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213,279 tools. Last updated 2026-06-19 14:30

"MCP server for semantic code snippet search" matching MCP tools:

  • Search the Arclan registry for MCP servers. By default returns only connectable servers (active, mcp_partial, auth_gated). Use status=stdio to browse local-only servers available for installation. Use status=all to query the full index. Use production_safe=true to restrict to servers with uptime > 97% and handshake success > 95%. Use read_only=true to restrict to servers with no write or exec tools. Use this before connecting to an MCP server to check its validation status and score. After using a server, call report_server to contribute reliability data.
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  • Configure automatic top-up when balance drops below a threshold. The configuration lives ONLY in the current MCP session — it is held in memory by the MCP server process and is lost on server restart, MCP client reconnect, or server redeploy. Top-ups are signed locally with TRON_PRIVATE_KEY and sent to your Merx deposit address (memo-routed). For persistent auto-deposit you currently need to call this tool again at the start of each session.
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  • Connectivity check that confirms the Nordic MCP server process is responding. Use this at the start of a session to verify the server is reachable before making other calls. Do not use as a proxy for database health — the server can respond while the Qdrant vector database is temporarily unavailable. To confirm data availability, call search_filings directly. Returns: A greeting string: "Hello {name}! Nordic MCP server is running."
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  • Search RedM/RDR3 docs by behavior, concept, OR exact token. Use when you don't have a specific native hash/name (use `lookup_native`) and the term isn't a known asset name in a large data table (use `grep_docs`). Hybrid mode (default) handles 'how do I X' queries ('teleport player', 'spawn vehicle', 'inventory add item') AND tokens ('addItem', 'weapon_pistol_volcanic', 'CPED_CONFIG_FLAG_') — fused via RRF over vector + BM25. Returns ranked snippets (path, breadcrumb, heading, snippet, score). Call `get_document({path, heading})` for full chunk content. `mode=semantic` for pure vector; `mode=lexical` for pure BM25. Filter via `category=vorp|rsgcore|oxmysql|natives|discoveries|jo_libs|learnings` or `namespace`. Community findings merged by default; `category=learnings` returns only findings. If you are retrying after a previous call returned no useful results, populate `prior_attempt` so the server can surface alternative wordings and learn what's missing from the docs.
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  • Keyword and semantic search across the connected repository's generated docs, conventions, documentation gaps, AI-context notes, and indexed code. Read-only; no side effects. Returns ranked matches in Markdown grouped into Documentation and Code sections, each with a title, snippet, and source paths. Use for open-ended lookups when you don't know which category holds the answer; when you do, the specific getters (get_conventions, get_doc_gaps, get_documentation_opportunities) are more direct. Omitting query returns recent context instead.
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  • Search RedM/RDR3 docs by behavior, concept, OR exact token. Use when you don't have a specific native hash/name (use `lookup_native`) and the term isn't a known asset name in a large data table (use `grep_docs`). Hybrid mode (default) handles 'how do I X' queries ('teleport player', 'spawn vehicle', 'inventory add item') AND tokens ('addItem', 'weapon_pistol_volcanic', 'CPED_CONFIG_FLAG_') — fused via RRF over vector + BM25. Returns ranked snippets (path, breadcrumb, heading, snippet, score). Call `get_document({path, heading})` for full chunk content. `mode=semantic` for pure vector; `mode=lexical` for pure BM25. Filter via `category=vorp|rsgcore|oxmysql|natives|discoveries|jo_libs|learnings` or `namespace`. Community findings merged by default; `category=learnings` returns only findings. If you are retrying after a previous call returned no useful results, populate `prior_attempt` so the server can surface alternative wordings and learn what's missing from the docs.
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  • Corporate travel: search and book flights, hotels, rail and transfers, manage orders.

  • Cloudflare Workers MCP server: code-explainer

  • Scan a public GitHub MCP-server repository for security issues. Clones the repo (shallow, <60s, <200 MB), runs compuute-scan v0.6.2 in static analysis mode (no code execution from the target), and returns a structured report with severity counts, a 0-100 score, and the 10 most severe findings. WHEN TO USE: - Before connecting to an unknown MCP server discovered via Anthropic Registry, Smithery, mcp.so, or a Discord recommendation. - Before installing a third-party MCP-server package into a production pipeline. - As part of an agent's pre-commit / pre-deploy due-diligence step when adding new dependencies. - As one input to a multi-source trust evaluation (combine with publisher reputation, package install count, last-update recency). WHEN NOT TO USE: - For private repos. Use the on-prem CLI instead: `npx compuute-scan ./path-to-private-repo` - For deep exploitability assessment of a specific code path. This is pattern matching, not dataflow analysis. Book a manual L2-L4 audit at https://compuute.se/audit for that depth. - For non-GitHub hosts (GitLab, Bitbucket, self-hosted). v1 supports github.com only. - For repos > 200 MB or clone time > 60s. The endpoint returns a 413 or 504 in those cases — fall back to local CLI. EXPECTED RESPONSE TIME: - Median: ~1-2 seconds for small repos (<100 files). - p99: ~10 seconds for medium repos. - Hard timeout at clone=60s, scan=120s combined. EXPECTED COST: - Free tier in MVP. Future Pro tier may charge per-scan or per-month. DATA FRESHNESS: - Scanner version is reported in response.scanner.version. - L1 rule set freshness reflects compuute-scan releases — see github.com/Compuute/compuute-scan/CHANGELOG.md for the latest CVE and threat-intel response timeline. EXAMPLES: Example 1 — scan an MCP server you're evaluating: github_url = "https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/servers" → score: 0, summary: {critical: 1, high: 94, medium: 22} → top_findings include SSRF, eval, etc. → recommendation: "AVOID — 1 critical and 94 high finding(s)..." Example 2 — scan a clean reference implementation: github_url = "https://github.com/microsoft/azure-devops-mcp" → score: 90+, summary: {critical: 0, high: 1} → recommendation: "REVIEW — 1 high finding(s)..." Example 3 — scan your own dev MCP-server before publishing: github_url = "https://github.com/yourorg/your-mcp" → audit your own surface before others install it OUTPUT FIELDS (stable schema): - repo_url (str): canonical URL of the scanned repo. - score (int): 0-100, higher safer. Coarse summary, not a precision claim. - summary (object): {critical, high, medium, low, info, files_scanned}. - recommendation (str): action guidance derived from severity counts. - findings_count (int): total raw findings (may include false positives). - top_findings (list): up to 10 most severe, each with {id, title, severity, file, line, owasp, cwe}. - l0_discovery (object): MCP transport, tool count, dependency pinning. - performance (object): clone_seconds, scan_seconds, repo_size_bytes. - scanner (object): {name, version, layers_covered}. - _disclaimer (str): MANDATORY triage disclaimer. Read it. Args: github_url: Public GitHub HTTPS URL (e.g. https://github.com/org/repo). Must be public and < 200 MB. v1 is github.com only. Returns: Structured scan result. On error, returns {"error": code, "message": ...} with HTTP-style code (invalid_url, clone_failed, scan_timeout, etc.).
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  • AI-powered company analysis using semantic search over Nordic financial data. Orchestrates multiple searches internally and returns a synthesized narrative answer with source citations. Covers annual reports, quarterly reports, press releases and macroeconomic context for Nordic listed companies. Use this when you want a synthesized answer rather than raw search chunks. For raw data access, use search_filings or company_research instead. For a full due diligence report with AI-planned sections, use the Alfred MCP server: alfred.aidatanorge.no/mcp Args: company: Company name or ticker question: What you want to know about the company model: 'haiku' (default) or 'sonnet'
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  • Discovers the most relevant tools available on this MCP server for a given task using local semantic search (MiniLM-L6-v2 embeddings). Accepts a plain-English description of what needs to be accomplished and returns the best matching tools ranked by relevance, along with their input schemas, pricing tier, and exact call instructions. Use this tool first when you are connected to this server but do not know which specific tool to call — describe your goal and let platform_tool_finder identify the right capability. Do not use this tool if you already know the tool name — call that tool directly instead. Returns up to 10 results ranked by semantic similarity score.
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  • Verify a pending Bitrise registration using the OTP sent to the user's email. Pass the `pending_signup_id` returned by `register`. Returns an `api_token` (a Bitrise personal access token) and, when a workspace was auto-created, a `workspace_slug`. If the code is rejected as invalid, retry with the same `pending_signup_id`; if it has expired or hit the attempt limit, call `register` again for a fresh code. After success, authenticate the MCP connection so the other tools work: set `Authorization: Bearer <api_token>` on the user's Bitrise server entry. Give the user BOTH a CLI command and a copy-pastable JSON snippet — e.g. Claude Code: `claude mcp add --transport http bitrise https://mcp.bitrise.io -H "Authorization: Bearer <api_token>"` — and let them use whichever fits (ask which client they use if unsure). Then have them reconnect for it to take effect, and explain how for their client (don't just say "reconnect"). The token expires in 24 hours, after which they'll need to register again.
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  • Returns runnable code that creates a Solana keypair. Solentic cannot generate the keypair for you and never sees the private key — generation must happen wherever you run code (the agent process, a code-interpreter tool, a Python/Node sandbox, the user's shell). The response includes the snippet ready to execute. After running it, fund the resulting publicKey and call the `stake` tool with {walletAddress, secretKey, amountSol} to stake in one call.
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  • 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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  • Returns runnable code that creates a Solana keypair. Solentic cannot generate the keypair for you and never sees the private key — generation must happen wherever you run code (the agent process, a code-interpreter tool, a Python/Node sandbox, the user's shell). The response includes the snippet ready to execute. After running it, fund the resulting publicKey and call the `stake` tool with {walletAddress, secretKey, amountSol} to stake in one call.
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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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  • [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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  • Get Google organic search results for SEO rank tracking. Returns up to 100 results per request with position, title, URL, and snippet. Ideal for monitoring keyword rankings and SERP analysis.
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  • Diagnostic snapshot of the deployed MCP server: build identifier, server_version (1.0.<PR> tag), boot time, advertised tool names, a hash of the tool surface, and corpus_updated_at (freshest watermark across the filings pipeline). Call this first when you suspect the connector is showing a stale tool list or you want to detect whether code or data has changed since your last call — compare tools_advertised against what your client lists, server_version for code, corpus_updated_at for data.
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  • Get Lenny Zeltser's Security Assessment 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 `assessment_load_context`. This server never requests your assessment notes or report and instructs your AI to keep them local—the templates and guidelines flow to your AI for local analysis.
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  • Verify MCP server connectivity. Returns success immediately with no database calls. Use this FIRST if experiencing tool errors - a successful response confirms the server is reachable and your authentication is valid.
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