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300,155 tools. Last updated 2026-07-14 23:50

"How to operate a computer and execute commands" matching MCP tools:

  • Run a read-only shell-like query against a virtualized, in-memory filesystem rooted at `/` that contains ONLY the nTop documentation pages and OpenAPI specs. This is NOT a shell on any real machine — nothing runs on the user's computer, the server host, or any network. The filesystem is a sandbox backed by documentation chunks. This is how you read documentation pages: there is no separate "get page" tool. To read a page, pass its `.mdx` path (e.g. `/quickstart.mdx`, `/api-reference/create-customer.mdx`) to `head` or `cat`. To search the docs with exact keyword or regex matches, use `rg`. To understand the docs structure, use `tree` or `ls`. **Workflow:** Start with the search tool for broad or conceptual queries like "how to authenticate" or "rate limiting". Use this tool when you need exact keyword/regex matching, structural exploration, or to read the full content of a specific page by path. Supported commands: rg (ripgrep), grep, find, tree, ls, cat, head, tail, stat, wc, sort, uniq, cut, sed, awk, jq, plus basic text utilities. No writes, no network, no process control. Run `--help` on any command for usage. Each call is STATELESS: the working directory always resets to `/` and no shell variables, aliases, or history carry over between calls. If you need to operate in a subdirectory, chain commands in one call with `&&` or pass absolute paths (e.g., `cd /api-reference && ls` or `ls /api-reference`). Do NOT assume that `cd` in one call affects the next call. Examples: - `tree / -L 2` — see the top-level directory layout - `rg -il "rate limit" /` — find all files mentioning "rate limit" - `rg -C 3 "apiKey" /api-reference/` — show matches with 3 lines of context around each hit - `head -80 /quickstart.mdx` — read the top 80 lines of a specific page - `head -80 /quickstart.mdx /installation.mdx /guides/first-deploy.mdx` — read multiple pages in one call - `cat /api-reference/create-customer.mdx` — read a full page when you need everything - `cat /openapi/spec.json | jq '.paths | keys'` — list OpenAPI endpoints Output is truncated to 30KB per call. Prefer targeted `rg -C` or `head -N` over broad `cat` on large files. To read only the relevant sections of a large file, use `rg -C 3 "pattern" /path/file.mdx`. Batch multiple file reads into a single `head` or `cat` call whenever possible. When referencing pages in your response to the user, convert filesystem paths to URL paths by removing the `.mdx` extension. For example, `/quickstart.mdx` becomes `/quickstart` and `/api-reference/overview.mdx` becomes `/api-reference/overview`.
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  • Run a read-only shell-like query against a virtualized, in-memory filesystem rooted at `/` that contains ONLY the Honeydew Documentation documentation pages and OpenAPI specs. This is NOT a shell on any real machine — nothing runs on the user's computer, the server host, or any network. The filesystem is a sandbox backed by documentation chunks. This is how you read documentation pages: there is no separate "get page" tool. To read a page, pass its `.mdx` path (e.g. `/quickstart.mdx`, `/api-reference/create-customer.mdx`) to `head` or `cat`. To search the docs with exact keyword or regex matches, use `rg`. To understand the docs structure, use `tree` or `ls`. **Workflow:** Start with the search tool for broad or conceptual queries like "how to authenticate" or "rate limiting". Use this tool when you need exact keyword/regex matching, structural exploration, or to read the full content of a specific page by path. Supported commands: rg (ripgrep), grep, find, tree, ls, cat, head, tail, stat, wc, sort, uniq, cut, sed, awk, jq, plus basic text utilities. No writes, no network, no process control. Run `--help` on any command for usage. Each call is STATELESS: the working directory always resets to `/` and no shell variables, aliases, or history carry over between calls. If you need to operate in a subdirectory, chain commands in one call with `&&` or pass absolute paths (e.g., `cd /api-reference && ls` or `ls /api-reference`). Do NOT assume that `cd` in one call affects the next call. Examples: - `tree / -L 2` — see the top-level directory layout - `rg -il "rate limit" /` — find all files mentioning "rate limit" - `rg -C 3 "apiKey" /api-reference/` — show matches with 3 lines of context around each hit - `head -80 /quickstart.mdx` — read the top 80 lines of a specific page - `head -80 /quickstart.mdx /installation.mdx /guides/first-deploy.mdx` — read multiple pages in one call - `cat /api-reference/create-customer.mdx` — read a full page when you need everything - `cat /openapi/spec.json | jq '.paths | keys'` — list OpenAPI endpoints Output is truncated to 30KB per call. Prefer targeted `rg -C` or `head -N` over broad `cat` on large files. To read only the relevant sections of a large file, use `rg -C 3 "pattern" /path/file.mdx`. Batch multiple file reads into a single `head` or `cat` call whenever possible. When referencing pages in your response to the user, convert filesystem paths to URL paths by removing the `.mdx` extension. For example, `/quickstart.mdx` becomes `/quickstart` and `/api-reference/overview.mdx` becomes `/api-reference/overview`.
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  • Async extended variant of patent_landscape. Supports max_results up to 200 (vs 50 in sync mode) and an optional include_citation_graph flag that enriches each patent with its 2-level citation graph (parent patents that cite this one + child patents cited by this one). Returns immediately (<300ms) with a job_id. Poll the result with patent_landscape_result(job_id) after eta_seconds (~180s). Use for deep R&D white-space analysis, freedom-to-operate (FTO) audits, VC due diligence IP mapping, or large-scale competitor portfolio analysis. Async tool — register a webhook via `webhooks_manage(register, url, [job.completed])` to receive callbacks instead of polling. Faster + lighter.
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  • NO AUTH / PUBLIC / READ-ONLY. Builds and validates a copy-pasteable authenticated /api/v2/{dataset}/timeseries HTTP request without sending it. This tool does not execute the request, query weather values, or return forecast data. Use gribstream_query_timeseries when the user asks for actual weather values or CSV/JSON/NDJSON data. Generated direct API requests include Accept-Encoding: gzip, and generated curl commands use --compressed so large responses can be transferred compressed when the client supports it. Do not include request.asOf unless the user explicitly wants backtesting, time travel, or a historical model-run cutoff. The request body must use exact selectors discovered from the catalog or shared-parameter tools, with coordinates in request.coordinates and selectors in request.variables.
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  • Get Moxie's summary of how THIS repository organizes and maintains documentation - where docs live relative to code and how they are kept current. Read-only; no side effects. Returns a Markdown list of pattern entries, each with a title, explanation, and source citations. Use this to decide WHERE a new doc should go before calling propose_doc_update; for the list of WHICH docs need work, use get_documentation_opportunities instead.
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  • Get the canonical description of an agent payment protocol including creator, maturity level, repo URL, and what layer it operates at (authorization, commerce, or settlement). Use when the user asks about a specific protocol ('what is AP2?', 'who created MPP?', 'is x402 production ready?', 'what layer does ACP operate at?'). Use compare_protocols instead when comparing multiple protocols against each other.
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Matching MCP Servers

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    An MCP server for tracking and managing AI command usage history using a PostgreSQL database. It enables users to log, search, and view statistics for various AI-related commands and their execution contexts.
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Matching MCP Connectors

  • Intent execution engine for autonomous agent task routing

  • Transform any blog post or article URL into ready-to-post social media content for Twitter/X threads, LinkedIn posts, Instagram captions, Facebook posts, and email newsletters. Pay-per-event: $0.07 for all 5 platforms, $0.03 for single platform.

  • Get the current date and time of the machine where LMCP runs — with timezone and UTC offset. Call this whenever you need the real 'now' on the user's computer: before creating calendar events or reminders, resolving relative dates like 'today'/'tomorrow'/'next Friday', or timestamping. Takes no arguments.
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  • Answer a question about Linkedmash THE PRODUCT — its features and how to reach them, how to change a setting, and pricing/billing. Use this for questions like 'where do I manage my subscription', 'how do I schedule a post', 'how much is the Creator plan', 'how do I change Lina's writing rules', 'how do I import my LinkedIn saves', 'what does Smart Folders do'. It returns the most relevant sections of the Linkedmash help guide — answer the user in your own words from them and point them to the exact page (e.g. Settings → Billing). For live prices, direct the user to the pricing page (/pricing). This tool reads product documentation only, NOT the user's saved posts or account data.
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  • Roll (regenerate) the personal proxy credential for a firewall. This invalidates the previous password and returns a new one with ready-to-use configuration commands. Only call this when the user explicitly needs new credentials — it will break any existing package manager configuration using the old password.
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  • Get the canonical description of an agent payment protocol including creator, maturity level, repo URL, and what layer it operates at (authorization, commerce, or settlement). Use when the user asks about a specific protocol ('what is AP2?', 'who created MPP?', 'is x402 production ready?', 'what layer does ACP operate at?'). Use compare_protocols instead when comparing multiple protocols against each other.
    Connector
  • Alias of chieflab_status. Use as the FIRST tool when an agent session starts on a workspace that already has activity — recovers all open business loops with literal user commands. Same response shape as chieflab_status, same handler. If the user asked to launch the current repo and a recovered open loop looks unrelated, do not blindly resume it; start a fresh launch for the current repo.
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  • Async extended variant of patent_landscape. Supports max_results up to 200 (vs 50 in sync mode) and an optional include_citation_graph flag that enriches each patent with its 2-level citation graph (parent patents that cite this one + child patents cited by this one). Returns immediately (<300ms) with a job_id. Poll the result with patent_landscape_result(job_id) after eta_seconds (~180s). Use for deep R&D white-space analysis, freedom-to-operate (FTO) audits, VC due diligence IP mapping, or large-scale competitor portfolio analysis. Async tool — register a webhook via `webhooks_manage(register, url, [job.completed])` to receive callbacks instead of polling. Faster + lighter.
    Connector
  • NO AUTH / PUBLIC / READ-ONLY. Builds and validates a copy-pasteable authenticated /api/v2/{dataset}/runs HTTP request without sending it. This tool does not execute the request, query weather values, or return forecast data. Use gribstream_query_runs when the user asks for actual model-run forecast data or CSV/JSON/NDJSON data. Generated direct API requests include Accept-Encoding: gzip, and generated curl commands use --compressed so large responses can be transferred compressed when the client supports it. The request body must use exact selectors discovered from the catalog or shared-parameter tools, with coordinates in request.coordinates and selectors in request.variables.
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  • List every available Lorg tool with a plain-English description. Call this when the user says /help, /options, "what can you do", or "show me available commands".
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  • Returns a detailed explanation of LabelHead's three-dimensional artist scoring methodology. Use this when you need to understand how composite scores are calculated, what each dimension measures, and how to interpret momentum labels.
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  • Returns details about the Fluentive free trial - duration, requirements, and how to sign up. Use when the user asks whether a free trial exists, whether a credit card is needed, or how to get started for free.
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  • START HERE. SaSame is the Protocol Observatory and MCP Owner Intelligence entrypoint. If you operate a published MCP that agents discover but rarely call, start with audit_mcp({url}) or /activation/ for a free reproducible External Call Activation baseline. resolve_and_run({goal}) remains supporting read-only routing infrastructure. Claim, subscriptions, receipts, and Town are secondary rails.
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  • Returns the Control Plane operating guide — the resource model, how secrets/images/workloads/domains fit together, production-grade defaults, how to verify a change landed, and how to handle failures. Read it once per session before the first create/update/delete, and any time a multi-resource task spans unfamiliar ground.
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  • List services other owners have delegated operator access to you — the VPS you can operate but don't own.
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  • Retrieve results from a previously executed SDK job using the resultId from `sdk-query-execute`. If the query is complete, returns results immediately. If still pending, polls for up to 1 more minute. Use this after `sdk-query-execute` returns PENDING status.
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