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161,446 tools. Last updated 2026-05-30 02:43

"MCP Servers Configuration for YAPI and MySQL" matching MCP tools:

  • Return the description, connection URL, and per-client install snippets for a named tool or server. For tools: the description and the server it belongs to. For servers: connection URL and install snippets for every supported client (or one specific client when the client parameter is specified). Call cyanheads_search first to find valid names.
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  • 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).
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  • ⚠️ 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]
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  • Switch between local and remote DanNet servers on the fly. This tool allows you to change the DanNet server endpoint during runtime without restarting the MCP server. Useful for switching between development (local) and production (remote) servers. Args: server: Server to switch to. Options: - "local": Use localhost:3456 (development server) - "remote": Use wordnet.dk (production server) - Custom URL: Any valid URL starting with http:// or https:// Returns: Dict with status information: - status: "success" or "error" - message: Description of the operation - previous_url: The URL that was previously active - current_url: The URL that is now active Example: # Switch to local development server result = switch_dannet_server("local") # Switch to production server result = switch_dannet_server("remote") # Switch to custom server result = switch_dannet_server("https://my-custom-dannet.example.com")
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  • [IN DEVELOPMENT] [READ] Search the Layer 3 curated directory of MCP servers and agent-work tools. The directory has 30 entries across three vetting tiers — `first-party` (operated by the swarm.tips DAO), `vetted` (third-party, we've used + verified), `discovered` (cataloged from public sources, not yet exercised). Filter by `query` (substring vs name/description/tags), `category` (substring), and `tier`. Results sort first-party → vetted → discovered. The same directory powers swarm.tips/discover; this tool exposes it programmatically. Use this when an agent needs to find an MCP server for a capability (DeFi, search, browser automation, etc.) instead of an opportunity (which `discover_opportunities` covers).
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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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Matching MCP Servers

Matching MCP Connectors

  • Give your AI agent a phone. Place outbound calls to US businesses to ask, book, or confirm.

  • Connect YNAB to AI assistants like ChatGPT and Claude via a hosted remote MCP server with OAuth. Provides tools for reading budgets, accounts, categories, transactions, analyzing spending patterns, forecasting cash flow, tracking goal progress, and managing funds — all after signing in with your own YNAB account.

  • Returns VoiceFlip MCP server health and version metadata. No authentication required. Use this first to verify the server is reachable from your MCP client.
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  • Browse and compare Licium's agents and tools. Use this when you want to SEE what's available before executing. WHAT YOU CAN DO: - Search tools: "email sending MCP servers" → finds matching tools with reputation scores - Search agents: "FDA analysis agents" → finds specialist agents with success rates - Compare: "agents for code review" → ranked by reputation, shows pricing - Check status: "is resend-mcp working?" → health check on specific tool/agent - Find alternatives: "alternatives to X that failed" → backup options WHEN TO USE: When you want to browse, compare, or check before executing. If you just want results, use licium instead.
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  • Search fleet tools and servers by natural-language description. Returns ranked matches with brief summaries and the server each tool belongs to. Use scope "servers" to find which server handles a workflow; use the default scope "tools" to find specific tools. Call cyanheads_describe on a result name to get install snippets and the connection URL.
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  • Get Lenny Zeltser's Malware cross-server handoff routes — when this MCP server can't fulfill a request, which other MCP servers (or fallback workflows) to consult. Surfaces a compact subset of `malware_load_context`. This server never requests your sample, analysis notes, or indicators and instructs your AI to keep them local—guidelines and the report template flow to your AI for local analysis.
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  • Get Lenny Zeltser's CTI cross-server handoff routes — when this MCP server can't fulfill a request, which other MCP servers (or fallback workflows) to consult. Surfaces a compact subset of `cti_load_context`. This server never requests your campaign or threat-intel notes and instructs your AI to keep them local—templates and guidelines flow to your AI for local analysis.
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  • Given an M/M/c configuration (arrivalRate, serviceRate, servers) and optionally an observed average wait, returns a queueing-theory framed interpretation: where you sit on the utilization curve, what ρ means in plain language, what one more or fewer server would qualitatively do, and which complexity factors (priority, abandonment, skills routing) might be hiding in real data the M/M/c model can't see. Use this to TEACH while answering — when the user wants context around a number, not just the number itself. Pure text computation, no simulation, no RNG — deterministic output.
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  • Browse and compare Licium's agents and tools. Use this when you want to SEE what's available before executing. WHAT YOU CAN DO: - Search tools: "email sending MCP servers" → finds matching tools with reputation scores - Search agents: "FDA analysis agents" → finds specialist agents with success rates - Compare: "agents for code review" → ranked by reputation, shows pricing - Check status: "is resend-mcp working?" → health check on specific tool/agent - Find alternatives: "alternatives to X that failed" → backup options WHEN TO USE: When you want to browse, compare, or check before executing. If you just want results, use licium instead.
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  • Lists Vocab Voyage's MCP starter prompts (also exposed via the standard MCP prompts/list endpoint). Useful for hosts that don't yet support prompts/list.
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  • List all slide presentations created in the current MCP session. Returns URLs, themes, and timestamps for each presentation you've created.
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  • INVERSE of simulate_mmc — given an arrival rate, service rate, and a target average wait time, returns the SMALLEST number of servers needed to meet the target. Use this when the user asks 'how many servers do I need?' / 'what staffing keeps wait under N minutes?'. The tool runs a binary search over candidate server counts (up to maxServers, default 50), invoking the simulator for each candidate. Saves Claude from iterating simulate_mmc 3-5 times by hand. If even maxServers servers can't meet the target, the recommendation is null and the response includes the achieved wait so Claude can explain that the target is infeasible at the given load. ANTI-FABRICATION: `recommendedServers` and `achievedAvgWaitMinutes` come from real DES runs. Quote them VERBATIM. Do not propose a different number you think 'feels right'; this tool already binary-searches for the minimum that meets the target. If the user asks 'what if c=N?' for a specific N, call simulate_mmc with that c.
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  • Get Lenny Zeltser's Vuln cross-server handoff routes — when this MCP server can't fulfill a request, which other MCP servers (or fallback workflows) to consult. Surfaces a compact subset of `vuln_load_context`. This server never requests your vulnerability notes and instructs your AI to keep them local—the brief template and guidelines flow to your AI for local analysis.
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  • 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.
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