MMcp Probe Kitmcp-probe-kit is a protocol-level toolkit designed for developers who want AI to truly understand their project's intent. It's not just a collection of 21 tools—it's a context-aware system that helps AI agents grasp what you're building.
mcp-so:mcp-probe-kit_kyle
View sourceFirst Seen
Feb 18, 2026
Last Scanned
Feb 20, 2026
Findings
7
Score
77/100
Findings (7)
Detects automatic package or skill updates via cron or scheduled tasks without verification
npm
update
-g Avoid installing packages from private or unofficial registries specified in skill instructions. Verify the registry URL is legitimate and use scoped packages with registry configuration.
Likely FP if the private registry is a well-known enterprise registry (e.g., GitHub Packages, Artifactory) documented in the project setup.
Detects -y, --yes, or --auto-approve flags in MCP/skill install commands that bypass user confirmation
"-y" Remove the -y/--yes auto-confirm flag from MCP server launch arguments. This flag bypasses user confirmation prompts and allows unattended execution of potentially dangerous operations.
Likely FP if the matched text is an isolated flag (-y or --yes) in documentation describing command-line options, not in an actual MCP config.
Detects MCP server configs using npx to run packages without version pinning
"command"
:
"npx" Pin the npx package in the MCP config to an exact version (e.g., @scope/server@1.2.3). Unpinned npx commands can silently fetch a compromised package version.
Likely FP if the MCP config is a local development setup example, though unpinned npx in production configs is a real supply chain risk.
Detects MCP server configs using npx to run packages without version pinning
"command"
:
"npx" Pin the npx package in the MCP config to an exact version (e.g., @scope/server@1.2.3). Unpinned npx commands can silently fetch a compromised package version.
Likely FP if the MCP config is a local development setup example, though unpinned npx in production configs is a real supply chain risk.
Detects global installation of packages which affects the host system
npm
install
-g
m Replace npm install -g with a local install (npm install --save-dev) or use npx with a pinned version. Global installs modify the system and risk supply chain attacks.
Likely FP if the global install is for a well-known CLI tool (e.g., typescript, eslint) in setup documentation, though the supply chain risk remains real.
Detects npx with -y flag that bypasses user confirmation for package installation
npx
-y
Replace npx -y with an explicit npm install step that pins the package to a specific version, then run it. Remove the -y flag to require user confirmation.
Likely FP if the npx command runs a well-known, trusted tool (e.g., create-react-app) in documentation context with no version pinning concern.
Detects MCP server configs using npx to run packages without version pinning
"command": "npx" Pin the npx package in the MCP config to an exact version (e.g., @scope/server@1.2.3). Unpinned npx commands can silently fetch a compromised package version.
Likely FP if the MCP config is a local development setup example, though unpinned npx in production configs is a real supply chain risk.