MCP Tool
nova.scheduled_task_var_list
For prepared tasks, runs, and closed-loop automation steps, an agent uses this public tool to handle the sensitive path "Variables auflisten". It keeps purpose, scope, user control, and sensitive data handling explicit.
Canonical reference for a public MCP tool name.
- Type
- MCP tool
- Family
- Scheduled Task Variables & Templates
- Effect
- sensitive
- Status
- Explained
- Path
- 41.3
Purpose
What this entry explains
What it does
nova.scheduled_task_var_list
An agent uses this tool to handle the sensitive path "Variables auflisten". It belongs to prepared tasks, runs, and closed-loop automation steps; agents should combine it with current discovery, target awareness, and the visible result.
Use when
- Use this entry when an agent needs to handle the sensitive path "Variables auflisten" for prepared tasks, runs, and closed-loop automation steps.
- Use it to understand the public tool name, its expected boundary, and the response signals to check.
- Use it before chaining follow-up tools so the next step is based on current evidence.
Reference Use
How agents should cite and apply this area
Examples are maintained at family level and use only public tool names or reference paths already present in the catalog.
Family example
A task in prepared tasks, runs, and closed-loop automation steps can trigger powerful execution and therefore needs target, approval, and result check before the step.
The agent starts with nova.scheduled_task_var_set, reads the current response or reference, and only then chooses the concrete next tool.
Current discovery, target, user control, warning signals, and result check come before execution.Contract
Inputs and important response fields
This page is a public reference. Agents and integrators should still read current MCP tool discovery before execution, because schemas can be gated by settings or version.
Inputs
taskId
Task reference for a scheduled or stored work context.
Response fields
No fixed public response field is derived from the catalog source for this path. Use current tool discovery and the actual response before chaining the next step.
Safety
Boundary before execution
May touch sensitive data, permissions, credentials, identity, or external connection paths. Use only with explicit scope and visible user control.
Require explicit purpose and current context, avoid exposing secrets in prompts or logs, and stop when permission or identity state is unclear.
For humans, this entry marks the sensitive surface in prepared tasks, runs, and closed-loop automation steps and keeps permission, credential, or external-connection handling explicit.
High-Impact Review
Execution boundary and recheck hints
Review category: Scheduler/tasks/automation
Runs need scope, budget, progress, stop condition, and reviewable terminal status before they start or continue.
False assumption: once started, a run may continue until success.
Task, schedule, variables, workspace, and run status must remain reviewable by the user.
Bound automations, poll progress, check terminal status, and avoid chaining when results are unclear.
Abort or recheck when budget, target set, run ID, workspace, or result status becomes unclear.
Safety Axes
How this path can affect work
Axes are stable catalog signals for humans, agents, and LLM discovery. One path can carry several axes.
read_current_state
Reads current state, response signals, or evidence without treating that alone as permission for a follow-up action.
Use the signal as current evidence and re-check target, scope, and visible state before any follow-up action.sensitive_data
Touches cookies, storage, clipboard, credentials, tokens, user content, identity, or private data.
Use only with bounded purpose and visible user control; do not guess, log, or forward sensitive values.automation_run
Starts or monitors crawls, sequences, schedulers, tasks, batches, or longer runs.
Keep scope, budget, progress, stop condition, and terminal status visible before and during the run.user_confirmation
Requires visible confirmation, target review, approval, or deliberate user control.
Do not proceed until the required confirmation is visible or unambiguous in the current context.