A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server to interact with Red Hat Lightspeed services like the
See toolsets.md for the toolsets available in the MCP server.
Note: Authentication is only required for accessing Red Hat Lightspeed APIs. The MCP server itself does not require authentication.
- Go to https://console.redhat.com → Click Settings (⚙️ Gear Icon) → "Service Accounts"
- Create a service account and remember
Client IDandClient secretfor later.
See below in the integration instructions, there they are respectively referred to asLIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_IDandLIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET.
Different toolsets require specific roles for your service account:
- Advisor tools:
RHEL Advisor viewer - Inventory tools:
Inventory Hosts viewer - Vulnerability tools:
Vulnerability viewer,Inventory Hosts viewer - Remediation tools:
Remediations user
By default, service accounts have no access. An organization administrator must assign permissions:
For detailed step-by-step instructions, see this video tutorial: Service Account Permissions Setup
-
Log in as Organization Administrator with User Access administrator role
-
Navigate to User Access Settings: Click Settings (⚙️ Gear Icon) → "User Access" → "Groups"
-
Assign permissions (choose one option):
Option A - Create New Group:
- Create new group (e.g.,
mcp-service-accounts) - Add required roles (e.g., RHEL Advisor viewer, Inventory Hosts viewer, etc.)
- Add your service account to this group
Option B - Use Existing Group:
- Open existing group with necessary roles
- Go to "Service accounts" tab
- Add your service account to the group
- Create new group (e.g.,
Your service account will inherit all roles from the assigned group.
If you start this MCP server locally (with podman or docker) make sure the container is not exposed to the internet. In this scenario it's probably fine to use LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID and LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET although your MCP Client (e.g. VSCode, Cursor, etc.) can get your LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID and LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET.
For a deployment where you connect to this MCP server from a different machine, you should consider that LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID and LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET are transferred to the MCP server and you are trusting the remote MCP server not to leak them.
In both cases if you are in doubt, please disable/remove the LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID and LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET from your account after you are done using the MCP server.
Set the environment variables
LIGHTSPEED_BASE_URLLIGHTSPEED_TOKEN_ENDPOINTLIGHTSPEED_PROXY_URLaccordingly.
Make sure you have podman installed.
(Docker is fine too but the commands below have to be adapted accordingly)
You can install it with sudo dnf install podman on Fedora/RHEL/CentOS,
or on macOS use either Podman Desktop or brew install podman.
podman explicitly.
E.g. replace podman with the full path. Should be something like
/usr/local/bin/podman/opt/homebrew/bin/podman- …
You can find the path by running which podman in your terminal.
First check the prerequisites section.
(Note: this uses the quay.io container image)
For the usage in your project, create a file called .vscode/mcp.json with
the following content.
{
"inputs": [
{
"id": "lightspeed_client_id",
"type": "promptString",
"description": "Enter the Red Hat Lightspeed Client ID",
"default": "",
"password": true
},
{
"id": "lightspeed_client_secret",
"type": "promptString",
"description": "Enter the Red Hat Lightspeed Client Secret",
"default": "",
"password": true
}
],
"servers": {
"lightspeed-mcp": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "podman",
"args": [
"run",
"--env",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID",
"--env",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET",
"--interactive",
"--rm",
"ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest"
],
"env": {
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID": "${input:lightspeed_client_id}",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET": "${input:lightspeed_client_secret}"
}
}
}
}
First check the prerequisites section.
Ctrl/Cmd-click to open in a new tab.
Otherwise the tab will close after installation and you won't see the documentation anymore.
(Note: this uses the quay.io container image)
Cursor doesn't seem to support inputs you need to add your credentials in the config file.
To start the integration create a file ~/.cursor/mcp.json with
{
"mcpServers": {
"lightspeed-mcp": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "podman",
"args": [
"run",
"--env",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID",
"--env",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET",
"--interactive",
"--rm",
"ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest"
],
"env": {
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID": "",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET": ""
}
}
}
}
start the server:
podman run --net host --rm ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest http
then integrate:
{
"mcpServers": {
"lightspeed-mcp": {
"type": "http",
"url": "http://localhost:8000/mcp",
"headers": {
"lightspeed-client-id": "",
"lightspeed-client-secret": ""
}
}
}
}
First check the prerequisites section.
To start the integration create a file ~/.gemini/settings.json with the following command:
{
...
"mcpServers": {
"lightspeed-mcp": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "podman",
"args": [
"run",
"--env",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>",
"--env",
"LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET=<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>",
"--interactive",
"--rm",
"ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest"
]
}
}
}
start the server:
podman run --net host --rm ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest http
Note
For podman machine on a mac you will need to set the host explicitly and expose the port
podman run -p 8000:8000 --rm ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest http --host 0.0.0.0
then integrate:
{
...
"mcpServers": {
"lightspeed-mcp": {
"httpUrl": "http://localhost:8000/mcp",
"headers": {
"lightspeed-client-id": "<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>",
"lightspeed-client-secret": "<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>"
}
}
}
}
First check the prerequisites section.
For Claude Desktop there is an extension file in the release section of the project.
Just download the red-hat-lightspeed-mcp*.dxt file and add this in Claude Desktop with
Settings -> Extensions -> Advanced Extensions Settings -> Install Extension…
First check the prerequisites section.
First off, start the SSE server with sse argument:
export LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>
export LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET=<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>
podman run --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET --net host --rm ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest sseIn the CLine -> Manage MCP Servers interface, add a new server name and URL:
http://localhost:9000/sse. It shall create the following config:
{
"mcpServers": {
"lightspeed-mcp": {
"disabled": false,
"type": "sse",
"url": "http://localhost:9000/sse"
}
}
}Ensure the type is sse as CLine does not support HTTP transport yet.
First check the prerequisites section.
For generic integration into other tools via STDIO, you should set the environment variables
LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID and LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET and use this command for an
integration using podman:
export LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>
export LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET=<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>
podman run --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET --interactive --rm ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latestIt is the MCP API what is exposed through standard input, not a chat interface.
You need an MCP client with "agent capabilities" to connect to the red-hat-lightspeed-mcp server and really use it.
First check the prerequisites section.
Claude Code requires a slight change to the podman command, as the host environment is not
available when it runs. The credentials must be copied into the configuration instead, which
can be done with the following command after setting LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID and
LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET environment variables:
export LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>
export LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET=<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>
claude mcp add red-hat-lightspeed-mcp -- podman run --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID=$LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET=$LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET --interactive --rm ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latestor just set the variables in the command directly:
claude mcp add red-hat-lightspeed-mcp -- podman run --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_ID=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID> --env LIGHTSPEED_CLIENT_SECRET=<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET> --interactive --rm ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latestTo verify setup was successful, within the Claude terminal execute the command:
/mcpIf successful, you should see red-hat-lightspeed-mcp listed under Manage MCP servers with a green check mark connected status besides it.
It's probably best to just ask the LLM you just attached to the MCP server to. e.g.
Please explain red-hat-lightspeed-mcp and what I can do with it?
For example questions specific to each toolset please have a look at the test files:
For some use cases it might be needed to use the MCP server directly from the command line. See usage.md for the usage of the MCP server.
There are two container images published for this MCP server.
ghcr.io/redhatinsights/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latestquay.io/redhat-services-prod/insights-management-tenant/insights-mcp/red-hat-lightspeed-mcp:latest
They are both based on main branch and you can use either of them.
Insights-branded images are deprecated but still available for a while but might be removed in the future.
ghcr.io/redhatinsights/insights-mcp:latestquay.io/redhat-services-prod/insights-management-tenant/insights-mcp/insights-mcp:latest
This software is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind, either express or implied. Use at your own risk. The authors and contributors are not liable for any damages or issues that may arise from using this software.
Please refer to the hacking guide to learn more.