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
JFrog's MCP server lets agents work with Platform services for artifact repositories, build information, release lifecycle management, and software supply-chain workflows.
BrowserStack's official MCP server for AI-assisted testing. Lets agents manage test cases, run manual and automated tests across real browsers and devices, access debugging artifacts such as logs and session details, and triage failures using plain English. Useful for cross-platform QA and browser-compatibility workflows from MCP-enabled clients.
Buildkite's official MCP server for querying and operating CI/CD pipelines, builds, jobs, artifacts, and organization-level delivery workflows.
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.
Built an MCP server?
Submit it to the registry — it's open source and community-maintained.