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Learn Model Context Protocol with Python

Learn Model Context Protocol with Python

By : Christoffer Noring
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Learn Model Context Protocol with Python

Learn Model Context Protocol with Python

4 (1)
By: Christoffer Noring

Overview of this book

Learn Model Context Protocol with Python introduces developers, architects, and AI practitioners to the transformative capabilities of Model Context Protocol (MCP), an emerging protocol designed to standardize, distribute, and scale AI-driven applications. Through the lens of a practical project, the book tackles the modern challenges of resource management, client-server interaction, and deployment at scale. Drawing from Christoffer's expertise as a published author and tutor at the University of Oxford, you’ll explore the components of MCP and how they streamline server and client development. Next, you’ll progress from building robust backends and integrating LLMs into intelligent clients to interacting with servers via tools such as Claude for desktop and Visual Studio Code agents. The chapters help you understand how to describe the capabilities of hosts, clients, and servers, facilitating better interoperability, easier integration, and clearer communication between different components. The book also covers security best practices and building for the cloud, ensuring that you're ready to deploy your MCP-based apps. Each chapter enables you to develop hands-on skills for building and operating MCP-based agentic apps. The Python primer at the end rounds out the practical toolkit, making this book essential for any team building AI-native applications today.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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14
Other Books You May Enjoy
15
Index

Hardening security with JWT

What’s the benefit of JWT rather than basic authentication? Well, with JWT, you can have more granular control over what the client can do. You can include claims in the token that specify what the client is allowed to do. For example, you can include a claim that specifies that the client is only allowed to read data, but not write data. This would look like something like this:

{
  "sub": "1234567890",
  "name": "User Userson",
  "admin": true,
  "iat": 1516239022,
  "exp": 1516242622,
  "scopes": ["User.Read"]
}

This token payload specifies that the client is allowed to read user data. The server can then check the token and see whether the client has the required scope to perform the requested action. There are a lot of other benefits as well, such as the following:

  • Stateless: The server doesn’t need to store any session information...
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Learn Model Context Protocol with Python
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