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Announcing StackOne Defender: leading open-source prompt injection guard for your agent Read More

Range MCP Server
for AI Agents

Production-ready Range MCP server with extensible actions — plus built-in authentication, security, and optimized execution.

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Range MCP Server
Built by StackOne StackOne

Coverage

13 Agent Actions

Create, read, update, and delete across Range — and extend your agent's capabilities with custom actions.

Authentication

Agent Tool Authentication

Per-user OAuth in one call. Your Range MCP server gets session-scoped tokens with zero credentials stored on your infra.

Agent Auth →

Security

Agent Protection

Every Range tool response scanned for prompt injection in milliseconds — 88.7% accuracy, all running on CPU.

Prompt Injection Defense →

Performance

Max Agent Context. Min Cost.

Free up to 96% of your agent's context window to enhance reasoning and reduce cost, on every Range call.

Tools Discovery →

What is the Range MCP Server?

A Range MCP server lets AI agents read and write Range data through the Model Context Protocol — Anthropic's open standard for connecting LLMs to external tools. StackOne's Range MCP server ships with pre-built actions, fully extensible via the Connector Builder — plus managed authentication, prompt injection defense, and optimized agent context. Connect it from MCP clients like Claude Desktop, Cursor, and VS Code, or from agent frameworks like OpenAI Agents SDK, LangChain, and Vercel AI SDK.

All Range MCP Tools and Actions

Every action from Range's API, ready for your agent. Create, read, update, and delete — scoped to exactly what you need.

Record Interactions

  • Record Interaction

    Record integration activity for a user

Teams

  • List Teams

    Retrieve a list of teams associated with an organization

  • Get Team

    Retrieve details about a specific team

User Teams

  • List User Teams

    Get all teams a user belongs to using their user_id

Team Relations

  • Update Team Relation

    Make a user join or follow a team, or update their role

  • Delete Team Relation

    Remove a user from a team or stop following it

Updates

  • List Updates

    Retrieve a list of check-ins (updates)

Users

  • List Users

    Retrieve a list of users in an organization

  • Get User

    Retrieve full profile of a user by their user_id

Authenticated Users

  • Get Authenticated User

    Retrieve the user associated with the current API key

Find Users

  • Find User

    Search for a user by email address or linked integration account

User Profiles

  • Update User Profile

    Update the profile information of a user

User States

  • Update User State

    Update the state of a user (admin only)

Set Up Your Range MCP Server in Minutes

One endpoint. Any framework. Your agent is talking to Range in under 10 lines of code.

MCP Clients

Agent Frameworks

Claude Desktop
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "stackone": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": [
        "-y",
        "mcp-remote@latest",
        "https://api.stackone.com/mcp?x-account-id=<account_id>",
        "--header",
        "Authorization: Basic <YOUR_BASE64_TOKEN>"
      ]
    }
  }
}

More Project Management MCP Servers

Azure DevOps

172+ actions

Bitbucket

134+ actions

Jira

134+ actions

Confluence

133+ actions

Trello

133+ actions

Asana

126+ actions

GitLab

125+ actions

Range MCP Server FAQ

Range MCP server vs direct API integration — what's the difference?
A Range MCP server and direct API integration serve different use cases. Direct API integration is for software-to-software — backend code calling Range. A Range MCP server is for AI agents — MCP clients like Claude and Cursor, plus framework agents built with OpenAI, LangChain, or Vercel AI — discovering and calling Range at runtime. StackOne provides both.
How does Range authentication work for AI agents?
Range authentication for AI agents works through a StackOne Connect Session. Create one via the dashboard or the SDK — you get an auth link and ready-to-paste config for Claude Desktop, Cursor, and other MCP clients. Your user authenticates their own Range account; StackOne handles token exchange, storage, and refresh. Credentials never reach the LLM, and each user is isolated via origin_owner_id.
Are Range MCP tools vulnerable to prompt injection?
Yes — Range MCP tools can be vulnerable to indirect prompt injection. Any tool that reads user-written content — documents, messages, tickets, records, or free-text fields — is a potential vector. StackOne Defender scans every tool response before it enters the agent's context — regex patterns in ~1ms, then a MiniLM classifier in ~4ms. 88.7% accuracy, CPU-only.
What is the context bloat of a Range agent and how do I avoid it?
Context bloat happens when Range tool schemas and API responses eat your Range agent's memory, preventing it from reasoning effectively. A single Range query can return a massive JSON response, and connecting multiple tools compounds the problem. Tools Discovery and Code Mode reduce context bloat — loading only relevant tools per query and keeping raw responses out of the agent's context.
Can I limit which actions my Range agent can access?
Yes — you can limit which actions your Range agent can access directly from the StackOne dashboard. Toggle actions on or off, or restrict them to specific accounts, with no code changes to your agent. Session tokens can be scoped to exact actions so if one leaks, exposure stays contained.
Can I create custom agent actions for my Range MCP server?
Yes — you can create custom agent actions for your Range MCP server using Connector Builder. It's an integration agent your coding assistant (Claude Code, Cursor, or Copilot) can invoke to research Range's API, generate production-ready connector YAML, test against the live API, and validate before you ship.
When should I NOT use a Range MCP server?
Skip a Range MCP server if your integration is purely software-to-software — direct Range API integration is simpler when no AI agent is involved. For deterministic, compliance-critical operations (financial transactions, regulatory reporting), direct API gives you predictable behavior without agent-driven decision-making. MCP shines when AI agents need to dynamically discover and call Range actions at runtime.
What AI frameworks and AI clients does the StackOne Range MCP server support?
The StackOne Range MCP server supports both. MCP clients (paste-and-go apps): Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor, VS Code, Goose. Agent frameworks (code SDKs you build with): OpenAI Agents SDK, Anthropic, Vercel AI, Google ADK, CrewAI, Pydantic AI, LangChain, LangGraph, Azure AI Foundry.

Put your AI agents to work

All the tools you need to build and scale AI agent integrations, with best-in-class connectivity, execution, and security.