141,426 tools. Last updated 2026-05-26 19:19
"Understanding AWS EC2 Pricing" matching MCP tools:
- Set or update a pricing entry for one category + deliverable_type combination. WHEN TO USE - You are a specialist agent wanting to declare your price for scoped or analysis deliverables in your domain. - You want to update an existing price for a category you already have a pricing row for. WHEN NOT TO USE - For quick (free-form Q&A) deliverables — those are always free, no pricing row needed. - To replace all pricing at once — use the REST API PUT /api/v1/agents/me/pricing. BEHAVIOR - Mutating. Auth required: agent API key. Rate-limited to 10 writes/min. - Upserts: inserts a new row or replaces the existing one for (agent_id, category, deliverable_type). - Pricing is dormant during Phase 2-Infra. Prices are stored but NOT shown to askers until Phase 2-Pay launches. - JPY note: price_cents stores integer yen (5000 = ¥5,000, not ¥50.00). No decimal subdivision. WORKFLOW - After setting pricing, askers routing direct consultations to you will see your quoted price at scope_accepted time (when Phase 2-Pay un-hides pricing). Until then, prices are informational only.Connector
- Retrieve pricing entries for yourself or another agent. WHEN TO USE - Before routing a direct consultation to a target agent, to check what they charge. - To verify your own pricing configuration is set correctly. WHEN NOT TO USE - For real-time consultation pricing during an engagement — pricing is dormant during Phase 2-Infra and no payments happen yet. BEHAVIOR - Read-only. Rate-limited to 60 req/min. - agent_id is optional. Omit to retrieve your own pricing (auth required). Provide a UUID to read another agent's pricing. - Returns category, deliverable_type, price_cents, currency for each entry. - Dormant note is always appended during Phase 2-Infra. WORKFLOW - After checking target agent pricing, use ask_consultation with target_agent_id set; at scope_accepted the platform snapshots the price.Connector
- BATCH INSPECTION: run up to 32 AWS inspect probes in one call. ⚠️ **PREREQUISITE**: Same as awsinspect — deploy attempt required. Check convostatus for hasDeployAttempt=true before calling. Use this when you need to check more than ~3 resources. The backend fetches Oracle credentials ONCE per batch and fans out probes against a single AWS config — for a 12-resource health check this is ~5–8× faster and 12× fewer Oracle round-trips than calling awsinspect 12 times. BUDGETS: - Up to 32 sub-probes per call (subs array length). - 30s per-sub timeout; 60s total batch wall-clock. - Concurrency cap 8 — sub-probes run in parallel but never saturate AWS. - 512 KB response cap: subs past the cap keep their envelope (index/service/action/ok) but have result replaced with truncated=true. PARTIAL FAILURE IS EXPECTED. The response is an ordered results array; each entry has {index, service, action, ok, result, error}. Inspect each result — do NOT abort on the first error. A credential fetch failure leaves cred-less probes (list-actions, list-metrics) succeeding anyway. REQUIRES: session_id from convoopen response (format: sess_v2_...). Supported services: account, acm, alb, apigateway, apprunner, backup, bedrock, cloudfront, cloudwatchlogs, cognito, cost-explorer, dynamodb, ebs, ec2, ecs, eks, elasticache, kms, lambda, msk, opensearch, rds, route53, s3, sagemaker, secretsmanager, sqs, vpc, waf For a specific service's actions, use awsinspect (singular) with action="list-actions" — batch is not the place for discovery. Batch responses are always summarized (no detail/raw per-sub); use singular awsinspect when you need full metadata or raw API output for one resource. EXAMPLES: - awsinspect_batch(session_id=..., subs=[ {"service":"ec2","action":"describe-instances"}, {"service":"rds","action":"describe-db-instances"}, {"service":"vpc","action":"describe-vpcs"}, {"service":"s3","action":"list-buckets"}]) - awsinspect_batch(session_id=..., subs=[ {"service":"ec2","action":"get-metrics","filters":"{\"hours\":6}"}, {"service":"rds","action":"get-metrics","filters":"{\"hours\":6}"}])Connector
- Fetch a public pricing page and extract first-pass pricing signals before you quote plan costs, free tiers, or plan names. Use this when you already have a likely pricing URL and need a quick live scan of visible page text. It returns price-like strings, heuristic plan labels, free or free-trial signals, and cache information. It does not map prices to exact plans, normalize currencies, execute checkout flows, or guarantee that a price applies to a specific region or customer type. JavaScript-rendered, logged-in, or heavily obfuscated pricing details can be missed. Results are cached for 5 minutes.Connector
- BATCH INSPECTION: run up to 32 AWS inspect probes in one call. ⚠️ **PREREQUISITE**: Same as awsinspect — deploy attempt required. Check convostatus for hasDeployAttempt=true before calling. Use this when you need to check more than ~3 resources. The backend fetches Oracle credentials ONCE per batch and fans out probes against a single AWS config — for a 12-resource health check this is ~5–8× faster and 12× fewer Oracle round-trips than calling awsinspect 12 times. BUDGETS: - Up to 32 sub-probes per call (subs array length). - 30s per-sub timeout; 60s total batch wall-clock. - Concurrency cap 8 — sub-probes run in parallel but never saturate AWS. - 512 KB response cap: subs past the cap keep their envelope (index/service/action/ok) but have result replaced with truncated=true. PARTIAL FAILURE IS EXPECTED. The response is an ordered results array; each entry has {index, service, action, ok, result, error}. Inspect each result — do NOT abort on the first error. A credential fetch failure leaves cred-less probes (list-actions, list-metrics) succeeding anyway. REQUIRES: session_id from convoopen response (format: sess_v2_...). Supported services: account, acm, alb, apigateway, apprunner, backup, bedrock, cloudfront, cloudwatchlogs, cognito, cost-explorer, dynamodb, ebs, ec2, ecs, eks, elasticache, kms, lambda, msk, opensearch, rds, route53, s3, sagemaker, secretsmanager, sqs, vpc, waf For a specific service's actions, use awsinspect (singular) with action="list-actions" — batch is not the place for discovery. Batch responses are always summarized (no detail/raw per-sub); use singular awsinspect when you need full metadata or raw API output for one resource. EXAMPLES: - awsinspect_batch(session_id=..., subs=[ {"service":"ec2","action":"describe-instances"}, {"service":"rds","action":"describe-db-instances"}, {"service":"vpc","action":"describe-vpcs"}, {"service":"s3","action":"list-buckets"}]) - awsinspect_batch(session_id=..., subs=[ {"service":"ec2","action":"get-metrics","filters":"{\"hours\":6}"}, {"service":"rds","action":"get-metrics","filters":"{\"hours\":6}"}])Connector
- Read full AWS documentation pages after searching — search results contain partial excerpts only. Use this tool on the URLs returned by `search_documentation` to get complete, accurate information. ## Usage This tool reads documentation pages concurrently and converts them to markdown format. Supports AWS documentation, AWS Amplify docs, AWS GitHub repositories and CDK construct documentation. When content is truncated, a Table of Contents (TOC) with character positions is included to help navigate large documents. ## Best Practices - After searching, read the most relevant URLs to get complete information — search snippets are partial excerpts and often insufficient to answer accurately - Batch 2-5 requests when reading multiple URLs from search results - Use TOC character positions to jump directly to relevant sections in long documents - If a document was truncated and the answer may be in the remaining content, continue reading with `start_index` set to the previous `end_index`. Stop only once you have found the needed information or confirmed it is not present in the document. ## Request Format Each request must be an object with: - `url`: The documentation URL to fetch (required) - `max_length`: Maximum characters to return (optional, default: 10000 characters) - `start_index`: Starting character position (optional, default: 0) For batching you can input a list of requests. ## Example Request ``` { "requests": [ { "url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/access-management.html", "max_length": 5000, "start_index": 0 }, { "url": "https://repost.aws/knowledge-center/ec2-instance-connection-troubleshooting" } ] } ``` ## URL Requirements Allow-listed URL prefixes: - docs.aws.amazon.com - aws.amazon.com - repost.aws/knowledge-center - docs.amplify.aws - ui.docs.amplify.aws - github.com/aws-cloudformation/aws-cloudformation-templates - github.com/aws-samples/aws-cdk-examples - github.com/aws-samples/generative-ai-cdk-constructs-samples - github.com/aws-samples/serverless-patterns - github.com/awsdocs/aws-cdk-guide - github.com/awslabs/aws-solutions-constructs - github.com/cdklabs/cdk-nag - constructs.dev/packages/@aws-cdk-containers - constructs.dev/packages/@aws-cdk - constructs.dev/packages/@cdk-cloudformation - constructs.dev/packages/aws-analytics-reference-architecture - constructs.dev/packages/aws-cdk-lib - constructs.dev/packages/cdk-amazon-chime-resources - constructs.dev/packages/cdk-aws-lambda-powertools-layer - constructs.dev/packages/cdk-ecr-deployment - constructs.dev/packages/cdk-lambda-powertools-python-layer - constructs.dev/packages/cdk-serverless-clamscan - constructs.dev/packages/cdk8s - constructs.dev/packages/cdk8s-plus-33 - strandsagents.com/ Deny-listed URL prefixes: - aws.amazon.com/marketplace ## Example URLs - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/bucketnamingrules.html - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/lambda-invocation.html - https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2023/02/aws-telco-network-builder/ - https://aws.amazon.com/builders-library/ensuring-rollback-safety-during-deployments/ - https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/developer/make-the-most-of-community-resources-for-aws-sdks-and-tools/ - https://repost.aws/knowledge-center/example-article - https://docs.amplify.aws/react/build-a-backend/auth/ - https://ui.docs.amplify.aws/angular/connected-components/authenticator - https://github.com/aws-samples/aws-cdk-examples/blob/main/README.md - https://github.com/awslabs/aws-solutions-constructs/blob/main/README.md - https://constructs.dev/packages/aws-cdk-lib/v/2.229.1?submodule=aws_lambda&lang=typescript - https://github.com/aws-cloudformation/aws-cloudformation-templates/blob/main/README.md - https://strandsagents.com/docs/user-guide/quickstart/overview/index.md ## Output Format Returns a list of results, one per request: - Success: Markdown content with `status: "SUCCESS"`, `total_length`, `start_index`, `end_index`, `truncated`, `redirected_url` (if page was redirected) - Error: Error message with `status: "ERROR"`, `error_code` (not_found, invalid_url, throttled, downstream_error, validation_error) - Truncated content includes a ToC with character positions for navigation - Redirected pages include a note in the content and populate the `redirected_url` field ## Handling Long Documents If the response indicates the document was truncated, you have several options: 1. **Continue Reading**: Make another call with `start_index` set to the previous `end_index` — do this if the answer may be in the remaining content 2. **Jump to Section**: Use the ToC character positions to jump directly to specific sections 3. **Stop when done**: Stop only once you have found the needed information or confirmed it is not present in the document **Example - Jump to Section:** ``` # TOC shows: "Using a logging library (char 3331-6016)" # Jump directly to that section: {"requests":[{"url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/python-logging.html", "start_index": 3331, "max_length": 3000}]} ```Connector
Matching MCP Servers
- Alicense-qualityBmaintenanceMCP server that provides tools for automating AWS Pricing Calculator estimate generation.Last updatedMIT
- PythonMIT
Matching MCP Connectors
The AWS Knowledge MCP server is a fully managed remote Model Context Protocol server that provides real-time access to official AWS content in an LLM-compatible format. It offers structured access to AWS documentation, code samples, blog posts, What's New announcements, Well-Architected best practices, and regional availability information for AWS APIs and CloudFormation resources. Key capabilities include searching and reading documentation in markdown format, getting content recommendations, listing AWS regions, and checking regional availability for services and features.
Create AWS cost estimates and shareable AWS Pricing Calculator URLs.
- Find cross-provider equivalents for a diagram node by infrastructure role. Given a node name (e.g. 'EC2', 'Lambda', 'ComputeEngine'), returns the infrastructure role category it belongs to and the equivalent nodes from other providers. If a node name is ambiguous, use list_categories to see all mapped roles and pick a provider-specific node name. Args: node: Node class name to look up (case-insensitive, e.g. 'EC2', 'lambda'). target_provider: Optional provider to filter equivalents to (e.g. 'gcp', 'azure', 'aws'). If omitted, all equivalents across all other providers are returned. Returns: A dict with keys: category (str): Infrastructure role category name. description (str): Human-readable description of the category. source (dict): The matched node with keys node, provider, service, import. equivalents (list[dict]): Equivalent nodes, each with keys node, provider, service, import.Connector
- Check AWS resource availability across regions for products (service and features), APIs, and CloudFormation resources. ## Quick Reference - Maximum 10 regions per call (split into multiple calls for more regions) - Single region: filters optional, supports pagination - Multiple regions: filters required, no pagination, queries run concurrently - Status values: 'isAvailableIn' | 'isNotAvailableIn' | 'isPlannedIn' | 'Not Found' - Response field: 'products' (product), 'service_apis' (api), 'cfn_resources' (cfn) ## When to Use 1. Pre-deployment Validation - Verify resource availability before deployment - Prevent deployment failures due to regional restrictions - Validate multi-region architecture requirements 2. Architecture Planning - Design region-specific solutions - Plan multi-region deployments - Compare regional capabilities ## Do Not Use This Tool For - Counting or listing regions by geography (e.g., "how many AP regions exist?") — use `list_regions` then count, or use `search_documentation` - Questions about documentation, announcements, or general service availability dates — use `search_documentation` - CloudFormation resource coverage questions across all regions — use `search_documentation` with topic `cloudformation` - Any question that asks about availability in general without specifying a known product name, API, or CFN resource type — use `search_documentation` instead, as this tool requires exact resource identifiers and will return 'Not Found' for vague queries ## Examples **Check specific resources in one region**: ``` regions=["us-east-1"], resource_type="product", filters=["AWS Lambda"] regions=["us-east-1"], resource_type="api", filters=["Lambda+Invoke", "S3+GetObject"] regions=["us-east-1"], resource_type="cfn", filters=["AWS::Lambda::Function"] ``` **Compare availability across regions**: ``` regions=["us-east-1", "eu-west-1"], resource_type="product", filters=["AWS Lambda"] ``` **Explore all resources** (single region only, with pagination handling support via next_token due to large output): ``` regions=["us-east-1"], resource_type="product" ``` Follow up with next_token from response to get more results. ## Response Format **Single Region**: Flat structure with optional next_token. Example: ``` {"products": {"AWS Lambda": "isAvailableIn"}, "next_token": null, "failed_regions": null} ``` **Multiple Regions**: Nested by region. Example: ``` {"products": {"AWS Lambda": {"us-east-1": "isAvailableIn", "eu-west-2": "isAvailableIn"}}, ...} ``` ## Filter Guidelines The filters must be passed as an array of values and must follow the format below. 1. Product - service and feature (resource_type='product') Format: 'Product' Example filters: - ['Latency-Based Routing', 'AWS Amplify', 'AWS Application Auto Scaling'] - ['PrivateLink Support', 'Amazon Aurora'] 2. APIs (resource_type='api') Format: to filter on API level 'SdkServiceId+APIOperation' Example filters: - ['Athena+UpdateNamedQuery', 'ACM PCA+CreateCertificateAuthority', 'IAM+GetSSHPublicKey'] Format: to filter on SdkService level 'SdkServiceId' Example filters: - ['EC2', 'ACM PCA'] 3. CloudFormation (resource_type='cfn') Format: 'CloudformationResourceType' Example filters: - ['AWS::EC2::Instance', 'AWS::Lambda::Function', 'AWS::Logs::LogGroup']Connector
- Get the cost to buy points/miles for a loyalty program. Returns tiered base purchase pricing and any active bonus promotion. Use to answer 'how much does it cost to buy X Avios/miles/points?' If no program specified, returns all programs with pricing data. Free — no account needed.Connector
- List all available Harvey Intel tools with pricing and input requirements. Use this for discovery.Connector
- Returns agentView plan pricing, features and upgrade options. Use this when the user asks about pricing, costs, plan differences or what an additional display costs. No authentication required. Returns an array of plans with name, price, included displays and features, plus the per-display add-on price and a link to the pricing page.Connector
- INSPECTION: Inspect AWS infrastructure for a deployed project ⚠️ **PREREQUISITE**: This tool requires a prior deployment ATTEMPT (successful or failed). Check convostatus for hasDeployAttempt=true before calling. Works even after failed deploys to inspect orphaned resources. Inspect deployed AWS resources after a deployment attempt. Use this tool when the user asks about the status or details of their deployed infrastructure. It fetches temporary read-only credentials securely and queries the AWS API directly. RESPONSE TIERS (default is summary for token efficiency): - Summary (default): Key fields only (~500 tokens). Set detail=false, raw=false or omit both. - Detail: Full metadata for a specific resource. Set detail=true + resource filter. - Raw: Complete unprocessed API response. Set raw=true. REQUIRES: session_id from convoopen response (format: sess_v2_...). Supported services: account, acm, alb, apigateway, apprunner, backup, bedrock, cloudfront, cloudwatchlogs, cognito, cost-explorer, dynamodb, ebs, ec2, ecs, eks, elasticache, kms, lambda, msk, opensearch, rds, route53, s3, sagemaker, secretsmanager, sqs, vpc, waf For a specific service's actions, call with action="list-actions". METRICS: Use list-metrics to discover available metrics for a service (no credentials needed). Then use get-metrics to retrieve data (auto-discovers resources). Most services return CloudWatch time-series. KMS returns key health (rotation, state). SecretsManager returns secret health (rotation, last accessed/rotated). Optional filters JSON: {"hours":6,"period":300}. BILLING: Use service=cost-explorer to inspect AWS costs. Actions: get-cost-summary (last 30 days by service, filters: {"days":7,"granularity":"DAILY"}), get-cost-forecast (projected spend through end of month), get-cost-by-tag (costs grouped by tag, filters: {"tag_key":"Environment","days":30}). Requires ce:GetCostAndUsage and ce:GetCostForecast IAM permissions. EXAMPLES: - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="ec2", action="describe-instances") - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="cost-explorer", action="get-cost-summary") - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="ec2", action="get-metrics", filters="{\"hours\":6}") - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="rds", action="describe-db-instances", detail=true)Connector
- Returns available evaluation tools, what they check, and their pricing. Call this first to understand what Axcess can evaluate and how much each evaluation costs. This tool is FREE. All evaluation tools require USDC payment on Base network. Returns: JSON with tool descriptions, pricing, and rubric categories.Connector
- Scrape and parse a competitor pricing page from a URL or domain. Fetches via proxy-aware timedFetch (tries /pricing, /plans, homepage fallback), then extracts: plan names, prices, billing cadence (monthly/annual/usage-based/one-time), key features, free tier presence, enterprise tier, estimated price range. Returns structured pricing tiers. If unfetchable or no pricing found (anti-bot, SPA, auth wall): returns a clear degraded result with warnings and signals — never fake success. ICP: founders, product managers, pricing strategists, competitive intel teams. Proxy-aware (AICI_RESEARCH_PROXY_URL). Cache TTL 6h.Connector
- INSPECTION: Inspect AWS infrastructure for a deployed project ⚠️ **PREREQUISITE**: This tool requires a prior deployment ATTEMPT (successful or failed). Check convostatus for hasDeployAttempt=true before calling. Works even after failed deploys to inspect orphaned resources. Inspect deployed AWS resources after a deployment attempt. Use this tool when the user asks about the status or details of their deployed infrastructure. It fetches temporary read-only credentials securely and queries the AWS API directly. RESPONSE TIERS (default is summary for token efficiency): - Summary (default): Key fields only (~500 tokens). Set detail=false, raw=false or omit both. - Detail: Full metadata for a specific resource. Set detail=true + resource filter. - Raw: Complete unprocessed API response. Set raw=true. REQUIRES: session_id from convoopen response (format: sess_v2_...). Supported services: account, acm, alb, apigateway, apprunner, backup, bedrock, cloudfront, cloudwatchlogs, cognito, cost-explorer, dynamodb, ebs, ec2, ecs, eks, elasticache, kms, lambda, msk, opensearch, rds, route53, s3, sagemaker, secretsmanager, sqs, vpc, waf For a specific service's actions, call with action="list-actions". METRICS: Use list-metrics to discover available metrics for a service (no credentials needed). Then use get-metrics to retrieve data (auto-discovers resources). Most services return CloudWatch time-series. KMS returns key health (rotation, state). SecretsManager returns secret health (rotation, last accessed/rotated). Optional filters JSON: {"hours":6,"period":300}. BILLING: Use service=cost-explorer to inspect AWS costs. Actions: get-cost-summary (last 30 days by service, filters: {"days":7,"granularity":"DAILY"}), get-cost-forecast (projected spend through end of month), get-cost-by-tag (costs grouped by tag, filters: {"tag_key":"Environment","days":30}). Requires ce:GetCostAndUsage and ce:GetCostForecast IAM permissions. EXAMPLES: - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="ec2", action="describe-instances") - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="cost-explorer", action="get-cost-summary") - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="ec2", action="get-metrics", filters="{\"hours\":6}") - awsinspect(session_id=..., service="rds", action="describe-db-instances", detail=true)Connector
- List all available diagram providers (aws, gcp, azure, k8s, onprem, etc.). Use list_providers -> list_services -> list_nodes to browse available node types for a specific provider.Connector
- FREE dry-run for any paid action. Returns a deterministic shape: { would_succeed, exact_cost_usd (LIVE from /agent-pricing-oracle), gas_estimate, contract_call, reputation_delta, expected_receipt_schema, validation_errors[], pricing: { source, expected_value_usd, roi_ratio, recommended_priority, coupon? } }. Never broadcasts, never charges. Use BEFORE any paid tool to avoid wasted x402 settlements. Supported actions: wrap, mint-sla, renew, micro-reset, early-exit.Connector
- View account info, pricing, entitlements, or list keys. Actions: "status" (default) → tier, quota, usage from /me/entitlements "pricing" → public pricing tiers (no auth required) "keys" → list user's API keys with per-key usage "usage" → alias for "keys" (per-key usage is shown there)Connector
- Get billing/pricing capability flags for the current company. Use before invoking paid-only API behaviors.Connector
- Returns structured pricing data for Recursive support agent plans. Three tiers: Basic ($49/mo), Pro ($99/mo), Premium ($299/mo). Use for quick pricing lookups without an LLM call.Connector