AI agents invoke limiter to trigger actions in AudacityMCP. What it does depends on the arguments the agent supplies, and its effects often reach beyond the immediate call — builds kicked off, notifications sent, workflows started.
Based on the server context (Audacity audio editing/processing) and the tool name 'limiter', this likely applies a dynamic range limiter to audio — an audio processing operation that modifies the audio signal. With no description, confidence is low. The most applicable category is Execute (triggers an external audio processing operation in Audacity), or potentially Write (modifies audio data).
From the tool's definition Tool name 'limiter' on an audio editing server; description is empty and uninformative.
Documented attack patterns abuse exactly the kind of access limiter gives an agent:
PolicyLayer is an MCP gateway — it sits between your AI agents and AudacityMCP, and nothing reaches the server without passing your rules. This is the rule we recommend for limiter:
{
"version": "1",
"default": "deny",
"tools": {
"limiter": {
"limits": [
{
"counter": "limiter_rate",
"window": "minute",
"max": 10,
"scope": "grant"
}
]
}
}
} limiter stays usable, but rate-capped — a runaway agent can't fire it dozens of times a minute. Everything else on the server is denied unless you say otherwise.
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limiter. It is categorised as a Execute tool in the AudacityMCP MCP Server, which means it can trigger actions or run processes. Use rate limits and argument validation.
Register the Audacity MCP server in PolicyLayer and add a rule for limiter: allow, deny, rate-limit, or require approval. Point your MCP client at the PolicyLayer proxy URL and the rule is enforced on every call, before it reaches AudacityMCP. Nothing to install.
limiter is a Execute tool with high risk. Execute tools should be rate-limited and have argument validation enabled.
Yes. Add a rate_limit block to the limiter rule in your PolicyLayer policy. For example, setting max: 10 and window: 60 limits the tool to 10 calls per minute. Rate limits are tracked per agent session and reset automatically.
Set action: deny in the PolicyLayer policy for limiter. The AI agent will receive a policy violation error and cannot call the tool. You can also include a reason field to explain why the tool is blocked.
limiter is provided by the Audacity MCP server (xdarkzx/audacity-mcp). PolicyLayer sits as a proxy in front of this server to enforce policies before tool calls reach the server.
Deterministic rules across all 131 AudacityMCP tools. Per-identity grants. Full audit log. Live in minutes. Nothing to install.
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131 AudacityMCP tools catalogued and risk-classified — across an index of 42,500+ MCP servers.