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260,871 tools. Last updated 2026-07-05 09:33

"How to upload a file to a server and get a download link" matching MCP tools:

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  • Manage your Canvas coursework with quick access to courses, assignments, and grades. Track upcomin…

  • 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.

  • Retrieve a temporary download link for ready CSV reports from Paddle Billing by report ID. The link expires after 3 minutes.
    Apache 2.0
  • Upload a reference file (image, PDF, or short video) to a task for the assigned worker to access after claiming. Files are stored privately with a time-limited download link.
    MIT
  • Attach a distributable file to a product for delivery after purchase. Use a public URL or upload a local file to enable download links in email sequences.
    MIT
  • Download any activity as a FIT file, the standard format for Garmin and most training platforms. Use this to get converted data instead of the original upload format.
    MIT
  • Upload files to RSpace documents and attach them as proper file attachments in one step. Supports all file types including images, PDFs, and data files.
    AGPL 3.0
  • Download a job result file to a local path after a file delivery. Supports resume and enforces a maximum file size.
    MIT
  • Upload an HTML file from your computer to a StelaSpace space and get a permanent link to share. Publish new versions by reusing the same slug.
    MIT
  • Download a file from kintone by providing its file key and file name. The file is saved to the configured download directory, and the absolute path is returned.
    Apache 2.0
  • Transfer files between local machine and OpenClaw server via SSH. Upload, download, or list files up to 10MB. Download returns file content if no local path provided.
    Apache 2.0
  • Upload a file to a text namespace for processing and indexing. The file is queued after direct upload to storage.
    Apache 2.0
  • Upload files to generate a secure, short sharing link with options for expiration, password protection, burn-after-reading, and download limits.
    MIT
  • Share multiple local files by auto-zipping them into a single download link, with support for encryption, password protection, and download limits.
    Apache 2.0