zoty
Lightweight Zotero MCP server for AI agents.
What it does
MCP server that connects AI agents to your local Zotero library. Provides 6 tools: BM25-ranked search over titles and abstracts, collection browsing, item lookup, and paper ingestion by arXiv ID or DOI with automatic PDF attachment.
Requirements
- Python 3.10+
- Zotero 7 desktop running
- Zotero local API enabled: Zotero Settings > Advanced > Config Editor > set
extensions.zotero.httpServer.localAPI.enabledtotrue - Zoty Bridge plugin installed (for PDF attachment and collection assignment)
Add to Your Agent
Claude Code
Add from the command line:
claude mcp add zoty -- uvx zoty
Add to your .mcp.json or ~/.claude/settings.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"zoty": {
"command": "uvx",
"args": ["zoty"]
}
}
}
Codex
Add from the command line:
codex mcp add zoty -- uvx zoty
Add to your ~/.codex/config.toml:
[mcp_servers.zoty]
command = "uvx"
args = ["zoty"]
Installation
Requires uv.
Run without installing (recommended for MCP setups):
uvx zoty
Install persistently:
uv tool install zoty
Upgrade an installed copy:
uv tool upgrade zoty
If you run zoty with uvx instead of installing it, refresh to the latest published version with:
uvx --refresh zoty
From a local checkout:
uv run zoty
# Or install from source as a tool
uv tool install .
PDF Reading Advice for Agents
For best results when coding agents open attachment filepaths from zoty, make sure poppler and the associated Poppler utilities are installed on the machine. In practice this usually means tools like pdftotext, pdfinfo, and pdftoppm are available on PATH.
This is especially important for Claude Code, which uses these utilities to read PDF pages efficiently. Without them, agents may still be able to open the PDF files themselves, but page extraction tends to be slower and less reliable.
Typical installs:
# macOS
brew install poppler
# Ubuntu / Debian
sudo apt-get install poppler-utils
Zoty Bridge Plugin
A tiny Zotero 7 plugin that lets zoty execute JavaScript inside Zotero's privileged context. This is needed for operations that can't go through the REST API: PDF attachment and collection assignment both require writing to Zotero's SQLite database, which locks out external processes. The bridge sidesteps this by running JS inside Zotero itself.
Install the plugin
- Download
zoty-bridge.xpifrom releases, or build it yourself:make build - In Zotero: Tools > Add-ons > gear icon > Install Add-on From File > select the
.xpi - Restart Zotero
The bridge runs an HTTP server on localhost:24119 when Zotero is open. No configuration needed.
Tools
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
search_library |
BM25-ranked search over item titles and abstracts, including attachment filepaths |
list_collections |
List all collections with keys, names, and item counts |
list_collection_items |
List items in a specific collection |
get_item |
Full metadata for a single item by key, including attachment filepaths |
get_recent_items |
Recently added items, sorted by date |
add_paper |
Add a paper by arXiv ID or DOI with automatic PDF download and collection-scoped duplicate prevention |
How it works
Read operations go through pyzotero against Zotero's local API (localhost:23119). The BM25 search index builds in a background thread at startup so the MCP handshake completes immediately.
Write operations use the Zotero connector endpoint (/connector/saveItems) to create metadata items. PDF attachment and collection assignment go through the zoty-bridge plugin, which executes JavaScript in Zotero's privileged context. This two-path design exists because Zotero's SQLite database uses exclusive locking -- external processes can read it (immutable mode) but not write to it while Zotero is running.
arXiv traffic is throttled internally to respect arXiv's access policy. Concurrent add_paper calls queue transparently: metadata requests serialize with a 3-second gap, and arXiv PDF downloads are rate-limited separately.
Development
make build # build zotero-plugin/dist/zoty-bridge.xpi
make test # run Python unit tests
License
MIT
Rate Limiting Across Sessions
zoty rate-limits arXiv traffic inside the running MCP server process. If several add_paper calls reach the same server at once, zoty queues them and drains metadata requests at arXiv-safe speed.
That limiter is not shared across separate zoty processes. If you start one zoty instance per agent, session, or editor window, each process will enforce its own limit and the combined request rate can still exceed arXiv policy.
If you expect multiple sessions to pull papers at the same time, start one long-lived zoty server and point all clients at that same instance.
Start one shared local server:
zoty --transport streamable-http --host 127.0.0.1 --port 8000
The shared MCP endpoint will be:
http://127.0.0.1:8000/mcp
If you want a different endpoint path:
zoty \
--transport streamable-http \
--host 127.0.0.1 \
--port 8000 \
--streamable-http-path /zoty-mcp
Then point every client at the same URL:
http://127.0.0.1:8000/zoty-mcp
For clients that support remote MCP servers by URL, the config should look like this:
{
"mcpServers": {
"zoty": {
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8000/mcp"
}
}
}
Avoid this pattern when multiple sessions may import papers in parallel, because it starts a separate zoty process per client:
{
"mcpServers": {
"zoty": {
"command": "zoty"
}
}
}
Recommended boot sequence:
- Boot Zotero and make sure the Zotero connector and
zoty-bridgeplugin are available. - Start one shared zoty server with
--transport streamable-http. - Configure each agent or MCP client to connect to that existing server URL instead of launching its own copy.
- Let the shared server serialize arXiv metadata lookups and rate-limit arXiv PDF downloads for everyone.
This keeps the agent-side behavior simple: tool calls may take a bit longer under load, but they will queue naturally instead of hammering export.arxiv.org.