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Sharing Tailwind CSS Styles Across Apps in a Monorepo | Nx Blog How SiriusXM Stays Competitive by Iterating and Getting to Market Fast | Nx Blog Agentic Experience Is the New Developer Experience | Nx Blog Nx Joins the Linux Foundation and the Agentic AI Foundation | Nx Blog A Monorepo Is NOT a Monolith | Nx Blog Why we deleted (most of) our MCP tools | Nx Blog Teach Your AI Agent How to Work in a Monorepo | Nx Blog How Broadcom stays efficient and nimble with monorepos | Nx Blog Why Monorepos are King in the Age of AI | Nx Blog Nx 2026 Roadmap: Expanding Agent Autonomy, Improving Performance, Better Polyglot and More | Nx Blog End to End Autonomous AI Agent Workflows with Nx | Nx Blog Autonomous Agents at Scale | Nx Blog Scaling 700+ Projects: How Nx Became a 'No-Brainer' for Caseware | Nx Blog Configure Tailwind v4 with Angular in an Nx Monorepo | Nx Blog The Missing Multiplier for AI Agent Productivity | Nx Blog A Year of Nx Webinars | Nx Blog Wrapping Up 2025 | Nx Blog Nx 22.3 Release: Angular 21 Support, tsgo Compiler, and Prettier v3 | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Release: Agent Resource Usage | Nx Blog Nx Platform Outperforms DIY Cache by 5x | Nx Blog An Nx Carol: Past, Present, and Future of Your Monorepo | Nx Blog Nx 22.1 Release: Terminal UI on Windows, Storybook 10, Vitest 4, and more! | Nx Blog The Compounding Effect: How Nx Features Multiply Performance Gains | Nx Blog 10 Monorepo Myths Debunked: Separating Fact from Fiction | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Release: Enterprise Task Analytics | Nx Blog Watch and Rebuild Storybook Dependencies with Nx | Nx Blog Book - React for Enterprise: Timeless Architecture for Enterprise Apps | Nx Blog Beyond Remote Cache: Unlock 70% More CI Performance | Nx Blog Nx 22 Release: Expanding the build platform | Nx Blog What's the Point of Generating All This Code If You Can't Merge It? | Nx Blog What's New in Nx Self-Healing CI | Nx Blog Nx Highlights: Smarter AI integration, all-new graph UI, and big new versions of your favorite tools | Nx Blog Making the Case for Smarter Monorepos, and How to Not Get Fooled by Myths | Nx Blog Integrating Biome in 20 Minutes | Nx Blog S1ngularity - What Happened, How We Responded, What We Learned | Nx Blog Stop Babysitting Your PRs: Self-Healing CI Cuts Time to Green by 50% | Nx Blog UKG Unifies Their Codebase and Eliminates CI Overhead to Focus on Customer Value | Nx Blog How Git Worktrees Changed My AI Agent Workflow | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Workspace Graph: See Your Organization's Code Structure Like Never Before | Nx Blog Seamless Java Deployment in Nx Using Docker | Nx Blog Getting Mobile Into Your Monorepo: Android + Nx | Nx Blog Polyglot Projects Made Easy: Integrating Spring Boot into an Nx Workspace | Nx Blog The Journey of the Nx Plugin for Gradle: From Prototype to Production | Nx Blog Combining Predictability and Intelligence With Nx Generators and AI | Nx Blog A New UI For The Humble Terminal | Nx Blog Continuous tasks are a huge DX improvement | Nx Blog New and Improved Module Federation Experience with Nx | Nx Blog A New UI for Nx Migration | Nx Blog Custom Task Runners and Self-Hosted Caching Changes | Nx Blog Enterprise Angular Monorepo Patterns | Nx Blog Using Rspack with Angular | Nx Blog Angular Architecture Guide To Building Maintainable Applications at Scale | Nx Blog Modern Angular Testing with Nx | Nx Blog Nx Update: 20.5 | Nx Blog Are Monorepos the Answer to Better AI-Assisted Development? | Nx Blog React Development for 2025 | Nx Blog Using Apollo GraphQL in an Nx Workspace | Nx Blog Angular State Management for 2025 | Nx Blog Tailoring Nx for Your Organization | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Pipelines Come To Nx Console | Nx Blog Define the relationship with monorepos | Nx Blog See your affected project graph in Nx Cloud | Nx Blog Handling CORS In Your Workspace | Nx Blog Improve your architecture and CI pipeline times with Nx projects | Nx Blog Announcing Nx 20 | Nx Blog Introducing Nx Powerpack | Nx Blog Nx 19.5 is here! 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Making Cursor Smarter with an MCP Server For Nx Monorepos | Nx Blog
2025-03-07 · via Nx Blog

A couple of weeks ago, we announced how Nx makes your LLM smarter by providing rich metadata about your monorepo structure, project relationships, and architectural context. This enhancement was initially available through GitHub Copilot in VSCode, but now we're taking it a step further by implementing the Model Context Protocol (MCP) for Cursor, making your AI assistant even more powerful.

What is the Model Context Protocol (MCP)?

The Model Context Protocol is an open standard - pioneered by Anthropic - that enables AI models to interact with your development environment in a more structured and powerful way. It provides a standardized interface for tools and resources that can be used by AI assistants to better understand and interact with your codebase.

mcp-architecture.avif

(Source: Official MCP documentation)

According to the MCP documentation, it's designed to:

  • Provide structured access to development tools and resources
  • Enable AI models to take actions in your development environment
  • Create a consistent interface for different AI assistants
  • Allow for better context management and tool selection

This protocol is particularly powerful for monorepo development because it allows AI assistants to understand not just individual files, but the entire workspace structure, project relationships, and available tools. When combined with Nx's rich metadata about your monorepo, it creates an incredibly powerful development experience.

The advantage of MCP is that it can become a standard. In fact, more and more libraries provide implementations (e.g. Spring AI's MCP integration).

We're leveraging this by exposing such an MCP from our Nx Language server that comes with Nx Console so Cursor and other MCP compatible clients can automatically hook into the data Nx has about your workspace.

How to enable it in your Cursor IDE

Getting started with Nx's MCP integration in Cursor is straightforward. Here's what you need to do:

Install Nx Console in your Cursor IDE by following our editor setup guide.

Once installed, Cursor will automatically detect Nx Console and prompt you to configure the MCP server. You'll see a notification like this:

cursor-nx-notification.avif

Click on the notification to open Cursor's settings. The Nx Console notification conveniently provides a direct link to the MCP settings:

cursor-nx-enable-mcp.avif

In the settings, you'll see the Nx Console MCP server listed as "Disabled". Click on it to enable it:

Cursor MCP settings screen showing the disabled Nx Console MCP server

Once enabled, you'll see the server status change:

Cursor MCP setting screen showing the enabled Nx MCP server

If this is your first MCP installation, you'll notice a new .cursor/mcp.json file in your workspace. This file contains your MCP configuration:

Cursor MCP configuration

Share this configuration with your team to ensure consistent settings or add it to .gitignore if you prefer to keep your local configuration private.

That's it! Your Cursor IDE is now configured to use Nx's MCP integration. For more details about the available features and capabilities, check out our AI enhancement documentation.

Manual Setup

If you've missed the notification, you can always run the nx.configureMcpServer command via the command prompt (Ctrl/Cmd + Shift + P) and install the MCP server that way.

How it works

The Nx MCP integration is built on top of the official Model Context Protocol TypeScript SDK. When you enable the integration, we automatically spin up a local MCP server that communicates with Cursor using Server-Sent Events (SSE). This server runs on a random available port on your localhost, ensuring it doesn't conflict with other services.

Cursor MCP Architecture Diagram

The MCP server is configured through the .cursor/mcp.json file, which is automatically created in your workspace as mentioned in the previous section. Nx Console will automatically read the port specified there and spin up a matching MCP server. You can always view and modify the configuration through Cursor Settings -> MCP.

Available Tools

While the Model Context Protocol defines various functionalities (tools, resources, roots, and sampling), support in popular clients like Cursor or Claude Desktop is limited. For now, we've focused on providing a set of essential tools that leverage Nx's rich metadata:

  • nx_workspace: Provides an annotated representation of your Nx configuration and project graph
  • nx_project_details: Returns comprehensive configuration for any specific Nx project
  • nx_docs: Retrieves relevant documentation sections based on your queries
  • nx_generators: Lists all available code generators in your workspace
  • nx_generator_schema: Provides detailed schema information for specific generators
  • nx_visualize_graph: Opens interactive project or task graph visualizations directly in your IDE

Data Flow

Behind the scenes, we use the Nx Language Server (nxls) that comes as part of the Nx Console extension to gather workspace information. Each tool request triggers a specific data flow:

  1. The tool receives your query
  2. nxls retrieves relevant workspace information from your Nx workspace
  3. We transform this data into a format optimized for LLM consumption
  4. The transformed data is enriched with natural language descriptions
  5. The result is passed back to the AI assistant

For example, when handling project graph queries, we transform the raw graph data into a more structured format that includes explanations about project relationships and dependencies. You can see this transformation in action in our project graph transformation code.

IDE Integration

The MCP's true potential lies in its deep integration with your IDE. Right now, it can trigger these actions directly in your IDE:

  • Visualize the project graph focused on a specific project
  • Visualize the task graph for a specific project and target

This is just the beginning. We plan to expand these capabilities in future releases and would love to hear your feedback and ideas on what you'd like to see.

Using MCP Outside Cursor

If you want to use our MCP integration with other tools that support the protocol (like Claude Desktop, Cline, Windsurf and more), you can run it in stdio mode. This allows direct communication between the client and server process. Follow the instructions in the nx-mcp npm package documentation to set this up.

Let's see it in action

The Youtube video above showcases the below example queries, showing how Cursor leverages the different exposed Nx MCP tools to get more information to correctly take action.

  • If I change the public API of feat-product-detail, which other projects might be affected by that change?
  • Use Nx to generate a new React library for handling past orders.
  • Can you configure Nx release for the packages of this workspace? Just update nx.json with the necessary configuration. Use conventional commits as the versioning strategy. Also feel free to use the Nx docs to pull more info on how to configure it.

Wrapping up

This is just our very first version of developing an MCP server. The protocol is evolving as we speak and getting more powerful by implementing new possibilities for enriching your LLM queries with more contextual data.

But already these first interactions show how much more helpful and precise the answers become, making Cursor specifically a lot more useful.

We want your feedback though! Reach out on our socials (Twitter/X, Bluesky and LinkedIn) or hop into our weekly office hours on Discord.

Stay tuned for more updates on this MCP integration as well as enhancements on the VSCode Copilot front.


Learn more: