10 comments

  • nzach 2 days ago

    This seems to be a better alternative: https://github.com/mark3labs/mcp-go

    • boomskats 2 days ago

      Yeah, mcp-go is a pretty well known project (i know it from godoc-mcp), but I don't know whether 'better' is the right word.

      It looks like it's a case of builder pattern/runtime validated vs codegen/typed. The readme doesn't reference mcp-go by name, but it does lead with 'type-safe, intuitive', which could be a poke at it?

      • peterldowns 2 days ago

        Do you know of anything that will autogen a golang mcp server from an OpenAPI spec? Seems completely do-able, and I'll write a tool for this myself if it doesn't already exist.

    • ra7 2 days ago

      Looks like there's also an official Go SDK coming soon, likely based on mark3labs/mcp-go. Proposal: https://github.com/orgs/modelcontextprotocol/discussions/224

    • dblooman 2 days ago

      Have used this for a hackday recently, found it easy to use, even for a complete newcomer.

  • dstotijn 2 days ago

    I also wrote a Go library for MCP a few weeks ago, with type safety as one of the project goals: https://github.com/dstotijn/go-mcp. It uses generics to support type-safe RPC methods. Additionally, it leans on JSON schema and its features for property validation.

  • whydid 2 days ago

    Whenever I see this many emojis in a readme, I assume the entire project was written by AI.

    • peterldowns 2 days ago

      Or, worse, an npm-infected frontend engineer. It's like a mindvirus in that ecosystem.

      • 2 days ago
        [deleted]
    • ramesh31 2 days ago

      >"Whenever I see this many emojis in a readme, I assume the entire project was written by AI."

      What difference does that make? Have you read the code and formulated an actual criticism, or is this just kneejerk "AI bad"?