Galileo
Rank #6128pulsemcp/galileo
Integrates with Galileo's evaluation and observability platform to enable dataset creation, prompt template management, experiment setup, log analysis, and step-by-step integration guides for monitoring LLM application performance.
Galileo is a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server published by rungalileo. It ranks #6128 of 58,900 servers tracked on MCP Toplist, and its repository has 5 GitHub stars. Galileo is listed on PulseMCP, and ships as a single rolling release with no explicit version metadata. It was first listed on Jan 22, 2025.
Ranks ahead of 52,772 of 58,900 servers on MCP Toplist.
Use Galileo
Add Galileo to any MCP client (Claude, Cursor, VS Code, …) with one of the configs below.
{
"mcpServers": {
"galileo": {
"url": "https://api.galileo.ai/mcp/http/mcp"
}
}
}This endpoint requires authentication — see the server’s docs for credentials.
Listed on 1 registry
rungalileo
Not versioned
This server is published through a registry that does not expose explicit version metadata, and no GitHub release tags were found on the linked repository. The listing tracks a single rolling release.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Galileo?
- Integrates with Galileo's evaluation and observability platform to enable dataset creation, prompt template management, experiment setup, log analysis, and step-by-step integration guides for monitoring LLM application performance.
- Who maintains Galileo?
- Galileo is maintained by rungalileo, which publishes 1 MCP server (0 total versions) tracked on MCP Toplist.
- Is Galileo an official MCP server?
- Galileo is not on the Official MCP Registry. It is listed on PulseMCP.
- How many versions does Galileo have?
- Galileo ships as a single rolling release with no explicit version metadata.
- Where can I find the source code for Galileo?
- The source code for Galileo is hosted at github.com/rungalileo/docs-official.