Capability
20 artifacts provide this capability.
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Find the best match →via “tool definition and invocation with schema-based validation”
Model Context Protocol Servers
Unique: Uses JSON Schema as the single source of truth for tool signatures, enabling automatic parameter validation and client-side tool discovery without separate documentation. The schema-based approach allows LLM clients to reason about tool capabilities and constraints directly from the schema.
vs others: More robust than REST API parameter validation because schemas are enforced at the protocol level and clients can discover tool signatures programmatically, unlike OpenAI function calling which requires separate schema definitions.
via “schema-validated tool parameter binding with type safety”
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server and CLI that provides tools for agent use when working on iOS and macOS projects.
Unique: Uses manifest-driven schema definitions to enforce type safety and parameter validation at the MCP boundary, preventing invalid tool invocations before they reach Xcode while maintaining a single source of truth for tool contracts
vs others: More robust than runtime parameter checking because validation happens before tool execution, and more maintainable than hardcoded validation because schemas are declarative and reusable across CLI and MCP modes
via “tool schema generation with parameter validation and type safety”
Put an end to code hallucinations! GitMCP is a free, open-source, remote MCP server for any GitHub project
Unique: Generates comprehensive JSON schemas for each tool with parameter constraints, examples, and descriptions, enabling AI assistants to understand tool capabilities and invoke them correctly without trial-and-error
vs others: More reliable than natural language tool descriptions because JSON schemas provide machine-readable specifications that AI assistants can parse and validate, reducing invocation errors
via “tool definition and invocation with schema-based parameter validation”
Specification and documentation for the Model Context Protocol
Unique: Uses JSON Schema as the canonical tool parameter definition format, enabling both humans and AI models to understand tool signatures without code inspection. Tools are first-class protocol objects with explicit list/call operations, and servers can update tool availability dynamically by sending resources/updated notifications.
vs others: More flexible than OpenAI's function calling (supports arbitrary JSON Schema, not just predefined types) and more discoverable than REST APIs (tools are enumerated with full schemas, not requiring documentation lookup)
via “tool definition and schema validation with runtime type checking”
Framework for building Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers in Typescript
Unique: Automatically generates JSON Schemas from TypeScript types at compile-time and validates inputs at runtime, eliminating manual schema maintenance and schema-implementation drift
vs others: Prevents entire classes of bugs (schema mismatches, type coercion errors) that plague manual schema definitions in competing frameworks
via “tool definition and schema registration with validation”
Shared infrastructure for Transcend MCP Server packages
Unique: Integrates schema validation directly into the tool registration layer, preventing invalid tool calls before they reach handlers — most MCP implementations validate at execution time, this validates at registration and request time
vs others: Catches schema violations earlier in the pipeline than post-execution validation, reducing wasted compute and providing clearer error feedback to clients
via “tool parameter binding and schema validation”
I'm one of the creators of The Edge Agent (TEA). We built this because we needed a way to deploy agents that was verifiable and robust enough for production/edge cases, moving away from loose scripts.The architecture aims to solve critical gaps in deterministic orchestration identified by
Unique: Combines schema-based validation with Prolog constraint checking to ensure tool parameters not only match type schemas but also satisfy logical constraints defined in agent configuration
vs others: More rigorous than simple type checking used by most frameworks; catches semantic parameter errors (e.g., invalid combinations) that type systems alone would miss
via “tool schema validation and error handling”
MarketIntelLabs fork of the Paperclip adapter for Hermes Agent — with adapter-owned status transitions, an in-process MCP tool server (paperclip-mcp) that replaces curl-in-prompt with structured tool calls, MIL heartbeat prompt templates, and OpenRouter m
Unique: Implements JSON Schema validation at the adapter boundary, catching errors before tool execution. Provides structured error responses that include schema violation details and suggestions, enabling agents to self-correct without human intervention.
vs others: More reliable than runtime error handling because validation prevents invalid calls from reaching APIs; more informative than generic error messages because it includes schema context and expected types.
via “tool call request/response schema validation and type checking”
Core proxy engine for Cordon for MCP — the security gateway for MCP tool calls
Unique: Provides MCP-level schema validation that works across all tools without requiring per-tool implementation, enabling centralized type safety enforcement
vs others: Validates schemas at the protocol level before tool execution, whereas per-tool validation requires implementing validation in each tool and may miss edge cases
via “tool parameter validation and schema enforcement”
MCP Tool Gate client for Claude Desktop - secure MCP tool governance with human-in-the-loop approvals
Unique: Implements JSON Schema validation specifically for MCP tool parameters, integrated into the approval gateway to prevent invalid tool calls before execution. Provides detailed validation error messages to support debugging and parameter correction.
vs others: More rigorous than runtime error handling because it validates parameters before execution, preventing downstream system errors and providing early feedback for parameter correction.
via “tool schema definition and parameter validation”
** - An R SDK for creating R-based MCP servers and retrieving functionality from third-party MCP servers as R functions.
Unique: Integrates with roxygen2 documentation system to extract parameter descriptions and types, converting R function signatures into JSON-Schema tool definitions that MCP clients can parse — this bridges R's dynamic typing with JSON-RPC's strict schema requirements through documentation-driven schema generation.
vs others: Leverages existing roxygen2 ecosystem familiar to R developers, reducing schema definition overhead compared to tools requiring separate schema files or manual JSON specification.
via “tool parameter validation and schema enforcement”
SINT MCP Security Scanner — analyze MCP server tool definitions for risk
Unique: Combines JSON schema validation with MCP-specific parameter risk patterns; includes built-in rules for common injection vectors in agent tool calls (shell metacharacters, path traversal, SQL injection signatures)
vs others: MCP-native validation vs. generic JSON schema validators that lack agent-specific threat context and injection pattern detection
via “tool schema definition and parameter validation”
** - A Model Context Protocol server for integrating [HackMD](https://hackmd.io)'s note-taking platform with AI assistants.
Unique: Uses server.json as single source of truth for tool schema definitions, enabling schema-driven validation and client-side discovery without requiring separate documentation or type definitions
vs others: Provides schema-driven tool definition vs hardcoded validation logic, enabling dynamic tool discovery and reducing client-side integration complexity
via “parameter validation and schema enforcement”
TypeScript MCP tool definitions for ManyWe Agent integrations.
Unique: Combines TypeScript compile-time type checking with runtime JSON schema validation, providing both development-time safety and production-time robustness that pure runtime validators or pure static typing alone cannot achieve
vs others: More comprehensive than simple type checking because it validates at runtime against full JSON schemas including constraints, patterns, and custom rules that TypeScript's static types cannot express
via “tool/action schema definition and validation”
Open source framework for building agents that pre-express their planned actions, share their progress and can be interrupted by a human. [#opensource](https://github.com/portiaAI/portia-sdk-python)
Unique: Integrates schema validation into the planning phase (to constrain agent reasoning) and execution phase (to prevent invalid tool calls), rather than treating validation as a post-hoc error handler
vs others: Similar to OpenAI function calling schemas, but Portia applies validation at planning time to prevent invalid plans rather than only catching errors at execution
via “tool schema definition and registration”
[](https://smithery.ai/server/cursor-mcp-tool)
Unique: Integrates Cursor-specific tool discovery mechanisms that allow IDE-native tool browsing and parameter hints, rather than generic JSON-RPC tool exposure
vs others: Tighter integration with Cursor's UI for tool discovery compared to raw MCP servers that expose tools as generic JSON endpoints
via “tool definition and request routing with schema validation”
mcp server
Unique: Integrates JSON Schema validation directly into the tool routing pipeline, preventing invalid requests from reaching handler code and reducing boilerplate validation logic in tool implementations
vs others: More declarative than manual validation in handler functions, but less flexible than frameworks offering custom validation middleware or async schema resolution
via “tool definition and invocation with schema validation”
[Go MCP SDK](https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/go-sdk)
Unique: Uses Roslyn source generators to emit compile-time schema validation code, eliminating runtime reflection overhead and enabling compile-time schema verification. Automatically generates JSON Schema from C# type metadata with support for custom schema attributes and documentation strings.
vs others: Eliminates manual schema maintenance compared to frameworks requiring separate schema files, with compile-time safety guarantees that schema and implementation stay synchronized.
via “tool invocation with parameter validation and error handling”
LucidBrain SDK — MCP tool server with OAuth 2.1 + PKCE, the WorkSpec v1.2 pattern packaged.
Unique: Integrates WorkSpec schema validation directly into the tool invocation pipeline, eliminating the need for separate validation middleware or manual parameter checking in tool handlers
vs others: More robust than manual parameter validation because schema-based validation catches type mismatches early; more flexible than strict type systems because JSON Schema supports optional fields and union types
via “tool registration and schema-based invocation with typed argument validation”
MCP server: mcp-server1
Unique: unknown — insufficient data on validation library choice, schema parsing strategy, and error reporting mechanism
vs others: Enforces schema-based validation at the protocol level vs alternatives that defer validation to handler code, catching errors earlier in the request pipeline
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