Connecting Mastra with Azure Table Data via CData Connect AI MCP Server
Mastra is designed for developers and enterprise teams building intelligent, composable AI agents. Its modular framework and declarative architecture make it simple to orchestrate agents, integrate LLMs, and automate data-driven workflows. But when agents need to work with data beyond their local memory or predefined APIs, many implementations rely on custom middleware or scheduled syncs to copy data from external systems into local stores. This approach adds complexity, increases maintenance overhead, introduces latency, and limits the real-time potential of your agents.
CData Connect AI bridges this gap with live, direct connectivity to more than 300 enterprise applications, databases, ERPs, and analytics platforms. Through CData's remote Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server, Mastra agents can securely query, read, and act on real-time data without replication. The result is grounded responses, faster reasoning, and automated decision-making across systems all with stronger governance and fewer moving parts.
This article outlines the steps required to configure CData Connect AI MCP connectivity, register the MCP server in Mastra Studio, and build an agent that queries live Azure Table data in real time.
Prerequisites
Before starting, make sure you have:
- A CData Connect AI account
- Node.js 18+ and npm installed
- A working Mastra project (created via npm create mastra@latest)
- Access to Azure Table
Credentials checklist
Ensure you have these credentials ready for the connection:
- USERNAME: Your CData email login
- PAT: Connect AI, go to Settings and click on Access Tokens (copy once)
- MCP_BASE_URL: https://mcp.cloud.cdata.com/mcp
Step 1: Configure Azure Table connectivity for Mastra
Connectivity to Azure Table from Mastra is made possible through CData Connect AI Remote MCP. To interact with Azure Table data from Mastra, we start by creating and configuring a Azure Table connection in CData Connect AI.
- Log into Connect AI, click Sources, and then click Add Connection
- Select "Azure Table" from the Add Connection panel
-
Enter the necessary authentication properties to connect to Azure Table.
Specify your AccessKey and your Account to connect. Set the Account property to the Storage Account Name and set AccessKey to one of the Access Keys. Either the Primary or Secondary Access Keys can be used. To obtain these values, navigate to the Storage Accounts blade in the Azure portal. You can obtain the access key by selecting your account and clicking Access Keys in the Settings section.
- Click Save & Test
-
Navigate to the Permissions tab in the Add Azure Table Connection page and update the User-based permissions.
Add a Personal Access Token
A Personal Access Token (PAT) is used to authenticate the connection to Connect AI from Mastra. It is best practice to create a separate PAT for each service to maintain granularity of access.
- Click on the Gear icon () at the top right of the Connect AI app to open the settings page.
- On the Settings page, go to the Access Tokens section and click Create PAT.
-
Give the PAT a name and click Create.
- The personal access token is only visible at creation, so be sure to copy it and store it securely for future use.
With the connection configured and a PAT generated, we are ready to connect to Azure Table data from Mastra.
Step 2: Set up the Mastra project
- Open a terminal and navigate to your desired folder
- Create a new project:
npm create mastra@latest
- Open the folder in VS Code
- Install the required Mastra dependencies:
npm install @mastra/core @mastra/libsql @mastra/memory
- Then install the MCP integration package separately:
npm install @mastra/mcp
Step 3: Configure environment variables
Create a .env file at the project root with the following keys:
OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-... [email protected] CDATA_CONNECT_AI_PASSWORD=your_PAT
Restart your dev server after saving changes:
npm run dev
Step 4: Add the CData Connect AI agent
Create a file src/mastra/agents/connect-ai-agent.ts with the following code:
import { Agent } from "@mastra/core/agent";
import { Memory } from "@mastra/memory";
import { LibSQLStore } from "@mastra/libsql";
import { MCPClient } from "@mastra/mcp";
const mcpClient = new MCPClient({
servers: {
cdataConnectAI: {
url: new URL("https://connect.cdata.com/mcp/"),
requestInit: {
headers: {
Authorization: `Basic ${Buffer.from(
`${process.env.CDATA_CONNECT_AI_USER}:${process.env.CDATA_CONNECT_AI_PASSWORD}`
).toString("base64")}`,
},
},
},
},
});
export const connectAIAgent = new Agent({
name: "Connect AI Agent",
instructions: "You are a data exploration and analysis assistant with access to CData Connect AI.",
model: "openai/gpt-4o-mini",
tools: await mcpClient.getTools(),
memory: new Memory({
storage: new LibSQLStore({ url: "file:../mastra.db" }),
}),
});
Step 5: Update index.ts to register the agent
Replace the contents of src/mastra/index.ts with:
import { Mastra } from "@mastra/core/mastra";
import { PinoLogger } from "@mastra/loggers";
import { LibSQLStore } from "@mastra/libsql";
import { connectAIAgent } from "./agents/connect-ai-agent.js";
export const mastra = new Mastra({
agents: { connectAIAgent },
storage: new LibSQLStore({ url: "file:../mastra.db" }),
logger: new PinoLogger({ name: "Mastra", level: "info" }),
observability: { default: { enabled: true } },
});
Step 6: Run and verify the connection
Start your Mastra server:
npm run dev
Step 7: Run a live query in Mastra Studio
In Mastra Studio, open the chat interface and enter one of the following sample prompts:
List available catalogs from my connected data sources.
Build real-time, data-aware agents with Mastra and CData
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