Odel
xhost

xhost

@yairlDeveloper ToolsMITUpdated 1w ago

Agent-first hosting: create apps, commit code, deploy, get HTTPS URLs. OAuth sign-in, no tokens.

Server endpointStreamable HTTP

This is the third-party server itself — Odel doesn't run it. Hitting this URL directly talks straight to the upstream server with no auth or proxying. Connect through Odel to front it with managed auth.

xhost SDK

Claude Code plugin for xhost — deploy static sites and dynamic applications. Push code, get HTTPS URLs.

Install

/plugin marketplace add yairl/xhost-sdk
/plugin install xhost@xhost-sdk

Installing the plugin registers both the xhost skill and the remote MCP server (https://mcp.xhostd.com/mcp/).

After installing, reload plugins in your current session:

/reload-plugins

Connect

Run /mcp, select xhost, and choose Authenticate. Your browser opens for Google sign-in — no token needed.

Usage

Just use /xhost — it handles everything:

"deploy my website"          → signs up, creates app, pushes, deploys
"check my app status"        → shows apps, channels, URLs, deploy state
"create a preview for this branch" → pushes branch, creates preview URL

Or invoke it explicitly:

/xhost

The single /xhost skill handles account setup, app creation, deploys, previews, and status checks. Claude figures out what you need from context.

What xhost supports

  • Static sites — HTML/CSS/JS served by nginx
  • Node.js apps — Express, Next.js, Fastify, Vite (provide install.sh + launch.sh)
  • Python apps — FastAPI, Flask, Django (provide install.sh + launch.sh)
  • Any language — if the runtime is in the base image, just write your scripts

How it works

  1. You push code to xhost's git server
  2. You trigger a deploy (explicitly, via /xhost or the API)
  3. xhost runs your install.sh (install deps) then launch.sh (start app on $PORT)
  4. Your app is live over HTTPS with a wildcard cert

Requirements

  • Git installed locally
  • An API token (from xhostd.com/tokens) only if you push over git or call the API with raw curl — the MCP connection itself uses OAuth, no token

License

MIT