Firewalla MCP Server
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that provides real-time access to Firewalla firewall data through 28 specialized tools, compatible with any MCP client.
Why Firewalla MCP Server?
Simple Network Security Integration
28 Tools for network monitoring and analysis
23 Direct API Endpoints + 5 Convenience Wrappers
Advanced Search with query syntax and filters
Clean, Verified Architecture with corrected API schemas
Features
Real-time Firewall Data: Query security alerts, network flows, and device status
Security Analysis: Get insights on threats, blocked attacks, and network anomalies
Bandwidth Monitoring: Track top bandwidth consumers and usage patterns
Rule Management: View and temporarily pause firewall rules
Target Lists: Manage custom security target lists and categories
Search Tools: Query syntax with filters and logical operators
Client Setup Guides
Client | Quick Start | Full Guide |
Claude Desktop |
→ Configure MCP | |
Claude Code |
→ CLI integration | |
VS Code | Install MCP extension → Configure server | |
Cursor | Install Claude Code → VSIX method | |
Roocode | Install MCP support → Configure server | |
Cline | Configure in VS Code → Enable MCP |
How It Works
The MCP server acts as a bridge between Claude and your Firewalla firewall, translating Claude's requests into Firewalla API calls and returning the results in a format Claude can understand.
Prerequisites
Node.js 18+ and npm
Firewalla MSP account with API access
Your Firewalla device online and connected
Quick Start
1. Installation
Option A: Install from npm (Recommended)
Option B: Use Docker
Warning: Not for production use – secrets visible in process list
The examples below pass credentials directly in the command line, which exposes them to process listing and shell history. For production use, consider these secure alternatives:
Use
--env-file
with a.env
file:docker run --env-file .env ...
Set environment variables in your shell before running Docker
Use Docker secrets for orchestration environments
Option C: Install from source
2. Configuration
Create a .env
file with your Firewalla credentials:
Getting Your Credentials:
Log into your Firewalla MSP portal at
https://yourdomain.firewalla.net
Your MSP ID is the full domain (e.g.,
company123.firewalla.net
)Generate an access token in API settings
Find your Box GID (Group ID) in device settings - this is your unique device identifier
3. Build and Start
4. Connect Claude Desktop
Add this configuration to your Claude Desktop claude_desktop_config.json
:
If installed via npm
If using Docker
If installed from source
Config file locations:
macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Windows:
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
5. Next Steps
See USAGE.md for practical examples and common queries
Check TROUBLESHOOTING.md if you encounter issues
Review client-specific setup guides in docs/clients/
Usage Examples
Step-by-Step First Use
1. Verify Connection After completing the setup, verify the MCP server is working:
2. Test with Claude Open Claude Desktop and try these starter queries:
Basic Health Check:
This uses:
Security Overview:
This uses:
Practical Workflows
Daily Security Review:
Investigating Suspicious Activity:
Network Troubleshooting:
Bandwidth Investigation:
Advanced Search Examples
Find Specific Threats:
Uses: AND timestamp:>24h"*
Analyze Rule Effectiveness:
Uses:
Device Behavior Analysis:
Uses:
Troubleshooting Common Issues
Connection Problems: If you get authentication errors:
Verify your
.env
file has correct credentialsCheck your MSP token hasn't expired
Confirm your Box ID is the full GID format
Empty Results: If queries return no data:
Check your Firewalla is online and reporting
Verify the time range isn't too narrow
Try broader search terms first
Performance Issues: If responses are slow:
Reduce the limit parameter in queries
Use more specific time ranges
Check your network connection to the MSP API
Available Tools (28 total)
Core Tools
Security: Get alarms, analyze threats
Network: Monitor traffic flows, track bandwidth usage
Devices: Check device status, find offline devices
Rules: Manage firewall rules, pause/resume rules
Search: Advanced search across all data types
Analytics: Statistics, trends, and geographic analysis
Target Management: Create, update, and delete security target lists
Quick Reference
Development
Scripts
MCP Execution Methods
Why
Version Management: Always uses the correct/latest version
Dependency Resolution: Handles package dependencies automatically
No global installation required: Works without global installation
MCP Standard: Follows Model Context Protocol conventions
Reliable: Works consistently across different environments
Alternative execution methods:
Project Structure
Documentation
README.md (this file) - Setup and basic usage
USAGE.md - Simple usage guide with examples
TROUBLESHOOTING.md - Common issues and solutions
docs/clients/ - Client-specific setup guides
CLAUDE.md - Development guide and commands
Security
MSP tokens are stored securely in environment variables
No credentials are logged or stored in code
Rate limiting prevents API abuse
Input validation prevents injection attacks
All API communications use HTTPS
Known Behaviors and Limitations
Category Classification
Flow Categories: Many network flows may show as empty category ("") in the Firewalla API response. This is expected behavior - Firewalla categorizes traffic when it recognizes the domain/service (e.g., "av" for audio/video, "social" for social media).
Target List Categories: Some target lists may show category as "unknown". This is normal for user-created or certain system lists.
Timeline: Category classification happens at the Firewalla device level and may take time to build up meaningful categorization data.
Data Characteristics
Response Sizes: The
get_recent_flow_activity
tool returns up to 150 recent flows to stay within token limits. For larger datasets or historical analysis, usesearch_flows
with time filters for more targeted queries.Geographic Data: IP geolocation is enriched by the MCP server and includes country, city, and risk scores when available.
API Limitations
Alarm Deletion: The
delete_alarm
tool may not actually delete alarms even though the Firewalla API returns a success response. This appears to be a limitation of the MSP API where delete operations return{"message": "success", "success": true}
but the alarm remains in the system. This may be due to permission restrictions or API design.
Troubleshooting
Quick Fixes
Server won't start:
Authentication errors:
Check your MSP token is valid
Verify Box ID format (long UUID)
Confirm MSP domain is correct
No data returned:
Try broader queries: "last week" vs "last hour"
Check if Firewalla is online
Test with: "show me basic statistics"
Slow responses:
Add limits: "top 10 devices"
Use shorter time ranges
Restart the server
Debug Mode
Enable detailed logging:
For more detailed troubleshooting, see TROUBLESHOOTING.md
Contributing
Fork the repository
Create a feature branch
Make your changes
Add tests for new functionality
Run the test suite
Submit a pull request
What's New
Version 1.0.0:
28 tools with API-verified schemas
24 direct API endpoints + 5 convenience wrappers
NEW: get_flow_insights for category-based traffic analysis
Advanced search with logical operators (AND, OR, NOT)
All limits corrected to API maximum (500)
Required parameters added for proper API calls
Better caching for faster responses
Handles high-volume networks (300k+ flows/day)
License
Support
For issues and questions:
Check the troubleshooting guide
Review the technical specifications
Open an issue on GitHub
GitHub Repository
Repository: https://github.com/amittell/firewalla-mcp-server
Quick Links
Repository Stats
This server cannot be installed
Provides real-time access to Firewalla firewall data through 28 specialized tools for network monitoring, security analysis, bandwidth tracking, and firewall rule management. Enables users to query security alerts, analyze network flows, monitor device status, and manage firewall configurations through natural language.