About
A Model Context Protocol server that lets developers upload, list, and query iOS/Android applications on the Pgyer platform. It supports CLI, Node.js, Docker, and integrates with tools like Claude and VSCode for seamless CI/CD workflows.
Capabilities

The PGYER MCP Server is a lightweight, protocol‑compliant bridge that lets AI assistants such as Claude upload and manage mobile applications on the PGYER distribution platform. By exposing a set of high‑level tools over MCP, it eliminates the need for developers to manually run CLI commands or write custom integration scripts. Instead, an AI assistant can trigger a file upload, list existing releases, or fetch detailed metadata with a single prompt, making the entire app‑distribution workflow conversational and automated.
At its core, the server offers three practical tools: upload‑app, which accepts an IPA or APK file along with optional parameters like installation mode, password protection, and release notes; list‑my-apps, which retrieves the current user’s app catalog with pagination support; and get‑app-info‑by‑shortcut, which looks up a specific app using its short link. These actions cover the most common tasks in mobile release pipelines, from initial build upload to post‑release monitoring. The server is also highly configurable through the environment variable, ensuring that secrets are never hard‑coded and can be supplied securely from the AI’s runtime environment.
Developers who integrate this MCP server into their workflows gain a number of tangible benefits. For teams conducting internal or public beta testing, the server allows instant distribution of new builds directly from a CI/CD job or an AI‑guided session, reducing the friction between developers and testers. Continuous integration tools can invoke after a successful build step, automatically propagating the new version to all stakeholders. Moreover, because the server is compatible with multiple MCP‑enabled clients—including Claude and VSCode—developers can perform app management tasks from wherever they are working, whether that’s a terminal, an IDE, or a chat interface.
The server’s design also emphasizes flexibility. Custom upload parameters let teams tailor the distribution experience: choose between public installs, password‑protected releases, or invitation‑only access; set expiration dates for test builds; and provide descriptive release notes—all without touching the underlying API. Pagination support in ensures that large repositories remain manageable, while the shortcut lookup offers a quick way to reference specific builds in documentation or communication.
In summary, the PGYER MCP Server turns a traditional mobile‑app distribution platform into an AI‑friendly service. By abstracting API calls behind intuitive MCP tools, it streamlines release processes, enhances collaboration across development environments, and provides a secure, configurable gateway for automated testing and continuous delivery.
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