Think Tool
by iamwavecut
What is Think Tool
MCP-Think
MCP-Think is a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that implements a "Think Tool" for LLMs. This tool allows LLMs to record and retrieve their thinking processes during reasoning.
YOLO
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/iamwavecut/MCP-Think/main/install.sh | bash
Features
- Think Tool: Record thoughts and reasoning steps
- Get Thoughts: Retrieve all previously recorded thoughts
- Clear Thoughts: Clear all recorded thoughts
- Get Thought Stats: Get statistics about recorded thoughts
Installation
There are several ways to install and run MCP-Think:
Installing via Smithery
To install mcp-think for Claude Desktop automatically via Smithery:
npx -y @smithery/cli install @iamwavecut/mcp-think --client claude
1. Pre-built Binaries (Recommended for Standalone Use)
Ready-to-use binaries for Linux, Windows, and macOS (amd64 & arm64) are automatically built and attached to each GitHub Release. This is the easiest way to get started if you don't need to modify the code.
-
macOS/Linux Auto-Install Script: (see YOLO)
The script automatically detects your OS and architecture, downloads the appropriate binary, and guides you through installation.
-
Manual Installation (incl. Windows):
- Go to the Releases page.
- Download the appropriate binary for your system (e.g.,
think-tool-linux-amd64
,think-tool-windows-amd64.exe
,think-tool-darwin-arm64
). - (Optional) Rename it:
mv think-tool-linux-amd64 think-tool
- Make it executable (Linux/macOS):
chmod +x think-tool
- Run it:
./think-tool
(See Usage section)
2. Using go install
(Requires Go)
This command compiles and installs the binary into your Go bin directory ($GOPATH/bin
or $HOME/go/bin
).
go install github.com/iamwavecut/MCP-Think@latest
- Note: Ensure your Go bin directory is in your system's
PATH
. You might need to addexport PATH=$PATH:$(go env GOPATH)/bin
orexport PATH=$PATH:$HOME/go/bin
to your shell profile (~/.bashrc
,~/.zshrc
, etc.). - Run the installed binary:
MCP-Think
3. Using go run
(Quick Testing, Requires Go)
This command compiles and runs the main
package directly from the source code without installing a binary. It's useful for quick tests.
go run github.com/iamwavecut/MCP-Think@latest
- This downloads the module and its dependencies temporarily if needed.
Requirements
- Go 1.24 or higher (if building from source or using
go install
/go run
)
Usage
Running the Standalone Server
If you installed via Pre-built Binary or go install
:
# If using pre-built binary in current directory:
./think-tool
# If installed via 'go install' or the install script to /usr/local/bin:
think-tool
If you are using go run
:
go run github.com/iamwavecut/MCP-Think@latest
The server will print Starting Think Tool MCP Server with stdio transport...
and wait for MCP requests on stdin.
Setting up in Cursor
To use MCP-Think with Cursor, follow these steps:
- Install MCP-Think using one of the installation methods above
- Create or update your Cursor MCP configuration file at
~/.cursor/mcp.json
:
{
"mcpServers": {
"think-tool": {
"command": "think-tool", // or absolute path, f.e.: /opt/bin/think-tool
"transport": "stdio"
}
}
}
- Add the following rule to your Cursor rules:
Before taking any action or responding to the user after receiving tool results, use the think tool as a scratchpad to:
- List the specific rules that apply to the current request
- Check if all required information is collected
- Verify that the planned action complies with all policies
- Iterate over tool results for correctness
Here are some examples of what to iterate over inside the think tool: <think_tool_example_1> User wants to cancel flight ABC123
- Need to verify: user ID, reservation ID, reason
- Check cancellation rules:
- Is it within 24h of booking?
- If not, check ticket class and insurance
- Verify no segments flown or are in the past
- Plan: collect missing info, verify rules, get confirmation </think_tool_example_1>
<think_tool_example_2> User wants to book 3 tickets to NYC with 2 checked bags each
- Need user ID to check:
- Membership tier for baggage allowance
- Which payments methods exist in profile
- Baggage calculation:
- Economy class × 3 passengers
- If regular member: 1 free bag each → 3 extra bags = $150
- If silver member: 2 free bags each → 0 extra bags = $0
- If gold member: 3 free bags each → 0 extra bags = $0
- Payment rules to verify:
- Max 1 travel certificate, 1 credit card, 3 gift cards
- All payment methods must be in profile
- Travel certificate remainder goes to waste
- Plan:
- Get user ID
- Verify membership level for bag fees
- Check which payment methods in profile and if their combination is allowed
- Calculate total: ticket price + any bag fees
- Get explicit confirmation for booking </think_tool_example_2>
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is MCP?
MCP (Model Context Protocol) is an open protocol that standardizes how applications provide context to LLMs. Think of MCP like a USB-C port for AI applications, providing a standardized way to connect AI models to different data sources and tools.
What are MCP Servers?
MCP Servers are lightweight programs that expose specific capabilities through the standardized Model Context Protocol. They act as bridges between LLMs like Claude and various data sources or services, allowing secure access to files, databases, APIs, and other resources.
How do MCP Servers work?
MCP Servers follow a client-server architecture where a host application (like Claude Desktop) connects to multiple servers. Each server provides specific functionality through standardized endpoints and protocols, enabling Claude to access data and perform actions through the standardized protocol.
Are MCP Servers secure?
Yes, MCP Servers are designed with security in mind. They run locally with explicit configuration and permissions, require user approval for actions, and include built-in security features to prevent unauthorized access and ensure data privacy.
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