A Model Context Protocol server for accessing and controlling webcams via OpenCV
Video Still Capture MCP is a Python implementation of the Model Context Protocol (MCP) that provides AI assistants with the ability to access and control webcams and video sources through OpenCV. This server exposes a set of tools that allow language models to capture images, manipulate camera settings, and manage video connections. There is no video capture.
Here are some examples of the Video Still Capture MCP server in action:
Left: Claude's view of the image | Right: Actual webcam capture |
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Left: Claude's view of the image | Right: Actual webcam capture |
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- Python 3.10+
- OpenCV (
opencv-python
) - MCP Python SDK
- UV (optional)
git clone https://github.com/13rac1/videocapture-mcp.git
cd videocapture-mcp
pip install -e .
Run the MCP server:
mcp dev videocapture_mcp.py
Edit your Claude Desktop configuration:
# Mac
nano ~/Library/Application\ Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
# Linux
nano ~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Add this MCP server configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"VideoCapture ": {
"command": "uv",
"args": [
"run",
"--with",
"mcp[cli]",
"--with",
"numpy",
"--with",
"opencv-python",
"mcp",
"run",
"/ABSOLUTE_PATH/videocapture_mcp.py"
]
}
}
}
Ensure you replace /ABSOLUTE_PATH/videocapture-mcp
with the project's absolute path.
Edit your Claude Desktop configuration:
nano $env:AppData\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
Add this MCP server configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"VideoCapture": {
"command": "uv",
"args": [
"run",
"--with",
"mcp[cli]",
"--with",
"numpy",
"--with",
"opencv-python",
"mcp",
"run",
"C:\ABSOLUTE_PATH\videocapture-mcp\videocapture_mcp.py"
]
}
}
}
Ensure you replace C:\ABSOLUTE_PATH\videocapture-mcp
with the project's absolute path.
Alternatively, you can use the mcp
CLI to install the server:
mcp install videocapture_mcp.py
This will automatically configure Claude Desktop to use your videocapture MCP server.
Once integrated, Claude will be able to access your webcam or video source when requested. Simply ask Claude to take a photo or perform any webcam-related task.
- Quick Image Capture: Capture a single image from a webcam without managing connections
- Connection Management: Open, manage, and close camera connections
- Video Properties: Read and adjust camera settings like brightness, contrast, and resolution
- Image Processing: Basic image transformations like horizontal flipping
Quickly open a camera, capture a single frame, and close it.
quick_capture(device_index: int = 0, flip: bool = False) -> Image
- device_index: Camera index (0 is usually the default webcam)
- flip: Whether to horizontally flip the image
- Returns: The captured frame as an Image object
Open a connection to a camera device.
open_camera(device_index: int = 0, name: Optional[str] = None) -> str
- device_index: Camera index (0 is usually the default webcam)
- name: Optional name to identify this camera connection
- Returns: Connection ID for the opened camera
Capture a single frame from the specified video source.
capture_frame(connection_id: str, flip: bool = False) -> Image
- connection_id: ID of the previously opened video connection
- flip: Whether to horizontally flip the image
- Returns: The captured frame as an Image object
Get properties of the video source.
get_video_properties(connection_id: str) -> dict
- connection_id: ID of the previously opened video connection
- Returns: Dictionary of video properties (width, height, fps, etc.)
Set a property of the video source.
set_video_property(connection_id: str, property_name: str, value: float) -> bool
- connection_id: ID of the previously opened video connection
- property_name: Name of the property to set (width, height, brightness, etc.)
- value: Value to set
- Returns: True if successful, False otherwise
Close a video connection and release resources.
close_connection(connection_id: str) -> bool
- connection_id: ID of the connection to close
- Returns: True if successful
List all active video connections.
list_active_connections() -> list
- Returns: List of active connection IDs
Here's how an AI assistant might use the Webcam MCP server:
-
Take a quick photo:
I'll take a photo using your webcam.
(The AI would call
quick_capture()
behind the scenes) -
Open a persistent connection:
I'll open a connection to your webcam so we can take multiple photos.
(The AI would call
open_camera()
and store the connection ID) -
Adjust camera settings:
Let me increase the brightness of the webcam feed.
(The AI would call
set_video_property()
with the appropriate parameters)
The server automatically manages camera resources, ensuring all connections are properly released when the server shuts down. For long-running applications, it's good practice to explicitly close connections when they're no longer needed.
If your system has multiple cameras, you can specify the device index when opening a connection:
# Open the second webcam (index 1)
connection_id = open_camera(device_index=1)
- Camera Not Found: Ensure your webcam is properly connected and not in use by another application
- Permission Issues: Some systems require explicit permission to access the camera
- OpenCV Installation: If you encounter issues with OpenCV, refer to the official installation guide
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.