Driflyte turns web crawling and GitHub scraping into queryable, topic-tagged knowledge that Claude can retrieve on demand. It recursively indexes web pages and repositories, then lets you search for content by topic or keyword to pull in fresh context for RAG workflows. The server is free to use with no signup, though rate limited to 100 requests per 5 minutes per IP. You can run it locally via npx or point directly at their hosted endpoint. Useful when you need Claude to answer questions grounded in specific documentation sites, project repos, or any other web content that changes too often to hardcode. Future roadmap includes Slack, Confluence, JIRA, and other workplace knowledge sources.
Public tool metadata for what this MCP can expose to an agent.
list-topicsReturns a list of topics for which resources (web pages, etc ...) have been crawled and content is available. This allows AI assistants to discover the most relevant and up-to-date subject areas currently indexed by the crawler.Returns a list of topics for which resources (web pages, etc ...) have been crawled and content is available. This allows AI assistants to discover the most relevant and up-to-date subject areas currently indexed by the crawler.
No parameter schema in public metadata yet.
searchGiven a list of topics and a user question, this tool retrieves the top-K most relevant documents from the crawled content. It is designed to help AI assistants surface the most contextually appropriate and up-to-date information for a specific topic and query. This enables mo...3 paramsGiven a list of topics and a user question, this tool retrieves the top-K most relevant documents from the crawled content. It is designed to help AI assistants surface the most contextually appropriate and up-to-date information for a specific topic and query. This enables mo...
topKnumberquerystringtopicsarrayMCP Server for Driflyte.
The Driflyte MCP Server exposes tools that allow AI assistants to query and retrieve topic-specific knowledge from recursively crawled and indexed web pages. With this MCP server, Driflyte acts as a bridge between diverse, topic-aware content sources (web, GitHub, and more) and AI-powered reasoning, enabling richer, more accurate answers.
100 API requests per 5 minutes per IP address.Driflyte MCP server supports the following CLI arguments for configuration:
--transport <stdio|streamable-http> - Configures the transport protocol (defaults to stdio).--port <number> – Configures the port number to listen on when using streamable-http transport (defaults to 3000).This MCP server (using STDIO or Streamable HTTP transport) can be added to any MCP Client
like VS Code, Claude, Cursor, Windsurf Github Copilot via the @driflyte/mcp-server NPM package.
Settings under your profile and enable Developer Mode under the Connectors option.+ icon, and from the dropdown, select Developer Mode.
You’ll see an option to add sources/connectors.Create:
Name: DriflyteMCP Server URL: https://mcp.driflyte.com/openaiAuthentication: No authenticationTrust Setting: Check I trust this applicationSee How to set up a remote MCP server and connect it to ChatGPT deep research and MCP server tools now in ChatGPT – developer mode for more info.
Run the following command. See Claude Code MCP docs for more info.
claude mcp add driflyte -- npx -y @driflye/mcp-server
claude mcp add --transport http driflyte https://mcp.driflyte.com/mcp
Add the following configuration into the claude_desktop_config.json file.
See the Claude Desktop MCP docs for more info.
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@driflyte/mcp-server"]
}
}
}
Go to the Settings > Connectors > Add Custom Connector in the Claude Desktop and add the new MCP server with the following fields:
Driflytehttps://mcp.driflyte.com/mcpAdd the following configuration to the mcpServers section of your Copilot Coding Agent configuration through
Repository > Settings > Copilot > Coding agent > MCP configuration.
See the Copilot Coding Agent MCP docs for more info.
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"type": "local",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@driflyte/mcp-server"]
}
}
}
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"type": "http",
"url": "https://mcp.driflyte.com/mcp"
}
}
}
Add the following configuration into the ~/.cursor/mcp.json file (or .cursor/mcp.json in your project folder).
Or setup by 🖱️One Click Installation.
See the Cursor MCP docs for more info.
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@driflyte/mcp-server"]
}
}
}
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"url": "https://mcp.driflyte.com/mcp"
}
}
}
Add the following configuration into the ~/.gemini/settings.json file.
See the Gemini CLI MCP docs for more info.
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@driflyte/mcp-server"]
}
}
}
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"httpUrl": "https://mcp.driflyte.com/mcp"
}
}
}
Run the following command. You can find your Smithery API key here. See the Smithery CLI docs for more info.
npx -y @smithery/cli install @serkan-ozal/driflyte-mcp-server --client <SMITHERY-CLIENT-NAME> --key <SMITHERY-API-KEY>
Add the following configuration into the .vscode/mcp.json file.
Or setup by 🖱️One Click Installation.
See the VS Code MCP docs for more info.
{
"mcp": {
"servers": {
"driflyte": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@driflyte/mcp-server"]
}
}
}
}
{
"mcp": {
"servers": {
"driflyte": {
"type": "http",
"url": "https://mcp.driflyte.com/mcp"
}
}
}
}
Add the following configuration into the ~/.codeium/windsurf/mcp_config.json file.
See the Windsurf MCP docs for more info.
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@driflyte/mcp-server"]
}
}
}
{
"mcpServers": {
"driflyte": {
"serverUrl": "https://mcp.driflyte.com/mcp"
}
}
}
list-topics: Returns a list of topics for which resources (web pages, etc ...) have been crawled and content is available.
This allows AI assistants to discover the most relevant and up-to-date subject areas currently indexed by the crawler.
topics:
Optinal: falseType: Array<string>Description: List of the supported topics.search: Given a list of topics and a user question, this tool retrieves the top-K most relevant documents from the crawled content.
It is designed to help AI assistants surface the most contextually appropriate and up-to-date information for a specific topic and query.
This enables more informed and accurate responses based on real-world, topic-tagged web content.
topics
Optinal: falseType: Array<string>Description: A list of one or more topic identifiers to constrain the search space.
Only documents tagged with at least one of these topics will be considered.query
Optinal: falseType: stringDescription: The natural language query or question for which relevant information is being sought.
This will be used to rank documents by semantic relevance.topK
Optinal: trueType: numberDefault Value: 10Min Value: 1Max Value: 30Description: The maximum number of relevant documents to return.
Results are sorted by descending relevance score.documents:
Optional: falseType: Array<Document>Description: Matched documents to the search query.Document:
content
Optinal: falseType: stringDescription: Related content (full or partial) of the matched document.metadata
Optinal: falseType: Map<string, any>Description: Metadata of the document and related content in key-value format.score
Optinal: falseType: numberMin Value: 0Max Value: 1Description: Similarity score (between 0 and 1) for the content of the document.N/A
.pdf, .ppt/.pptx, .doc/.docx, and many others applicable including audio and video file formats ...)Please use GitHub Issues for any bug report, feature request and support.
If you would like to contribute, please
Tip: Please check the existing pull requests for similar contributions and consider submit an issue to discuss the proposed feature before writing code.
Licensed under MIT.
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