Codex is one of the most popular coding harnesses out there. And MCP makes the experience even better. With Supadata MCP integration, you can draft, triage, summarise emails, and much more, all without leaving the terminal or the app, whichever you prefer.
Table of Contents
Connect Supadata without Auth hassles
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Also integrate Supadata with
Why use Composio?
Apart from a managed and hosted MCP server, you will get:
- CodeAct: A dedicated workbench that allows GPT to write its code to handle complex tool chaining. Reduces to-and-fro with LLMs for frequent tool calling.
- Large tool responses: Handle them to minimise context rot.
- Dynamic just-in-time access to 20,000 tools across 870+ other Apps for cross-app workflows. It loads the tools you need, so GPTs aren't overwhelmed by tools you don't need.
How to install Supadata MCP in Codex
Run the setup command
Run this command in your terminal to add the Composio MCP server to Codex.
It will initiate the authentication in a browser window, authorize Codex to access your Composio account.
(Optional) Authenticate with OAuth
To authenticate manually, run the login command to open a browser window and authorize Codex to access your Composio account.
Verify the connection
Run codex mcp list to confirm Composio appears as a registered MCP server.
Codex App
Codex App follows the same approach as VS Code.
- Click ⚙️ on the bottom left → MCP Servers → + Add servers → Streamable HTTP:
- Fill the header and Key fields with
{ "x-consumer-api-key" = "ck_*******" }. - The Key is the Composio API key, that you can find on connect.composio.dev
- Click on Authenticate and authorize Codex to your Composio account and you're all set.
- Restart and verify if it's there in
.codex/config.toml
What is the Supadata MCP server, and what's possible with it?
The Supadata MCP server is an implementation of the Model Context Protocol that connects your AI agent and assistants like Claude, Cursor, etc directly to your Supadata account. It provides structured and secure access to web and video data extraction tools, so your agent can perform actions like scraping websites, mapping URLs, transcribing YouTube videos, and gathering channel or playlist metadata on your behalf.
- Comprehensive website scraping and content extraction: Instruct your agent to pull structured content from any website, enabling programmatic parsing and analysis for research or automation.
- Automated sitemap and URL mapping: Let your agent retrieve all URLs from a given website, making it easy to analyze site structure or perform link audits.
- YouTube video and channel metadata retrieval: Have your agent fetch detailed metadata for any YouTube video, playlist, or channel—including titles, descriptions, stats, and more.
- YouTube search and discovery: Empower your agent to search YouTube for videos, channels, or playlists by keyword, streamlining content discovery and curation tasks.
- Playlist and channel video extraction: Direct your agent to list and export videos from specific YouTube channels or playlists, complete with pagination support for large collections.
Supported Tools & Triggers
Conclusion
You've successfully integrated Supadata with Codex using Composio's MCP server. Now you can interact with Supadata directly from your terminal, VS Code, or the Codex App using natural language commands.
Key benefits of this setup:
- Seamless integration across CLI, VS Code, and standalone app
- Natural language commands for Supadata operations
- Managed authentication through Composio
- Access to 20,000+ tools across 870+ apps for cross-app workflows
- CodeAct workbench for complex tool chaining
Next steps:
- Try asking Codex to perform various Supadata operations
- Explore cross-app workflows by connecting more toolkits
- Build automation scripts that leverage Codex's AI capabilities










