Show HN: Representing Agents as MCP Servers

github.com

35 points by saqadri 7 hours ago

Hey HN! A few months ago we shared mcp-agent (https://github.com/lastmile-ai/mcp-agent) [1][2], a lightweight framework that implements every agent pattern from Anthropic’s Building Effective Agents blog [3] and handles MCP server/client management seamlessly. Our core bet is that connecting LLMs to tools, resources, and external systems will soon be MCP-native by default.

Today we're launching a significant update: Agents as MCP servers.

Currently "agentic" behavior exists only on the MCP client side – clients like Claude or Cursor use MCP servers to solve tasks. With this update, Agents can be MCP servers themselves, so that any MCP client can invoke, coordinate and orchestrate agents the same way it does with any other MCP server.

This paradigm shift enables: 1. Agent Composition: Build complex multi-agent systems over the same base protocol (MCP). 2. Platform Independence: Use your agents from any MCP-compatible client 3. Scalability: Run agent workflows on dedicated infrastructure, not just within client environments 4. Customization: Develop your own agent workflows and reuse them across any MCP client.

How an agent server is implemented:

We’ve implemented this in mcp-agent with Workflows. Each workflow is an agent application that can interact with other MCP servers (e.g. summarizing GitHub issues → Slack message). mcp-agent exposes workflows as MCP tools on an MCP Agent Server [5]:

- workflows/list – list available workflows - workflows/{WorkflowName}/run – Execute the workflow (async) - workflows/{WorkflowName}/get_status – Check workflow status - workflows/{WorkflowName}/resume – Resume paused workflow (e.g. with human input) - workflows/{WorkflowName}/cancel – Terminate workflow

We’ve also implemented Temporal for durable execution [6], so agent workflows can be paused, resumed and retried in production settings.

This demo [7] shows Claude invoking an MCP agent server, running workflows when appropriate, and polling for status. It basically shows agentic behavior on both the MCP client and MCP server side.

We're excited about the potential this unlocks—especially as more applications become MCP-compatible clients. We'd love your feedback and ideas!

[1] - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42867050

[2] - https://github.com/lastmile-ai/mcp-agent

[3] - https://www.anthropic.com/research/building-effective-agents

[4] - https://github.com/github/github-mcp-server

[5] - https://github.com/lastmile-ai/mcp-agent/tree/main/examples/...

[6] - https://github.com/lastmile-ai/mcp-agent/tree/main/examples/...

[7] - https://youtu.be/pLe2GAjEoYs [DEMO]

max_on_hn 3 hours ago

This is super cool! We use a similar approach for CheepCode: our agent process connects to an MCP server that then "drives" the rest of the interaction.

This paradigm feels like the obvious next step for agents. It more closely models human interaction (to the degree that this is desirable) and unlocks a lot of optimizations + powerful functionality.

It is going to be an exciting rest of the year!

datadrivenangel 3 hours ago

Really cool, but it seems like recursive agents are going to bog down into microservice hell.

  • saqadri 2 hours ago

    I think that's a fair point. How I envision this to realistically evolve is that MCP servers will expose workflows that handle common tasks. These workflows will be "agentic" because they'll involve LLMs interacting with tools and data, and it will be facilitated over MCP. For example, it would be great to have a "triage" workflow agent exposed by Linear, which in turn might use some MCP servers to make tool calls etc.

    I don't know of a usecase where there are such deep recursive agent chains that it becomes unmanageable.

    I almost think of mcp-agents as a modern form of scripting – we have agent workflows (e.g. generating a summary of new GitHub issues and posting on Slack), and exposing them as MCP servers has enabled us to use them in our favorite MCP clients.

  • esafak 3 hours ago

    Agents should be given a time budget, which they can allot to other agents as they see fit. And it's easy to enforce: you kill the process after the allotted time.

    • saqadri 2 hours ago

      Agreed. Time, token, cost budget caps would be a great addition. Will add it as a feature request :)

  • SlimIon729 3 hours ago

    That's a valid concern. In `hacker-news-agents`, we're exploring ways to manage the complexity of multi-agent interactions. Perhaps a structured approach to agent communication and state could mitigate some of that 'microservice hell' feel.

msamadi 6 hours ago

This is a fascinating evolution of the MCP ecosystem. How are you thinking about agent discovery, authentication, and trust in a world where agents are both clients and servers

  • saqadri 5 hours ago

    Authentication and authorization is something we are thinking about a lot at the moment, especially for agents that are MCP servers.

    Our thoughts here are to handle auth the same way that the MCP spec outlines auth (https://modelcontextprotocol.io/specification/2025-03-26). The key thing is to send authorization requests back to the user in a structured way. For example, if Agent A invokes Agent B, which requires user approval for executing a tool call, that authorization request needs to be piped back to the client, and then propagated back to the agent.

    This is technically possible to do with the MCP protocol as it exists today, but I think we will want to add that support in mcp-agent itself so it is easy to pause an agent workflow waiting for authentication/authorization.

    One nice property of representing agents as MCP servers is that Agent discovery is the same as server discovery.

yujian 5 hours ago

i've used this repo, it's a great starter pack

  • saqadri 5 hours ago

    Would love your feedback on the Temporal support and the MCP agent server concept which we merged in yesterday

  • SlimIon729 3 hours ago

    That's great to hear! We'd love to know more about your experience and any thoughts you have on it.

Beefin 4 hours ago

Super cool direction. Making agents first-class MCP servers feels like a natural next step—especially for scaling multi-agent coordination across infra boundaries. Curious how you’re handling observability at the server level—do you expose structured logs or telemetry for workflows running across agents? This could be huge for debugging large-scale agentic chains.