Abscissa
FreeNot checkedA Python stdio MCP server for Linear's GraphQL API, providing 35 tools to manage issues, projects, cycles, dependencies, comments, labels, workflow states, team
About
A Python stdio MCP server for Linear's GraphQL API, providing 35 tools to manage issues, projects, cycles, dependencies, comments, labels, workflow states, teams, and users with cursor-paginated results and destructive action confirmation.
README
Abscissa is a Python stdio MCP server for Linear. It turns Linear's GraphQL API into 42 tools for an MCP client: issues, projects, cycles, dependencies, comments, labels, workflow states, teams, and users.
The design priority is deliberate control over project data. Read operations
return cursor-paginated results; get_user_issues() resolves the authenticated
Linear user; archive and delete tools require an explicit confirm=true before
they make a destructive API call. The server stores no credentials and reads
LINEAR_API_KEY from its process environment.
Abscissa uses the stdio transport from the Model Context Protocol. Any client that supports stdio MCP can launch it as a local tool process.
Run it
You need Python 3.10+ and a Linear personal API key.
git clone https://github.com/KazKozDev/abscissa.git
cd abscissa
python3 -m venv .venv
.venv/bin/pip install -e '.[dev]'
export LINEAR_API_KEY='lin_api_…'
.venv/bin/abscissa
You can also install Abscissa directly from PyPI:
pip install abscissa
The final command starts the MCP server on standard input and output. Register
.venv/bin/abscissa as a stdio command in your MCP client, and pass
LINEAR_API_KEY through that client's environment or secret manager.
The key remains outside the repository. The .gitignore excludes common local
environment files, including .env and .venv.
Example prompts
Once Abscissa is registered in your MCP client, try prompts like:
Show my open Linear issues grouped by project.
Create an issue in ENG for fixing onboarding copy.
List issues blocked by GEN-32.
Tools
| Area | Tools |
|---|---|
| Identity | get_current_user |
| Issues | create_issue, update_issue, search_issues, get_user_issues, get_issue, assign_issue, add_comment, set_issue_estimate |
| Issue lifecycle | archive_issue, delete_issue |
| Dependencies | list_issue_dependencies, add_issue_dependency, remove_issue_dependency |
| Labels and workflow | list_workflow_states, list_issue_labels, create_label, add_issue_label, remove_issue_label |
| Teams and people | list_teams, get_team, list_users |
| Projects | create_project, get_project, list_projects, list_project_issues, set_issue_project, remove_issue_from_project, update_project, update_project_details, archive_project |
| Project labels | list_project_labels, create_project_label, add_project_label, remove_project_label |
| Project updates | create_project_update, list_project_updates |
| Cycles | create_cycle, update_cycle, archive_cycle, list_cycles, list_cycle_issues |
Search and list tools accept limit and cursor. Their responses keep the same
shape:
{
"items": [],
"next_cursor": null
}
Pass a non-null next_cursor back as cursor to request the next page.
list_issue_dependencies returns separate blocks and blocked_by lists.
Each item includes its relation_id; use it to remove that dependency. Its
next_cursors object has separate cursors for each direction.
Destructive actions
archive_issue, archive_project, and delete_issue are marked with MCP's
destructiveHint. They refuse to call Linear until the client invokes them
with confirm=true.
Deletion requires explicit confirmation: set confirm=true
This prevents an accidental tool call from deleting or archiving data. It does not replace Linear's own access controls: the API key still determines which resources the server may read or change.
Verify the checkout
.venv/bin/ruff check .
.venv/bin/python -m pytest
The current checkout produces:
All checks passed!
.......... [100%]
10 passed
The tests cover pagination bounds and response shape, authenticated-user issue resolution, project membership, cycle queries, dependency direction, confirmation guards, cycle lifecycle operations, and MCP tool registration. GitHub Actions runs the same lint and test commands on Python 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, and 3.13.
Limitations
Abscissa is a local stdio server, not an HTTP service. It needs a running MCP-capable client and a valid Linear API key. The automated suite avoids mutating a real Linear workspace; create, update, archive, and delete behavior is therefore protected by unit tests rather than a live write test.
License
Install Abscissa in Claude Desktop, Claude Code & Cursor
unyly install abscissaInstalls into Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor & VS Code — handles npx, uvx and build-from-source repos for you.
First time? Get the CLI: curl -fsSL https://unyly.org/install | sh
Or configure manually
Run in your terminal:
claude mcp add abscissa -- uvx abscissaFAQ
Is Abscissa MCP free?
Yes, Abscissa MCP is free — one-click install via Unyly at no cost.
Does Abscissa need an API key?
No, Abscissa runs without API keys or environment variables.
Is Abscissa hosted or self-hosted?
A hosted option is available: Unyly runs the server in the cloud, no local setup required.
How do I install Abscissa in Claude Desktop, Claude Code or Cursor?
Open Abscissa on unyly.org, pick your client tab (Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor) and press Install — the config is generated automatically, no JSON editing.
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