managing-path-cleaning-rules
Inspects URL paths and proposes, tests, orders, and applies project-level path cleaning rules so dynamic segments (numeric IDs, UUIDs, slugs, dates) collapse into readable aliases. Use when the user says "clean the paths", "normalize URLs", "group similar pages", "too many distinct paths", "/users/123 and /users/456 are the same page", "set up path cleaning", or asks why a Web analytics or Paths breakdown is fragmented across thousands of nearly-identical URLs. Covers regex syntax (re2), alias placeholder convention, rule ordering, the test workflow, and applying rules via the project-settings-update MCP tool.
How do I install this agent skill?
npx skills add https://github.com/posthog/ai-plugin --skill managing-path-cleaning-rulesIs this agent skill safe to install?
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This skill provides instructions for managing URL path cleaning rules in PostHog. It uses tools to query analytics data and update project settings. While it processes user-controlled data (URLs), the risk is minimal as the agent's task is strictly defined.
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Risk: LOW · No issues
What does this agent skill do?
Managing path cleaning rules
Path cleaning rules normalize $pathname and $entry_pathname so that pages
sharing the same template (/users/123/profile, /users/456/profile, …) collapse
into one row (/users/<id>/profile) in Web analytics tiles, Paths insights, and
any HogQL query that calls apply_path_cleaning. They are the right answer when
a breakdown is fragmented across thousands of near-identical URLs.
This skill teaches you how to:
- recognize when path cleaning is the right tool
- inspect real paths to find what needs cleaning
- write
regex+aliasrules in re2 syntax with the project's placeholder convention - test rules before saving them
- order rules so specific patterns aren't swallowed by generic ones
- apply the rules via MCP
Data model
Team.path_cleaning_filters is a JSON list of PathCleaningFilter objects:
{
"regex": "/users/\\d+/profile",
"alias": "/users/<id>/profile",
"order": 0
}
regex— a re2 pattern. No need to escape/. Anchor with^/$when you mean it.alias— the literal replacement. Use angle-bracket placeholders (<id>,<slug>,<uuid>,<date>) by convention so the cleaned path stays human-readable. The alias is not a regex template — backreferences are not supported.order— integer. Rules apply sequentially inorderascending, each rule's output feeds the next.
Application is replaceRegexpAll(pathname, regex, alias) per rule, chained.
Source: posthog/hogql/property.py:613.
Workflow
1. Confirm path cleaning is the right move
Ask yourself: is the user complaining about cardinality (too many distinct paths
in a chart), or do they want a per-URL drill-down? Path cleaning is for the
former. If they want per-URL data, suggest a property filter on $pathname
instead.
2. Inspect the real paths
Don't guess at patterns — query them. With the execute-sql MCP tool:
SELECT properties.$pathname AS path, count() AS views
FROM events
WHERE event = '$pageview'
AND timestamp > now() - INTERVAL 7 DAY
GROUP BY path
ORDER BY views DESC
LIMIT 200
Scan the result for:
- numeric IDs:
/users/123,/orders/4242 - UUIDs:
/sessions/8f3c1a3b-… - slugs:
/posts/why-i-love-posthog - dates:
/archive/2024-09-12 - locales:
/en-US/,/fr-FR/ - pagination:
?page=3,/page/3/
3. Draft regex + alias
| Pattern | Example match | regex | alias |
|---|---|---|---|
| Numeric segment | /users/123/profile | /users/\d+/profile | /users/<id>/profile |
| UUID v4 | /sessions/8f3c1a3b-… | /sessions/[0-9a-f-]{36} | /sessions/<uuid> |
| Slug | /posts/why-posthog | /posts/[a-z0-9-]+$ | /posts/<slug> |
| ISO date | /archive/2024-09-12 | /archive/\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2} | /archive/<date> |
| Locale prefix | /en-US/about | ^/[a-z]{2}-[A-Z]{2}/ | /<locale>/ |
| Trailing query/page | /blog?page=3 | \?page=\d+$ | (empty alias drops it) |
Anchoring rules of thumb:
- start the regex with
^only when the segment must be at the beginning of the path - end with
$to keep a generic rule (e.g.\d+$) from matching mid-path segments
4. Test before saving
Three options, pick one:
-
Settings page tester:
/settings/project#path_cleaninghas a built-in "test path" input that replays the full ordered chain. -
Project HogQL (via
execute-sql):SELECT replaceRegexpAll('/users/42/profile', '/users/\d+/profile', '/users/<id>/profile')Chain
replaceRegexpAllcalls in the same order the rules will run if you want to verify multi-rule interaction. -
Built-in AI helper: there is already an
AiRegexHelpermodal accessible from the rule editor (Help me with Regexbutton) that turns natural language into a regex. Suggest it to the user when they say "I don't know regex" — but always validate the output against real paths via the tester.
5. Order rules from most-specific to most-general
Sequential application means a generic rule placed first will swallow everything that should have hit a specific rule.
order=0 /users/me/profile → /users/me/profile (specific, runs first)
order=1 /users/\d+/profile → /users/<id>/profile
order=2 /users/[a-z0-9-]+ → /users/<slug> (catch-all, runs last)
If /users/[a-z0-9-]+ ran first it would also match /users/me/profile and
make the more specific rule unreachable.
6. Apply via MCP
Use the project-settings-update tool with the full list (the field is
replaced, not merged):
{
"path_cleaning_filters": [
{ "regex": "/users/me/profile", "alias": "/users/me/profile", "order": 0 },
{ "regex": "/users/\\d+/profile", "alias": "/users/<id>/profile", "order": 1 },
{ "regex": "/users/[a-z0-9-]+", "alias": "/users/<slug>", "order": 2 }
]
}
Always read the existing rules first (project settings include
path_cleaning_filters) and merge — overwriting silently destroys whatever the
team has already configured.
Where the rules apply
When the user (or a HogQL query) opts in:
- Web analytics: the Path cleaning toggle in the page header
(
PathCleaningToggle.tsx) - Paths insights: the path cleaning toggle in the insight filters
- HogQL: any query that calls
apply_path_cleaning(path_expr, team)
The rules are stored once per project — they are not insight-scoped.
Common pitfalls
- Backreferences in
aliasneed double-escaping — ClickHouse'sreplaceRegexpAllsupports\0(whole match) and\1–\9(capture groups). In a JSON field or SQL string literal the backslash must be doubled, so use\\1inpath_cleaning_filters/ HogQL to get the\1backreference at the ClickHouse layer. - Forgetting
$—\d+without an end anchor matches every numeric run in any path, so/blog/2024-09-12/postbecomes/blog/<num>-<num>-<num>/postwhen you only meant to match the year segment. Use\d+$or\d+(/|$)depending on intent. - Escaping
/— re2 does not require it.\/works but adds noise. - Case sensitivity — re2 is case-sensitive by default. Use
(?i)at the start of the pattern for case-insensitive matching, e.g.(?i)/users/\d+. - Replacing the whole list —
path_cleaning_filtersis overwrite, not append. Always start from the current list. - Rules apply globally — adding a rule can change historical numbers in every Web analytics / Paths chart that has cleaning enabled. Warn the user before applying anything destructive.
How can the creator link this skill?
Add the canonical catalog link to the repository README so users can inspect current installs and available audits. The publishing guide covers the complete discovery path.
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