JSPM

@headlessly/mcp

0.1.2
  • ESM via JSPM
  • ES Module Entrypoint
  • Export Map
  • Keywords
  • License
  • Repository URL
  • TypeScript Types
  • README
  • Created
  • Published
  • Downloads 9
  • Score
    100M100P100Q38495F
  • License MIT

MCP protocol client for headless.ly — search, fetch, do

Package Exports

  • @headlessly/mcp
  • @headlessly/mcp/stdio

Readme

@headlessly/mcp

Three tools. Not three hundred. The entire business graph via MCP.

import { MCPServer } from '@headlessly/mcp'

const server = new MCPServer({ provider })

// search — find entities across the graph
await server.handleRequest({
  jsonrpc: '2.0',
  method: 'tools/call',
  id: 1,
  params: { name: 'search', arguments: { type: 'Contact', filter: { stage: 'Lead' } } },
})

// fetch — get specific entities with relationships
await server.handleRequest({
  jsonrpc: '2.0',
  method: 'tools/call',
  id: 2,
  params: { name: 'fetch', arguments: { type: 'Deal', id: 'deal_k7TmPvQx', include: ['contact', 'subscription'] } },
})

// do — execute any operation with TypeScript
await server.handleRequest({
  jsonrpc: '2.0',
  method: 'tools/call',
  id: 3,
  params: { name: 'do', arguments: { code: 'await $.Contact.qualify("contact_fX9bL5nRd")' } },
})

Most SaaS products expose hundreds of API endpoints per domain. An AI agent connecting to HubSpot + Stripe + Zendesk + Jira needs to learn 1,000+ different tool schemas. headless.ly exposes three: search across the graph, fetch with relationships, do anything with TypeScript. One MCP server covers CRM, billing, support, projects, marketing, analytics, experiments, and workflows.

The Problem

Every SaaS product builds its own MCP server. Each one exposes 20-50 tools with unique schemas, authentication flows, and error formats. Your agent needs to:

  • Learn HubSpot's 47 tools for CRM
  • Learn Stripe's 38 tools for billing
  • Learn Zendesk's 25 tools for support
  • Learn Jira's 32 tools for projects
  • Learn Mailchimp's 22 tools for marketing
  • Map data between all of them

That's 164 tool schemas. And they don't share a data model, so "the contact who has a deal that has a subscription that has a support ticket" requires your agent to orchestrate across four different APIs with four different ID systems.

headless.ly collapses all of this into three tools against one typed graph.

Three Tools

Find entities across any domain with MongoDB-style filters:

{ "type": "Contact", "filter": { "stage": "Lead", "leadScore": { "$gte": 50 } } }
{ "type": "Deal", "filter": { "stage": "Open", "value": { "$gt": 10000 } }, "sort": "-value", "limit": 10 }

fetch

Get specific entities with relationship traversal:

{ "type": "Contact", "id": "contact_fX9bL5nRd", "include": ["deals", "subscriptions", "tickets"] }
{ "resource": "schema", "type": "Deal" }
{ "resource": "events", "type": "Contact", "id": "contact_fX9bL5nRd", "asOf": "2025-06-01T00:00:00Z" }

do

Execute any operation — CRUD, custom verbs, or full TypeScript programs:

// Qualify every lead with a score above 80
const leads = await $.Contact.find({ stage: 'Lead', leadScore: { $gte: 80 } })
for (const lead of leads) {
  await $.Contact.qualify(lead.$id)
  await $.Deal.create({
    name: `${lead.name} opportunity`,
    contact: lead.$id,
    stage: 'Prospecting',
  })
}

The do tool executes arbitrary TypeScript in a sandboxed environment with full access to the entity graph via $. This is how agents go beyond CRUD to truly autonomous operations.

Auto-Generated Tool Definitions

Noun schemas automatically generate MCP tool definitions. No manual schema maintenance:

import { getTools } from '@headlessly/mcp'

const tools = getTools()
// [
//   { name: 'search', description: 'Search across 35 entity types...', inputSchema: { ... } },
//   { name: 'fetch', description: 'Fetch entities, schemas, events...', inputSchema: { ... } },
//   { name: 'do', description: 'Execute TypeScript with full entity access...', inputSchema: { ... } },
// ]

Every entity type, every field, every verb — all reflected in the tool schemas your agent receives.

Custom Handlers

Build your own MCP integration with direct handler access:

import { createHandlers } from '@headlessly/mcp'

const handlers = createHandlers({
  provider: myProvider,
  evaluate: async (code, context) => {
    // Sandboxed code execution for the 'do' tool
    return await sandbox.run(code, context)
  },
})

const leads = await handlers.search({ type: 'Contact', filter: { stage: 'Lead' } })
const deal = await handlers.fetch({ resource: 'entity', type: 'Deal', id: 'deal_k7TmPvQx' })
const result = await handlers.doAction({ code: 'await $.Contact.qualify("contact_fX9bL5nRd")' })

HTTP Integration

Drop the MCP server into any Hono, Express, or Cloudflare Worker route:

import { MCPServer } from '@headlessly/mcp'

const server = new MCPServer({ provider })

// Hono
app.post('/mcp', (c) => server.handleHTTP(c.req.raw))

// Express
app.post('/mcp', (req, res) => {
  const response = await server.handleHTTP(req)
  res.json(response)
})

Install

npm install @headlessly/mcp

API

MCPServer

Full MCP server with JSON-RPC protocol support.

  • handleRequest(body) -- handle a JSON-RPC request object, returns JSON-RPC response
  • handleHTTP(request) -- handle a raw HTTP request, returns a Response

Supported JSON-RPC methods:

  • initialize -- protocol handshake
  • tools/list -- list available tools (auto-generated from Noun schemas)
  • tools/call -- execute a tool (search, fetch, or do)

getTools(context?)

Generate MCP tool definitions from registered Noun schemas. Returns an array of tool objects with name, description, and inputSchema.

createHandlers(options)

Create handler functions for each tool.

  • handlers.search(args) -- search entities with type, query, filter, limit, sort
  • handlers.fetch(args) -- fetch entity, schema, events, metrics, or state (supports time-travel via asOf)
  • handlers.doAction(args) -- execute create, update, delete, custom verbs, or eval code

Types

  • MCPTool, MCPToolCall, MCPToolResult -- tool protocol types
  • MCPContext -- server context with provider and evaluator
  • SearchArgs, FetchArgs, DoArgs -- tool argument types
  • MCPServerOptions, MCPHandlerOptions -- configuration types

License

MIT