origin-mcp is a local Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that lets AI
assistants control Origin/OriginPro on Windows. It connects through OriginLab's
Python automation interface and exposes tools for importing data, editing
worksheets, creating and refining graphs, running Origin analyses, exporting
figures, and managing the Origin application lifecycle.
This project is still in a testing stage. Trying it on real Origin workflows, reporting issues, suggesting improvements, and opening pull requests are all welcome.
- Import CSV, TSV, TXT, DAT, XLS, and Excel data into Origin worksheets.
- Read, write, sort, clear, and export worksheet data.
- Create and refine common 2D, 3D, contour, statistical, and specialized plots.
- Run Origin analyses such as fitting, smoothing, integration, peak finding, descriptive statistics, interpolation, normalization, t-tests, FFT/IFFT, and correlation.
- Export figures and projects through a local Origin GUI bridge.
- Windows
- Origin or OriginPro installed and licensed
- Origin/OriginPro 2026 is the primary tested target; other Origin versions are not currently guaranteed
- Origin's embedded Python with the preinstalled
originpropackage
origin-mcp runs as two cooperating processes, and the supported Python
versions differ by role:
- MCP server core (the
python -m origin_mcpprocess, which only talks to the bridge over localhost): Python 3.10+. CI tests this core on Windows with Python 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13, and 3.14. - Origin bridge (
addon.py): runs inside Origin's own embedded Python, so its version is whatever your Origin install ships — there is nothing to pick.
Direct external originpro automation is not a supported MCP backend for this
project. Start the bridge inside Origin's embedded Python and let the MCP server
connect to it over localhost.
Copy this to your AI agent and let it self-configure:
Fetch and follow this bootstrap guide end to end:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Ge-Shun/origin-mcp/main/docs/agentic/origin-mcp-bootstrap.md
Example MCP client configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"origin": {
"command": "python",
"args": ["-m", "origin_mcp"]
}
}
}If python is not the Python 3.10+ interpreter you installed origin-mcp
into, use that interpreter's absolute python.exe path instead. More examples
are in docs/mcp-config.md.
The bridge runs inside Origin's own Python so originpro stays on Origin's UI
thread. There is nothing to configure — start it once per Origin session:
Origin Apps (recommended for daily use). Build and install the two bridge Apps once with the steps in docs/origin-ui-buttons.md. After that, click Origin MCP Bridge Start in the Apps gallery to start the bridge and Origin MCP Bridge Stop to stop it.
Python Console (one-off or troubleshooting). Open Origin's Python Console and paste this line (replace the path with your checkout):
import runpy; runpy.run_path(r"C:\path\to\origin-mcp\addon.py", run_name="__main__")A Bridge is running inside Origin. box confirms startup; keep that console
running while you use the tools. To stop, ask your MCP assistant to shut the
bridge down (it calls origin_bridge_shutdown), or double-click
scripts\stop-bridge.cmd (or run python scripts\stop_bridge.py). Origin stays
open either way.
If a package is missing or the bridge will not start, see docs/origin-bridge.md.
The bridge listens only on 127.0.0.1 and authenticates local requests by
default with a per-session token, so normal use needs no security setup.
Treat that token as a credential. Any local process that presents it can drive
Origin with the full tool surface, including arbitrary LabTalk execution through
origin_run_labtalk. The token is generated per session and written to an
owner-scoped file in your per-user temporary directory
(%TEMP%/origin-mcp/bridge.json on Windows), which a standard single-user
machine already protects through the directory's OS permissions. If you redirect
TEMP or ORIGIN_MCP_BRIDGE_HANDSHAKE to a directory other local users can
read, the token — and therefore control of Origin — is exposed to them. Setting
ORIGIN_MCP_BRIDGE_NO_AUTH removes the token boundary entirely and should be
used only when you fully trust every local process.
If you need to restrict which files tools may read or write, set
ORIGIN_MCP_ALLOWED_ROOTS to the allowed directories. Avoid disabling bridge
authentication unless you fully trust every local process on the machine.
MIT. See LICENSE.
