Agoric Dev MCP Server

Agoric Dev MCP Server

Provides AI assistants with a comprehensive toolkit for developing, testing, and deploying smart contracts on the Agoric blockchain. It supports key Agoric features such as the Zoe contract framework, ERTP asset handling, and cross-chain orchestration patterns.

Category
Visit Server

README

Agoric Dev MCP Server

An MCP (Model Context Protocol) server that provides AI assistants with tools for Agoric smart contract development. This server enables Claude and other MCP-compatible AI assistants to help developers build, test, debug, and deploy smart contracts on the Agoric blockchain.

Features

The server provides tools across 10 categories:

  • Project Setup - Initialize and configure Agoric projects
  • Core Patterns - Agoric development patterns and best practices
  • Contract Structure - Smart contract scaffolding and structure
  • Zoe & ERTP - Zoe contract framework and ERTP asset handling
  • Orchestration - Cross-chain orchestration capabilities
  • Durability - Durable object patterns for upgrade-safe contracts
  • Testing - Contract testing utilities and patterns
  • Debugging & Tracing - Debug and trace contract execution
  • Security - Security best practices and vulnerability checks
  • Discovery & Help - Documentation and API discovery

Quick Start (Claude Code)

claude mcp add --transport sse agoric-dev https://agoric-dev-mcp.agoric-core.workers.dev/sse

For local development, use http://localhost:8787/sse instead.

Develop locally

# install dependencies
yarn install

# run locally
yarn start

You should be able to open http://localhost:8787/ in your browser

Connect the MCP inspector to your server

To explore your new MCP api, you can use the MCP Inspector.

  • Start it with npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector
  • Within the inspector, switch the Transport Type to SSE and enter http://localhost:8787/sse as the URL of the MCP server to connect to, and click "Connect"
  • You will navigate to a (mock) user/password login screen. Input any email and pass to login.
  • You should be redirected back to the MCP Inspector and you can now list and call any defined tools!

Connect Claude Desktop to your local MCP server

The MCP inspector is great, but we really want to connect this to Claude! Follow Anthropic's Quickstart and within Claude Desktop go to Settings > Developer > Edit Config to find your configuration file.

Open the file in your text editor and replace it with this configuration:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "math": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["mcp-remote", "http://localhost:8787/sse"]
    }
  }
}

This will run a local proxy and let Claude talk to your MCP server over HTTP

When you open Claude a browser window should open and allow you to login. You should see the tools available in the bottom right. Given the right prompt Claude should ask to call the tool.

Deploy to Cloudflare

  1. npx wrangler kv namespace create OAUTH_KV
  2. Follow the guidance to add the kv namespace ID to wrangler.jsonc
  3. npm run deploy

Call your newly deployed remote MCP server from a remote MCP client

Just like you did above in "Develop locally", run the MCP inspector:

npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector@latest

Then enter the workers.dev URL (ex: worker-name.account-name.workers.dev/sse) of your Worker in the inspector as the URL of the MCP server to connect to, and click "Connect".

You've now connected to your MCP server from a remote MCP client.

Connect Claude Desktop to your remote MCP server

Update the Claude configuration file to point to your workers.dev URL (ex: worker-name.account-name.workers.dev/sse) and restart Claude

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "math": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["mcp-remote", "https://worker-name.account-name.workers.dev/sse"]
    }
  }
}

Debugging

Should anything go wrong it can be helpful to restart Claude, or to try connecting directly to your MCP server on the command line with the following command.

npx mcp-remote http://localhost:8787/sse

In some rare cases it may help to clear the files added to ~/.mcp-auth

rm -rf ~/.mcp-auth

Recommended Servers

playwright-mcp

playwright-mcp

A Model Context Protocol server that enables LLMs to interact with web pages through structured accessibility snapshots without requiring vision models or screenshots.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Magic Component Platform (MCP)

Magic Component Platform (MCP)

An AI-powered tool that generates modern UI components from natural language descriptions, integrating with popular IDEs to streamline UI development workflow.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
Audiense Insights MCP Server

Audiense Insights MCP Server

Enables interaction with Audiense Insights accounts via the Model Context Protocol, facilitating the extraction and analysis of marketing insights and audience data including demographics, behavior, and influencer engagement.

Official
Featured
Local
TypeScript
VeyraX MCP

VeyraX MCP

Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.

Official
Featured
Local
graphlit-mcp-server

graphlit-mcp-server

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server enables integration between MCP clients and the Graphlit service. Ingest anything from Slack to Gmail to podcast feeds, in addition to web crawling, into a Graphlit project - and then retrieve relevant contents from the MCP client.

Official
Featured
TypeScript
Kagi MCP Server

Kagi MCP Server

An MCP server that integrates Kagi search capabilities with Claude AI, enabling Claude to perform real-time web searches when answering questions that require up-to-date information.

Official
Featured
Python
E2B

E2B

Using MCP to run code via e2b.

Official
Featured
Neon Database

Neon Database

MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases

Official
Featured
Exa Search

Exa Search

A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server lets AI assistants like Claude use the Exa AI Search API for web searches. This setup allows AI models to get real-time web information in a safe and controlled way.

Official
Featured
Qdrant Server

Qdrant Server

This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.

Official
Featured