Mcp Builder

v1.0.0

Guide for creating high-quality MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers that enable LLMs to interact with external services through well-designed tools. Use whe...

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Purpose & Capability
The name/description (MCP server builder) matches the included materials: a detailed SKILL.md, reference docs for Node/Python MCP servers, evaluation guidance, and helper scripts for connecting to MCP transports. Required dependencies/environment variables are none, which is proportionate for a documentation/guide package that ships example code.
Instruction Scope
The runtime instructions focus on researching the MCP spec, fetching SDK README files from GitHub, designing tools, and running tests. They instruct network fetches (modelcontextprotocol.io and raw.githubusercontent.com) which are expected for this purpose. The evaluation guide explicitly instructs evaluators not to read implementation code when authoring evaluations—this is a process guideline and does not attempt to read unrelated host files or secrets. Overall the instructions stay within the stated purpose, though they do expect the agent to fetch public web resources and to inspect packaged reference files.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no downloads from unknown URLs. This is an instruction-and-reference bundle with example scripts and a small requirements.txt; nothing writes arbitrary code to disk during install. That is low-risk and appropriate for a documentation/Examples skill.
Credentials
The skill does not declare or require any environment variables or credentials. The docs recommend best practices for storing API keys in environment variables, which is consistent guidance. The packaged scripts accept env dicts for stdio invocations (expected for running subprocess MCP servers) but do not demand access to unrelated secrets.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and disable-model-invocation is false (normal). The skill does not request permanent system presence or modify other skills' configurations. It contains example code that, if executed by a user, can open network connections; that is expected for a server development guide but requires user caution when running code.
Assessment
This package appears to be a coherent developer guide and reference for building MCP servers. Before using it: (1) Review the included example scripts (scripts/*.py) before executing them locally; they can launch connections to external MCP endpoints if you run them. (2) The docs instruct fetching public READMEs and the MCP spec from the web — network access is expected. (3) Although the skill itself doesn't request credentials, when you implement or test an MCP server you will likely supply API keys or tokens to your test environment; store those secrets securely and avoid running examples with real production credentials. (4) If you plan to run any of the example code, do so in an isolated environment (virtualenv/container) and audit or run static checks on dependencies listed in scripts/requirements.txt.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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License

MIT-0
Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.

SKILL.md

MCP Server Development Guide

Overview

Create MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers that enable LLMs to interact with external services through well-designed tools. The quality of an MCP server is measured by how well it enables LLMs to accomplish real-world tasks.


Process

🚀 High-Level Workflow

Creating a high-quality MCP server involves four main phases:

Phase 1: Deep Research and Planning

1.1 Understand Modern MCP Design

API Coverage vs. Workflow Tools: Balance comprehensive API endpoint coverage with specialized workflow tools. Workflow tools can be more convenient for specific tasks, while comprehensive coverage gives agents flexibility to compose operations. Performance varies by client—some clients benefit from code execution that combines basic tools, while others work better with higher-level workflows. When uncertain, prioritize comprehensive API coverage.

Tool Naming and Discoverability: Clear, descriptive tool names help agents find the right tools quickly. Use consistent prefixes (e.g., github_create_issue, github_list_repos) and action-oriented naming.

Context Management: Agents benefit from concise tool descriptions and the ability to filter/paginate results. Design tools that return focused, relevant data. Some clients support code execution which can help agents filter and process data efficiently.

Actionable Error Messages: Error messages should guide agents toward solutions with specific suggestions and next steps.

1.2 Study MCP Protocol Documentation

Navigate the MCP specification:

Start with the sitemap to find relevant pages: https://modelcontextprotocol.io/sitemap.xml

Then fetch specific pages with .md suffix for markdown format (e.g., https://modelcontextprotocol.io/specification/draft.md).

Key pages to review:

  • Specification overview and architecture
  • Transport mechanisms (streamable HTTP, stdio)
  • Tool, resource, and prompt definitions

1.3 Study Framework Documentation

Recommended stack:

  • Language: TypeScript (high-quality SDK support and good compatibility in many execution environments e.g. MCPB. Plus AI models are good at generating TypeScript code, benefiting from its broad usage, static typing and good linting tools)
  • Transport: Streamable HTTP for remote servers, using stateless JSON (simpler to scale and maintain, as opposed to stateful sessions and streaming responses). stdio for local servers.

Load framework documentation:

For TypeScript (recommended):

  • TypeScript SDK: Use WebFetch to load https://raw.githubusercontent.com/modelcontextprotocol/typescript-sdk/main/README.md
  • ⚡ TypeScript Guide - TypeScript patterns and examples

For Python:

  • Python SDK: Use WebFetch to load https://raw.githubusercontent.com/modelcontextprotocol/python-sdk/main/README.md
  • 🐍 Python Guide - Python patterns and examples

1.4 Plan Your Implementation

Understand the API: Review the service's API documentation to identify key endpoints, authentication requirements, and data models. Use web search and WebFetch as needed.

Tool Selection: Prioritize comprehensive API coverage. List endpoints to implement, starting with the most common operations.


Phase 2: Implementation

2.1 Set Up Project Structure

See language-specific guides for project setup:

2.2 Implement Core Infrastructure

Create shared utilities:

  • API client with authentication
  • Error handling helpers
  • Response formatting (JSON/Markdown)
  • Pagination support

2.3 Implement Tools

For each tool:

Input Schema:

  • Use Zod (TypeScript) or Pydantic (Python)
  • Include constraints and clear descriptions
  • Add examples in field descriptions

Output Schema:

  • Define outputSchema where possible for structured data
  • Use structuredContent in tool responses (TypeScript SDK feature)
  • Helps clients understand and process tool outputs

Tool Description:

  • Concise summary of functionality
  • Parameter descriptions
  • Return type schema

Implementation:

  • Async/await for I/O operations
  • Proper error handling with actionable messages
  • Support pagination where applicable
  • Return both text content and structured data when using modern SDKs

Annotations:

  • readOnlyHint: true/false
  • destructiveHint: true/false
  • idempotentHint: true/false
  • openWorldHint: true/false

Phase 3: Review and Test

3.1 Code Quality

Review for:

  • No duplicated code (DRY principle)
  • Consistent error handling
  • Full type coverage
  • Clear tool descriptions

3.2 Build and Test

TypeScript:

  • Run npm run build to verify compilation
  • Test with MCP Inspector: npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector

Python:

  • Verify syntax: python -m py_compile your_server.py
  • Test with MCP Inspector

See language-specific guides for detailed testing approaches and quality checklists.


Phase 4: Create Evaluations

After implementing your MCP server, create comprehensive evaluations to test its effectiveness.

Load ✅ Evaluation Guide for complete evaluation guidelines.

4.1 Understand Evaluation Purpose

Use evaluations to test whether LLMs can effectively use your MCP server to answer realistic, complex questions.

4.2 Create 10 Evaluation Questions

To create effective evaluations, follow the process outlined in the evaluation guide:

  1. Tool Inspection: List available tools and understand their capabilities
  2. Content Exploration: Use READ-ONLY operations to explore available data
  3. Question Generation: Create 10 complex, realistic questions
  4. Answer Verification: Solve each question yourself to verify answers

4.3 Evaluation Requirements

Ensure each question is:

  • Independent: Not dependent on other questions
  • Read-only: Only non-destructive operations required
  • Complex: Requiring multiple tool calls and deep exploration
  • Realistic: Based on real use cases humans would care about
  • Verifiable: Single, clear answer that can be verified by string comparison
  • Stable: Answer won't change over time

4.4 Output Format

Create an XML file with this structure:

<evaluation>
  <qa_pair>
    <question>Find discussions about AI model launches with animal codenames. One model needed a specific safety designation that uses the format ASL-X. What number X was being determined for the model named after a spotted wild cat?</question>
    <answer>3</answer>
  </qa_pair>
<!-- More qa_pairs... -->
</evaluation>

Reference Files

📚 Documentation Library

Load these resources as needed during development:

Core MCP Documentation (Load First)

  • MCP Protocol: Start with sitemap at https://modelcontextprotocol.io/sitemap.xml, then fetch specific pages with .md suffix
  • 📋 MCP Best Practices - Universal MCP guidelines including:
    • Server and tool naming conventions
    • Response format guidelines (JSON vs Markdown)
    • Pagination best practices
    • Transport selection (streamable HTTP vs stdio)
    • Security and error handling standards

SDK Documentation (Load During Phase 1/2)

  • Python SDK: Fetch from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/modelcontextprotocol/python-sdk/main/README.md
  • TypeScript SDK: Fetch from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/modelcontextprotocol/typescript-sdk/main/README.md

Language-Specific Implementation Guides (Load During Phase 2)

  • 🐍 Python Implementation Guide - Complete Python/FastMCP guide with:

    • Server initialization patterns
    • Pydantic model examples
    • Tool registration with @mcp.tool
    • Complete working examples
    • Quality checklist
  • ⚡ TypeScript Implementation Guide - Complete TypeScript guide with:

    • Project structure
    • Zod schema patterns
    • Tool registration with server.registerTool
    • Complete working examples
    • Quality checklist

Evaluation Guide (Load During Phase 4)

  • ✅ Evaluation Guide - Complete evaluation creation guide with:
    • Question creation guidelines
    • Answer verification strategies
    • XML format specifications
    • Example questions and answers
    • Running an evaluation with the provided scripts

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