As GitHub Copilot expands its capabilities through the Model Context Protocol (MCP), it introduces an extra security challenge: how to give developers access to powerful AI tools while maintaining control over what external services those tools can access. This post walks you through setting up a curated MCP registry and enforcing access controls across your organization or enterprise when using Github Copilot. Why restrict access? MCP servers extend Copilot's capabilities by connecting it to external tools, databases, APIs, and services. While this opens up incredible possibilities for developer productivity, it also introduces potential security risks. Without proper controls, developers could: Connect Copilot to unauthorized external services Expose sensitive data to third-party MCP servers Use tools that don't meet your organization's security or compliance requirements Bypass established security policies through AI-assisted workflows A way is n...
As AI coding assistants become more sophisticated, we're approaching a future where multiple agents might work on different parts of your codebase simultaneously. But there's a challenge: how do you let multiple processes work on the same repository without constantly stepping on each other's toes? One solution is to have agents work on dedicated machines like GitHub Copilot Agent does in a GitHub Codespace. But what if you want to have multiple agents working on your local machine? Enter git worktrees – a powerful Git feature that's been hiding in plain sight since 2015, and the perfect foundation for multi-agent development workflows. What are Git worktrees? Git worktrees allow you to check out multiple branches from the same repository simultaneously, each in its own directory. Think of it as having multiple working directories all sharing the same Git history, but each can be on a different branch. Here's the key insight: while the working directories...