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127,309 tools. Last updated 2026-05-05 14:16

"A server for monitoring tools and services" matching MCP tools:

  • Discovers the most relevant tools available on this MCP server for a given task using local semantic search (MiniLM-L6-v2 embeddings). Accepts a plain-English description of what needs to be accomplished and returns the best matching tools ranked by relevance, along with their input schemas, pricing tier, and exact call instructions. Use this tool first when you are connected to this server but do not know which specific tool to call — describe your goal and let platform_tool_finder identify the right capability. Do not use this tool if you already know the tool name — call that tool directly instead. Returns up to 10 results ranked by semantic similarity score.
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  • Returns recent configuration drift events for a domain under monitoring by the authenticated account — TLS changes, DNSSEC state changes, new or removed security headers, shifts in third-party JS hosts, new cookies. Each event carries its observed-at timestamp, a kind (tls/dnssec/cookies/js_hosts/headers), a severity classified centrally (high for tls/dnssec/headers, medium for cookies/js_hosts, otherwise low), a short summary, and a sanitised detail payload. Use this when the user asks 'what changed' on a domain, wants to audit recent posture shifts, or is diagnosing an unexpected issue. Pair it with get_domain_status to see the current state and get_drift_events to see how it got there. Do NOT use this for a domain that is not under monitoring — you'll get a domain_not_monitored error; monitoring has to be active for the drift history to accumulate. Optional since (ISO-8601) and limit (1..100) params narrow the window. Requires a valid API key.
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  • List all available Harvey Intel tools with pricing and input requirements. Use this for discovery.
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  • List available MCP tools and get detailed help. Use this tool to discover what tools are available and how to use them. Call without parameters to see all tools, or provide a tool name to get detailed help including parameters, examples, and related tools. Args: tool_name: Optional name of a specific tool to get detailed help for. Example: "search_funders", "get_funder_profile" Returns: If called without parameters: - server_name: Name of the MCP server - server_version: Current version - total_tools: Number of available tools - tier: Current access tier (free) - rate_limit: Rate limit information - tools: List of available tools with names, descriptions, and examples If called with tool_name: - tool: Detailed tool information including: - name: Tool name - description: What the tool does - parameters: List of parameters with types, descriptions, and examples - examples: Example usage - related_tools: Tools that work well together with this one Examples: list_tools() # See all available tools list_tools(tool_name="search_funders") # Get detailed help for search_funders list_tools(tool_name="get_funder_profile") # Get help for get_funder_profile
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  • Connectivity check — returns server version and current timestamp. Use to verify MCP server is reachable before calling other tools.
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  • Discovers the most relevant tools available on this MCP server for a given task using local semantic search (MiniLM-L6-v2 embeddings). Accepts a plain-English description of what needs to be accomplished and returns the best matching tools ranked by relevance, along with their input schemas, pricing tier, and exact call instructions. Use this tool first when you are connected to this server but do not know which specific tool to call — describe your goal and let platform_tool_finder identify the right capability. Do not use this tool if you already know the tool name — call that tool directly instead. Returns up to 10 results ranked by semantic similarity score.
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Matching MCP Servers

  • A
    license
    C
    quality
    C
    maintenance
    Enables interaction with Google Cloud services including billing cost analysis, log querying, and metrics monitoring through natural language commands. Provides comprehensive tools for managing GCP resources, analyzing costs, detecting anomalies, and retrieving operational insights.
    Last updated
    40
    1
    Apache 2.0
  • A
    license
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    quality
    B
    maintenance
    Multi-tool MCP server for AI agents with 29 tools across web scraping, SEO analysis, screenshot and PDF generation, domain intelligence, content extraction, multi-chain EVM blockchain queries, and security toolkit. Free tier available with no auth required.
    Last updated
    16
    1
    MIT

Matching MCP Connectors

  • List all available Zero Core Tools with pricing and input requirements. Use this for discovery.
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  • Get Lenny Zeltser's scoring playbook so your AI can score a draft locally against a cybersecurity-writing rating sheet. THIS IS THE ONLY TOOL THAT PRODUCES NUMERIC SCORES — the writing-coach tools (`get_security_writing_guidelines`, `ir_*`, `product_*`) never score. Returns the rubric plus step-by-step instructions for applying it. This server never requests your draft and instructs your AI to keep it local—rating sheets and scoring instructions flow to your AI.
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  • Create an authenticated server session and return a `sessionId` for subsequent tool calls. Default mode is wallet signature login for platform tools; secondary mode is `apiKey` login for internal tools. For wallet login, ALWAYS call `tronsave_get_sign_message` first, sign that exact message client-side, then call `tronsave_login` with `signature_timestamp` in exact format `<signature>_<timestamp>` (signature and timestamp joined by `_`). Use returned `sessionId` as `mcp-session-id` on every subsequent request.
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  • [READ] Aggregated list of paid services swarm.tips agents can spend on. v1 covers first-party services (generate_video — 5 USDC for an AI-generated short-form video). External spend sources (Chutes inference at llm.chutes.ai/v1, x402-paywalled APIs, etc.) are deferred to follow-up integrations. Each entry includes title, description, source, category, cost_amount/token/chain, USD estimate, direct redirect URL, and (for first-party services) a `spend_via` field naming the in-MCP tool to call. Use this to discover where to spend; for first-party services use the named `spend_via` tool, for external services navigate to the URL.
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  • Use this as the primary tool to retrieve a single specific custom monitoring dashboard from a Google Cloud project using the resource name of the requested dashboard. Custom monitoring dashboards let users view and analyze data from different sources in the same context. This is often used as a follow on to list_dashboards to get full details on a specific dashboard.
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  • Discovers the most relevant tools available on this MCP server for a given task using local semantic search (MiniLM-L6-v2 embeddings). Accepts a plain-English description of what needs to be accomplished and returns the best matching tools ranked by relevance, along with their input schemas, pricing tier, and exact call instructions. Use this tool first when you are connected to this server but do not know which specific tool to call — describe your goal and let platform_tool_finder identify the right capability. Do not use this tool if you already know the tool name — call that tool directly instead. Returns up to 10 results ranked by semantic similarity score.
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  • <tool_description> Search for products in the Nexbid marketplace. Alias for nexbid_search with content_type='product'. </tool_description> <when_to_use> When an agent needs to discover products (not recipes or services). Convenience alias — delegates to nexbid_search internally. </when_to_use> <combination_hints> list_products → get_product for details → create_media_buy for advertising. For recipes/services use nexbid_search with content_type filter. </combination_hints> <output_format> Product list with name, price, availability, score, and link. </output_format>
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  • List all 33 x402 service categories with aggregate stats: services count, 24h volume, transaction count, real-volume %, and label distribution. Use this to understand the shape of the x402 ecosystem before drilling into specific services or wallets.
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  • List all available service directories in the LocalPro network. This is the starting point for discovering what categories of verified local service providers are available. Categories include floor coating, radon mitigation, foundation repair, basement waterproofing, crawl space repair, mold/asbestos/lead remediation, septic services, and laundry services. Returns niche IDs needed for all other tools.
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  • Create an authenticated server session and return a `sessionId` for subsequent tool calls. Default mode is wallet signature login for platform tools; secondary mode is `apiKey` login for internal tools. For wallet login, ALWAYS call `tronsave_get_sign_message` first, sign that exact message client-side, then call `tronsave_login` with `signature_timestamp` in exact format `<signature>_<timestamp>` (signature and timestamp joined by `_`). Use returned `sessionId` as `mcp-session-id` on every subsequent request.
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  • Compare developer tools and services side by side — free tier limits, pricing tiers, and recent pricing changes. Use this when choosing between similar services (e.g., Supabase vs Neon vs PlanetScale) or when a vendor changes their pricing. Call this tool when a user asks: 'Compare Neon vs Supabase', 'Which database has a better free tier?'.
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  • Actively probe any URL to check if it is a live, spec-compliant MCP server. Sends a JSON-RPC tools/list request and verifies a valid response. Use this before depending on a third-party MCP endpoint — manifests and documentation can claim MCP support without actually serving it. Returns {verified: true/false, endpoint, note}.
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  • Detect anomalies in time-series data — use after pulling numeric metrics from monitoring APIs, financial data sources, IoT sensors, or spreadsheet columns. Send a single numeric array and specify a window size. Early windows define 'normal', recent windows are tested for anomalies. Typical workflow: (1) Pull a column of numbers from Sheets, a Supabase time-series table, or a metrics API. (2) Pass the array here. (3) Get back which time windows are anomalous. Examples: - Revenue monitoring: Pull monthly revenue from Sheets → detect anomalous months - Stock screening: Pull 90 days of closing prices → find unusual price windows - Server health: Pull response-time metrics → identify degradation windows - Sensor QA: Pull temperature readings from IoT API → flag sensor drift
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  • Get business information for a Dashform funnel, including description, industry, location, services, and booking link. Use this to understand what a business offers before checking lead fit.
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