--- description: >- TRIGGER when: user asks to trace a specific route, schema object, file, table, RPC, or error string through its evidence. Covers `route_trace`, `schema_usage`, `file_health`, `auth_path`, `trace_file`, `preflight_table`, `trace_edge`, `trace_error`, `trace_table`, `trace_rpc`. when_to_use: >- Use after discovery has identified a concrete entity or when the user already provided a route, file, schema object, table, RPC, edge, auth surface, or error text. allowed-tools: "mcp__mako-ai__*" --- # Mako Trace Use this skill for focused evidence traces around a known target. The output should help the user understand what implements the target, what depends on it, and what evidence supports the answer. ## Targeted Answer Tools ### `route_trace` Use to find the route handler, nearby files, and evidence for a route/API behavior. - Best when the user names a route, page, method/path pair, or route-like URL. - Pair with `auth_path` for authorization questions. - Pair with `route_context` when the user wants a wider route neighborhood. ### `schema_usage` Use to find where an indexed schema object, table shape, or validation type is defined and referenced. - Best for schema objects and type-ish entities. - Use before editing validation contracts or generated schema surfaces. - Pair with `trace_table` or `table_neighborhood` for database-backed entities. ### `file_health` Use to understand a file's role, dependents, risks, and likely blast radius. - Best before editing a central or unfamiliar file. - Pair with `imports_impact` for a deeper dependency view. - Do not use it for repo-wide orientation; use `repo_map`. ### `auth_path` Use to inspect likely authentication or authorization boundaries for a route, file, feature, or flow. - Best when the user asks what protects something or whether auth is enforced. - Pair with `route_trace`, `route_context`, and `tenant_leak_audit` when the risk is tenant or data-boundary related. - If no exact route, file, or feature matches, `auth_path` returns `matched: false`, `reason`, and a suggested `cross_search` fallback instead of throwing a batch-breaking error. - Do not overclaim; report evidence and uncertainty. ## Composer Trace Tools ### `trace_file` Use for a compact file trace: symbols, imports, routes, schema touches, and notable relationships before editing. ### `preflight_table` Use before changing database-backed behavior to inspect table usage, RLS, relations, and common query paths. ### `trace_edge` Use to gather evidence for a relationship between two entities, files, routes, tables, symbols, or RPCs. ### `trace_error` Use to investigate an error string, stack, or failure mode and produce likely causes with evidence. ### `trace_table` Use to trace a table through schema, code references, routes, and related RPCs. ### `trace_rpc` Use to trace a database RPC/function through schema and app-code callers. ## Feedback Logging Log `agent_feedback` when a trace here was notably useful, partial, noisy, stale, wrong, or wasted the turn. Skip routine calls. Required procedure (see `/mako-ai:mako-guide` for full rules and reason-code vocabulary): 1. Call `recall_tool_runs` to get the prior run's `requestId`. Do not fabricate one — if no run is recalled, skip feedback. 2. Call `agent_feedback` with `referencedToolName`, `referencedRequestId`, `grade: "full" | "partial" | "no"`, `reasonCodes` from the starter vocabulary in `/mako-ai:mako-guide`, and a short `reason`. ## See Also - Use `/mako-ai:mako-neighborhoods` when a table, route, or RPC needs wider bundled context. - Use `/mako-ai:mako-graph` when the question is dependency path, flow, impact, or change planning. - Use `/mako-ai:mako-workflow` when the user wants a review bundle, verification bundle, or pre-ship artifact after tracing.