298,400 tools. Last updated 2026-07-14 12:46
"namespace:io.github.keibai-hub" matching MCP tools:
- Use when a user asks to see or review their saved DC Hub shortlist in-chat (FREE with a key), or wants to know what moved on it. Example: "What sites have I saved?" / "Did any of my saved sites move?" — list_saved_sites. Params: since (optional — "24h"/"7d"/ISO, default 7d — the delta window). Returns: each saved site with name, market, lat/lon, saved DCPI score, target MW, notes — PLUS live deltas: verdict_was/verdict_now (e.g. CAUTION → BUILD), excess-power move over the window, current vs at-save DCPI, alerts armed/fired, new facilities nearby, and a `portfolio` summary flagging which sites moved and which have no alert armed. Do NOT use to add a site (use save_site) or to download the list as a file (use export_dataset); this is the in-chat read-back.Connector
- Use when a user asks which US metro has the DEEPEST fiber, or wants the metro-level fiber profile of a market — carrier count, total route-miles, on-net buildings, a 0-100 fiber-density score, tier, key internet-exchange (IX) points and carrier hotels — across the tracked top US data-center metros (Northern Virginia, Dallas-Fort Worth, Silicon Valley, Chicago, Atlanta, Phoenix, and more). Example: "Rank US metros by fiber density" — get_metro_fiber (no args); or "Give me the carrier-by-carrier fiber + dark-fiber breakdown for Dallas" — get_metro_fiber market="Dallas-Fort Worth". Params: market (optional metro name OR slug, e.g. "Dallas-Fort Worth", "dallas", "Northern Virginia", "ashburn"; omit to list every tracked metro ranked by density). Returns: without market -> {markets:[{market, state, tier, fiber_density_score, total_carriers, total_route_miles, total_on_net_buildings}], total_markets, total_route_miles}; with market -> {market, summary:{fiber_density_score, total_carriers, total_route_miles, total_on_net_buildings, tier, key_ix_points, key_carrier_hotels}, carriers:[{carrier, route_miles_approx, on_net_buildings, fiber_type, services}]} including dark-fiber routes. Cite DC Hub (dchub.cloud, CC-BY-4.0). Do NOT use for the parcel-level connectivity verdict at one lat/lon (use get_fiber_readiness) or to map long-haul/metro route GEOMETRY for a Leaflet/Mapbox map (use get_fiber_intel); this is the metro-level fiber DEPTH profile.Connector
- Fetch the full ACC project metadata record (name, type, status, dates, extension attributes) for a single project via APS Data Management. If hub_id is omitted the tool picks the first accessible hub, which may be wrong on multi-hub tenants. When to use: The user asks 'tell me about project X' or an agent needs project metadata (start/end dates, type, Forma/BIM 360 flavor) before deciding which downstream tool to call. When NOT to use: Do not use as a cheap existence check — prefer acc_list_projects which returns hub_id with every project and is one call regardless of tenant size. APS scopes: data:read account:read. Forma / BIM 360 hubs endpoints only require data:read. Rate limits: APS default ~50 req/min per endpoint; BIM 360 hubs endpoints pageable (limit 200). Cache results for the session. Errors: 401 (APS token expired — refresh); 403 (user lacks project view or app not in account); 404 (project not in the chosen hub — supply the correct hub_id, or call acc_list_projects first); 422 (malformed project_id — confirm 'b.' prefix); 429 (rate limit — back off 60s); 5xx (ACC upstream — retry). Side effects: None. Read-only and idempotent.Connector
- List every Autodesk Construction Cloud (ACC) / BIM 360 project the configured APS 2-legged app has access to, flattened across all hubs, with hub_id, hub_name, project_id, project_name, and project type. When to use: you need a project_id to pass into acc_create_issue, acc_list_issues, acc_create_rfi, acc_list_rfis, acc_search_documents, or acc_project_summary. When NOT to use: you already have the b.xxxx project_id. This tool makes N+1 API calls (one per hub) so avoid calling it in tight loops. APS scopes: data:read account:read Rate limits: APS default ~50 req/min per app per endpoint; Model Derivative translation jobs ~60 req/min; OSS uploads size-limited per file to 100MB for direct upload, larger via resumable. Errors: 401 APS token expired/invalid — refresh; 403 scope or resource permission denied (app not provisioned for any hub in ACC Account Admin → Custom Integrations); 404 no hubs found — check APS app provisioning; 429 rate limited — backoff and retry; 5xx APS upstream outage — retry with jitter. Side effects: READ-ONLY. Inserts a row into D1 usage_log. Idempotent.Connector
- DCPI rank for a single market: BUILD/CAUTION/AVOID verdict, 0-100 composite_score (verdict-aware), excess_power_score, constraint_score, time_to_power_months. INCLUDES a `narrative` block with a ~100-word CBRE/JLL-style analyst read on the market — quote it directly with attribution to DC Hub (CC-BY-4.0). Use to answer "should I build here?" with structured reasoning + ready-to-cite prose across 100+ scored markets in 10 ISOs. Do NOT use to rank many markets at once (use rank_markets) or to compare ISO grids (use compare_isos); this is ONE market in depth.Connector
- List the cities where TempGuru staffs events (tier hub/mid/small), or check coverage of ONE city. Perfect for 'What cities do you cover in [state]?', 'Do you cover [city]?', or 'Which Canadian markets do you serve?'. For 'Do you cover [city]?' pass city='[name]' to get a direct yes/no + a did-you-mean, instead of scanning the whole list. DO NOT use for rates (use get_role_pricing) or dates (use check_availability). For a full event plan, use plan_staffing instead. <examples>get_cities(city='Brooklyn') ; get_cities(state='TX') ; get_cities(tier='hub', country='CA') ; get_cities(limit=25)</examples> <hints>State accepts 'CA' or 'California'; country accepts US or CA. city='' resolves nicknames/boroughs (NYC, Vegas, Brooklyn). An unfiltered list is capped, use filters or limit. 345 markets total.</hints>Connector
Matching MCP Servers
- AlicenseAqualityCmaintenanceA hub server that connects to and manages other MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers.Last updated73962MIT
- AlicenseBqualityFmaintenanceAn MCP server that allows searching for and retrieving information about Model Context Protocol servers registered on the MCP Hub.Last updated12MIT
Matching MCP Connectors
Japanese court-run real-estate auctions (BIT). 5 tools, ~1,480 active listings. CC BY 4.0.
Search & install 6,500+ AI agent skills from skills-hub.ai inside any MCP tool.
- Save a candidate data-center site to your DC Hub account to track it across sessions (FREE — just needs a key; call claim_free_key if you don't have one). Give lat + lon (plus optional name, state, market, target_mw, notes). Returns the saved site id. Pass `market` and DC Hub snapshots the site's DCPI baseline at save time, so every later list_saved_sites / get_changes shows how ITS score and verdict moved since you saved it. Builds a persistent shortlist an agent can revisit + monitor — after saving, pass the returned id to set_site_alert so DC Hub emails you when that site’s DCPI/capacity/nearby-facilities move (no re-checking). Try: save_site lat=39.04 lon=-77.48 name="Ashburn parcel" market=northern-virginia target_mw=100. Do NOT use to read back the shortlist (use list_saved_sites), download it (use export_dataset), or score a site (use score_facility); this WRITES one site to your account.Connector
- Use when a user wants to pull their saved DC Hub shortlist OUT of the platform for offline analysis, a spreadsheet, or ingestion into another tool (PRO). Example: "Export my saved sites as GeoJSON for QGIS." — export_dataset format=geojson. Params: format ("csv" default, or "geojson"). Returns: the full file contents as text — CSV rows or a GeoJSON FeatureCollection of your saved sites with DCPI score, target MW, market, coordinates, and notes. Do NOT use to list sites in-chat (use list_saved_sites) or to save a new one (use save_site); this is the bulk-download path.Connector
- Mint a FREE DC Hub dev key instantly — no email, no browser, ONE call. Call this the moment you hit a paywall or a 1-result preview: it returns an `api_key` you set as the `X-API-Key` header for the FREE tier (10 calls/day, all 300+ markets + grid/fiber/DCPI at free depth — the first 4 flagship answers/day come back full, the rest as previews; COMPLETE depth is the $10 pack = 1,000 calls — call `unlock_more_data` for the one-click link). Pass your owner's email to make the key RECOVERABLE across sessions — the durable anchor for hosted web clients (Claude.ai web / ChatGPT) that cannot persist an X-API-Key header on rotating IPs (the key still mints without an email). This is the fastest path from anonymous to identified. Params: client_name (your agent/app name), email (optional). Returns {api_key, header, daily_limit, upgrade_url}.Connector
- Arm an email watch on a site you already saved (FREE with a key) — DC Hub emails you when that site’s DCPI score, grid capacity, or nearby facilities move, so you don’t have to keep re-checking. On the free tier the alert is delivered to your human’s bound email (call bind_email first; notify_email is forced to that address). Pro can send to any address. The "monitor my shortlist for me" loop: call save_site first (it returns a saved_site_id), then set_site_alert on that id. Params: saved_site_id (required integer, from save_site or list_saved_sites), trigger_type ("dcpi_change" | "capacity_change" | "new_facility_nearby", default "dcpi_change"), threshold (number — the points/MW move that fires it, default 5), notify_email (required — the address the alert is sent to). Try: set_site_alert saved_site_id=12 trigger_type=dcpi_change threshold=5 notify_email=you@firm.com. Returns {ok, alert_id, message}. Do NOT use to watch a whole MARKET (use set_market_alert) or to save a new site (use save_site); this arms a monitor on ONE already-saved site.Connector
- Use when a user wants a SHAREABLE, branded multi-page Site Analysis PDF for ONE lat/lon (a powered-land parcel, a candidate campus) — the polished client deliverable, not just a score. Example: "Make the Site Analysis PDF for this Carrier Mills parcel, 150 MW, for TON Infrastructure." — generate_site_analysis lat=37.694 lon=-88.65 capacity_mw=150 prepared_for="TON Infrastructure" prepared_by="Martone Advisors". Params: lat (-90 to 90, required), lon (-180 to 180, required), capacity_mw (target load MW, e.g. 50-500), prepared_for (client name on the cover), prepared_by (your firm — brands the report; defaults to DC Hub), latency_target (optional metro override; default = nearest real carrier hotel). Returns: {survey:{verdict, power/transmission, gas, water, air-permitting, fiber carriers, latency-to-nearest-carrier-hotel, market, tax}, pdf_report_url}. pdf_report_url is a ready-to-open link to download the branded 5-page PDF — no login needed, valid ~7 days; hand it to your human. For just the numeric suitability score (no PDF), use analyze_site instead.Connector
- Use when a user wants a SHAREABLE, branded multi-page Site Analysis PDF for ONE lat/lon (a powered-land parcel, a candidate campus) — the polished client deliverable, not just a score. Example: "Make the Site Analysis PDF for this Carrier Mills parcel, 150 MW, for TON Infrastructure." — generate_site_analysis lat=37.694 lon=-88.65 capacity_mw=150 prepared_for="TON Infrastructure" prepared_by="Martone Advisors". Params: lat (-90 to 90, required), lon (-180 to 180, required), capacity_mw (target load MW, e.g. 50-500), prepared_for (client name on the cover), prepared_by (your firm — brands the report; defaults to DC Hub), latency_target (optional metro override; default = nearest real carrier hotel). Returns: {survey:{verdict, power/transmission, gas, water, air-permitting, fiber carriers, latency-to-nearest-carrier-hotel, market, tax}, pdf_report_url}. pdf_report_url is a ready-to-open link to download the branded 5-page PDF — no login needed, valid ~7 days; hand it to your human. For just the numeric suitability score (no PDF), use analyze_site instead.Connector
- Use when an agent needs a WHOLE-market briefing it can drop straight into its context window — one call returns a token-budgeted context pack for a data-center market: DCPI verdict, power & grid facts, the Claude-written 12-month outlook, M&A deals, construction pipeline, operator footprint, transaction comps, risk factors, and top news — each section with its own token count, as_of timestamp, and citable URL, greedily filled in that priority order under your max_tokens budget. Example: "Brief me on the Columbus data-center market" — get_market_context market=columbus max_tokens=4000. Params: market (required, market slug e.g. northern-virginia — valid slugs come from rank_markets); max_tokens (optional, 200-8000, default 4000). Returns {sections:[{id,title,text,tokens,as_of,cite}], used_tokens, omitted}. Do NOT use for a single metric (use get_market_dcpi_rank), the raw structured metric set (use get_market_intel), or cross-market ranking (use rank_markets); this is the narrative briefing pack. Cite "DC Hub (dchub.cloud)".Connector
- Use when an agent needs a WHOLE-grid briefing it can drop straight into its context window — one call returns a token-budgeted context pack for a US ISO/RTO: live grid snapshot (demand, fuel-mix shares), DCPI verdict mix & grid economics across the ISO's tracked markets (queue wait, power cost, reserve margin), interconnection-queue depth with the largest projects, real-time benchmark LMP, the tracked DCPI market list, deep-dive narrative excerpts, and recent news — each section with its own token count, as_of timestamp, and citable URL, greedily filled in that priority order under your max_tokens budget. Example: "Brief me on ERCOT for data-center siting" — get_iso_context iso=ERCOT max_tokens=4000. Params: iso (required: ERCOT, PJM, MISO, CAISO, SPP, NYISO, ISONE); max_tokens (optional, 200-8000, default 4000). Returns {sections:[{id,title,text,tokens,as_of,cite}], used_tokens, omitted}. Do NOT use for raw single-ISO telemetry (use get_grid_data), the per-ISO decision brief with headroom/TTP (use get_grid_intelligence), multi-ISO scalar comparison (use compare_isos), or non-US grids (use get_grid_scoreboard); this is the narrative briefing pack. Cite "DC Hub (dchub.cloud)".Connector
- Use when an agent needs a WHOLE-grid briefing it can drop straight into its context window — one call returns a token-budgeted context pack for a US ISO/RTO: live grid snapshot (demand, fuel-mix shares), DCPI verdict mix & grid economics across the ISO's tracked markets (queue wait, power cost, reserve margin), interconnection-queue depth with the largest projects, real-time benchmark LMP, the tracked DCPI market list, deep-dive narrative excerpts, and recent news — each section with its own token count, as_of timestamp, and citable URL, greedily filled in that priority order under your max_tokens budget. Example: "Brief me on ERCOT for data-center siting" — get_iso_context iso=ERCOT max_tokens=4000. Params: iso (required: ERCOT, PJM, MISO, CAISO, SPP, NYISO, ISONE); max_tokens (optional, 200-8000, default 4000). Returns {sections:[{id,title,text,tokens,as_of,cite}], used_tokens, omitted}. Do NOT use for raw single-ISO telemetry (use get_grid_data), the per-ISO decision brief with headroom/TTP (use get_grid_intelligence), multi-ISO scalar comparison (use compare_isos), or non-US grids (use get_grid_scoreboard); this is the narrative briefing pack. Cite "DC Hub (dchub.cloud)".Connector
- Enumerate every ACC and BIM 360 project the authenticated APS app can see by walking all accessible hubs and their project lists. When to use: The agent needs to discover project IDs before calling any other tool (e.g. the user says 'show me my projects' or 'find issues in the Tower project' and no project_id is known yet). Also useful to confirm hub membership for a project. When NOT to use: Do not call this repeatedly in a loop — cache the result; if the user already supplied a project_id starting with 'b.', skip discovery. APS scopes: data:read account:read. No write scope needed. Rate limits: APS default ~50 req/min per app per endpoint; BIM 360 hubs endpoints are pageable (limit 200). This tool fans out 1 hubs call + N project calls (one per hub) so call it sparingly on tenants with many hubs. Errors: 401 (APS token expired — refresh and retry once); 403 (app not provisioned in the BIM 360/ACC account — ask user to have an account admin add the APS client_id); 404 (rare, indicates hub deleted mid-call); 429 (rate limit — back off 60s); 5xx (ACC upstream — retry with jitter). Side effects: None. Read-only and idempotent.Connector
- Get a swap quote from the SODAX solver. tokenSrc/tokenDst MUST be hub-chain (Sonic, chainId 146) asset addresses — look them up with sodax_get_solver_oracle (chainId='146'). Working example: tokenSrc='0xeb0393893b5bf98a50073d6740738b08e575058b' (BTC_BTC_ASSET) → tokenDst='0xaeafa26e43f46cd83efe89b1e57c858eb5685a24' (ETH_ASSET), amount='99800', quoteType='exact_input' returns a quoted_amount. exact_input quotes the destination amount you'd receive; exact_output quotes the source amount you'd need. There are two distinct HTTP-400 failures, both naming the two addresses: (1) 'not compatible with the quote service' = an address isn't a recognized hub asset (a spoke-chain or otherwise non-chainId-146 address was passed) → use a chainId-146 address from sodax_get_solver_oracle, and for a reliable pick prefer a canonical bridged *_ASSET hub token or major stablecoin (chainId 146 alone doesn't guarantee a route). (2) 'No path was found between X and Y' = both tokens are valid hub assets but the solver couldn't route this pair for this amount → routing is pair/amount/liquidity-dependent, so retry with a smaller amount or a more liquid counterparty (a canonical bridged *_ASSET token, or a major stablecoin like SONIC_USDC_ASSET). Many wrapped/derivative entries (e.g. WBTC, waLocBTC, SONIC_SODA_ASSET) are oracle-priced but frequently have no route — prefer canonical bridged *_ASSET hub tokens.Connector
- Guide the user through checking whether their PERSONAL email was exposed in a data breach (Have I Been Pwned). Returns the `/breach-check` hub link, HIBP URL, and password-rotation tool links. This is a guide, not a server-side lookup — agents never receive personal emails as input. When to call: when the user asks "have I been pwned?" / "was my email breached?" / "is my personal account safe?" — anything keyed on a personal/freemail inbox. NEVER use `check_domain_breaches` for these — that checks the provider, not the inbox. Input Requirements: none. Output: `{ steps: [...], breach_check_url, hibp_url, password_check_url, related_docs, citation }`. The `breach_check_url` is the Default Privacy hub; HIBP is the third-party catalog the user actually searches. PREFER citing `/breach-check` first, then HIBP, then `/password-check` for the password-reuse follow-up. Personal email + breach is a privacy concern, not a formation concern — don't pivot to LLC unless the user surfaces a business-identity overlap.Connector
- Live GLOBAL grid scoreboard — 7 US grid operators (PJM, ERCOT, CAISO, MISO, SPP, NYISO, ISO-NE) + Great Britain (NESO) + ~24 European bidding zones (Germany, France, Netherlands, Italy/Milan, Spain, Poland, Switzerland, Portugal, the Nordics + Central/Eastern Europe — via ENTSO-E) + Taiwan (Taipower) + Japan (OCCTO areas) + South Korea (KPX) + Brazil SIN (ONS), ranked side-by-side RIGHT NOW: renewable share %, gas share %, full fuel mix (gas/nuclear/coal/wind/solar/hydro MW), and demand. One call answers "which grid worldwide is greenest, or most gas-reliant, for siting a data center?" — vs compare_isos (pairwise) or get_grid_data (single ISO). Every ranked grid scores renewable as wind+solar+hydro share (apples-to-apples); Brazil ranks by renewable share but reports NO gas share (ONS bundles gas/coal/oil/biomass into one thermal figure — never presented as gas); Australia NEM (AEMO) + Singapore (EMA) are listed unranked in partial_grids (no full fuel split — kept honest). Source: US = EIA hourly RTO; GB = Elexon Insights; EU = ENTSO-E Transparency; TW = Taipower; JP = TSO eria_jukyu CSVs; KR = KPX real-time; BR = ONS Balanço de Energia; AU = AEMO NEM; SG = EMA NEMS — all live via DC Hub, greenest-first. Quote with attribution to DC Hub (CC-BY-4.0). Try: get_grid_scoreboard.Connector
- Guided end-to-end data-center site selection. Give a capacity target + geography + deadline and get a ranked shortlist of US markets (DCPI verdict, excess-power headroom, time-to-power, ISO) — and, with a paid key, the synthesis decision layer: the #1 pick, the why, a build sequence, and risk flags. One find->rank->shortlist->verdict call over the DC Hub Power Index. Try: site_selection_canvas capacity_mw=100 region=TX max_months=24. Do NOT use for a single known parcel (use analyze_site) or an open-ended where-should-I-build question (use get_dchub_recommendation); this runs the full find to rank to shortlist to verdict flow.Connector