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rvaghela20

ForceKit MCP Server

by rvaghela20

ForceKit — AI Agent Framework for Salesforce

ForceKit is a programmatic AI Agent Framework designed for Salesforce development. It enables declarative agent definitions, custom lifecycle plugins, unified CLI execution, and seamless integration with Large Language Models (LLMs) via the Model Context Protocol (MCP).


Key Features

  1. Declarative Agent Definitions: Define agent capabilities, constraints, tool permissions, and lifecycle rules in clean YAML files.

  2. Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server: Run ForceKit as a standard stdio MCP server to expose Salesforce tools programmatically to LLM clients (like Claude Desktop or Cursor).

  3. Structured State Management: Track agent sessions, decisions, tasks, and blockers in a centralized, serializable JSON state, rendering automatic Markdown updates.

  4. Active Salesforce Integration: Wrap the Salesforce CLI (sf) to verify metadata existence, execute Apex unit tests, parse code coverage, and deploy files securely.

  5. Static Analysis (Linter): Includes 10 built-in, Salesforce-specific linting rules (e.g. banning DML/SOQL in loops, enforcing user-mode operations, detecting empty catch blocks).


Related MCP server: Salesforce CLI MCP Server

Project Status

ForceKit v2.0.0-beta.1 — the following table describes the maturity of each major feature area:

Feature

Status

Notes

CLI (scan, lint, verify, deploy, test)

✅ Production-ready

Wraps sf CLI with full JSON output support

MCP Server Integration

✅ Production-ready

Tested with Claude Desktop and Cursor

Agent Definitions (YAML)

✅ Production-ready

5 built-in agents, AJV-validated schema

State Management & Markdown Rendering

✅ Production-ready

Atomic writes, structured JSON, backward-compatible

Static Analysis (Linter)

✅ Production-ready

12 built-in rules, plugin-extensible

Plugin System

🧪 Experimental

API stable, 3 built-in plugins

Orchestrator Multi-Agent Loop

🧪 Experimental

Sequential task delegation, quality gates

Web Search Tool

🧪 Curated reference DB

27+ Salesforce doc entries, offline-capable

Legend: ✅ = Stable and tested for production Salesforce projects  |  🧪 = Functional but under active development

Directory Structure

forcekit/
├── agents/
│   └── definitions/         # Declarative YAML definitions
│       ├── developer.yaml   # Code generation & modification agent
│       ├── reviewer.yaml    # Code review & linter agent
│       ├── qa.yaml          # Test executor & coverage analyzer agent
│       ├── researcher.yaml  # Doc search & release notes agent
│       └── orchestrator.yaml# Lead task planner & coordination agent
├── src/
│   ├── bin/
│   │   └── forcekit.ts      # Unified CLI Entry Point
│   ├── config/
│   │   └── defaults.ts      # Configuration defaults & dynamic loaders
│   ├── core/
│   │   ├── engine.ts        # Agent Engine lifecycle runner
│   │   ├── orchestrator.ts  # Multi-agent delegation controller
│   │   ├── state.ts         # JSON state manager & markdown renderer
│   │   ├── context.ts       # Context assembler & prompt builder
│   │   ├── events.ts        # Centralized event bus
│   │   ├── mcp.ts           # Model Context Protocol stdio server
│   │   └── registry.ts      # Tool and Plugin registry
│   ├── plugins/             # Extensible plugins api and built-ins
│   ├── tools/               # Salesforce and platform CLI tools
│   └── tests/               # 100% mocked, sandbox-independent unit tests
└── tsconfig.json

AI Assistant & IDE Compatibility

ForceKit integrates with your favorite AI coding tools in two primary ways: Model Context Protocol (MCP) for active tool execution, and Markdown Grounding Context for passive workspace indexing.

1. Claude Desktop & Cursor (Active Tool Execution via MCP)

  • Claude Desktop & Cursor IDE: Expose ForceKit tools (such as scan, lint, test, verify, and web-search) directly into chats or agent loops by registering ForceKit as a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. When the AI assistant needs to check rules or run Apex tests, it executes the tool natively on your project directory.

2. Claude Code & Terminal Agents (CLI Command Execution)

  • Claude Code: Standard command-line terminal agents can run ForceKit's compiled commands directly from your local terminal workspace (e.g. node forcekit/dist/bin/forcekit.js lint --project-root .) to verify build health or static code guidelines before making commits.

3. Gemini / Antigravity (Active Pair Programming Integration)

  • Gemini/Antigravity: As pair-programming agents with terminal command and filesystem access, we run the ForceKit CLI, synchronize org settings, verify test coverage, and automate refactoring loops directly on your behalf.

4. GitHub Copilot & OpenAI Codex (Passive Grounding Context)

  • Copilot & Codex: These systems index files in your workspace automatically. ForceKit's state engine outputs structured Markdown logs: forcekit/current-state.md and forcekit/inventory.md. Copilot and Codex read these files, making them aware of existing classes, object definitions, and session goals without field name hallucinations.


Getting Started

1. Installation

You can install ForceKit globally or locally via npm, or build it from source.

Global CLI Installation

npm install -g @rvaghela-09/forcekit

Verify the installation:

forcekit help

Local Project Dependency

npm install --save-dev @rvaghela-09/forcekit

Verify the local installation:

npx forcekit help

Build From Source

Clone the repository, install dependencies, and build the TypeScript codebase:

npm install
npm run build

Verify that the CLI is correctly installed:

node dist/bin/forcekit.js --help

Configuration

ForceKit supports cascading configuration loading. It merges defaults with local overrides in the following priority order:

  1. DEFAULT_CONFIG (Base settings)

  2. forcekit.config.json (Static project overrides)

  3. forcekit.config.js (Dynamic script overrides)

  4. Runtime Options (CLI flags / programmatic parameters)

Example forcekit.config.js

Place this file in your Salesforce project root:

export default {
  apiVersion: '68.0',
  minTestCoverage: 95,
  lint: {
    maxClassLines: 150,
    rules: {
      'no-security-enforced': true,
      'user-mode-enforced': true
    }
  }
};

CLI Usage Guide

Run commands by providing the target Salesforce project root via --project-root:

1. Scan Project

Catalog all Salesforce metadata (Apex, LWC, Flows, Triggers) into the local inventory state:

forcekit scan --project-root /path/to/sf-project

2. Lint Code

Run static analysis checks on your Apex classes, triggers, and LWC files:

forcekit lint --project-root /path/to/sf-project

3. Sync Salesforce Org & Limits

Query active org status, Daily API limits, Data Storage, and File Storage usage:

forcekit org sync --project-root /path/to/sf-project

4. Verify Metadata

Check if custom objects, fields, classes, or flows exist on the active org:

forcekit verify --type field --name Active__c --object Account --project-root /path/to/sf-project

5. Deploy Metadata

Deploy target source directories or files to the active org:

forcekit deploy --source-dir force-app/main/default/classes/AccountService.cls --project-root /path/to/sf-project

6. Run Unit Tests

Execute target Apex unit tests and verify code coverage:

forcekit test --tests AccountServiceTest --project-root /path/to/sf-project

7. Run Lead Orchestrator

Execute the complete, multi-agent task loop (Research → Dev → Review → QA) to achieve a high-level goal:

forcekit run-orchestrator --goal "Create Lead trigger assigning default owner" --project-root /path/to/sf-project

Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server Setup

Expose ForceKit's tools to AI IDEs or chat interfaces (like Claude Desktop) by configuring ForceKit as an MCP server.

Configuration in Claude Desktop

Add the following entry to your claude_desktop_config.json:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "forcekit": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": [
        "/absolute/path/to/forcekit/dist/bin/forcekit.js",
        "mcp",
        "--project-root",
        "/absolute/path/to/sf-project"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Note: Replace /absolute/path/to/forcekit and /absolute/path/to/sf-project with the actual absolute paths on your local machine.

Exposed MCP Tools

Once configured, the following tools will be discoverable:

  • scan: Catalog all metadata.

  • lint: Static analysis of Apex/LWC code.

  • verify: Check metadata definitions.

  • deploy: Deploy source/metadata.

  • test: Run unit tests and calculate coverage.

  • web-search: Search Salesforce documentation & release notes.

  • session: Control task progression.


Verification & Testing

ForceKit contains a suite of sandbox-independent unit tests. Run them using:

npm test

All tests mock the Salesforce CLI commands, file streams, and JSON-RPC protocols to guarantee execution stability and speeds.

A
license - permissive license
-
quality - not tested
C
maintenance

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