MCP Servers
The open registry for Model Context Protocol servers. Find the right tools, resources, and prompts for your AI agents — filtered by category, transport, or use case.
Servers
160
Tools
465
Categories
11
Contributors
142
GitHub's official MCP Server that connects AI tools directly to GitHub's platform. Enables AI agents to manage repositories, issues, pull requests, branches, files, actions workflows, and code security. Supports both remote (OAuth) and local (Docker/binary) modes with fine-grained toolset configuration.
Reference MCP server for Git repository operations. Provides tools to read, search, and manipulate Git repositories including viewing commit history, diffs, branches, file contents at specific revisions, and repository status. Enables AI agents to understand code changes and navigate version history without direct filesystem access.
Official Figma MCP server that brings design context directly into AI coding workflows. Provides tools for extracting design information, generating code from Figma selections, taking screenshots, creating and editing Figma files, generating diagrams from Mermaid syntax, searching design systems, managing Code Connect mappings, and uploading assets. Supports both remote (OAuth) and local (desktop app) server modes.
Official GitLab MCP server connecting AI tools to GitLab's DevOps platform. Enables agents to manage projects, issues, merge requests, branches, files, CI/CD pipelines, and the GitLab Duo workflow. Supports both GitLab.com SaaS and self-managed instances with fine-grained access tokens.
E2B's MCP server gives AI agents the ability to run arbitrary code in secure, isolated cloud sandboxes. Each sandbox is a fast-booting micro-VM where models can execute Python and shell commands, install packages, read and write files, and capture stdout/stderr — ideal for code interpretation, data analysis, and agentic workflows that need real execution.
Official Apple Xcode MCP server (xcrun mcpbridge) that gives external AI agents direct access to Xcode IDE capabilities. Provides 20 native tools for building projects, running tests, reading and writing files in the project navigator, searching code with regex, rendering SwiftUI previews, executing code snippets, browsing Apple Developer documentation, and inspecting build logs and workspace issues. Requires Xcode 26+ with MCP enabled in Intelligence settings.
Skills vs MCP servers
what's the difference?Skillsthe “what to do”
A skillA reusable, structured prompt/workflow with recommended models, an example prompt, and compatible tools. packages know-how — instructions, an example promptA ready-to-use prompt template that demonstrates how to invoke the skill., and recommended models — so an agent performs a task consistently. Skills add knowledge, not new connections.
MCP serversthe “how to connect”
An MCP serverModel Context Protocol server — a standard way to expose tools, resources, and prompts to AI agents and IDEs. gives an agent new capabilities by connecting it to real systems (databases, APIs, files) over a transportHow the client talks to the server: stdio (local process), SSE, or HTTP streaming.. MCP adds connections and actions, not task instructions.
Rule of thumb: reach for a skill when you need the model to do a task well, and an MCP server when you need it to reach a tool or system. They compose — a skill can rely on tools an MCP server provides.
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