Skip to main content
Glama
254,125 tools. Last updated 2026-07-01 06:37

"namespace:io.github.gaiabio12-design" matching MCP tools:

  • Creates a new perspective in DRAFT status from a natural-language description and starts the design agent. Returns immediately with a job_id and status "pending"; long-poll perspective_await_job with that job_id to receive the generated outline or follow-up question. Behavior: - Creates a new perspective on every call — not safe to retry blindly. Identical input produces a new perspective each time. - If workspace_id is omitted, the user's default workspace is used; errors with "No default workspace found..." if none exists. - Tip: use workspace_list to see all workspaces with their descriptions, then pick the best-matching workspace_id based on context. - Title is auto-generated from the description. - The design agent runs in the background and may take seconds to a minute. Resolve via perspective_await_job; terminal states are "ready" (outline generated, share/direct/preview URLs returned) or "needs_input" (follow-up question requires the user's answer). - description can reference research goals, source URLs, or audience details. Examples: "understand why trial users aren't converting", "convert the form at https://example.com/contact", "talk to churned customers from Q3". - agent_context selects the agent role: 'research' = Interviewer (default; deep qualitative interviews), 'form' = Concierge (replaces static forms with conversational flow), 'survey' = Evaluator (turns surveys into engaging conversations), 'advocate' = Advocate (listens, then responds from a brand/cause playbook). When to use this tool: - The user wants to create a new perspective from a brief. - You're starting the design conversation that may iterate via perspective_respond. When NOT to use this tool: - The perspective already exists and the user wants to change it — use perspective_update. - The agent already asked a follow-up question — use perspective_respond with the user's answer. - Listing or finding existing perspectives — use perspective_list. Typical flow: 1. perspective_create → start design (returns job_id) 2. perspective_await_job → long-poll until "ready" or "needs_input" 3. perspective_respond → if "needs_input", answer and re-poll 4. perspective_get_preview_link → test 5. perspective_update → refine 6. perspective_get_embed_options → deploy
    Connector
  • Long-polls a perspective-design job (started by perspective_create, perspective_respond, or perspective_update) and returns either its terminal result or another "pending" envelope to keep polling. Behavior: - Read-only — observes a running design job. Safe to call repeatedly. - Errors with "Unknown job_id" if no such job exists, or "job_id does not belong to a perspective design workflow" if the id is for a different kind of job. Workspace and perspective access are re-checked on every call. - Each call blocks up to wait_ms (default 30s, min 1s, max 45s). On timeout, returns status "pending" with a progress_cursor — pass it back on the next call to skip already-seen progress events. - Terminal status is "ready" (outline generated; share_url/direct_url/preview_url populated) or "needs_input" (follow_up_question populated). Failures surface as "Design job failed: ..." with the underlying message. When to use this tool: - Immediately after perspective_create / perspective_respond / perspective_update returns a job_id. - Re-polling after a previous call returned status "pending" (pass the returned progress_cursor back). When NOT to use this tool: - You don't have a job_id yet — call perspective_create / perspective_respond / perspective_update first. - Inspecting a finished perspective's config — use perspective_get.
    Connector
  • Authenticated — submit an agency engagement enquiry on behalf of the caller for a founder-led discovery call. Persists an AgencyHandoff row routed to the agency inbox; the user is contacted by the team for a scoped proposal. Engagement scopes: workflow sprint (rapid agentic workflow implementation), proof-of-concept (validate a specific agent design in a bounded timeframe), pilot support (co-design and validate a production-ready pilot), advisory (ongoing architectural guidance across a product team). WHEN TO CALL: the user has identified a paid hands-on expert engagement need beyond self-service learning, and explicitly asks to talk to the team or book a discovery call. ALWAYS confirm with the user before firing — this creates a sales-visible record. WHEN NOT TO CALL: for free training / partnerships discussion (use handoffs.partnership); for support / billing / access (use handoffs.operator); proactively or as a sales push. BEHAVIOR: write-only, single insert, side-effecting. Auth: Bearer <token> (Firebase ID token, any plan). UK/EU residency. Response confirms the ticket id + scope so the user can reference it.
    Connector
  • Pro/Teams — second-pass adversarial certification of an architect.validate run that scored production_ready (A or B first-pass tier). ON CLIENT TIMEOUT — DO NOT RETRY THIS TOOL. **RECOVERY FIRST**: the run_id is emitted in the FIRST notifications/progress event at t=0s (BEFORE the LLM call begins). Capture it. On timeout, call `me.validation_history(run_id='<that-id>')` to fetch the persisted cert verdict; the server-side run completes independently within a 20-minute budget. This is the canonical recovery path. Use it before considering any retry. Long-running LLM call (60-180s typical; exceeds Claude Code's ~60s idle budget); MCP clients commonly close the call before the server returns. Retrying re-runs the LLM call AND burns one of your 3 cert retry-budget attempts. Mints the certified production_ready badge when both reviewers sign off; caps the run to C/emerging when the second pass surfaces a missed production_blocker. MANDATORY DOCTRINE RULE (load-bearing): the badge certifies the EXACT code that produced the validate run_id, NOT 'this codebase' in general. If you modify, fix, or iterate the code between architect.validate and architect.certify — even a single character — cert rejects with code_fingerprint_mismatch. Fixing the code voids the run. The recovery path is always: edit code → architect.validate → fresh run_id → architect.certify on the fresh run. Do NOT cert from a stale run_id after iteration; ask the user to re-validate first. WHEN TO CALL: only after architect.validate returned tier=production_ready AND the user wants the certified badge AND the code has not been touched since the validate run. NOT for tier=draft/emerging/not_applicable runs (typed rejections fire — see below). NOT idempotent across attempts: each call is one of the 3 attempts in the retry budget. BEHAVIOR: atomic one-shot single LLM call, ~60-180s server-side at high reasoning effort (small payloads finish faster; observed p99 ~250s; server-side budget is 20 min, ~5× observed max). Exceeds typical MCP-client tool-call idle budget (~60s in Claude Code), so the FIRST notifications/progress event fires at t=0 carrying the run_id. The run is atomic by contract — no in_progress lifecycle, no cancellation, no resume. Updates the persisted run's result_json (public review URL + me.validation_history(run_id=...) reflect the cert outcome). ELIGIBILITY GATE (typed rejection enum on failure): caller must own the run, tier=production_ready, less than 24h old, not already certified, within cert retry budget (max 3 attempts), no other cert call in flight for the same run_id, code fingerprint must match the validated code, AND the submitted payload must be cert-payload-complete (see Payload Completeness below — cert rejects pre-LLM with `payload_incomplete` when an imported module's surface isn't visible in the validate payload that produced this run_id). Rejection reasons (typed Literal): auth_required, paid_plan_required, run_not_found, not_run_owner, not_eligible_tier, not_agentic_component (tier=not_applicable runs), already_certified, certification_age_exceeded, retry_budget_exhausted, code_fingerprint_mismatch, code_fingerprint_missing, code_not_on_file (caller omitted `code` argument AND the 24h cert-retry hold for this run has expired or was never written. Recovery: re-run architect.certify from the same MCP session that ran architect.validate, passing the code explicitly — the server never persists code by design), payload_incomplete (submitted/validated payload imports modules whose contents aren't visible — cert refuses pre-LLM to prevent a false-precision downgrade. Recovery: re-validate with verbatim public-surface stubs for every imported module, then re-cert on the fresh run_id. Empirically validated: PR #157 iter8/iter9 cert rejections were exactly this class — code on disk was correct, the submitted payload merely omitted module visibility), cert_consensus_score_below_threshold (consensus_median<75 — consensus runs only), cert_consensus_unstable_blocker (any principle mode_stability<80% — consensus runs only), run_state_corrupt, cert_persistence_failed, cert_in_flight (a prior architect.certify call on this run_id is still running. Poll me.validation_history for the verdict; do not retry until it resolves). PAYLOAD COMPLETENESS (load-bearing for cert eligibility): the cert reviewer reads the EXACT payload that produced the validate run_id. Imported modules whose surface isn't present in the payload cause pre-LLM `payload_incomplete` refusal. Avoidance — when validating with intent to cert, bundle public-surface stubs for every imported module: `from sqlalchemy.exc import SQLAlchemyError` → include a stub class; `from app.db import models` → include a `class models:` namespace stub with the columns/methods you reference; module-level imports of `dataclass`, `Literal`, `json`, `datetime`, `timezone` MUST also be in the payload (cert correctly catches when they're omitted — code would NameError on import). 'Submit Like Production': the payload should be the code as it would actually run, not a compressed sketch. The stubs cover IMPORTED dependencies only; the certified code's own enforcement branches (approval gates, policy checks, recovery paths) must be present in full. A `# ...` placeholder reads as an ABSENT control and is graded against you, not as shorthand for one that exists. PRE-LLM REJECTION AUDIT TRAIL: when cert rejects before the LLM call (payload_incomplete, code_fingerprint_mismatch, etc.), `certification_attempts=[]` on the response — no attempt landed in the retry budget, no LLM hop occurred. The rejection envelope's `rejection_reason` + `guidance` are the actionable surface. (Audit-trail UI surfacing of pre-LLM rejections is tracked in the platform self-audit set as anomaly #5; out of scope for the cert tool itself.) INPUTS: re-send the SAME code that produced the run_id (the architect persists findings + recommendations, never code, by design — privacy-preserving). Server compares the submitted code's SHA-256 fingerprint to the stored fingerprint and rejects mismatches. Auth: Bearer <token>, Pro or Teams plan required. UK/EU data residency (Cloud Run europe-west2). Code processed transiently by OpenAI (no-training-on-API-data) and dropped; payloads JSON-escaped + delimited as inert untrusted data — prompt-injection inside code is ignored. If the cert call fails outright (provider error, persistence error), a fresh architect.certify is the recovery path; the eligibility gate enforces the 3-attempt retry budget. For long-running cert workflows the answer is to re-validate, not to make this tool stateful. OUTCOMES: certification_status ∈ {confirmed_production_ready (badge mints), downgraded_to_emerging (cert review surfaced a missed production_blocker, tier capped at C/emerging), unavailable_provider_error (LLM call failed, retry within budget)}. Cert findings + summary + attempt history surfaced on the persisted run for full inspectability.
    Connector
  • Soft-delete a saved thesis: status flips to `archived` (the row stays for audit / re-scoring). Idempotent — archiving an already-archived thesis succeeds. Hard-delete is not supported by design; future versions may expire archived theses after N years. This does not delete the claims linked to the thesis — use delete_claim for those. Tier: paid + free (sample rejected).
    Connector
  • Design a NEW guided workflow for a jurisdiction + type, optionally seeding it with the skills it's based on. Creates a DRAFT (not public until publish_workflow). Create-or-adopt: if a workflow for that (jurisdiction, workflow_type) already exists it is returned for editing instead of duplicated. Verified accountants only, in their approved jurisdictions.
    Connector

Matching MCP Servers

Matching MCP Connectors

  • Design Feeds MCP.

  • AI data-center design engine: size, validate & lay out Rubin-era data centers. Korea live.

  • Pro/Teams — records a value moment (review_confidence, runtime_risk_found, regression_caught, recommendation_taken) after a successful architect.validate or design session. Each event captures event_type, surface_used (mcp/web/cli), perceived_value (1-5), and an optional brief_context — structured fields only, NO prompts or code stored. WHEN TO CALL: after architect.validate returns a clearly useful result AND the user has acknowledged the value (or you ask them "would you rate this 1-5?"). Validate's response carries an explicit next_step instruction telling the agent to OFFER this call — surface that offer to the user. WHEN NOT TO CALL: silently or without the user's awareness; on every validate (only after a clear value moment); to capture intent or speculative value. If the user declines, do not retry within the same session. BEHAVIOR: write-only, single insert into ValueEvent. Auth: Bearer <token>, Pro or Teams plan required. UK/EU residency. Do NOT include proprietary code, prompt content, or PII in brief_context — it surfaces in admin AI-visibility dashboards. Expect a 1-line acknowledgment in the response; the structured feedback is then aggregated server-side.
    Connector
  • Upload a PNG design (base64-encoded, <=3MB decoded) and receive a durable https url. Pass that url as `design_url` to mu_create_product. Requires `Authorization: Bearer <api_key>`.
    Connector
  • Evaluates typography elements against a principled accessibility rubric. COST: $0.05 USDC via x402 on Base-compatible EVM network per call. Goes beyond what axe/Lighthouse/WAVE can check — evaluates design judgment, not just numeric compliance. Catches issues like: - Contrast that passes WCAG 4.5:1 but fails visually due to thin font weight - Body text that meets minimum size requirements but is still too small for comfortable reading - Line heights that technically comply but impede readability for dyslexic users - Extended all-caps or italic text that passes all AA criteria but impairs reading - Text on gradient/image backgrounds where scanner sampling is unreliable - Heading sizes that are technically correct but visually indistinct from body Args: - elements: Array of 1–50 typography element objects with font/color properties - screen_name: Optional label for the evaluation report Each element requires: element_type, font_size, font_weight, line_height, color_hex, background_color_hex. Returns: Structured report with: - Per-element scores (0–100) - Specific issues with severity (critical/major/minor) - WCAG references and what automated tools miss - Concrete fix recommendations - Overall score and verdict (pass/needs_work/fail) - Top issues sorted by severity Example use: Extract text layer properties from Figma using get_design_context, pass the typography properties to this tool for evaluation before shipping.
    Connector
  • [BROWSE] List open design briefs, creative challenges and collaboration requests posted by brands seeking designers and creators. These are NOT products for sale. Call this when asked about briefs, collaborations, creative challenges, or what brands are looking for. Returns brief title, brand name, description, and brief ID. Use a brief ID with submit_design to respond. To see products for sale, use list_drops instead.
    Connector
  • [BROWSE] List open design briefs, creative challenges and collaboration requests posted by brands seeking designers and creators. These are NOT products for sale. Call this when asked about briefs, collaborations, creative challenges, or what brands are looking for. Returns brief title, brand name, description, and brief ID. Use a brief ID with submit_design to respond. To see products for sale, use list_drops instead.
    Connector
  • Search Blueprint principles by free-text query and return the closest matches ranked by relevance. Use this to find principles related to a specific design challenge, failure mode, or keyword (e.g. 'reversibility', 'approval flow', 'delegation boundary'). Returns principle title, cluster, definition, rationale, and implementation heuristics. Prefer this over principles.list when you have a specific topic in mind rather than wanting all principles.
    Connector
  • Pro/Teams — records a value moment (review_confidence, runtime_risk_found, regression_caught, recommendation_taken) after a successful architect.validate or design session. Each event captures event_type, surface_used (mcp/web/cli), perceived_value (1-5), and an optional brief_context — structured fields only, NO prompts or code stored. WHEN TO CALL: after architect.validate returns a clearly useful result AND the user has acknowledged the value (or you ask them "would you rate this 1-5?"). Validate's response carries an explicit next_step instruction telling the agent to OFFER this call — surface that offer to the user. WHEN NOT TO CALL: silently or without the user's awareness; on every validate (only after a clear value moment); to capture intent or speculative value. If the user declines, do not retry within the same session. BEHAVIOR: write-only, single insert into ValueEvent. Auth: Bearer <token>, Pro or Teams plan required. UK/EU residency. Do NOT include proprietary code, prompt content, or PII in brief_context — it surfaces in admin AI-visibility dashboards. Expect a 1-line acknowledgment in the response; the structured feedback is then aggregated server-side.
    Connector
  • Authenticated — creates a partnerships handoff record for design-partner, ecosystem, training, or advisory conversations needing human review. Persists a PartnershipHandoff row routed to the partnerships inbox; the user is contacted by the team. WHEN TO CALL: user explicitly wants to engage as a design partner, co-marketing/training partner, or evaluate the Blueprint for their org's training programme. ALWAYS confirm with the user before firing — this creates a human-visible partnerships ticket. WHEN NOT TO CALL: for general support / billing / access issues (use handoffs.operator); for paid-engagement enquiries (use handoffs.agency); proactively or as a sales prompt — only when the user has explicitly asked. BEHAVIOR: write-only, single insert, side-effecting (creates a ticket). Auth: Bearer <token> (any plan). UK/EU residency. Response confirms the ticket id + audience so the user can reference it.
    Connector
  • P87 — list the specialist agents ChiefLab can delegate to (design / video / research / outreach / seo / analytics). USE WHEN the user asks 'what can ChiefLab do beyond launch posts?' or before calling chieflab_request_specialist. Returns the kind + label for each so the caller can pick the right one.
    Connector
  • P87 — list the specialist agents ChiefLab can delegate to (design / video / research / outreach / seo / analytics). USE WHEN the user asks 'what can ChiefLab do beyond launch posts?' or before calling chieflab_request_specialist. Returns the kind + label for each so the caller can pick the right one.
    Connector
  • Generate a perceptually smooth gradient between 2-5 archive anchor colours. Each interpolated stop snaps to the nearest real archive colour by CIEDE2000. Anchor stops are kept true to their source. Choose linear (physically accurate Lab interpolation) or chroma_preserved (LCh interpolation, short-arc hue, avoids desaturated midpoints). Returns stop array, CSS linear-gradient string, or SVG swatch bar. Use for design briefs, colour journey visualisations, and gradient systems.
    Connector
  • Generate a perceptually smooth gradient between 2-5 archive anchor colours. Each interpolated stop snaps to the nearest real archive colour by CIEDE2000. Anchor stops are kept true to their source. Choose linear (physically accurate Lab interpolation) or chroma_preserved (LCh interpolation, short-arc hue, avoids desaturated midpoints). Returns stop array, CSS linear-gradient string, or SVG swatch bar. Use for design briefs, colour journey visualisations, and gradient systems.
    Connector
  • One-call compound tool. Submit a concept, medium, audience, and constraints — receive a complete design package: historically grounded palette, cultural narrative, commercial paint matches, WCAG accessibility check, illuminant behaviour, and a ready-made image generation prompt. Replaces chaining query_conceptual + palette_from_concept + colour_story + match_paint_system + accessibility_check + get_colour_metrics. Use when an AI agent or user needs a complete, deployable colour direction in a single call. Not for iterative refinement — use individual tools for that.
    Connector
  • [Design] Add the rules of a correlation framework preset (SAML, OAuth, .NET, Java, Token, AzureAD, or a custom one) to an OctoPerf design project's rule library. Bulk-creates every rule of the framework into the project, skipping rules that are already present (structural dedupe ignoring id/userId, mirrors the OctoPerf UI behaviour). Returns the rules that were actually created. The rules are not yet wired into any Virtual User — call `apply_correlations_to_virtual_user` next on each affected VU to materialise extractors and injections in its action tree.
    Connector