How to connect Datadog MCP with VS Code

How to connect Datadog MCP with VS Code VS Code is the most popular code editor out there. With its recent AI makeover, it can do more than just help you write code. You can connect your applications to it and let LLMs automate many of the mundane tasks in your workflow. In this guide, I will explain how to connect Datadog with VS Code in the most secure and robust way possible via Composio.

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Datadog is a cloud monitoring and observability platform for applications and infrastructure. It helps teams detect issues and optimize performance by unifying metrics, logs, and traces.

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How to connect Datadog MCP with VS Code

VS Code is the most popular code editor out there. With its recent AI makeover, it can do more than just help you write code. You can connect your applications to it and let LLMs automate many of the mundane tasks in your workflow.

In this guide, I will explain how to connect Datadog with VS Code in the most secure and robust way possible via Composio.

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Why use Composio?

Composio provides:

  • Access to 1,000+ managed apps from a single MCP endpoint. This makes it convenient for agents to run cross-app workflows.
  • Programmatic tool calling. Allows LLMs to write its code in a remote workbench to handle complex tool chaining. Reduces to-and-fro with LLMs for frequent tool calling.
  • Large tool response handling outside the LLM context. This minimizes context bloat from large tool responses.
  • Dynamic just-in-time access to thousands of tools across hundreds of apps. Composio loads the tools your agent needs, so LLMs are not overwhelmed by tools they do not need.

Integrate Datadog MCP with VS Code

1. Install with one click

Click the button below to add Composio to VS Code. You will be prompted to authorize. This requires VS Code 1.99+ with GitHub Copilot.

+Install in VS Code

2. Or add manually

Open or create .vscode/mcp.json in your project root and add the following configuration:

bash
{
  "servers": {
    "composio": {
      "type": "http",
      "url": "https://connect.composio.dev/mcp"
    }
  }
}

3. Authorize

Click the install button to authorize VS Code to connect to Composio. VS Code will detect OAuth and prompt you to sign in.

VS Code MCP server install screen for Composio

A browser window will open to authorize.

Composio authorization browser window

4. Authenticate Datadog and start working

Back in VS Code chat, ask the agent to connect to Datadog or give it any Datadog-related task.

For example, ask it to:

  • "Create downtime for nightly maintenance window"
  • "List all monitors tracking CPU usage"
  • "Create synthetic API test for login endpoint"

It will prompt you to authenticate and authorize access to Datadog.

That is it. Composio tools are now available in VS Code, and your Datadog account is ready to use.

Way Forward

Now that Datadog is connected, extend your setup by connecting the other apps you already use every day, so your agent can run true cross-app workflows end to end.

  • Connect Calendar to turn threads into scheduled meetings automatically.
  • Connect Slack or Teams to post summaries, approvals, and alerts where your team works.
  • Connect Notion, Linear, Jira, or Asana to convert requests into tickets, tasks, and docs.
  • Connect Drive, Dropbox, or OneDrive to fetch, file, and share attachments without manual steps.
  • Connect HubSpot or Salesforce to log customer context, update records, and draft follow-ups.

Start with one workflow you do repeatedly, then keep adding apps as you find new handoffs. With everything behind a single MCP endpoint, your agent can coordinate multiple tools safely and reliably in one conversation.

TOOLS

Supported Tools

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

Create Dashboard

Create a dashboard in Datadog.

Create downtime

Creates a new downtime in Datadog to suppress alerts during maintenance windows or planned outages.

Create event

Creates a new event in Datadog.

Create monitor

Creates a new Datadog monitor to track metrics, logs, or other data sources with configurable alerting thresholds and notifications.

Create SLO

Create a Service Level Objective (SLO) in Datadog.

Create Synthetic API Test

Create a synthetic API test in Datadog.

Create Webhook

Create a webhook in Datadog.

Delete Dashboard

Delete a dashboard in Datadog.

Delete monitor

Deletes a Datadog monitor permanently.

Get Dashboard

Get a specific dashboard from Datadog.

Get monitor

Retrieves detailed information about a specific Datadog monitor, including its current state, configuration, and any active downtimes.

Get Service Dependencies

Get service dependency mapping from Datadog APM.

Get Synthetics Locations

Tool to retrieve all available public and private locations for Synthetic tests in Datadog.

Get host tags

Retrieves all tags associated with a specific host in Datadog.

Get usage summary

Retrieves usage summary information from Datadog including API calls, hosts, containers, and other billable usage metrics.

List All Tags

List all tags from Datadog.

List API Keys

List API keys in Datadog.

List APM Services

List APM services from Datadog.

List AWS Integration

List AWS integrations in Datadog.

List dashboards

Lists all Datadog dashboards with basic information.

List events

Lists events from Datadog within a specified time range.

List hosts

Lists all hosts in your Datadog infrastructure with detailed information including metrics, tags, and status.

List Incidents

List incidents from Datadog.

List Log Indexes

Tool to retrieve a list of all log indexes configured in Datadog, including their names and configurations.

List active metrics

Discover metric names by listing actively reporting metrics since a given timestamp.

List monitors

Get all monitor details.

List Roles

List roles from Datadog organization.

List service checks

Lists service checks from Datadog.

List SLOs

List Service Level Objectives (SLOs) from Datadog.

List Synthetics Tests

List Synthetics tests from Datadog.

List Users

List users from Datadog organization.

List Webhooks

List webhooks from Datadog.

Mute Monitor

Mute a monitor in Datadog.

Query metrics

Queries Datadog metrics and returns time series data.

Search logs

Searches Datadog logs with advanced filtering capabilities.

Search Spans Analytics

Search and analyze span data with aggregations in Datadog.

Search Traces

Search for traces in Datadog APM.

Submit metrics

Submits custom metrics to Datadog.

Unmute Monitor

Unmute a monitor in Datadog.

Update Dashboard

Update a dashboard in Datadog.

Update host tags

Updates tags for a specific host in Datadog.

Update monitor

Updates an existing Datadog monitor with new configuration, thresholds, or notification settings.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

Yes, you can. VS Code 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 Datadog tools.

Yes, absolutely. You can configure which Datadog 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 Datadog data and credentials are handled as safely as possible.

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