tree view of contents
    • Input: path (string)
  • move_file

    • Move or rename files/directories
    • Inputs:
      • source (string)
      • destination (string)
  • search_files

    • Recursively search by name
    • Inputs:
      • path (string)
      • pattern (string)
      • excludePatterns (string[], optional)
  • get_file_info

    • Detailed metadata
    • Input: path (string)
    • Returns: size, timestamps, type, permissions
  • list_allowed_directories

    • Lists all directories accessible to the server
  • list_wsl_distributions

    • Lists available distributions and shows the active one

Requirements

For Claude Desktop users:
No additional installation required — just configure your claude_desktop_config.json.

For development:

  • Node.js (v14.0.0 or higher)
  • TypeScript (included as a dev dependency)

Installing Node.js on Windows

  1. Download the installer from nodejs.org
  2. Run it and follow the instructions
  3. Check versions:
node --version
npm --version

Usage

Before running the server, you need to build the TypeScript project:

npm install
npm run build

Run the server by specifying which WSL distribution to use (optional) and which directories to expose:

node dist/index.js [--distro=distribution_name] <allowed_directory> [additional_directories...]

If no distribution is specified, the default WSL distribution will be used.

Examples

Access Ubuntu-20.04 distribution:

node dist/index.js --distro=Ubuntu-20.04 /home/user/documents

Use default distribution:

node dist/index.js /home/user/documents

Usage with Claude Desktop

Add this to your claude_desktop_config.json:

Option 1: Using a specific WSL distribution

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "wsl-filesystem": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": [
        "-y",
        "mcp-server-wsl-filesystem",
        "--distro=Ubuntu-20.04",
        "/home/user/documents"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Option 2: Using the default WSL distribution

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "wsl-filesystem": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": [
        "-y",
        "mcp-server-wsl-filesystem",
        "/home/user/documents"
      ]
    }
  }
}

In the second example, the system will use your default WSL distribution without you needing to specify it.

Differences from original project

This fork adapts the original Filesystem MCP Server to work with WSL by:

  1. Replacing direct Node.js filesystem calls with WSL command executions
  2. Adding support for selecting specific WSL distributions
  3. Implementing path translation between Windows and Linux formats
  4. Enhancing file content handling for cross-platform compatibility
  5. Adding specialized tools for WSL management

License

This project is a fork of the original Filesystem MCP Server created by the Model Context Protocol team.

This MCP server for WSL is licensed under the MIT License, following the original project's license. This means you are free to use, modify, and distribute the software, subject to the terms and conditions of the MIT License. For more details, please see the LICENSE file in the original project repository.