From datadog
Manages toolsets for the Datadog MCP server: view, enable, or disable tool groups to control available tools. Use when configuring Datadog MCP integration.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/datadog:ddtoolsetsThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
The id of the Datadog MCP Server referenced on this document is `plugin:datadog:mcp`. You MUST use this specific server even if there are other Datadog servers.
The id of the Datadog MCP Server referenced on this document is plugin:datadog:mcp. You MUST use this specific server even if there are other Datadog servers.
Read references/mcp-settings.md before proceeding. It contains the datadog-server-state check, registration file location, and editing rules used by the flows below.
Check the datadog-server-state (see mcp-settings.md). Use the datadog://mcp/toolsets resource on the plugin:datadog:mcp server as the MCP call (do NOT use any other Datadog MCP server). Do not output anything until the datadog-server-state and resource content are available, and proceed based on the results:
/ddsetup, and stop./ddconfig, and stop.When communicating with the user below, describe the server state and actions in plain language. Do not reveal what was checked, what was found, or any implementation details like file contents or variable values.
A toolset is a named group of related tools for a specific Datadog feature. Enabling a toolset makes its tools available; disabling it removes them.
The DD_MCP_TOOLSETS default value in the registration file controls which toolsets are active. It has two states:
${DD_MCP_TOOLSETS:-}) — the server decides which toolsets to enable. This is the preferred state because the plugin automatically picks up new default toolsets added by the server in the future.${DD_MCP_TOOLSETS:-core,alerting}) — exactly these toolsets are enabled, nothing more. The server's defaults are ignored. If the server adds a new default toolset later, this plugin will NOT pick it up.The order of toolsets in the comma-separated list is not meaningful. core,alerting and alerting,core are equivalent. When comparing lists (e.g. to check if the result matches the defaults), compare as sets, not strings.
When computing changes, always prefer empty over an explicit list that happens to match the current defaults. See the editing rule in mcp-settings.md for how to set an empty default value.
Use the content of the datadog://mcp/toolsets resource from the plugin:datadog:mcp MCP server. This tells you which toolsets exist, which are currently enabled, which are defaults, and what each one does. Present all toolsets to the user — do not summarize and do choose the best format for the client (selectable list, table, grouped summary, etc.). Make it easy for the user to identify which toolsets are currently enabled and which toolsets are available to them.
Also read the current DD_MCP_TOOLSETS default value from the registration file. If it is empty, the user is currently using server defaults. If it has an explicit list, those are the manually selected toolsets.
Any toolset name in the registration file that does not appear in the datadog://mcp/toolsets resource is unknown — ignore it when presenting to the user and silently drop it when writing the updated list.
The user may want to:
Understand the user's intent from their response. Ask for clarification if ambiguous.
Important: If the current default value is empty (server defaults) and the user wants to add a toolset, you need to know what the defaults ARE so you can build the full list. Use the default information from the datadog://mcp/toolsets resource.
Apply the user's changes to produce a new comma-separated value for DD_MCP_TOOLSETS:
core → warn the user before applying. The core toolset provides essential Datadog functionality and most workflows depend on it. Only proceed without core if the user explicitly confirms.Edit DD_MCP_TOOLSETS in the registration file following the editing rule in mcp-settings.md.
Example — adding alerting when currently using server defaults (assuming core and synthetics are defaults):
${DD_MCP_TOOLSETS:-} → ${DD_MCP_TOOLSETS:-core,synthetics,alerting}
Example — reverting to server defaults:
${DD_MCP_TOOLSETS:-core,alerting} → ${DD_MCP_TOOLSETS:-}
Then silently write the new DD_MCP_TOOLSETS value to ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_DATA}/toolsets (plain text, one line — write an empty file if reverting to server defaults).
Tell the user the toolsets have been updated including which toolsets are now enabled, and that they need to follow these steps:
/reload-plugins/mcp in Claude Code and select the plugin:datadog:mcp serverGuides creation, editing, and verification of skills for AI coding agents using test-driven development with subagent scenarios. Use when authoring or debugging skills.
npx claudepluginhub anthropics/claude-plugins-official --plugin datadog