Bring Code Review
to Cursor
Create your Vinkius account to connect DeepSource to Cursor and start using all 14 AI tools in minutes. Fully managed, enterprise secure, and ready to use without writing a single line of code. No hosting, no server setup — just connect and start using.
Compatible with every major AI agent and IDE
What is the DeepSource MCP Server?
Connect your DeepSource account to any AI agent and take full control of code quality analysis, vulnerability detection, and metrics monitoring through natural conversation.
What you can do
- Code Issues — List and inspect code quality issues (code smells, anti-patterns, bugs) across repositories with severity and file locations
- Analysis History — View recent analysis runs with status, branch, and analyzer information (Python, JavaScript, Go, etc.)
- Security Vulnerabilities — Identify dependency vulnerabilities (SCA) with CVE IDs, CVSS scores, reachability, and fixability status
- Code Metrics — Query maintainability index, cyclomatic complexity, lines of code, and test coverage percentages
- Report Cards — Get overall repository health grades (A-F) with score breakdowns and trend analysis
- SCA Targets — List all dependency manifest files being scanned for supply chain security
- Repository Management — Activate/deactivate repos, update default branches, and regenerate DSN tokens
How it works
- Subscribe to this server
- Enter your DeepSource Personal Access Token
- Start monitoring code quality, reviewing issues, and tracking vulnerabilities from Claude, Cursor, or any MCP-compatible client
No more manual navigation through the DeepSource dashboard. Your AI acts as a dedicated code quality analyst or security reviewer.
Who is this for?
- Engineering Managers — instantly review code quality grades, issue counts, and analysis status across multiple repositories without opening the dashboard
- Security Teams — monitor dependency vulnerabilities with CVE details, CVSS scores, and prioritize remediation based on reachability
- Developers — check code issues, metrics, and report cards directly from the IDE to fix quality problems before merging
- DevOps Leads — manage repository activation status, default branches, and DSN rotation across the organization
Built-in capabilities (14)
Once activated, DeepSource will start analyzing the code on each push/PR. You must provide the repository ID (obtained from get_repository). Use this to enable code quality monitoring for a repository that was previously inactive. Activate a repository for code analysis in DeepSource
No new analyses will run until the repository is reactivated. You must provide the repository ID (obtained from get_repository). Use this to pause analysis for archived repositories or when you want to stop billing for a specific repository. Deactivate a repository to stop code analysis in DeepSource
This provides a quick health check of the repository's overall code quality status. You must provide the repository name, login, and VCS provider. Use this to get a high-level view of code quality trends and identify areas needing improvement. Get the overall report card (grade) for a repository
You must provide the repository name, login (user or org name), and VCS provider (e.g., GITHUB, GITLAB, BITBUCKET). Use this to inspect repository configuration before querying issues, analyses, or metrics. Get details of a specific repository in DeepSource
You must provide the repository name, login, and VCS provider. Optionally filter by specific metric shortcodes (e.g., "LCV" for line coverage, "MI" for maintainability index, "CC" for cyclomatic complexity). If no shortcodes specified, returns all available metrics with their values and thresholds. Get code quality metrics for a repository
Shows the coverage percentage value and any configured thresholds. You must provide the repository name, login, and VCS provider. Use this to monitor code quality and ensure adequate test coverage across your codebase. Get test coverage metrics for a repository
Use this to verify your API token is working and to get your user details from DeepSource. Get the authenticated user profile from DeepSource
You must provide the repository name, login, VCS provider, and the vulnerability occurrence ID (obtained from list_vulnerabilities). Use this to deep-dive into a specific vulnerability before deciding on remediation steps. Get details of a specific dependency vulnerability by its ID
You must provide the repository name, login, and VCS provider. Optionally filter by branch name and limit the number of results (default: 20). Each run shows which analyzer was used (e.g., PYTHON, JAVASCRIPT, GO) and whether the analysis succeeded or failed. List recent code analysis runs for a repository
You must provide the repository name, login, and VCS provider. Optionally filter by analyzer short code (e.g., "PYTHON", "JS-A1") and limit results (default: 50). Each issue includes up to 3 sample occurrences with file path and line number. Use this to identify code smells, anti-patterns, and potential bugs across your codebase. List code quality issues in a repository
Each target includes ecosystem (e.g., npm, pip, gem), package manager, manifest file path, and activation status. You must provide the repository name, login, and VCS provider. Use this to understand which dependency files are being scanned for vulnerabilities. List all SCA (Supply Chain Analysis) targets in a repository
Each vulnerability includes severity, CVE ID, CVSS score, description, affected package name and version, reachability status, and fixability. You must provide the repository name, login, and VCS provider. Optionally limit the number of results (default: 20). Use this to identify security risks in your dependencies and prioritize remediation. List dependency vulnerabilities in a repository (SCA)
The DSN is used to authenticate DeepSource analysis runs. You must provide the repository ID (obtained from get_repository). This action invalidates the old DSN and returns the new one. Use this if you suspect the DSN has been compromised or needs rotation. Regenerate the DSN (Data Source Name) for a repository
This affects which branch is analyzed by default. You must provide the repository ID (from get_repository) and the new branch name (e.g., "main", "develop", "master"). Use this when your team changes the default branch name (e.g., migrating from "master" to "main"). Update the default branch for a repository in DeepSource
Why Cursor?
Cursor's Agent mode turns DeepSource into an in-editor superpower. Ask Cursor to generate code using live data from DeepSource and it fetches, processes, and writes. all in a single agentic loop. 14 tools appear alongside file editing and terminal access, creating a unified development environment grounded in real-time information.
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Agent mode turns Cursor into an autonomous coding assistant that can read files, run commands, and call MCP tools without switching context
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Cursor's Composer feature can generate entire files using real-time data fetched through MCP. no copy-pasting from external dashboards
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MCP tools appear alongside built-in tools like file reading and terminal access, creating a unified agentic environment
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VS Code extension compatibility means your existing workflow, keybindings, and extensions all work alongside MCP tools
DeepSource in Cursor
Why run DeepSource with Vinkius?
The DeepSource connection runs on our fully managed, secure cloud infrastructure. We handle the hosting, maintenance, and security so you don't have to deal with servers or code. All 14 tools are ready to work instantly without any complex setup.
You stay in complete control of your data. Your AI only accesses the information you approve, keeping your sensitive passwords and private details completely safe. Plus, with automatic optimizations, your AI works faster and more efficiently.

* Every connection is hosted and maintained by Vinkius. We handle the security, updates, and infrastructure so you don't have to write code or manage servers. See our infrastructure
Over 4,000 integrations ready for AI agents
Explore a vast library of pre-built integrations, optimized and ready to deploy.
Connect securely in under 30 seconds
Generate tokens to authenticate and link external services in a single step.
Complete visibility into every agent action
Audit live requests, latency, success rates, and active security compliance policies.
Optimize spending and track token ROI
Analyze real-time token consumption and cost metrics detailed by connection.




Explore our live AI Agents Analytics dashboard to see it all working
This dashboard is included when you connect DeepSource using Vinkius. You will never be left in the dark about what your AI agents are doing with your tools.
DeepSource and 4,000+ other AI tools. No hosting, no code, ready to use.
Professionals who connect DeepSource to Cursor through Vinkius don't need to write code, manage servers, or worry about security. Everything is pre-configured, secure, and runs automatically in the background.
Raw MCP | Vinkius | |
|---|---|---|
| Ready-to-use MCPs | Find and configure each manually | 4,000+ MCPs ready to use |
| Connection Setup | Manual coding & server setup | 1-click instant connection |
| Server Hosting | You host it yourself (needs 24/7 uptime) | 100% hosted & managed by Vinkius |
| Security & Privacy | Stored in plaintext config files | Bank-grade encrypted vault |
| Activity Visibility | Blind execution (no logs or tracking) | Live dashboard with real-time logs |
| Cost Control | Runaway AI token spend risk | Automatic budget limits |
| Revoking Access | Must delete files or code to stop | 1-click disconnect button |
How Vinkius secures
DeepSource for Cursor
Every request between Cursor and DeepSource is protected by our secure gateway. We automatically keep your sensitive data private, prevent unauthorized access, and let you disconnect instantly at any time.
Frequently asked questions
How do I get a DeepSource Personal Access Token and where do I find it?
Log in to your DeepSource account, go to Account Settings → Personal Access Tokens, and click Create New Token. Give it a descriptive name (e.g., 'Vinkius MCP') and copy the token immediately — it won't be shown again. Paste this token into the API key field below. The token is used as a Bearer token in the Authorization header for all GraphQL requests to https://api.deepsource.com/graphql/.
What types of code issues can DeepSource detect and how are they categorized?
DeepSource detects various code quality issues including code smells, anti-patterns, performance issues, security vulnerabilities, and bugs. Issues are categorized by severity (CRITICAL, HIGH, MEDIUM, LOW) and by analyzer type (e.g., PYTHON for Python issues, JS-A1 for JavaScript anti-patterns, GO for Go issues). Each issue includes a shortcode, title, category, and file locations with line numbers. You can filter issues by analyzer short code when querying repositories.
How does DeepSource detect dependency vulnerabilities and what information is provided?
DeepSource uses Supply Chain Analysis (SCA) to scan dependency manifest files (package.json, requirements.txt, Gemfile, etc.) for known vulnerabilities. Each vulnerability includes: CVE ID, CVSS score (0-10), severity level, description, affected package name and version, ecosystem (npm, pip, etc.), reachability status (whether the vulnerable code is actually called), and fixability (whether a fix version is available). This helps prioritize which vulnerabilities to address first based on real risk rather than just theoretical severity.
What is the API rate limit and how many requests can I make per hour?
DeepSource enforces a rate limit of 5,000 requests per hour per user account. This limit covers both read (queries) and write (mutations) operations. If you exceed this limit, the API will return HTTP 429 (Too Many Requests). For most code review and monitoring workflows, this limit is more than sufficient. If you need higher limits for large-scale analysis, contact DeepSource support.
What is Agent mode and why does it matter for MCP?
Agent mode is Cursor's autonomous execution mode where the AI can perform multi-step tasks: reading files, editing code, running terminal commands, and calling MCP tools. Without Agent mode, Cursor operates in a simpler ask-and-answer mode that doesn't support tool calling. Always ensure you're in Agent mode when working with MCP servers.
Where does Cursor store MCP configuration?
Cursor looks for MCP server configurations in a mcp.json file. You can configure servers at the project level (.cursor/mcp.json in your project root) or globally (~/.cursor/mcp.json). Project-level configs take precedence.
Can Cursor use MCP tools in inline edits?
No. MCP tools are only available in Agent mode through the chat panel. Inline completions and Tab suggestions do not trigger MCP tool calls. This is by design. tool calls require user visibility and approval.
How do I verify MCP tools are loaded?
Open Settings → Features → MCP and look for your server name. A green indicator means the server is connected. You can also check Agent mode's available tools by clicking the tools dropdown in the chat panel.
Tools not appearing in Cursor
Ensure you are in Agent mode (not Ask mode). MCP tools only work in Agent mode.
Server shows as disconnected
Check Settings → Features → MCP and verify the server status. Try clicking the refresh button.
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