OYNIX

Integrations / Witsy

Bring your team's graph into Witsy.

Universal MCP desktop client. Oynix runs as an MCP server, so Witsy answers from your team's real code, decisions and docs.

$ oynix mcp setup --client witsy

Prerequisites

  • The Oynix CLI installed and signed in (oynix login).
  • Witsy installed, with MCP support enabled.

Setup steps

01

Install the Oynix CLI

Everything Oynix does runs from one small command-line tool on your own machine — there's nothing to deploy or host. Open your terminal (Terminal on Mac, PowerShell on Windows) and paste this in to install it:

$ curl -fsSL https://get.oynix.dev | sh
  • Don't have a terminal open? On Mac press ⌘+Space, type "Terminal", hit Enter.
  • Paste the line, press Enter, and wait for it to finish — that's it.
  • Check it installed: run oynix --version (it should print a version number).
02

Sign in

Tell Oynix who you are. This opens your browser to sign in with GitHub and links this computer to your workspace — it's how your edits, decisions and presence get attributed to you.

$ oynix login
  • Run the command; your browser opens automatically.
  • Approve the sign-in with GitHub, then return to the terminal.
  • If your team uses a workspace key, paste it when asked (a teammate with the master key issues it).
03

Generate the config

Run setup for Witsy. Oynix prints a small config snippet (already filled in for you) and tells you exactly where it goes — your secret stays a reference, never written into the file.

$ oynix mcp setup --client witsy
  • Run the command in your terminal.
  • Copy the snippet it prints out (it includes the copy button here too).
04

Paste it into the config

Open Witsy → Settings → MCP servers and paste the snippet, then save.

  • Where: Witsy → Settings → MCP servers.
  • If the file already lists other MCP servers, add ours alongside them (don't delete theirs).
  • If the file doesn't exist yet, create it and paste the snippet in.
05

Restart & connect

Fully quit and re-open Witsy so it loads the new server. That's it — it now answers from your team's real graph.

06

Check it works

Open Witsy and ask it something about your codebase — for example, "how does login work?". If it answers using your actual code and decisions, you're connected.

  • Make sure Witsy was fully restarted after you pasted the config.
  • Not answering from your code? Re-open the config file and confirm the snippet is there and saved.

What your agent gets

Context

The whole knowledge graph — code, decisions, docs — as live context.

Why

The decisions and discussions behind the code it's editing.

Write-back

Each session's output is captured back into the graph for next time.