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grepai-trace-callers

Find function callers with GrepAI trace. Use this skill to discover what code calls a specific function.

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This page reorganizes the original catalog entry around fit, installability, and workflow context first. The original raw source lives below.

Stars
14
Hot score
86
Updated
March 20, 2026
Overall rating
C1.6
Composite score
1.6
Best-practice grade
B81.2

Install command

npx @skill-hub/cli install yoanbernabeu-grepai-skills-grepai-trace-callers
code-analysisrefactoringdebuggingdependenciesnavigation

Repository

yoanbernabeu/grepai-skills

Skill path: skills/trace/grepai-trace-callers

Find function callers with GrepAI trace. Use this skill to discover what code calls a specific function.

Open repository

Best for

Primary workflow: Ship Full Stack.

Technical facets: Full Stack.

Target audience: everyone.

License: Unknown.

Original source

Catalog source: SkillHub Club.

Repository owner: yoanbernabeu.

This is still a mirrored public skill entry. Review the repository before installing into production workflows.

What it helps with

  • Install grepai-trace-callers into Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI, or OpenCode workflows
  • Review https://github.com/yoanbernabeu/grepai-skills before adding grepai-trace-callers to shared team environments
  • Use grepai-trace-callers for development workflows

Works across

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Sub-skills: 0.

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Original source / Raw SKILL.md

---
name: grepai-trace-callers
description: Find function callers with GrepAI trace. Use this skill to discover what code calls a specific function.
---

# GrepAI Trace Callers

This skill covers using `grepai trace callers` to find all code locations that call a specific function or method.

## When to Use This Skill

- Finding all usages of a function before refactoring
- Understanding function dependencies
- Impact analysis before changes
- Code navigation and exploration

## What is Trace Callers?

`grepai trace callers` answers: **"Who calls this function?"**

```
func Login(user, pass) {...}
        ↑
        │
┌───────┴───────────────────┐
│   Who calls Login()?      │
├───────────────────────────┤
│ • HandleAuth (auth.go:42) │
│ • TestLogin (test.go:15)  │
│ • CLI (main.go:88)        │
└───────────────────────────┘
```

## Basic Usage

```bash
grepai trace callers "FunctionName"
```

### Example

```bash
grepai trace callers "Login"
```

Output:
```
🔍 Callers of "Login"

Found 3 callers:

1. HandleAuth
   File: handlers/auth.go:42
   Context: user.Login(ctx, credentials)

2. TestLoginSuccess
   File: handlers/auth_test.go:15
   Context: result := Login(testUser, testPass)

3. RunCLI
   File: cmd/main.go:88
   Context: err := auth.Login(username, password)
```

## JSON Output

For programmatic use:

```bash
grepai trace callers "Login" --json
```

Output:
```json
{
  "query": "Login",
  "mode": "callers",
  "count": 3,
  "results": [
    {
      "file": "handlers/auth.go",
      "line": 42,
      "caller": "HandleAuth",
      "context": "user.Login(ctx, credentials)"
    },
    {
      "file": "handlers/auth_test.go",
      "line": 15,
      "caller": "TestLoginSuccess",
      "context": "result := Login(testUser, testPass)"
    },
    {
      "file": "cmd/main.go",
      "line": 88,
      "caller": "RunCLI",
      "context": "err := auth.Login(username, password)"
    }
  ]
}
```

## Compact JSON (AI Optimized)

```bash
grepai trace callers "Login" --json --compact
```

Output:
```json
{
  "q": "Login",
  "m": "callers",
  "c": 3,
  "r": [
    {"f": "handlers/auth.go", "l": 42, "fn": "HandleAuth"},
    {"f": "handlers/auth_test.go", "l": 15, "fn": "TestLoginSuccess"},
    {"f": "cmd/main.go", "l": 88, "fn": "RunCLI"}
  ]
}
```

## Extraction Modes

GrepAI offers two extraction modes:

### Fast Mode (Default)

Uses regex patterns. Fast and dependency-free.

```bash
grepai trace callers "Login" --mode fast
```

### Precise Mode

Uses tree-sitter AST parsing. More accurate but requires tree-sitter.

```bash
grepai trace callers "Login" --mode precise
```

### Comparison

| Mode | Speed | Accuracy | Dependencies |
|------|-------|----------|--------------|
| `fast` | ⚡⚡⚡ | Good | None |
| `precise` | ⚡⚡ | Excellent | tree-sitter |

## Configuration

Configure trace in `.grepai/config.yaml`:

```yaml
trace:
  mode: fast  # fast or precise

  enabled_languages:
    - .go
    - .js
    - .ts
    - .py
    - .php
    - .rs

  exclude_patterns:
    - "*_test.go"
    - "*.spec.ts"
```

## Supported Languages

| Language | Extensions |
|----------|------------|
| Go | `.go` |
| JavaScript | `.js`, `.jsx` |
| TypeScript | `.ts`, `.tsx` |
| Python | `.py` |
| PHP | `.php` |
| C/C++ | `.c`, `.h`, `.cpp`, `.hpp`, `.cc`, `.cxx` |
| Rust | `.rs` |
| Zig | `.zig` |
| C# | `.cs` |
| Java | `.java` |
| Pascal/Delphi | `.pas`, `.dpr` |

## Use Cases

### Before Refactoring

```bash
# Find all usages before renaming
grepai trace callers "getUserById"

# Check impact of changing signature
grepai trace callers "processPayment"
```

### Understanding Codebase

```bash
# Who uses this core function?
grepai trace callers "validateToken"

# Find entry points to a module
grepai trace callers "initialize"
```

### Debugging

```bash
# Where is this function called from?
grepai trace callers "problematicFunction"
```

### Code Review

```bash
# Verify function usage before approving changes
grepai trace callers "deprecatedMethod"
```

## Handling Common Names

If your function name is common, results may include unrelated code:

### Problem

```bash
grepai trace callers "get"  # Too common, many false positives
```

### Solutions

1. Use more specific name:
```bash
grepai trace callers "getUserProfile"
```

2. Filter results by path:
```bash
grepai trace callers "get" --json | jq '.results[] | select(.file | contains("auth"))'
```

## Combining with Semantic Search

Use together for comprehensive understanding:

```bash
# Find what Login does (semantic)
grepai search "user login authentication"

# Find who uses Login (trace)
grepai trace callers "Login"
```

## Scripting Examples

### Bash

```bash
# Count callers
grepai trace callers "MyFunction" --json | jq '.count'

# Get caller function names
grepai trace callers "MyFunction" --json | jq -r '.results[].caller'

# Get file paths only
grepai trace callers "MyFunction" --json | jq -r '.results[].file' | sort -u
```

### Python

```python
import subprocess
import json

result = subprocess.run(
    ['grepai', 'trace', 'callers', 'Login', '--json'],
    capture_output=True,
    text=True
)

data = json.loads(result.stdout)
print(f"Found {data['count']} callers of Login:")
for r in data['results']:
    print(f"  - {r['caller']} in {r['file']}:{r['line']}")
```

## Common Issues

❌ **Problem:** No callers found
✅ **Solutions:**
- Check function name spelling (case-sensitive)
- Ensure file type is in `enabled_languages`
- Run `grepai watch` to update symbol index

❌ **Problem:** Too many false positives
✅ **Solutions:**
- Use more specific function name
- Add exclude patterns in config
- Filter results with `jq`

❌ **Problem:** Missing some callers
✅ **Solutions:**
- Try `--mode precise` for better accuracy
- Check if files are in ignore patterns

## Best Practices

1. **Use exact function name:** Case matters
2. **Check symbol index:** Run `grepai watch` first
3. **Use JSON for scripts:** Easier to parse
4. **Combine with search:** Semantic + trace = full picture
5. **Filter large results:** Use `jq` or grep

## Output Format

Trace callers result:

```
🔍 Callers of "Login"

Mode: fast
Language files scanned: 245

Found 3 callers:

1. HandleAuth
   File: handlers/auth.go:42
   Context: user.Login(ctx, credentials)

2. TestLoginSuccess
   File: handlers/auth_test.go:15
   Context: result := Login(testUser, testPass)

3. RunCLI
   File: cmd/main.go:88
   Context: err := auth.Login(username, password)

Tip: Use --json for machine-readable output
     Use --mode precise for more accurate results
```
grepai-trace-callers | SkillHub