| name | network-request-auditing |
| description | After navigating and interacting in Cursor's built-in browser, use browser_network_requests to audit every fetch/XHR for failures, slowness, duplicate calls, and suspicious payloads. Use for API-heavy pages and after backend or client networking changes. |
| user-invocable | true |
Network Request Auditing
Deep-dive network health using the cursor-ide-browser MCP. This skill focuses on browser_network_requests — not just “any 500s” but patterns that indicate bugs, waste, or security issues.
How it works
- Drive the app in the browser (navigate, click, submit forms) so real requests fire.
- Call
browser_network_requests after meaningful interactions (and after navigation settles).
- Classify and report findings using the criteria below.
Follow cursor-ide-browser workflow rules: use browser_snapshot before structural interactions; after actions that change the page, take a fresh snapshot before the next interaction.
Audit checklist
Failures
- 4xx / 5xx — list method, URL (path + query), status, and whether the UI handled the error.
- CORS or network errors — often misconfigured origins or mixed content.
Performance
- Slow requests — flag requests with high latency (e.g. > 500 ms server time if timings are visible; otherwise note unusually large waterfalls).
- Duplicate calls — same URL + method fired multiple times in one user action (often a React effect or missing deduplication).
- Oversized payloads — responses that look huge for what the UI needs (suggest pagination, field selection, or compression).
Security and privacy
- Sensitive data in URLs — tokens or PII in query strings.
- Missing auth — API calls that should send credentials or bearer tokens but do not (compare with adjacent authenticated calls).
Correctness
- Unexpected hosts — calls to third parties not documented for the feature (trackers, accidental leaks).
- Preflight storms — excessive OPTIONS requests may indicate wrong CORS caching or too many distinct origins.
Steps
-
Start from a clean navigation — browser_navigate to the target URL (or use an existing tab via browser_tabs).
-
Exercise the feature — interactions that trigger API usage (filters, infinite scroll, form save, modal open).
-
Fetch network log — browser_network_requests after each logical step if the page does multiple round-trips.
-
Report — structured output:
- Summary counts (failed, slow, duplicate groups).
- Table or bullet list of issues with URL pattern (not necessarily full secrets), status, category (failure / perf / security / correctness).
- Recommended next code changes or investigations.
Notes
- Iframe traffic may not appear in the same log — note if the feature runs inside an iframe.
- Compare against expected API design; a 404 might be correct for “optional resource not found” if handled in UI.
- Pair with
browser_console_messages for errors that do not surface as failed HTTP (e.g. parse errors after 200).