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Claude Extension MCP Server

MCP Server

Automated config for Claude Desktop and Cursor IDE extensions

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Updated May 7, 2025

About

Generates and installs feature‑rich MCP server configurations for Claude Desktop and Cursor IDE, enabling Brave search, file system, Git, GitHub, shell, Puppeteer, Fetch, Claude CLI, AWS docs, Supabase, and Obsidian integration.

Capabilities

Resources
Access data sources
Tools
Execute functions
Prompts
Pre-built templates
Sampling
AI model interactions

Overview

The Drapon Claude MCP Server is a specialized tool that bridges the gap between AI assistants—such as Claude—and the rich ecosystem of developer tools and data sources. By exposing a set of MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers, it lets Claude directly invoke external services like web search, file system operations, Git workflows, and cloud SDKs without leaving the conversational interface. This eliminates the need for manual scripting or context switching, enabling developers to keep their focus on high‑level problem solving while the AI handles routine integration tasks.

At its core, the server generates configuration files for both the Claude Desktop application and Cursor IDE. Using a simple Makefile workflow, it pulls values from a file (API keys, executable paths, vault locations) and merges them with template JSON files. The resulting configuration is automatically copied into the appropriate settings directory, ensuring that every supported tool—Brave search, GitHub API, Supabase client, Obsidian vault operations, and more—is available as a first‑class MCP capability. This automation removes repetitive manual setup and guarantees that the same environment is reproducible across machines.

Key features include:

  • Web search & scraping via Brave and Puppeteer, allowing the assistant to fetch up‑to‑date information or crawl pages on demand.
  • File system and Git integration, giving the AI read/write access to local projects, commit changes, or pull from remote repositories.
  • Cloud and database connectivity with AWS Documentation, Supabase, and Figma APIs, enabling dynamic data retrieval or configuration updates.
  • Command execution through a shell tool, providing the ability to run scripts, build commands, or system utilities directly from chat.
  • Obsidian note management, letting Claude create, update, or search notes within a personal knowledge base.

These capabilities are especially valuable for developers who rely on AI assistants to prototype, debug, or document code. In a typical workflow, a developer might ask Claude to “create a new feature branch, add the necessary files, and push to GitHub,” and the assistant would orchestrate all underlying actions through MCP calls. Similarly, a data‑driven developer could request “fetch the latest sales metrics from Supabase and generate a chart,” with the server handling authentication, query execution, and result formatting automatically.

The Drapon Claude MCP Server stands out by providing a unified, declarative configuration approach that works seamlessly with both desktop and IDE environments. Its interactive command lets teams enable only the servers they need, reducing attack surface and simplifying onboarding. For any developer looking to embed powerful external tooling into AI‑driven workflows, this server offers a robust, low‑friction solution that keeps the focus on creative problem solving rather than infrastructure plumbing.