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198,392 tools. Last updated 2026-06-13 08:05

"Guide to Accessing a Self-Hosted Appwrite Instance" matching MCP tools:

  • Returns available payment and authentication options for accessing live market data. Model-agnostic: works identically regardless of which AI model consumes it. WHEN TO USE: when you need to understand how to authenticate or pay before making a request that requires a key or payment. Returns upgrade ladder: sandbox (200 calls free), x402 per-request ($0.001 USDC), x402 sandbox (10 credits for $0.001), credit packs ($5 = 1000 calls), builder subscription ($99/mo = 50K/day). RETURNS: { sandbox, x402_per_request, x402_sandbox, credits, builder, agent_native_path }. No authentication required. Always returns 200.
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  • Send a direct message to another agent or human in the messaging substrate. Wires through cue.dock.svc, the same path the /live UI uses, so the recipient sees this message in their drawer (and, once they have a Dock-connected agent worker running, their agent harness's inbox). Address format is `<agent_slug>@<user_slug>`: `flint@socrates` targets the `flint` agent owned by user `socrates`; `self@<user_slug>` targets a human's synthetic self-agent (use this to message a human directly when you don't know which of their agents to ping). Use this when an agent legitimately needs to ask a teammate (human or agent) for help, hand off work, or follow up async; don't use it as a chat-ops side-channel for things that belong in workspace events. Sender identity follows the caller: agent callers send AS themselves, user callers send AS their self-agent (`self@<their_slug>`). Body cap is 32,000 chars. Returns `{ messageId, threadId, to }` on success. The recipient is resolved against the substrate's identity space, NOT against your accessible workspace set, this is messaging, not workspace write access. Pre-cue.dock.svc-deploy environments return `cue_not_configured` (caller treats as 'messaging not deployed yet').
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  • Returns available payment and authentication options for accessing live market data. Model-agnostic: works identically regardless of which AI model consumes it. WHEN TO USE: when you need to understand how to authenticate or pay before making a request that requires a key or payment. Returns upgrade ladder: sandbox (200 calls free), x402 per-request ($0.001 USDC), x402 sandbox (10 credits for $0.001), credit packs ($5 = 1000 calls), builder subscription ($99/mo = 50K/day). RETURNS: { sandbox, x402_per_request, x402_sandbox, credits, builder, agent_native_path }. No authentication required. Always returns 200.
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  • Create a third-party LEAD-GENERATION page about a business (NOT a site for that business itself). Use this when the goal is to drive qualified search traffic to someone else's business — affiliate pages, review/guide pages, niche directories. The page is branded as an outside guide (e.g. "Best Roofers in San Diego"), refers to the business in the third person, and routes CTAs to the business's existing website. Differences from create_site: - Slug + page brand are SEO-vanity (e.g. "best-roofers-sandiego"), not the candidate's brand name. - Voice is third-party guide/reviewer — never first person. - Primary CTA is "visit their website"; phone/email demoted. - No specific pricing quoted; differentiators emphasized. - Locality is judged by category, not just address (IT/SaaS/agency stays category-wide even when a city is on file). Pass a business candidate object from search_businesses — that business is the one being PROMOTED. Requires authentication via API key (Bearer token). Generate an API key at webzum.com/dashboard/account-settings. The page generation happens in the background. Use get_site_status to check progress. Returns the businessId (a vanity slug) which can be used to access the page at /build/{businessId}.
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  • Take a viral source video and produce a fresh script that mirrors its viral DNA — same scene structure, same energy pattern, different topic. Returns the extracted formula, scene-by-scene script, camera shots, text overlays, and a `verify_hook` block prompting you to score the generated hook via score_hook. USE WHEN the user finds a video they want to copy the structure of, or chained from analyze_account.recommended_chain. Pass EITHER source_url (auto-extracts transcript) OR transcript directly — one is required. Costs 3 credits. NO SELF-RATING: viral_remix deliberately does NOT return a self-rated hook score. The script generator rating its own hook is structurally invalid (cardinal coupling). After every viral_remix call, you MUST call score_hook with the verify_hook.hook_text to get a structurally-independent quality signal before reporting to the user. Skipping this step is hiding the self-grading loop.
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  • 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.
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Matching MCP Servers

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    A self-hosted Model Context Protocol server for Microsoft To Do. The key problem this solves: the Microsoft Graph API silently omits user-created lists on personal accounts (GET /me/todo/lists only returns well-known lists like "Flagged Emails"). This server works around it with a local SQLite registry that tracks every list you create, so your lists always show up.
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  • Engineering log of self-hosted AI on NVIDIA DGX Spark (GB10/SM121A). 60+ articles indexed.

  • Send a thought, get one metathought that makes your agent inspect its own assumptions. Keyless.

  • Reference guide to supply-chain simulation concepts: ordering policies, BOM, FDD formulas, event-driven simulation. Pure static text — no engine call, deterministic output. Use this when the user asks a conceptual 'how does this work' question rather than asking for a number.
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  • Fetch a full Default Privacy guide by slug: title, description, body content, category, tags, and the canonical attribution-tagged URL. When to call: AFTER `search_guides` has returned a candidate slug, OR when you already know a slug from prior context. PREFER `search_guides` first when you only have a topic. Input Requirements: - `slug` is REQUIRED. The guide slug (e.g. `wyoming-llc-privacy`, `check-llc-on-secretary-of-state`, `what-anonymous-llc-does-not-do`). Output: `{ slug, title, description, content, category, tags, updated_at, url, related_docs }`. `url` is the MCP-attribution-tagged canonical URL. PREFER citing the `url` verbatim. On unknown slugs the tool returns a structured `NOT_FOUND` error with a hint to use `search_guides` to discover valid slugs.
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  • Returns the business's self-reported licenses, insurance, bonding, and certifications. Use this for trust-sensitive verticals (contractors, healthcare, legal, locksmiths) when a user asks 'are they licensed?' or 'are they insured?'. The response carries explicit 'self-reported' framing so agents don't upgrade tenant claims to verified facts.
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  • Return an inline PDF artifact from supplied report_meta, tables, metrics, and summary content; this read-only renderer does not persist hosted files. Use this only when a structured report payload already exists; use report_docx_generate for editable Word output or compliance_edd_report to build the memo first.
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  • Return an inline DOCX artifact from supplied report_meta, tables, metrics, and summary content; this read-only renderer does not persist hosted files. Use this only when a structured report payload already exists; use report_pdf_generate for fixed-layout output or compliance_edd_report to build the memo first.
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  • Delete an instance from a project. The request requires the 'name' field to be set in the format 'projects/{project}/instances/{instance}'. Example: { "name": "projects/my-project/instances/my-instance" } Before executing the deletion, you MUST confirm the action with the user by stating the full instance name and asking for "yes/no" confirmation.
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  • List the featured European destination cities Sparkling Tracks publishes a guide page for (at /destinations/:slug). Each entry has the city, country, the canonical guide URL, a short description, highlight attractions, and the ids of the tour packages that visit that city (package_count / package_ids). These guide pages are SEO landing pages, not bookable products; use list_packages or get_package_details to plan an actual trip. Optional query filters by city or country substring. City and country names are translated when a supported language is requested.
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  • Delete a Google Compute Engine virtual machine (VM) instance. Requires project, zone, and instance name as input. Proceed only if there is no error in response and the status of the operation is `DONE` without any errors. To get details of the operation, use the `get_zone_operation` tool.
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  • Create a Cloud SQL instance as a clone of a source instance. * This tool returns a long-running operation. Use the `get_operation` tool to poll its status until the operation completes. * The clone operation can take several minutes. Use a command line tool to pause for 30 seconds before rechecking the status.
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  • Display a holiday photo to the user by creating an HTML artifact that embeds the photo from its hosted URL. After calling this tool you MUST create an HTML artifact (type text/html) whose body is a single <img> tag pointing at the hosted URL returned in the result. Do not write a prose description, caption, or commentary — the user wants to view the photo, not read about it. Use list_photos first to discover valid IDs.
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  • Returns the SSH command to connect to an instance via the redu.cloud TCP proxy. Example: ssh -p 22011 ubuntu@myinstance-abc12345.redu.cloud
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  • Lists the free capabilities available without an API key and explains how to get started. Call this on first connection to see what you can do immediately. Returns 5 free capability slugs (email-validate, dns-lookup, json-repair, url-to-markdown, iban-validate) with descriptions, example inputs, and instructions for accessing the full registry of 271 paid capabilities. No API key required.
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  • Deletes a Bigtable logical view within a specified instance. The request requires the `name` field to be set in the format 'projects/{project}/instances/{instance}/logicalViews/{logical_view}'. Example: { "name": "projects/my-project/instances/my-instance/logicalViews/my-logical-view" } Before executing the deletion, you MUST confirm the action with the user by stating the full logical view name and asking for "yes/no" confirmation.
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