outline-mcp
Tree-structured knowledge base as an MCP server.
LLM sessions are ephemeral. outline-mcp gives them a persistent, editable knowledge tree — sections and content nodes that can be browsed (toc), annotated with properties, and evolved across sessions. Nodes with inject=true are automatically included in session context.
Quick Start
cargo install --path .
Claude Code (~/.claude.json)
Native binary (after cargo install)
{
"mcpServers": {
"outline": {
"command": "outline-mcp",
"args": ["/path/to/your-book.json"]
}
}
}
Docker (no Rust toolchain required)
{
"mcpServers": {
"outline": {
"command": "docker",
"args": [
"run", "-i", "--rm",
"-v", "/path/to/data:/data",
"ghcr.io/ynishi/outline-mcp:latest",
"/data/your-book.json"
]
}
}
}
If the path argument is omitted, defaults to outline-book.json in the current directory.
Workflow
shelf → select_book → toc → node_create / node_update / node_move
node_batch_move / node_batch_update / node_query
checklist / import / init / gen_routing
snapshot_create / snapshot_list / snapshot_restore
node_history / dump
init— Create a new empty booknode_create— Add sections and content nodes (with optionalproperties)toc— View the table of contents with numbered IDs (e.g.1,2-3). Supportsfilterby propertiesselect_book— Select a book. Nodes withinject=trueproperty have their body auto-appended (draft nodes excluded)checklist— Export a section (or the whole book) as a Markdown checklist with checkboxesnode_update— Edit title, body, type, placeholder, properties, or status (active/draft) of a nodenode_move— Relocate or delete nodes (with descendants)node_batch_move— Move or delete multiple nodes in a single atomic call (requires UUID or UUID-prefix IDs)node_batch_update— Update title/body/type/properties/status on multiple nodes atomicallynode_query— Search nodes by property values, status (active/draft), or type (section/content); optionally include body in resultsimport— Import a book from a previously exported JSON filegen_routing— Generate a Markdown routing table from nodes withroutingproperty across all bookssnapshot_create/snapshot_list/snapshot_restore— Full book versioning (create, list, restore)node_history— View per-node change log with before/after diffsdump— Export full book as JSON file
Node IDs
toc assigns human-friendly numbered IDs:
1. Coding Standards
1-1. Naming Conventions
1-2. Error Handling
2. Testing
2-1. Unit Tests
2-2. Integration Tests
These IDs (1, 1-2, 2-1, etc.) work in most tools. Full UUIDs and title substring matching are also supported as fallbacks.
Note:
node_batch_moveandnode_batch_updaterequire UUID or UUID-prefix IDs. Hierarchical toc IDs are intentionally rejected to prevent positional drift when the tree is modified mid-batch.
Node Properties
Nodes can have key-value properties for metadata:
node_create title="My Rule" properties={"inject": "true", "scope": "rust"}
inject=true— Node body is automatically included inselect_bookoutput (context injection)routing=<scene>— Marks the node forgen_routingoutput. Use|to assign multiple scenes (e.g.routing="testing|TDD")routing_ref=<text>— Overrides the default§ID Titlereference in the routing table (e.g.routing_ref="select_book で全体参照")- Properties with value
"true"appear as tags intoc:1. My Rule [inject] tocsupports filtering:filter={"inject": "true"}shows only matching nodes- Properties are preserved in JSON export/import
Architecture
The repository is a Cargo workspace with two crates: an rmcp-independent SDK (outline-mcp-core) and the MCP server binary (outline-mcp).
crates/
├── outline-mcp-core/ # SDK crate (library, no rmcp dependency)
│ └── src/
│ ├── domain/ # Core model (TemplateBook, TemplateNode, NodeId)
│ │ ├── model/ # Aggregate root + value objects
│ │ ├── error.rs # Domain errors
│ │ └── repository.rs # BookRepository trait
│ ├── application/ # Use cases
│ │ ├── service.rs # BookService (CRUD)
│ │ └── eject.rs # EjectService (Markdown/JSON export & import)
│ └── infra/ # Persistence
│ ├── json_store.rs # JSON file repository (atomic write)
│ ├── changelog_store.rs
│ └── snapshot.rs
└── outline-mcp/ # Binary crate (MCP server, depends on outline-mcp-core)
└── src/
├── main.rs # Entry point
└── interface/
└── mcp/ # MCP handlers (rmcp, stdio)
Downstream applications that want to embed the tree / snapshot / changelog logic without pulling rmcp can depend on outline-mcp-core directly:
[dependencies]
outline-mcp-core = "0.7"
Export Formats
Markdown (default)
# My Runbook
## Design
- [ ] Define requirements
> requirements list: ___
- [ ] API design
REST endpoints
JSON
Tree-structured format that can be re-imported:
{
"title": "My Runbook",
"max_depth": 4,
"nodes": [
{
"title": "Design",
"node_type": "section",
"children": [...]
}
]
}
Upgrading
From 0.9.1 or earlier
The snapshot subsystem now persists to a per-book SQLite event log ({shelf_dir}/{slug}.events.db) in addition to the existing on-disk .snap.{millis}.json files. Existing installs must run the migrator once to fold pre-existing on-disk snapshots into the event log — until they do, those snapshots stay on disk but are not visible to snapshot_list / snapshot_restore.
1. Back up the shelf directory. The migrator is idempotent and does not delete files, but the shelf directory is the source of truth for your books; a copy is cheap insurance.
cp -a <shelf-dir> <shelf-dir>.bak
2. Run the migrator.
outline-mcp migrate-snapshots --shelf <shelf-dir>
The migrator scans every {slug}.snap.{millis}.json file under <shelf-dir>, imports each into {shelf-dir}/{slug}.events.db with its original timestamp preserved, and leaves the source .json file in place. Output looks like:
== rust ==
scanned: 3
imported: 3
skipped: 0
failed: 0
Pass --slug <slug> to migrate one book at a time.
3. Verify (optional). Re-running the migrator is a no-op — every file will report as skipped.
What the migrator does not do
- It does not delete the source
.snap.*.jsonfiles. Keep them for a while as a second layer of backup. - It will refuse a stream that already carries events from a different clock (e.g. a book that has been actively edited via
snapshot_createbetween the upgrade and the migrator run). Run the migrator before doing new writes. - The startup warning that steers you here is emitted via
tracing::warn!onstderr. MCP clients that swallow server stderr (Claude Code included) will not surface it — treat the migrator command as the canonical way to check.
Known limitations
- Snapshots that were post-hoc labeled via
snapshot_tag(as opposed to labeled atsnapshot_createtime) lose the "time the label was attached" value in their sidecar.meta.json's internalcreated_atfield. The label text itself is preserved, andcreated_atis never exposed through the MCP surface — this is an internal-metadata drift, not user-visible.
License
Licensed under either of
at your option.