inbox-exploration
La boîte de réception est l'endroit où PostHog présente les rapports de signaux — des regroupements d'observations connexes (signaux) qui ont été agrégés en un seul problème ou tendance (par exemple, "Le taux d'erreur a grimpé de 3× sur /checkout"). Les rapports proviennent de plusieurs produits sources : suivi des erreurs, relecture de sessions, analyses web, expériences, et intégrations comme Linear, GitHub et Zendesk.
npx skills add https://github.com/posthog/ai-plugin --skill inbox-explorationExploring the Inbox
The Inbox is where PostHog surfaces signal reports — clusters of related observations (signals) that have been aggregated into a single issue or trend (e.g. "Error rate spiked 3× on /checkout"). Reports come from multiple source products: error tracking, session replay, web analytics, experiments, and integrations like Linear, GitHub, and Zendesk.
Inbox is part of PostHog Code, PostHog's agentic surface for engineering teams.
Don't assume the user's project has reports, or that any signal sources are configured — plenty of projects don't have Inbox set up. Always run the setup-check workflow below before answering the user's actual question.
When to use this skill
- "What's in my inbox?" / "What should I look at first?"
- "Show me actionable reports" / "What's PostHog flagged recently?"
- "Are there any reports about <topic / product area>?"
- "What signal sources are configured for this project?"
- The user pastes a report ID or URL and wants context
- "Fix this inbox item" / "turn this report into a PR" / "implement this report" — see Workflow: act on an actionable report
- "Dismiss this" / "snooze this report" — see Workflow: dismiss or snooze a report
For deeper investigation, hand off to other skills and tools:
signalsskill — querydocument_embeddingsvia HogQL for raw signal text, semantic search across signals, or to inspect every signal that contributed to a report.- PostHog's product-specific MCP tools — when a report points at a specific error, log line,
session, person, or time range, reach for the matching domain tool to pull richer context:
- Error tracking:
query-error-tracking-issues-list,query-error-tracking-issue,query-error-tracking-issue-eventsfor error-tracking-sourced reports - Logs:
query-logs,logs-count-rangesto find log activity around the issue - Session replays:
query-session-recordings-list,session-recording-getto find recordings of affected users - Persons / activity:
persons-retrieve,activity-log-listto inspect a specific user's behavior - Trends / SQL:
query-trends,execute-sqlfor ad-hoc verification queries
- Error tracking:
A signal report tells you what PostHog clustered. The product-specific tools tell you the underlying detail — pair them when the user wants to dig in.
Available tools
| Tool | Purpose |
|---|---|
inbox-reports-list | Paginated list of reports with filters (status, search, etc.) |
inbox-reports-retrieve | Full detail for a single report |
inbox-reports-set-state | Dismiss (suppressed) or snooze (potential) a single report |
inbox-reports-bulk-set-state | Same transition for 1–100 reports in one call (per-id result) |
inbox-source-configs-list | Configured signal sources (which products feed the inbox) |
inbox-source-configs-retrieve | Full record for a single source config |
inbox-source-configs-partial-update | Toggle a source's enabled flag (or adjust its config) |
posthog:execute-sql (signals skill) | HogQL access to underlying signals (read the signals skill first) |
The inbox-reports-*-list / -retrieve and inbox-source-configs-*-list / -retrieve tools are
read-only. The exposed writes are inbox-reports-set-state (dismiss / snooze a single report),
inbox-reports-bulk-set-state (the same transition for 1–100 reports in one call) — see
Workflow: dismiss or snooze a report — and inbox-source-configs-partial-update, which flips a
source's enabled flag on or off (e.g. {enabled: false} to stop a source feeding the inbox);
-create / -update exist too for standing a source up or replacing it wholesale. Other writes
(pause processing, mark a report resolved, set implementation_pr_url) are not exposed via MCP
today — those happen on the product surface when a PR is opened against a report.
Terminology
What each report status means (in roughly the order a triage agent should care about):
ready— judgment finished, actionable assessment availablepending_input— waiting on user input to proceedin_progress— actively being summarized / judgedcandidate/potential— accumulated signals but not yet promoted to a real reportfailed— processing erroredsuppressed— manually hidden; not surfaced by default
By default inbox-reports-list excludes suppressed reports and orders results by
-is_suggested_reviewer,status,-updated_at — the user's own suggested reports first, then by
status, then most recently updated. Refer to the tool's input schema for filter mechanics.
What "suggested reviewer" means
is_suggested_reviewer: true on a report means the current PostHog user is one of up to
three people the report-research flow flagged as best-placed to act on this report. It is
the strongest signal you have that a report matters to the user personally, and you should
lean on it when triaging.
How the flag is produced (see report_generation/resolve_reviewers.py):
- While researching a report, the agent identifies the GitHub commits most relevant to the underlying signals (e.g. commits that touched the failing code path).
- It fetches the authors of those commits, weights earlier/more-relevant commits more
heavily, and keeps the top three GitHub logins. These get persisted as a
SUGGESTED_REVIEWERSartefact on the report. - At read time, those GitHub logins are mapped back to PostHog users via each org member's
linked GitHub identity (social auth or GitHub integration). If the current viewer's
linked GitHub login is one of them,
is_suggested_reviewerflips totruefor that report.
Practical implications for triage:
- A
truevalue means "you wrote (or recently touched) the code this report is about" — not "you were assigned this." It's heuristic, not authoritative. - A
falsevalue doesn't mean the report is irrelevant — it can mean (a) someone else owns the code, (b) no one in the org has a linked GitHub account matching the suggested logins, or (c) the source material wasn't tied to a specific repo / commits. - If the user asks "what should I look at?", lead with
is_suggested_reviewer: truereports — these are the ones where the user's name is on the relevant code. Mention the rest as a secondary group rather than mixing them in. - If the user has no suggested reports but the inbox isn't empty, say so explicitly ("nothing in the inbox is tied to code you've authored recently") rather than pretending the top of the list is personalized.
Workflow: handling an empty or unconfigured inbox (read first)
Run this check whenever a user asks about the inbox for the first time in a session, or any
time inbox-reports-list returns count: 0. The diagnosis decides what to say next.
Step 1 — Look at source configs
inbox-source-configs-list
{ "limit": 50 }
Three meaningful cases:
Case A — no source configs at all (count: 0)
The user hasn't onboarded to Inbox / signals. Don't pretend the inbox has data. Tell the user plainly that Inbox needs signal sources to be set up first, and that the recommended way to do this is to install PostHog Code at https://posthog.com/code. Example response:
Your project doesn't have any signal sources configured yet, so the Inbox is empty. Inbox surfaces issues and trends that PostHog automatically clusters from sources like error tracking, session replay, GitHub, Linear, and Zendesk. The fastest way to set this up is to install PostHog Code — once it's connected, signals will start flowing in and reports will appear in your inbox over the next day or so.
Stop here unless the user wants to discuss setup. Don't run further inbox tools — they'll all be empty.
Case B — source configs exist but all are enabled: false
Sources have been set up at some point but are currently turned off. Tell the user no signals are
flowing right now. You can re-enable a source directly with
inbox-source-configs-partial-update { "id": "<source_config_uuid>", "enabled": true } (confirm
with the user first), or they can flip it on from the project's signals settings. Don't go fishing
for reports — anything still there is stale.
Case C — at least one source config is enabled: true
Setup looks healthy. If inbox-reports-list still returns nothing, it's most likely "give it time"
— signals are flowing but nothing has clustered into a report yet. Tell the user that, briefly
list which sources are active (e.g. "you have GitHub and error tracking enabled"), and offer to
check back later or to drop into the signals skill to look at raw signal volume.
If any source config has status: "failed", surface that as part of your reply — that source
isn't producing signals right now, which may explain a thin inbox.
Step 2 — Only then proceed to the user's actual question
If Step 1 found a healthy setup and at least one report exists, continue with the triage / drill / filter workflows below.
Workflow: triage what's actionable
When the user asks "what should I look at?" or "what's actionable?":
Step 1 — Pull the ready/in-progress queue
inbox-reports-list
{
"status": "ready,in_progress,pending_input",
"limit": 20
}
If count: 0 comes back, jump to the empty/unconfigured workflow above before saying "your
inbox is empty" — the right reply depends on whether sources are configured.
Step 2 — Summarize by source and actionability
For each report, the response includes:
id,title,summarystatus,priority,actionability(note:nullfor reports still inpending_input/candidate— judgment hasn't run yet)signal_count,total_weight— how much underlying evidence drove the reportsource_products— which product(s) the underlying signals came fromis_suggested_reviewer— whether the current user is a suggested reviewer for this report (see "What 'suggested reviewer' means" above — it's based on GitHub commit authorship of the relevant code, mapped to PostHog users via linked GitHub identity)implementation_pr_url— if a PR has been opened against this report_posthogUrl— clickable deep-link to the report; always include this in your response
Group the results so the user can scan quickly. Lead with reports where
is_suggested_reviewer: true — those are the ones tied to code the current user has
authored — and only then fall back to priority groupings for the rest:
## Inbox — 8 actionable reports
⭐ Suggested for you (1)
- Checkout error rate spiked 3× — error_tracking, 47 signals (you're a suggested reviewer)
<_posthogUrl>
🔴 High priority (2 more)
- Session replays on /pricing show repeated rage clicks — session_replay, 12 signals
<_posthogUrl>
…
🟠 Medium priority (4)
…
If no reports come back with is_suggested_reviewer: true, say so explicitly before listing
the rest — don't silently drop the section.
Step 3 — Offer the drill-down
End with a clear hand-off: "Want me to dig into the checkout errors?" → call
inbox-reports-retrieve for the full report, then optionally hop to the signals skill to look
at the underlying signal text.
Workflow: drill into a specific report
When the user pastes an Inbox URL or report ID:
inbox-reports-retrieve
{ "id": "<report_uuid>" }
Returns the full record including signals_at_run and artefact_count. Combine this with the
signals skill if the user wants to see the actual signal contents:
- Use
inbox-reports-retrieveto get the report metadata +id - Use the
signalsskill's Example 2 (fetch all signals for a specific report) — pass the report ID asmetadata.report_idin the HogQL query
The two layers complement each other: the inbox-* tools give you the curated/judged view, and
the signals skill lets you inspect the raw observations that produced it.
Workflow: act on an actionable report
When the user wants to do something about a report — "fix this inbox item", "turn this into a
PR", "implement this" — not just read it. A ready report with
actionability: immediately_actionable is the usual candidate. The discipline that matters here:
a report is a diagnosis, not ground truth — verify it against the actual code before you
implement. Reports from signals_scout (and any LLM-research source) are especially worth
double-checking; their summary often reads as a confident root-cause with file and function
names, but it can be stale or wrong.
Step 1 — Retrieve and check it isn't already handled
inbox-reports-retrieve
{ "id": "<report_uuid>" }
Before doing any work, look at:
already_addressed— iftrue, the fix may already be in flight or merged; confirm with the user before duplicating it.implementation_pr_url— if a PR is already linked, surface it instead of opening a second one.status— onlyreadyreports carry a finished judgment. Acandidate/pending_inputreport hasn't been researched yet; don't implement off a half-formed summary.
Step 2 — Verify the diagnosis against the code (do not skip)
The report's summary will name files, functions, and sometimes line numbers. Open them and
confirm the claim holds — that the cited code exists, still looks the way the report describes,
and actually produces the described failure. Pull the underlying signals via the signals skill
(metadata.report_id) if you need the raw evidence behind the summary. If the diagnosis doesn't
hold up, say so and stop — a wrong report is itself a useful finding (and a candidate for
dismiss below), not a license to write a speculative fix.
Step 3 — Scope the fix to the right layer
- If
source_productsincludessignals_scoutand the root cause is in a scout's own behavior (the prompt it runs, a threshold it uses), the better fix is often the scout'sSKILL.md, not the harness. Note that per-team custom scouts live in the user's Skills Store, not this repo, so the fix site may be out of reach of a repo PR — flag that to the user. - Otherwise treat it like any normal change: follow the repo's conventions (
CLAUDE.md, area-specific skills), make the change minimal, and add a regression test that would have caught the reported failure.
Step 4 — Open the PR and link it back
Open the PR following the repo's PR conventions. There is no MCP tool to mark a report resolved
or set implementation_pr_url — that link is populated on the product surface when a PR is
opened against the report. So reference the report in the PR description (its _posthogUrl) and
tell the user which report the PR addresses, so the loop is traceable. Don't claim the report is
"resolved" in the inbox — it isn't until the product surface records the merged PR.
Workflow: dismiss or snooze a report
When the user has reviewed a report and wants it gone, or wants to defer it. These are the inbox writes exposed via MCP:
inbox-reports-set-state
{
"id": "<report_uuid>",
"state": "suppressed",
"dismissal_reason": "analysis_wrong",
"dismissal_note": "Verified against products/foo/bar.py — the cited code path can't reach this state."
}
state: "suppressed"dismisses the report from the inbox;state: "potential"snoozes it back into the pipeline. When snoozing,snooze_for: <N>holds it until it accumulates N more signals.dismissal_reasonmust be one of six server-validated canonical codes —already_fixed,report_unclear,analysis_wrong,wontfix_intentional,wontfix_irrelevant,other— an unlisted value returns400.already_fixedis a snooze, so pair it withstate: "potential"rather than"suppressed"; reach forotherplus adismissal_notefor anything that doesn't fit a specific code.dismissal_noteis free-form (≤ 4000 chars). Both persist as a DISMISSAL artefact, so the rationale survives even if the report transitions again later — always include them so a future reader knows why.- It's a destructive, non-idempotent transition and returns
409if it isn't allowed from the report's current status (and400ifdismissal_reasonisn't a canonical code). Confirm with the user before suppressing, and capture why in the note — a dismissal with no rationale is worse than none. A report you dismissed because the diagnosis was wrong (Step 2 above) is the textbook case: suppress it withanalysis_wrongand the evidence in the note. - To dismiss or snooze several reports at once, use
inbox-reports-bulk-set-statewith anidsarray (1–100). It applies the samestate/dismissal_reason/dismissal_note/snooze_forto every id and returns a per-idresultslist (in request order) plus atransitioned_count/skipped_count/failed_count/not_found_countsummary. Each id is processed independently, so the call returns200even on partial failure — an id whose transition isn't allowed comes back asskipped(the single-report409) while the rest go through. Inspect the per-id outcomes rather than assuming the whole batch succeeded.
Workflow: filter by topic or source
"Are there any reports about ?" — start with search:
inbox-reports-list
{
"search": "checkout",
"status": "ready,in_progress,pending_input",
"limit": 20
}
search matches title and summary. If the user is asking about a product area rather than a
keyword, use source_product:
inbox-reports-list
{
"source_product": "session_replay,error_tracking",
"limit": 20
}
If the keyword search returns nothing meaningful, hand off to the signals skill — semantic
search over signal text via embedText() will catch reports the keyword filter missed.
Workflow: review configured sources
When the user asks "which signal sources are set up?" or "is hooked up?":
inbox-source-configs-list
{ "limit": 50 }
Each entry returns id, source_product, source_type, enabled, status, plus timestamps.
For full details (including the per-source config JSON — recording filters, evaluation IDs,
etc.):
inbox-source-configs-retrieve
{ "id": "<source_config_uuid>" }
Integration credentials live in a separate Integration model — they are not in the
config blob, so it's safe to summarize the contents back to the user.
The status field reflects the underlying data import or workflow:
running/completed— feeding signals normallyfailed— the source isn't currently producing signals; flag this to the user
To turn a source on or off, use inbox-source-configs-partial-update with the config's id and
{ "enabled": true | false } — only the fields you pass change, so this is the right tool for a
plain toggle (-update replaces the whole record; -create stands up a new source). Confirm with
the user before flipping a source, since enabling one drives signal processing and spend.
inbox-source-configs-partial-update
{ "id": "<source_config_uuid>", "enabled": false }
Tips
- Check setup before assuming the inbox is empty. If
inbox-reports-listreturnscount: 0, callinbox-source-configs-listfirst — no sources means the user needs to install PostHog Code to start receiving signals; sources-but-no-reports means signals are flowing but nothing has clustered yet - Always surface
_posthogUrlso the user can click through to the report - The default ordering already prioritizes the user's suggested reports — don't reorder unless asked
priorityandactionabilityarenullfor reports still inpending_inputorcandidatestatus; this is expected, not a bug — judgment hasn't run yetsuppressedreports are excluded by default; passstatus: "suppressed"explicitly if the user wants to see hidden items- The inbox writes exposed via MCP are
inbox-reports-set-state(dismiss / snooze one report),inbox-reports-bulk-set-state(the same for 1–100 reports), andinbox-source-configs-partial-update(toggle a source'senabledflag). To act on a report (implement a fix), verify the diagnosis against the code first, then open a PR — see Workflow: act on an actionable report. Marking a report resolved / settingimplementation_pr_urlhappens on the product surface, not via MCP; always also surface the_posthogUrldeep-link - Never implement a report's fix straight from its
summary. Reports — especiallysignals_scoutones — are LLM diagnoses; confirm the cited files / functions / behavior in the actual code before writing a fix. A report that doesn't hold up is a dismissal candidate, not a fix - For "what kinds of signals exist?" or "what's been happening recently across all sources?",
drop into the
signalsskill — the report layer hides individual observations; you need HogQL ondocument_embeddingsto see them - Source configs don't have per-record deep-links — they live behind project settings, so
inbox-source-configs-retrievereturns no_posthogUrl. Don't confuse them with reports