Control real iPhones and simulators on macOS for UI testing and automation.
This MCP tool is an open-source MIT project with no stated API keys or remote endpoints, and the provided material shows no clear high-risk red flags. However, its purpose—controlling real iPhones and simulators on macOS for automation—implies local code execution and potential access to device data, so it should be used with caution.
The material states that no keys or environment variables are required, and there is no evidence that it asks for account tokens, API keys, or other sensitive credentials.
The material lists no remote endpoints, and the README does not describe sending data to external services; based on the provided facts, no explicit network egress is shown.
The system flags executes-code, and the description says it can control real iPhones and simulators on macOS for interaction, testing, and automation. This typically implies launching local processes and using device/simulator control capabilities; this is a built-in high-privilege capability of the tool class and warrants caution.
To perform UI interaction, testing, and automation, the tool likely can access data visible to or interacted with on simulators or connected iPhones, and may read/write local test-related resources. The material does not specify scope details, and there is no clear evidence of permissions exceeding its stated purpose.
Positive factors include being open source, MIT-licensed, and auditable. However, it comes from a third-party registry, shows 0 stars, has unknown maintenance status, and lacks a README, making its maturity and ongoing maintenance difficult to assess; dependency risk should be evaluated cautiously.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "iPhone MCP" yet — see the docs or source repo.
Connect to the available iPhone simulator, open my app, perform login, open profile, change avatar, and log out. Record whether each step succeeds and return a test summary.
A UI regression test summary with steps, pass/fail status, and notes on any issues.
Open the app in the iPhone simulator, go to Settings, switch to dark mode, and check whether any button labels are truncated. If you find an issue, describe the reproduction path and capture screenshots.
A defect report with reproduction steps, issue description, and screenshots for debugging.
On the connected iPhone, demonstrate the first-time user flow: launch the app, complete onboarding, sign up, enable notifications, and output action notes for each screen.
A screen-by-screen action log that can be used for product demos or acceptance review.
Automate iOS Simulator app interactions for testing, demos, and AI-assisted workflows.
Control multiple iOS and Android devices for testing, screenshots, and UI actions.
Let AI agents read, send, and manage iMessages on macOS.
Let AI securely access and manage iCloud calendars, reminders, and mail.
Control Android and iOS devices for UI automation, screenshot analysis, and testing.
Connect AI to macOS apps for email, calendar, and file workflows.