RAD Security MCP Server
by rad-security
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for RAD Security, providing AI-powered security insights for Kubernetes and cloud environments.
Last updated: N/A
What is RAD Security MCP Server?
The RAD Security MCP Server is a Model Context Protocol server designed to provide AI-powered security insights for Kubernetes and cloud environments. It enables users to monitor, analyze, and secure their cloud infrastructure.
How to use RAD Security MCP Server?
The server can be installed via npm and requires a RAD Security account and API key. Environment variables for access key ID, secret key, and account ID must be configured. It can be run directly, using a start script, in Claude Desktop, or as a Docker container.
Key features of RAD Security MCP Server
Account Inventory
Containers Inventory
Security Findings
Runtime Security (process trees, baselines, behavior analysis)
Network Security (HTTP requests, network connections, pattern analysis)
Identity and Access
Audit (who shelled into a pod)
Cloud Security (resource monitoring and compliance)
Images (SBOMs, vulnerability scanning)
Kubernetes Objects (details and listing)
Threat Vector (details and listing)
Use cases of RAD Security MCP Server
Monitoring and securing Kubernetes environments
Analyzing security findings in cloud infrastructure
Detecting and responding to runtime security threats
Improving cloud resource compliance and security posture
FAQ from RAD Security MCP Server
What is a RAD Security account?
What is a RAD Security account?
A RAD Security account is required to use the MCP server and access its security insights.
How do I get a RAD Security API key?
How do I get a RAD Security API key?
You can obtain a RAD Security API key (access key ID and secret key) from your RAD Security account settings.
What Node.js version is required?
What Node.js version is required?
Node.js 20.x or higher is required to run the MCP server.
How do I configure environment variables?
How do I configure environment variables?
Environment variables can be set directly in your shell, in a start script, or within a Docker container.
What kind of security insights does the server provide?
What kind of security insights does the server provide?
The server provides insights into account inventory, containers, security findings, runtime security, network security, identity and access, audits, cloud security, images and kubernetes objects.