Skip to main content
Glama
135,600 tools. Last updated 2026-05-22 16:24

"Databases or database systems written in Python, like Postgres" matching MCP tools:

  • Re-deploy skills WITHOUT changing any definitions. ⚠️ HEAVY OPERATION: regenerates MCP servers (Python code) for every skill, pushes each to A-Team Core, restarts connectors, and verifies tool discovery. Takes 30-120s depending on skill count. Use after connector restarts, Core hiccups, or stale state. For incremental changes, prefer ateam_patch (which updates + redeploys in one step).
    Connector
  • ⚠️ SQL MUST BE VALID IN EVERY DIALECT YOU TARGET — stick to ANSI-ish SELECT syntax when mixing pg/mysql/mssql. `SELECT TOP 10` (mssql) or `LIMIT` (others) will fail on the wrong side. Run the same query across 2-4 connections in parallel; returns per-connection rows + errors for diffing. Canonical use cases: regional compare (`['mssql-reporting-us', 'mssql-reporting-eu']`), cross-dialect sync check (`['prod-postgres-fleet', 'prod-mysql-app']`), 3-env drift, 4-region compare. Resolve every connection name via `list_connections` first; tool fails per-connection on unknown names. ARCHITECT-tier cap: 4 connections; https://www.thinair.co/ for unlimited. [ARCHITECT tier]
    Connector
  • Newest-first listing of the caller's in-app alert inbox. Each item is a single fire of an alert with a `dashboard` channel — written by the cron evaluator (or `test_alert`). By default dismissed items are hidden and read items are included. Cursor-paginated by `fired_at`. Sample tier rejected — alerts are a paid-tier feature.
    Connector
  • Execute any valid read only SQL statement on a Cloud SQL instance. To support the `execute_sql_readonly` tool, a Cloud SQL instance must meet the following requirements: * The value of `data_api_access` must be set to `ALLOW_DATA_API`. * For a MySQL instance, the database flag `cloudsql_iam_authentication` must be set to `on`. For a PostgreSQL instance, the database flag `cloudsql.iam_authentication` must be set to `on`. * An IAM user account or IAM service account (`CLOUD_IAM_USER` or `CLOUD_IAM_SERVICE_ACCOUNT`) is required to call the `execute_sql_readonly` tool. The tool executes the SQL statements using the privileges of the database user logged with IAM database authentication. After you use the `create_instance` tool to create an instance, you can use the `create_user` tool to create an IAM user account for the user currently logged in to the project. The `execute_sql_readonly` tool has the following limitations: * If a SQL statement returns a response larger than 10 MB, then the response will be truncated. * The tool has a default timeout of 30 seconds. If a query runs longer than 30 seconds, then the tool returns a `DEADLINE_EXCEEDED` error. * The tool isn't supported for SQL Server. If you receive errors similar to "IAM authentication is not enabled for the instance", then you can use the `get_instance` tool to check the value of the IAM database authentication flag for the instance. If you receive errors like "The instance doesn't allow using executeSql to access this instance", then you can use `get_instance` tool to check the `data_api_access` setting. When you receive authentication errors: 1. Check if the currently logged-in user account exists as an IAM user on the instance using the `list_users` tool. 2. If the IAM user account doesn't exist, then use the `create_user` tool to create the IAM user account for the logged-in user. 3. If the currently logged in user doesn't have the proper database user roles, then you can use `update_user` tool to grant database roles to the user. For example, `cloudsqlsuperuser` role can provide an IAM user with many required permissions. 4. Check if the currently logged in user has the correct IAM permissions assigned for the project. You can use `gcloud projects get-iam-policy [PROJECT_ID]` command to check if the user has the proper IAM roles or permissions assigned for the project. * The user must have `cloudsql.instance.login` permission to do automatic IAM database authentication. * The user must have `cloudsql.instances.executeSql` permission to execute SQL statements using the `execute_sql_readonly` tool or `executeSql` API. * Common IAM roles that contain the required permissions: Cloud SQL Instance User (`roles/cloudsql.instanceUser`) or Cloud SQL Admin (`roles/cloudsql.admin`) When receiving an `ExecuteSqlResponse`, always check the `message` and `status` fields within the response body. A successful HTTP status code doesn't guarantee full success of all SQL statements. The `message` and `status` fields will indicate if there were any partial errors or warnings during SQL statement execution.
    Connector
  • Read an HTML surface's body. HTML surfaces (Surface.kind="html") store mockup or full-page content as three text fields (html, css, js) rendered together inside a sandboxed iframe. Use `list_surfaces` to enumerate html surfaces in a workspace. Omit `surface_slug` to read the primary html surface; pass it to target a specific tab. Empty (never-written) html surfaces return { html:"", css:"", js:"" }. 404 when `surface_slug` doesn't match a live html surface. Requires viewer role.
    Connector
  • List all template categories currently in use in your Carbone account. Categories act like folders for organising templates (e.g. "invoices", "legal", "hr"). Use the returned names as the category filter in list_templates or upload_template.
    Connector

Matching MCP Servers

  • A
    license
    B
    quality
    C
    maintenance
    An MCP server that allows users to run and visualize systems models using the lethain:systems library, including capabilities to run model specifications and load systems documentation into the context window.
    Last updated
    2
    14
    MIT
  • F
    license
    -
    quality
    B
    maintenance
    Enables LLMs and agents to interact with relational databases (SQL Server, MySQL, PostgreSQL) through MCP tools. Supports executing queries, inserting records, listing tables, and exposing database schemas with secure credential management.
    Last updated

Matching MCP Connectors

  • Access comprehensive company data including financial records, ownership structures, and contact information. Search for businesses using domains, registration numbers, or LinkedIn profiles to streamline due diligence and lead generation. Retrieve historical financial performance and complex corporate group structures to support informed business analysis.

  • A simple MCP server built with FastMCP and python

  • Discover what's currently available in FINN's fleet. Returns all brands (with nested models), car types, fuel types, colors, subscription terms, gearshifts, and price/power/range bounds. Use this to answer questions like 'What brands does FINN offer?' or to validate filter values before searching.
    Connector
  • Deploys a Cloud Run service directly from local source files. This method is suitable for scripting languages like Python and Node.js, of which the source code can be embedded in the request. This is ideal for quick tests and development feedback loops. You must include all necessary dependencies within the source files because it skips the build step for faster deployment. **Key Requirements:** 1. source_code: Should set to sourceCode.inlinedSource.sources with array of source files, each having `filename` and `content`. 2. Size limit: you are subject to total request size limit of 50MiB.
    Connector
  • Execute a read-only SQL query against the target connection. ONLY SELECT / WITH / EXPLAIN permitted. Write dialect-appropriate SQL for the connection's engine — use PostgreSQL syntax for postgres connections (`SELECT NOW()`, `LIMIT`, `ILIKE`), T-SQL for mssql (`SELECT GETDATE()`, `TOP N`, `LIKE`), MySQL for mysql (`SELECT NOW()`, `LIMIT`). Response meta includes `connection` + `dialect` so you know which syntax worked; reuse that dialect in follow-up calls. Default LIMIT 100 unless the user asks for all rows.
    Connector
  • Execute JavaScript or Python code in an isolated sandbox. Use for: data processing, math, CSV parsing, JSON transformation, crypto calculations, algorithm testing. Secure — no filesystem access, no network. Returns: { output: string, runtime_ms: number, language: string }. Requires API key.
    Connector
  • Create a database user for a Cloud SQL instance. * This tool returns a long-running operation. Use the `get_operation` tool to poll its status until the operation completes. * When you use the `create_user` tool, specify the type of user: `CLOUD_IAM_USER`, `CLOUD_IAM_SERVICE_ACCOUNT`, or `BUILT_IN`. * By default the newly created user is assigned the `cloudsqlsuperuser` role, unless you specify other database roles explicitly in the request. * You can use a newly created user with the `execute_sql` tool if the user is a currently logged in IAM user. The `execute_sql` tool executes the SQL statements using the privileges of the database user logged in using IAM database authentication. The `create_user` tool has the following limitations: * To create a built-in user with password, use the `password_secret_version` field to provide password using the Google Cloud Secret Manager. The value of `password_secret_version` should be the resource name of the secret version, like `projects/12345/locations/us-central1/secrets/my-password-secret/versions/1` or `projects/12345/locations/us-central1/secrets/my-password-secret/versions/latest`. The caller needs to have `secretmanager.secretVersions.access` permission on the secret version. * The `create_user` tool doesn't support creating a user for SQL Server. To create an IAM user in PostgreSQL: * The database username must be the IAM user's email address and all lowercase. For example, to create user for PostgreSQL IAM user `example-user@example.com`, you can use the following request: ``` { "name": "example-user@example.com", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_USER", "instance":"test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM user is `example-user@example.com`. To create an IAM service account in PostgreSQL: * The database username must be created without the `.gserviceaccount.com` suffix even though the full email address for the account is`service-account-name@project-id.iam.gserviceaccount.com`. For example, to create an IAM service account for PostgreSQL you can use the following request format: ``` { "name": "test@test-project.iam", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_SERVICE_ACCOUNT", "instance": "test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM service account is `test@test-project.iam`. To create an IAM user or IAM service account in MySQL: * When Cloud SQL for MySQL stores a username, it truncates the @ and the domain name from the user or service account's email address. For example, `example-user@example.com` becomes `example-user`. * For this reason, you can't add two IAM users or service accounts with the same username but different domain names to the same Cloud SQL instance. * For example, to create user for the MySQL IAM user `example-user@example.com`, use the following request: ``` { "name": "example-user@example.com", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_USER", "instance": "test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM user is `example-user`. * For example, to create the MySQL IAM service account `service-account-name@project-id.iam.gserviceaccount.com`, use the following request: ``` { "name": "service-account-name@project-id.iam.gserviceaccount.com", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_SERVICE_ACCOUNT", "instance": "test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM service account is `service-account-name`.
    Connector
  • Given a Cyclesite listing slug, return up to 5 similar active listings (same category, ±25% price, same brand or frame size weighted higher). Use when the user is interested in one bike and wants alternatives. Example: 'show me bikes like that one'.
    Connector
  • DEFAULT tool for user-facing translation-listing questions. Use this for ANY user-facing query like 'what English translations are available', 'list French translations', 'which translators can I choose from'. This is the FINAL tool call for these requests; do not follow it with lookup_translations. Shows the catalog in an interactive widget the user can browse. Use ISO 639-1 codes like 'en', not names like 'english'. ONLY use lookup_translations instead when EITHER (a) the user explicitly asks for plain text / raw data, OR (b) you will pipe the result into ayah_translation in the same turn without showing the list. When in doubt, use this widget. Returned language_name values are display labels. Rows without usable slugs are filtered out.
    Connector
  • Audit the supply chain risk of a GitHub repository's dependencies. Fetches the repo's package.json and/or requirements.txt from GitHub and runs behavioral commitment scoring on every dependency. This is the fastest way to audit a project — just provide the GitHub URL or owner/repo slug, and get a full risk table in seconds. Risk flags: - CRITICAL: single publisher/maintainer/owner + >10M weekly downloads (publish-access concentration risk) - HIGH: sole publisher/maintainer + >1M/wk downloads, OR new package (<1yr) with high adoption - WARN: no release in 12+ months (potential abandonware) Examples: - "vercel/next.js" — audit Next.js dependencies - "https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchainjs" — audit LangChain JS - "facebook/react" — audit React's dependency tree - "anthropics/anthropic-sdk-python" — audit Anthropic Python SDK Use this when someone asks "is my project at risk?" or "audit this repo's dependencies".
    Connector
  • Test copy on simulated users, or A/B test two variants head-to-head. Use when choosing between headlines, taglines, value propositions, email subject lines, CTA text, product descriptions, or any written content. For single variant: returns raw persona reactions and monologues. For two variants: returns both sets of raw results side by side for you to compare.
    Connector
  • DEFAULT tool for user-facing translation-listing questions. Use this for ANY user-facing query like 'what English translations are available', 'list French translations', 'which translators can I choose from'. This is the FINAL tool call for these requests; do not follow it with lookup_translations. Shows the catalog in an interactive widget the user can browse. Use ISO 639-1 codes like 'en', not names like 'english'. ONLY use lookup_translations instead when EITHER (a) the user explicitly asks for plain text / raw data, OR (b) you will pipe the result into ayah_translation in the same turn without showing the list. When in doubt, use this widget. Returned language_name values are display labels. Rows without usable slugs are filtered out.
    Connector
  • Search for transit stops near a named location. IMPORTANT: Use this tool for queries like "Show me bus stops near KLCC" or "What buses stop at KL Sentral?" This tool geocodes the location name to coordinates, then finds nearby stops. CRITICAL: For Rapid KL services, ALWAYS use specific terms in the provider parameter like "rapid kl bus", "rapid rail", "mrt feeder", "lrt", "mrt" instead of using "prasarana" with a separate category parameter. DO NOT use provider="prasarana" with category="rapid-rail-kl" as this causes 404 errors. Instead use provider="rapid rail" or provider="lrt" or provider="mrt" or provider="mrt feeder" or provider="rapid kl bus" without a category parameter.
    Connector
  • List products for a specific vendor with vulnerability counts. Use this to discover exact product names for filtering. Product names in the database use CPE conventions (e.g. 'exchange_server' not 'exchange', 'windows_10' not 'windows 10'). Example: vendor='microsoft' returns products like exchange_server, windows_10, office, edge_chromium.
    Connector
  • Use this tool to split long text into smaller, overlapping chunks suitable for embedding, vector storage, or RAG pipelines. Triggers: 'chunk this document for RAG', 'split this into embeddings', 'break this into segments', 'prepare this text for a vector database'. Returns an array of chunks with index, text, character count, and estimated token count. Essential before embedding or storing text in a vector database.
    Connector
  • List every database connection registered for your tenant: name, id, dbType (postgres / mysql / mssql), createdAt. Flags duplicate names — only the first-added connection of a duplicate name is reachable by name. Returns nothing sensitive (no DSN, no credentials).
    Connector