Integrating LlamaIndex with JSON Services via CData Connect AI

Leverage the CData Connect AI Remote MCP Server to enable LlamaIndex ReAct agents to securely access and act on JSON services in real time.

LlamaIndex is a data framework for building LLM applications — agents, RAG pipelines, and structured workflows that reason over external data. By integrating LlamaIndex with CData Connect AI through the built-in MCP Server, your agents can discover and query live JSON services as native tools without writing custom connectors.

CData Connect AI offers a secure, low-code environment to connect JSON and other data sources, removing the need for complex ETL and enabling seamless automation across business applications with live data.

This article outlines how to configure JSON connectivity in CData Connect AI, register the MCP server with LlamaIndex, and build a ReAct agent that queries JSON services in real time.

Prerequisites

Step 1: Configure JSON Connectivity for LlamaIndex

Before LlamaIndex can access JSON, a JSON connection must be created in CData Connect AI. This connection is then exposed to LlamaIndex through the remote MCP server.

  1. Log in to Connect AI, click Sources, and then click + Add Connection Adding a Connection
  2. From the available data sources, choose JSON Selecting a data source
  3. Enter the necessary authentication properties to connect to JSON

    See the Getting Started chapter in the data provider documentation to authenticate to your data source: The data provider models JSON APIs as bidirectional database tables and JSON files as read-only views (local files, files stored on popular cloud services, and FTP servers). The major authentication schemes are supported, including HTTP Basic, Digest, NTLM, OAuth, and FTP. See the Getting Started chapter in the data provider documentation for authentication guides.

    After setting the URI and providing any authentication values, set DataModel to more closely match the data representation to the structure of your data.

    The DataModel property is the controlling property over how your data is represented into tables and toggles the following basic configurations.

    • Document (default): Model a top-level, document view of your JSON data. The data provider returns nested elements as aggregates of data.
    • FlattenedDocuments: Implicitly join nested documents and their parents into a single table.
    • Relational: Return individual, related tables from hierarchical data. The tables contain a primary key and a foreign key that links to the parent document.

    See the Modeling JSON Data chapter for more information on configuring the relational representation. You will also find the sample data used in the following examples. The data includes entries for people, the cars they own, and various maintenance services performed on those cars.

    Configuring a connection (Salesforce is shown)
  4. Click Save & Test
  5. Once authenticated, open the Permissions tab in the JSON connection and configure user-based permissions as required Updating permissions

Generate a Personal Access Token (PAT)

LlamaIndex authenticates to Connect AI using an account email and a Personal Access Token (PAT). Creating separate PATs for each integration is recommended to maintain access control granularity.

  1. In Connect AI, select the Gear icon in the top-right to open Settings
  2. Under Access Tokens, select Create PAT
  3. Provide a descriptive name for the token and select Create Creating a new PAT
  4. Copy the token and store it securely. The PAT will only be visible during creation

With the JSON connection configured and a PAT generated, LlamaIndex is prepared to connect to JSON services through the CData MCP server.

Step 2: Connect to the MCP server in LlamaIndex

To connect LlamaIndex with CData Connect AI Remote MCP Server and use OpenAI for reasoning, configure your MCP server endpoint and authentication in a

config.py
file. These values let LlamaIndex’s MCP tool spec call the MCP server tools, while OpenAI handles the natural language reasoning.

  1. Create a folder for the LlamaIndex MCP project
  2. Create two Python files within the folder:
    config.py
    and
    llamaindex_agent.py
  3. In
    config.py
    , define your MCP server URL and your Base64-encoded CData Connect AI email and PAT (obtained in the prerequisites):
    class Config:
    
          MCP_BASE_URL = "https://mcp.cloud.cdata.com/mcp"   # MCP Server URL
          MCP_AUTH     = "base64encoded(EMAIL:PAT)"          # Base64 encoded Connect AI Email:PAT
    

    Note: You can create the base64 encoded version of MCP_AUTH using any Base64 encoding tool.

  4. In
    llamaindex_agent.py
    , wire up the MCP tool spec and a ReAct agent:
    """
    Integrates a LlamaIndex ReAct agent with the CData Connect AI MCP server.
    The script discovers MCP tools, wraps them as LlamaIndex tools, and runs an
    agent loop driven by OpenAI for reasoning.
    """
    
    import asyncio
    from llama_index.tools.mcp import BasicMCPClient, McpToolSpec
    from llama_index.core.agent.workflow import ReActAgent
    from llama_index.llms.openai import OpenAI
    from config import Config
    
    async def main():
    
        # Initialize the MCP client pointed at Connect AI
        mcp_client = BasicMCPClient(
            Config.MCP_BASE_URL,
            headers={"Authorization": f"Basic {Config.MCP_AUTH}"},
        )
    
        # Discover tools the MCP server exposes (getCatalogs, queryData, etc.)
        tool_spec = McpToolSpec(client=mcp_client)
        tools = await tool_spec.to_tool_list_async()
        print("Discovered MCP tools:", [t.metadata.name for t in tools])
    
        # Configure the LLM that drives the ReAct loop
        llm = OpenAI(
            model="gpt-4o",
            temperature=0.2,
            api_key="YOUR_OPENAI_API_KEY",  # https://platform.openai.com/
        )
    
        # Build the agent with the MCP-backed tools
        agent = ReActAgent(tools=tools, llm=llm)
    
        user_prompt = "How many tables are available in JSON1?"  # Change as needed
        print(f"
    User prompt: {user_prompt}")
    
        response = await agent.run(user_prompt)
    
        print("Agent final response:", response)
    
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        asyncio.run(main())
    

Step 3: Install the LlamaIndex packages

Since this workflow uses LlamaIndex together with the CData Connect AI MCP server and OpenAI for reasoning, install the required Python packages.

Run the following command in your project terminal:

pip install llama-index llama-index-tools-mcp llama-index-llms-openai

Step 4: Prompt JSON using LlamaIndex (via the MCP server)

  1. When the installation finishes, run
    python llamaindex_agent.py
    to execute the script
  2. The script connects to the MCP server and discovers the CData Connect AI MCP tools available for querying your connected data
  3. Supply a prompt (e.g., "How many tables are available in JSON?")
  4. The agent reasons over the available tools, calls
    queryData
    against JSON, and responds with the result

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