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Taranis MCP Server for Cline 12 tools — connect in under 2 minutes

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Cline is an autonomous AI coding agent inside VS Code that plans, executes, and iterates on tasks. Wire Taranis through Vinkius and Cline gains direct access to every tool. from data retrieval to workflow automation. without leaving the terminal.

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Classic Setup·json
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "taranis": {
      "url": "https://edge.vinkius.com/[YOUR_TOKEN_HERE]/mcp"
    }
  }
}
Taranis
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Stream every event to Splunk, Datadog, or your own webhook in real-time

* Every MCP server runs on Vinkius-managed infrastructure inside AWS - a purpose-built runtime with per-request V8 isolates, Ed25519 signed audit chains, and sub-40ms cold starts optimized for native MCP execution. See our infrastructure

About Taranis MCP Server

Connect your Taranis AI Scouting API to any AI agent and take full control of AI-powered crop threat detection, ultra-high-resolution imagery analysis, field scouting recommendations, and precision agriculture decision-making through natural conversation.

Cline operates autonomously inside VS Code. it reads your codebase, plans a strategy, and executes multi-step tasks including Taranis tool calls without waiting for prompts between steps. Connect 12 tools through Vinkius and Cline can fetch data, generate code, and commit changes in a single autonomous run.

What you can do

  • Organizations — List all agricultural organizations and farms in your Taranis account
  • Field Management — View all monitored fields with crop types, boundaries, and growth stages
  • Flight History — Review all drone and aircraft flight missions with imagery acquisition dates
  • Flight Imagery — Access ultra-high-resolution orthomosaics, DSMs, and NDVI maps from each flight
  • All Detections — Get comprehensive AI-detected threats (weeds, diseases, pests, nutrients) in any field
  • Threat Summary — View consolidated threat severity assessments and trend analysis per field
  • Scouting Recommendations — Receive AI-powered action plans for targeted field scouting missions
  • Multispectral Analysis — Access NDVI, NDRE, and GNDVI vegetation indices for vigor assessment
  • Weed Detection — Identify specific weed species with coverage estimates and herbicide recommendations
  • Disease Detection — Detect crop diseases with severity levels and fungicide treatment suggestions
  • Nutrient Analysis — Identify nutrient deficiencies with variable rate fertilization recommendations

The Taranis MCP Server exposes 12 tools through the Vinkius. Connect it to Cline in under two minutes — no API keys to rotate, no infrastructure to provision, no vendor lock-in. Your configuration, your data, your control.

How to Connect Taranis to Cline via MCP

Follow these steps to integrate the Taranis MCP Server with Cline.

01

Open Cline MCP Settings

Click the MCP Servers icon in the Cline sidebar panel

02

Add remote server

Click "Add MCP Server" and paste the configuration above

03

Enable the server

Toggle the server switch to ON

04

Start using Taranis

Ask Cline: "Using Taranis, help me...". 12 tools available

Why Use Cline with the Taranis MCP Server

Cline provides unique advantages when paired with Taranis through the Model Context Protocol.

01

Cline operates autonomously. it reads your codebase, plans a strategy, and executes multi-step tasks including MCP tool calls without step-by-step prompts

02

Runs inside VS Code, so you get MCP tool access alongside your existing extensions, terminal, and version control in a single window

03

Cline can create, edit, and delete files based on MCP tool responses, enabling end-to-end automation from data retrieval to code generation

04

Transparent execution: every tool call and file change is shown in Cline's activity log for full visibility and approval before committing

Taranis + Cline Use Cases

Practical scenarios where Cline combined with the Taranis MCP Server delivers measurable value.

01

Autonomous feature building: tell Cline to fetch data from Taranis and scaffold a complete module with types, handlers, and tests

02

Codebase refactoring: use Taranis tools to validate live data while Cline restructures your code to match updated schemas

03

Automated testing: Cline fetches real responses from Taranis and generates snapshot tests or mocks based on actual payloads

04

Incident response: query Taranis for real-time status and let Cline generate hotfix patches based on the findings

Taranis MCP Tools for Cline (12)

These 12 tools become available when you connect Taranis to Cline via MCP:

01

get_detections

Returns detection locations (GPS coordinates), threat types (weeds, diseases, pests, nutrient deficiencies), severity levels, confidence scores, affected area estimates, and recommended actions. Detections are classified by AI models trained on millions of field images for sub-millimeter accuracy. Essential for early threat identification, targeted scouting, and precision treatment planning. AI agents should use this when users ask "show me all detections in my field", "what threats were detected in field X", or need comprehensive threat analysis before planning field operations. Optional threatType filters detections by specific threat category. Get all AI-detected crop threats (weeds, diseases, pests, nutrient deficiencies) in a field

02

get_disease_detections

Returns disease locations, pathogen identification where possible, severity levels (early, moderate, advanced), affected plant parts, and recommended fungicide treatments. Essential for early disease intervention, fungicide planning, and yield loss prevention. AI agents should reference this when users ask "what diseases are in my soybean field", "show disease progression over time", or need disease-specific analysis for crop protection decisions. Get crop disease detections and severity assessments for a field

03

get_field_details

Essential for understanding field context before analyzing detections, planning scouting missions, or generating management recommendations. AI agents should reference this when users ask "tell me about this field", "what crop is planted in field X", or need detailed field metadata for context-aware analysis. Get detailed information about a specific agricultural field

04

get_fields

Returns field names, IDs, boundaries (GeoJSON polygons), area in hectares/acres, crop type, planting dates, and monitoring status. Essential for farm management overview, field inventory, and selecting target fields for threat detection and scouting analysis. AI agents should use this when users ask "show me all fields in my organization", "list monitored fields", or need to identify available fields for detection or flight queries. Optional orgId filters fields by specific organization. List all agricultural fields monitored by Taranis for an organization

05

get_flight_imagery

Returns orthomosaic mosaics, digital surface models (DSM), digital terrain models (DTM), normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) maps, and true-color RGB composites. Essential for visual crop assessment, change detection between flights, and downloading high-resolution imagery for GIS analysis. AI agents should reference this when users ask "show me the latest imagery from this flight", "get the NDVI map for flight X", or need specific imagery products for field analysis. Get ultra-high-resolution imagery products from a specific flight mission

06

get_flights

Returns flight dates, times, aircraft type, imagery resolution, weather conditions during flight, coverage percentage, and processing status. Essential for understanding imagery acquisition history, assessing data quality, and selecting specific flights for detailed analysis. AI agents should use this when users ask "show me all flights over my corn field", "what imagery was captured last week", or need flight metadata before accessing specific imagery products. List all drone or aircraft flights that captured imagery for a specific field

07

get_multispectral_imagery

Supports indices including NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index), NDRE (Normalized Difference Red Edge), GNDVI (Green NDVI), and custom band combinations. Returns imagery layers, statistical summaries (mean, min, max, std), and zone classifications. Essential for crop vigor assessment, variable rate application planning, and growth stage monitoring. AI agents should reference this when users ask "show me NDVI map for my field", "get multispectral analysis", or need vegetation index data for precision agriculture planning. Get multispectral imagery and vegetation indices (NDVI, NDRE, GNDVI) for a field

08

get_nutrient_detections

Returns deficiency locations, severity estimates, affected growth stages, and variable rate fertilization recommendations. Essential for precision nutrient management, yield optimization, and cost-efficient fertilization planning. AI agents should use this when users ask "does my field have nutrient deficiencies", "where do I need to apply nitrogen", or need nutrient-specific analysis for variable rate application planning. Get nutrient deficiency detections and fertilization recommendations for a field

09

get_organizations

Returns organization names, IDs, contact information, and field counts. Essential for multi-account management, selecting target organizations for field analysis, and understanding the scope of monitored agricultural operations. AI agents should use this when users ask "show me all my organizations", "list farms I have access to", or need to identify available organizations before querying fields or detections. List all organizations available to the user in Taranis platform

10

get_scouting_recommendations

Returns specific action items including ground truth verification locations, recommended scouting patterns, treatment suggestions, timing recommendations, and priority levels. Essential for field team coordination, targeted scouting missions, and data-driven treatment decisions. AI agents should use this when users ask "what should I scout for in my field this week", "give me scouting recommendations", or need AI-generated action plans based on latest imagery analysis. Get AI-powered scouting recommendations and action plans for a field

11

get_threats

Returns threat categories, overall severity ratings (low, medium, high, critical), affected area percentages, trend analysis (increasing, stable, decreasing), and priority rankings. Essential for quick field health assessment, prioritizing scouting missions, and making informed treatment decisions. AI agents should reference this when users ask "what is the overall threat level in my field", "summarize field health status", or need a high-level threat overview before diving into individual detections. Get consolidated threat summary and severity assessment for a field

12

get_weed_detections

Returns weed locations, estimated coverage area, species classification, growth stage, and herbicide resistance indicators. Essential for targeted spot spraying, herbicide selection, and resistance management. AI agents should use this when users ask "where are the weeds in my field", "what weed species were detected", or need weed-specific analysis for precision herbicide application. Get specific weed species detections and infestation maps for a field

Example Prompts for Taranis in Cline

Ready-to-use prompts you can give your Cline agent to start working with Taranis immediately.

01

"Show me all AI-detected threats in my corn field from the latest flight."

02

"Generate scouting recommendations for my soybean field this week."

03

"What is the overall threat level and NDVI trend for my wheat field this season?"

Troubleshooting Taranis MCP Server with Cline

Common issues when connecting Taranis to Cline through the Vinkius, and how to resolve them.

01

Server shows error in sidebar

Click the server name to see logs. Verify the URL and token are correct.

Taranis + Cline FAQ

Common questions about integrating Taranis MCP Server with Cline.

01

How does Cline connect to MCP servers?

Cline reads MCP server configurations from its settings panel in VS Code. Add the server URL and Cline discovers all available tools on initialization.
02

Can Cline run MCP tools without approval?

By default, Cline asks for confirmation before executing tool calls. You can configure auto-approval rules for trusted servers in the settings.
03

Does Cline support multiple MCP servers at once?

Yes. Configure as many servers as needed. Cline can use tools from different servers within the same autonomous task execution.

Connect Taranis to Cline

Get your token, paste the configuration, and start using 12 tools in under 2 minutes. No API key management needed.