skillZs
LIVE SKILL TAGS
>>> LIVE SKILLS INDEX <<<
* OPEN SOURCE *
NO LOGIN, NO TRACKING
REAL INSTALL DATA
← back to all skills
posthog/ai-plugin32 installs

triaging-error-issues

Triage PostHog error tracking issues during a daily or on-call review. Use when the user asks "what's broken?", "what new errors do we have?", "show me top errors today", "what should I look at this morning", or wants a prioritized list of active issues to work on. Surfaces new and high-impact issues, ranks by users affected and recency, points at linked replays, and proposes next actions (investigate, assign, suppress, merge).

How do I install this agent skill?

npx skills add https://github.com/posthog/ai-plugin --skill triaging-error-issues
view source ↗

Is this agent skill safe to install?

  • Gen Agent Trust Hubpass

    The skill facilitates triaging PostHog error tracking issues. It provides structured instructions for identifying new or high-impact errors using official PostHog tools. The skill accesses technical error metadata such as stack traces and session IDs, which is necessary for its purpose. No malicious patterns, obfuscation, or unauthorized exfiltration attempts were detected.

  • Socketpass

    No alerts

  • Snykwarn

    Risk: MEDIUM · 1 issue

What does this agent skill do?

Triaging error tracking issues

When a user asks "what's broken?" or wants a daily error review, the goal is a short prioritized list of issues worth a human's attention — not a dump of every active issue. Most projects have hundreds of active issues; the few that matter are usually new (first seen in the last 24-48h), spiking, or affecting many distinct users.

Available tools

ToolPurpose
posthog:query-error-tracking-issues-listList + rank issues with aggregate metrics (occurrences, users, sessions)
posthog:query-error-tracking-issueCompact details for a single issue (status, assignee, top frame, release)
posthog:query-error-tracking-issue-eventsSampled $exception events with stack, URL, browser, and $session_id
posthog:query-session-recordings-listFind replays of users hitting an issue
posthog:inbox-reports-listPre-curated actionable signals if the project uses Inbox

Workflow

Step 1 — Pick a window and a signal

Read the time window from the user's wording. Defaults if unspecified:

  • "Today" / "this morning" / "right now" → dateRange: { date_from: "-24h" }
  • "This week" / "since Monday" → -7d
  • On-call shift handoff → -24h

Pick what "matters" means:

  • New issuesorderBy: "first_seen", orderDirection: "DESC", tight window. Catches regressions introduced by recent deploys.
  • High-impactorderBy: "users" ranks by distinct users affected. Better than raw occurrences for severity (one bot loop produces many occurrences but one user).
  • TrendingorderBy: "occurrences" over a short window vs a longer baseline to spot spikes.

Step 2 — Pull the candidate list

Start narrow and widen if too few issues come back:

posthog:query-error-tracking-issues-list
{
  "status": "active",
  "orderBy": "users",
  "orderDirection": "DESC",
  "dateRange": { "date_from": "-24h" },
  "limit": 20,
  "volumeResolution": 24
}

Match volumeResolution to the window (24 buckets for -24h, 14 for -14d, etc.) so each row's sparkline has enough resolution to show a spike vs flat steady state. A single bucket only gives a total, not a shape.

For new-issues-only, run a parallel query with orderBy: "first_seen":

{
  "status": "active",
  "orderBy": "first_seen",
  "orderDirection": "DESC",
  "dateRange": { "date_from": "-24h" },
  "limit": 10
}

If a project mixes browser and server SDKs, the top-by-users list is usually drowned by server-side errors (each invocation often gets a fresh distinct_id). Narrow with the library filter — values match the SDK's $lib, not the npm package name, examples:

  • web — posthog-js (browser)
  • posthog-node, posthog-python, posthog-ruby, posthog-go, posthog-php, posthog-java, posthog-elixir — server SDKs
  • posthog-edge — Cloudflare Workers / edge runtime
  • posthog-ios, posthog-android, posthog-react-native, posthog-flutter — mobile

Step 3 — Filter the noise

The list will include known noise. Before presenting, drop or call out:

  • Issues whose volume is flat over the window — they're not new, the user already lives with them. Surface them only if they're in the top by users.
  • Bot-only issues — if all events come from headless browsers or crawler user agents, flag for suppression (suppressing-noisy-errors) instead of triage.

If unsure whether an issue is new vs. recurring, compare first_seen to the start of the window:

  • first_seen inside the window → new, worth attention
  • first_seen weeks ago but spiking now → regression worth attention
  • first_seen weeks ago, flat volume → background noise

Step 4 — Add context for the top items

For the top 3-5 candidates, pull a sample exception so the summary includes a stack frame and URL, not just a title. Use posthog:query-error-tracking-issue-events rather than raw SQL — it returns normalized fields ($exception_types, $exception_values, $current_url, browser/OS, $session_id) and defaults to onlyAppFrames: true to strip vendor noise from the stack:

posthog:query-error-tracking-issue-events
{
  "issueId": "<issue_id>",
  "limit": 1,
  "verbosity": "stack"
}

If the user wants to see what users were doing, hand off to finding-replay-for-issue to pick the best linked recording. Don't fetch replays for every triaged issue — only the ones the user asks to dig into.

Step 5 — Present the triage list

Lead with a one-line headline ("3 new issues in last 24h, 1 spike, 5 active high-impact"). Then a short table sorted by your chosen signal:

IssueFirst seenUsersSessionsSample messageSuggested action
...2h ago142198TypeError ... at checkout.js:42Investigate
...spike6789Network request failedWatch — likely transient
...3d ago1212chrome-extension:// timeoutSuppress (extension noise)

For each, suggest one of: investigate (investigating-error-issue), assign (error-tracking-issues-partial-update), suppress (suppressing-noisy-errors), merge (grouping-noisy-errors), or resolve if it's already known fixed.

Tips

  • A single deploy often surfaces several related new issues. If multiple new issues share a properties.$lib_version (or properties.$exception_releases when the SDK is configured to populate it), present them grouped — a rollback decision rests on the cluster, not any one issue.
  • "Users" is the right severity proxy for user-facing apps. For backend services without a real distinct_id concept, fall back to sessions or occurrences.
  • Don't auto-assign or auto-resolve as part of triage. Present the list and let the user decide. Bulk actions belong in dedicated skills.
  • If the project uses Inbox (posthog:inbox-reports-list), check it first — PostHog may have already curated the most actionable issues so you avoid re-deriving them.
  • Provide each row's _posthogUrl (returned on every issue row) so the user can jump straight to the issue page if they want to drill down themselves. If you build the link yourself, use the full /project/<project_id>/error_tracking/<id> path, never a bare /error_tracking/<id>.

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.

<a href="https://skillzs.dev/skills/posthog/ai-plugin/triaging-error-issues">View triaging-error-issues on skillZs</a>