How to integrate Cloudlayer MCP with Codex

Codex is one of the most popular coding harnesses out there. And MCP makes the experience even better. With Cloudlayer MCP integration, you can draft, triage, summarise emails, and much more, all without leaving the terminal or the app, whichever you prefer.

Cloudlayer logoCloudlayer
Api Key

Cloudlayer is a document and asset generation service for creating PDFs and images via API or SDKs. It lets you automate high-quality doc creation, saving dev time and reducing manual work.

16 Tools

Introduction

Codex is one of the most popular coding harnesses out there. And MCP makes the experience even better. With Cloudlayer MCP integration, you can draft, triage, summarise emails, and much more, all without leaving the terminal or the app, whichever you prefer.

Also integrate Cloudlayer 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 1000+ 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 Cloudlayer MCP in Codex

Run the setup command

Run this command in your terminal to add the Composio MCP server to Codex.

Terminal

It will initiate the authentication in a browser window, authorize Codex to access your Composio account.

Composio authentication page

(Optional) Authenticate with OAuth

To authenticate manually, run the login command to open a browser window and authorize Codex to access your Composio account.

bash
codex mcp login composio

Verify the connection

Run codex mcp list to confirm Composio appears as a registered MCP server.

bash
codex mcp list

Codex App

Codex App follows the same approach as VS Code.

  1. Click ⚙️ on the bottom left → MCP Servers → + Add servers → Streamable HTTP:
  2. Fill the header and Key fields with { "x-consumer-api-key" = "ck_*******" }.
  3. The Key is the Composio API key, that you can find on dashboard.composio.dev
  4. Click on Authenticate and authorize Codex to your Composio account and you're all set.
Codex App MCP setup
  1. Restart and verify if it's there in .codex/config.toml
bash
[mcp_servers.composio]
url = "https://connect.composio.dev/mcp"
http_headers = { "x-consumer-api-key" = "ck_*******" }

What is the Cloudlayer MCP server, and what's possible with it?

The Cloudlayer MCP server is an implementation of the Model Context Protocol that connects your AI agent and assistants like Claude, Cursor, etc directly to your Cloudlayer account. It provides structured and secure access to dynamic document and asset generation, so your agent can perform actions like converting HTML or URLs to PDFs or images, managing assets, and configuring storage on your behalf.

  • Automated PDF and image generation: Instantly convert HTML content or public URLs into professional PDFs and images for reporting, documentation, or sharing.
  • Asset management and retrieval: Let your agent fetch metadata or download links for generated assets, or list your most recent document and image creations.
  • Dynamic storage configuration: Seamlessly add and manage external storage buckets or containers for organizing generated files and assets.
  • Real-time API health monitoring: Enable your agent to check Cloudlayer API status, ensuring your integrations are always up and running.
  • Flexible screenshot and rendering tasks: Capture dynamic webpage screenshots as images or PDFs, with full control over conversion parameters, for advanced automation workflows.

Conclusion

You've successfully integrated Cloudlayer with Codex using Composio's MCP server. Now you can interact with Cloudlayer 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 Cloudlayer operations
  • Managed authentication through Composio
  • Access to 20,000+ tools across 1000+ apps for cross-app workflows
  • CodeAct workbench for complex tool chaining

Next steps:

  • Try asking Codex to perform various Cloudlayer operations
  • Explore cross-app workflows by connecting more toolkits
  • Build automation scripts that leverage Codex's AI capabilities
TOOLS

Supported Tools

Every Cloudlayer action and event your agent gets out of the box.

Add Storage

Add a user-owned S3-compatible storage configuration for storing generated assets.

Convert HTML to Image (V2)

Convert HTML content to an image (PNG, JPG, or WebP) using the v2 API endpoint.

Convert HTML to PDF (v2)

Tool to convert HTML content to PDF using CloudLayer v2 API.

Convert URL to PDF (Simple)

Tool to convert a URL to PDF using GET request.

Delete Storage Configuration

Tool to delete a specific user storage configuration.

Get Account Info

Tool to retrieve Cloudlayer account usage, credits, and document counts.

Get Asset

Tool to retrieve a specific asset by its ID.

Get Job By ID

Retrieve details of a specific Cloudlayer job by its ID.

Get API Status

Tool to test API reachability.

Get Storage Configuration by ID

Tool to retrieve a specific storage configuration by its ID.

List Assets

List assets in your CloudLayer account with cursor-based pagination.

List Jobs

List jobs in your CloudLayer account with cursor-based pagination.

List Storage Configurations

Retrieves all user storage configurations (S3-compatible buckets) for the authenticated Cloudlayer account.

Template to PDF

Generate a PDF document from an HTML/Nunjucks template with dynamic data.

Convert URL to Image

Converts a webpage URL to an image (PNG, JPG, or WebP).

Convert URL to PDF

Tool to convert a URL to PDF with full parameter support.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

With a standalone Cloudlayer MCP server, the agents and LLMs can only access a fixed set of Cloudlayer tools tied to that server. However, with the Composio Tool Router, agents can dynamically load tools from Cloudlayer and many other apps based on the task at hand, all through a single MCP endpoint.

Yes, you can. Codex fully supports MCP integration. You get structured tool calling, message history handling, and model orchestration while Tool Router takes care of discovering and serving the right Cloudlayer tools.

Yes, absolutely. You can configure which Cloudlayer scopes and actions are allowed when connecting your account to Composio. You can also bring your own OAuth credentials or API configuration so you keep full control over what the agent can do.

All sensitive data such as tokens, keys, and configuration is fully encrypted at rest and in transit. Composio is SOC 2 Type 2 compliant and follows strict security practices so your Cloudlayer data and credentials are handled as safely as possible.

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