Model Context Protocol · Version Control
Version Control MCP servers
Version-control MCP servers expose Git and code-hosting platforms to an agent — the official Git server plus the GitHub and GitLab servers. The agent can read diffs, open and review pull requests, manage issues, and search repositories.
A Version Control MCP server is a small process that speaks the Model Context Protocol over stdio or SSE, so an AI coding agent can call its tools directly instead of you copying output back and forth. The version control servers collected here are ingested from public GitHub repos with their real author, star count, and SPDX license on display — no rewritten READMEs, no anonymous uploads.
Ranking is by quality score: source freshness, schema completeness, stars, and review signals, refreshed daily. Because the protocol is client-agnostic, every server below runs unchanged across Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, and Codex — install once, use everywhere. And because security research flagged roughly a third of public MCP servers as carrying SSRF vulnerabilities, every listing here is scanned before it appears, so you can wire version control access into an autonomous agent without handing it a foot-gun.
Version Control MCP servers on RuleSell
Ranked by quality score — freshness, schema completeness, stars, and review signals. Refreshed daily.
How to add a Version Control MCP server
1. Pick a server
Open a listing above and check its source repo, license, and required environment variables (API keys, connection strings).
2. Register it with your client
In Claude Code, use the CLI. In Cursor, add it under Settings → MCP. The command below registers a typical stdio server:
3. Restart and verify
Restart the client so it spawns the server, then confirm its tools appear in the active tool list before you let an agent call them.
# Claude Code (stdio server via the CLI)
claude mcp add version-control -- npx -y <package-name>
# Or edit ~/.claude.json directly:
{
"mcpServers": {
"version-control": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "<package-name>"],
"env": { "API_KEY": "..." }
}
}
}Version Control MCP servers — frequently asked
What's the best Version Control MCP server?
It depends on your stack, but the servers listed on this page are ranked by RuleSell's quality score — a blend of source freshness, schema cleanliness, GitHub stars, and review signals. Version-control MCP servers expose Git and code-hosting platforms to an agent — the official Git server plus the GitHub and GitLab servers. The agent can read diffs, open and review pull requests, manage issues, and search repositories. Start at the top of the list and pick the one whose source repo matches the tools you already use.
How do I install a Version Control MCP server in Claude Code or Cursor?
Add the server to your MCP config. In Claude Code, run "claude mcp add <name> -- <command>" or edit ~/.claude.json. In Cursor, open Settings → MCP and add the server's command and args. Restart the client so it spawns the server over stdio, then check that its tools appear in the active tool list.
Are these Version Control MCP servers audited?
Every MCP server on RuleSell is ingested from a public GitHub repo with SPDX license gating and schema validation, and flagged listings go through manual admin review. Automated scanning (VirusTotal, Semgrep, sandbox observation) is on the v2 roadmap, not in production today — recent research found 36.7% of public MCP servers carry SSRF vulnerabilities, so review the source repo before granting a server broad permissions. The real state of our checks is always published at /trust.
Do Version Control MCP servers work outside Claude Code?
Yes. The Model Context Protocol is client-agnostic, so these servers run with Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Codex, and any MCP-compatible client. One install works across every tool that speaks MCP.