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cycles-mcp-server

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Cycles MCP Server

MCP server for Cycles — runtime budget authority for autonomous agents.

Why use this?

Autonomous AI agents (Claude, GPT, custom agents) call LLMs, invoke tools, and hit external APIs — but have no built-in way to cap how much they spend. A single agent loop can burn through hundreds of dollars before anyone notices. Multiply that across tenants and teams, and cost control becomes a real problem.

This MCP server gives any MCP-compatible agent a runtime budget authority: a set of tools to check, reserve, spend, and release budget before and after every costly operation. The agent asks "can I afford this?" before acting, and reports what it actually used afterward.

Who needs this:

  • Platform teams building multi-tenant agent systems that need per-customer or per-workspace spend limits

  • Agent developers who want agents to self-regulate — degrade to cheaper models when budget is low, skip optional tool calls, reduce retries

  • Enterprises deploying AI agents that need guardrails so a runaway agent can't blow through a budget

Why MCP specifically:

MCP is the standard protocol that AI hosts (Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, custom agents) use to discover and call tools. By exposing Cycles as an MCP server, any MCP-compatible agent gets budget awareness as a plug-in — just add the server to your config. No SDK integration in the agent's own code required.

The server also ships built-in prompts so an AI assistant can help you design your budget strategy, generate integration code, and diagnose budget overruns — not just enforce budgets at runtime.

Use Cases

Coding agent with a per-task dollar cap

You run a Claude Code agent that writes and iterates on code. Each task should cost no more than $5. The agent calls cycles_reserve before every LLM call with a cost estimate in USD_MICROCENTS. If the reservation comes back DENY, the agent stops and reports "budget exhausted" instead of silently racking up charges. When the call completes, cycles_commit records the actual token cost so the running total stays accurate.

Multi-tenant SaaS with per-customer budgets

Your platform lets customers deploy AI assistants. Each customer has a monthly budget. The agent calls cycles_check_balance at the start of a conversation to see what's left, then cycles_reserve before each tool invocation (web search, code execution, API calls). If customer Acme is near their limit, the decision comes back ALLOW_WITH_CAPS — the agent automatically drops to a cheaper model and skips optional tools. Customer budgets are isolated; one customer's heavy usage never affects another.

Multi-agent pipeline with shared budget

You have an orchestrator that fans out to specialist agents — a researcher, a coder, and a reviewer. All three draw from the same workflow budget. Each agent calls cycles_reserve before its work; the Cycles server tracks concurrent reservations so the total never exceeds the workflow limit. If the researcher burns through 80% of the budget, the coder's next reservation gets DENY and the orchestrator can decide to skip the review step instead of going over budget.

Long-running data pipeline with heartbeats

An agent processes a large dataset in chunks, each chunk taking several minutes. It calls cycles_reserve with a 5-minute TTL before each chunk, then cycles_extend every 60 seconds to keep the reservation alive while processing. If the agent crashes, the reservation expires automatically and the locked budget returns to the pool — no manual cleanup needed.

Fire-and-forget usage metering

You have an existing system that already makes LLM calls and you just want to track spend, not gate it. After each call completes, the agent fires cycles_create_event with the actual cost. No reservation needed — the event is applied atomically to all budget scopes (tenant, workspace, app). You get a real-time spend dashboard without changing your existing call flow.

Installation

npm install @runcycles/mcp-server

Setup

Claude Desktop

Add to your claude_desktop_config.json:

  • macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

  • Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "cycles": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "@runcycles/mcp-server"],
      "env": {
        "CYCLES_API_KEY": "your-api-key-here"
      }
    }
  }
}

For local development without an API key, use mock mode:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "cycles": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "@runcycles/mcp-server"],
      "env": {
        "CYCLES_MOCK": "true"
      }
    }
  }
}

Claude Code

claude mcp add cycles -- npx -y @runcycles/mcp-server

Set your API key:

export CYCLES_API_KEY=your-api-key-here

Cursor / Windsurf / Other MCP Hosts

Use stdio transport with:

command: npx
args: ["-y", "@runcycles/mcp-server"]
env: { CYCLES_API_KEY: "your-key" }

Configuration

export CYCLES_API_KEY=your-api-key-here       # required (unless CYCLES_MOCK=true)
export CYCLES_BASE_URL=https://api.runcycles.io  # optional
export CYCLES_MOCK=true                        # optional, enables mock mode
export PORT=3000                               # optional, for HTTP transport

Need an API key? API keys are created via the Cycles Admin Server (port 7979). See the deployment guide to create one, or run:

curl -s -X POST http://localhost:7979/v1/admin/api-keys \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "X-Admin-API-Key: admin-bootstrap-key" \
  -d '{"tenant_id":"acme-corp","name":"dev-key","permissions":["reservations:create","reservations:commit","reservations:release","reservations:extend","reservations:list","balances:read","decide","events:create"]}' | jq -r '.key_secret'

The key (e.g. cyc_live_abc123...) is shown only once — save it immediately. For key rotation and lifecycle details, see API Key Management.

Running

# stdio transport (default — for Claude Desktop / Claude Code)
npx @runcycles/mcp-server

# HTTP transport (Streamable HTTP on port 3000)
npx @runcycles/mcp-server --transport http

Tools

Tool

Protocol Endpoint

Description

cycles_reserve

POST /v1/reservations

Reserve budget before a costly operation

cycles_commit

POST /v1/reservations/{id}/commit

Commit actual usage after operation completes

cycles_release

POST /v1/reservations/{id}/release

Release reservation without committing

cycles_extend

POST /v1/reservations/{id}/extend

Extend reservation TTL (heartbeat)

cycles_decide

POST /v1/decide

Lightweight preflight budget check

cycles_check_balance

GET /v1/balances

Check current budget balance for a scope

cycles_list_reservations

GET /v1/reservations

List reservations with filters

cycles_get_reservation

GET /v1/reservations/{id}

Get reservation details by ID

cycles_create_event

POST /v1/events

Record usage without reserve/commit lifecycle

Agent Decision Loop

Every costly operation follows a reserve → execute → finalize lifecycle:

1. cycles_reserve   → Lock budget before each costly step
2. Execute          → Perform the operation (respecting any caps)
3. cycles_commit    → Record actual usage — releases unused portion back to the pool
   OR cycles_release → Cancel the reservation if the step was skipped

Optionally, before reserving:

  • cycles_check_balance — inspect remaining budget to plan your approach

  • cycles_decide — lightweight preflight check without locking funds

Every reservation must be finalized with either cycles_commit or cycles_release — never leave reservations dangling. For long-running operations, use cycles_extend to heartbeat the reservation TTL so it doesn't expire mid-operation. See integration patterns for detailed examples.

Resources

URI

Description

cycles://balances/{tenant}

Current budget balance for a tenant

cycles://reservations/{reservation_id}

Reservation details

cycles://docs/quickstart

Getting started guide

cycles://docs/patterns

Integration patterns

Prompts

Prompt

Description

integrate_cycles

Generate Cycles integration code

diagnose_overrun

Analyze budget exhaustion

design_budget_strategy

Recommend scope hierarchy and limits

Development

npm install
npm run dev              # stdio transport with tsx
npm run dev:http         # HTTP transport with tsx
npm run build            # TypeScript build
npm run lint             # ESLint
npm test                 # Run tests
npm run test:coverage    # Run with coverage (95%+ lines, 85%+ branches)
npm run typecheck        # Type check without emitting

Publishing

The server is published to two registries:

Registry

Identifier

How

npm

@runcycles/mcp-server

CI publishes on v* tag push with provenance

MCP Registry

io.github.runcycles/cycles-mcp-server

CI publishes .mcp/server.json manifest after npm

To release a new version:

# 1. Update version in package.json and .mcp/server.json
# 2. Commit, tag, and push
git tag v0.1.0
git push origin v0.1.0

CI runs: test (Node 20+22) → npm publish → MCP Registry publish.

Documentation

Protocol Conformance

This MCP server is audited against the Cycles Protocol v0.1.23 OpenAPI spec. See AUDIT.md for the full conformance report.

License

Apache-2.0

-
security - not tested
A
license - permissive license
-
quality - not tested

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