Free TierAPI Key AuthOpenAPI Spec
InfluxDB is a time-series database designed for storing and querying metrics, events, and real-time analytics data at scale. It provides high-performance ingestion, flexible data model, and powerful query language (InfluxQL and Flux).
#31 of 69 in Database · #27 of 117 in Analytics · #21 of 52 in Monitoring
Checklist Breakdown
13 of 33 checks passed.
14 unscored.
Can an agent find and understand this tool without a web search?
✓
Published OpenAPI/Swagger spec
✗
Has llms.txt or llms-full.txt
✗
Has an MCP server (official or well-maintained)
✗
MCP server listed in a public registry
✓
API reference docs are publicly accessible
✓
Docs include runnable code examples
✓
Has a public changelog or release notes
✓
Has a public status page
Can an agent create an account and get credentials without human intervention?
✗
Signup does not require CAPTCHA
✗
Signup does not require phone verification
✓
Supports API key auth (not only OAuth)
✗
API key obtainable without manual approval
✓
No mandatory billing info to start
✓
Can sign up without creating an organization
Can an agent operate autonomously without upfront payment or contracts?
✓
Has a free tier
✓
Usage-based pricing available
✓
No minimum contract or commitment
✓
Pricing page is public (no 'contact sales')
✓
Free tier sufficient for testing (not just a trial)
How well does the API work for non-human consumers?
—
SDK available in 2+ languages
—
Structured error responses (JSON with error codes)
—
Idempotency support on write endpoints
—
Pagination on list endpoints
—
Webhook/event support
—
Sandbox or test mode available
—
Rate limit headers in responses
—
Consistent REST resource naming
Does the tool fail gracefully when an agent makes a mistake?
—
Meaningful error messages (not just 500)
—
429 responses include Retry-After header
—
Documented uptime SLA (99.9%+)
—
Graceful degradation under rate limits
—
Request IDs in responses for debugging
—
API versioning supported
Reviewer Notes
InfluxDB scores well on agent tooling with a comprehensive REST API, structured JSON responses, and well-documented SDKs (Python, Go, JavaScript, etc.). Discovery is solid due to clear API documentation and OpenAPI specs, though no MCP server or llms.txt file exists. Account creation requires human interaction (email signup + verification), limiting autonomous agent onboarding. Reliability is strong with good uptime track record and clear error responses. Pricing is the main weakness—the free tier is quite limited (3GB storage), and agents would need a paid plan for practical production use without upfront credit card setup.
Let your agents find tools like InfluxDB
Install the Agent Native Registry MCP server. Your agents can search, compare, and score tools mid-task.
claude mcp add --transport http agent-native-registry https://agentnativeregistry.com/api/mcp