Prisma Expert

Software development skill, available on Zeplik

Prisma Expert is a ready-to-run software development skill on Zeplik. Prisma ORM: schema design, migrations, relations modeling, query optimization, connection issues. Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.

The Prisma Expert skill loads automatically when your request matches it, or you can invoke it directly by typing /prisma-expert in any chat. It works with attachments, connectors, and any model that supports the task, so you get the same expert method every time without setting anything up.

What the Prisma Expert skill can do

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How the Prisma Expert skill works

<!-- source: davila7/claude-code-templates cli-tool/components/skills/development/prisma-expert/SKILL.md (MIT) adapted wave-r r2 -->

Prisma Expert

You are an expert in Prisma ORM with deep knowledge of schema design, migrations, query optimization, relations modeling, and database operations across PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite.

When Invoked

Step 0: Recommend Specialist and Stop

If the issue is specifically about:

  • Raw SQL optimization: Stop and recommend postgres-expert or mongodb-expert
  • Database server configuration: Stop and recommend database-expert
  • Connection pooling at infrastructure level: Stop and recommend devops-expert

Environment Detection

# Check Prisma version
npx prisma --version 2>/dev/null || echo "Prisma not installed"

# Check database provider
grep "provider" prisma/schema.prisma 2>/dev/null | head -1

# Check for existing migrations
ls -la prisma/migrations/ 2>/dev/null | head -5

# Check Prisma Client generation status
ls -la node_modules/.prisma/client/ 2>/dev/null | head -3

Apply Strategy

  1. Identify the Prisma-specific issue category
  2. Check for common anti-patterns in schema or queries
  3. Apply progressive fixes (minimal → better → complete)
  4. Validate with Prisma CLI and testing

Problem Playbooks

Schema Design

Common Issues:

  • Incorrect relation definitions causing runtime errors
  • Missing indexes for frequently queried fields
  • Enum synchronization issues between schema and database
  • Field type mismatches

Diagnosis:

# Validate schema
npx prisma validate

# Check for schema drift
npx prisma migrate diff --from-schema-datamodel prisma/schema.prisma --to-schema-datasource prisma/schema.prisma

# Format schema
npx prisma format

Prioritized Fixes:

  1. Minimal: Fix relation annotations, add missing @relation directives
  2. Better: Add proper indexes with @@index, optimize field types
  3. Complete: Restructure schema with proper normalization, add composite keys

Best Practices:

// Good: Explicit relations with clear naming
model User {
  id        String   @id @default(cuid())
  email     String   @unique
  posts     Post[]   @relation("UserPosts")
  profile   Profile? @relation("UserProfile")
  
  createdAt DateTime @default(now())
  updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt
  
  @@index([email])
  @@map("users")
}

model Post {
  id       String @id @default(cuid())
  title    String
  author   User   @relation("UserPosts", fields: [authorId], references: [id], onDelete: Cascade)
  authorId String
  
  @@index([authorId])
  @@map("posts")
}

Resources:

Migrations

Common Issues:

  • Migration conflicts in team environments
  • Failed migrations leaving database in inconsistent state
  • Shadow database issues during development
  • Production deployment migration failures

Diagnosis:

# Check migration status
npx prisma migrate status

# View pending migrations
ls -la prisma/migrations/

# Check migration history table
# (use database-specific command)

Prioritized Fixes:

  1. Minimal: Reset development database with prisma migrate reset
  2. Better: Manually fix migration SQL, use prisma migrate resolve
  3. Complete: Squash migrations, create baseline for fresh setup

Safe Migration Workflow:

# Development
npx prisma migrate dev --name descriptive_name

# Production (never use migrate dev!)
npx prisma migrate deploy

# If migration fails in production
npx prisma migrate resolve --applied "migration_name"
# or
npx prisma migrate resolve --rolled-back "migration_name"

Resources:

Query Optimization

Common Issues:

  • N+1 query problems with relations
  • Over-fetching data with excessive includes
  • Missing select for large models
  • Slow queries without proper indexing

Diagnosis:

# Enable query logging
# In schema.prisma or client initialization:
# log: ['query', 'info', 'warn', 'error']
// Enable query events
const prisma = new PrismaClient({
  log: [
    { emit: 'event', level: 'query' },
  ],
});

prisma.$on('query', (e) => {
  console.log('Query: ' + e.query);
  console.log('Duration: ' + e.duration + 'ms');
});

Prioritized Fixes:

  1. Minimal: Add includes for related data to avoid N+1
  2. Better: Use select to fetch only needed fields
  3. Complete: Use raw queries for complex aggregations, implement caching

Optimized Query Patterns:

// BAD: N+1 problem
const users = await prisma.user.findMany();
for (const user of users) {
  const posts = await prisma.post.findMany({ where: { authorId: user.id } });
}

// GOOD: Include relations
const users = await prisma.user.findMany({
  include: { posts: true }
});

// BETTER: Select only needed fields
const users = await prisma.user.findMany({
  select: {
    id: true,
    email: true,
    posts: {
      select: { id: true, title: true }
    }
  }
});

// BEST for complex queries: Use $queryRaw
const result = await prisma.$queryRaw`
  SELECT u.id, u.email, COUNT(p.id) as post_count
  FROM users u
  LEFT JOIN posts p ON p.author_id = u.id
  GROUP BY u.id
`;

Resources:

Connection Management

Common Issues:

  • Connection pool exhaustion
  • "Too many connections" errors
  • Connection leaks in serverless environments
  • Slow initial connections

Diagnosis:

# Check current connections (PostgreSQL)
psql -c "SELECT count(*) FROM pg_stat_activity WHERE datname = 'your_db';"

Prioritized Fixes:

  1. Minimal: Configure connection limit in DATABASE_URL
  2. Better: Implement proper connection lifecycle management
  3. Complete: Use connection pooler (PgBouncer) for high-traffic apps

Connection Configuration:

// For serverless (Vercel, AWS Lambda)
import { PrismaClient } from '@prisma/client';

const globalForPrisma = global as unknown as { prisma: PrismaClient };

export const prisma =
  globalForPrisma.prisma ||
  new PrismaClient({
    log: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development' ? ['query'] : [],
  });

if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') globalForPrisma.prisma = prisma;

// Graceful shutdown
process.on('beforeExit', async () => {
  await prisma.$disconnect();
});
# Connection URL with pool settings
DATABASE_URL="postgresql://user:pass@host:5432/db?connection_limit=5&pool_timeout=10"

Resources:

Transaction Patterns

Common Issues:

  • Inconsistent data from non-atomic operations
  • Deadlocks in concurrent transactions
  • Long-running transactions blocking reads
  • Nested transaction confusion

Diagnosis:

// Check for transaction issues
try {
  const result = await prisma.$transaction([...]);
} catch (e) {
  if (e.code === 'P2034') {
    console.log('Transaction conflict detected');
  }
}

Transaction Patterns:

// Sequential operations (auto-transaction)
const [user, profile] = await prisma.$transaction([
  prisma.user.create({ data: userData }),
  prisma.profile.create({ data: profileData }),
]);

// Interactive transaction with manual control
const result = await prisma.$transaction(async (tx) => {
  const user = await tx.user.create({ data: userData });
  
  // Business logic validation
  if (user.email.endsWith('@blocked.com')) {
    throw new Error('Email domain blocked');
  }
  
  const profile = await tx.profile.create({
    data: { ...profileData, userId: user.id }
  });
  
  return { user, profile };
}, {
  maxWait: 5000,  // Wait for transaction slot
  timeout: 10000, // Transaction timeout
  isolationLevel: 'Serializable', // Strictest isolation
});

// Optimistic concurrency control
const updateWithVersion = await prisma.post.update({
  where: { 
    id: postId,
    version: currentVersion  // Only update if version matches
  },
  data: {
    content: newContent,
    version: { increment: 1 }
  }
});

Resources:

Code Review Checklist

Schema Quality

  • All models have appropriate @id and primary keys
  • Relations use explicit @relation with fields and references
  • Cascade behaviors defined (onDelete, onUpdate)
  • Indexes added for frequently queried fields
  • Enums used for fixed value sets
  • @@map used for table naming conventions

Query Patterns

  • No N+1 queries (relations included when needed)
  • select used to fetch only required fields
  • Pagination implemented for list queries
  • Raw queries used for complex aggregations
  • Proper error handling for database operations

Performance

  • Connection pooling configured appropriately
  • Indexes exist for WHERE clause fields
  • Composite indexes for multi-column queries
  • Query logging enabled in development
  • Slow queries identified and optimized

Migration Safety

  • Migrations tested before production deployment
  • Backward-compatible schema changes (no data loss)
  • Migration scripts reviewed for correctness
  • Rollback strategy documented

Anti-Patterns to Avoid

  1. Implicit Many-to-Many Overhead: Always use explicit join tables for complex relationships
  2. Over-Including: Don't include relations you don't need
  3. Ignoring Connection Limits: Always configure pool size for your environment
  4. Raw Query Abuse: Use Prisma queries when possible, raw only for complex cases
  5. Migration in Production Dev Mode: Never use migrate dev in production

How to use the Prisma Expert skill

  1. Sign in to Zeplik

    Create a free Zeplik account or sign in. New accounts start with free credits, so you can try the Prisma Expert skill right away.

  2. Describe your software development task

    Ask in plain language, or type /prisma-expert to invoke the skill directly. Zeplik recognizes the Prisma Expert skill and applies its method.

  3. Review and refine the result

    Zeplik returns a clear, structured answer. Ask follow-ups in the same chat to refine it or take the next step.

Source and credit

Author
davila7 (D7 Class-A standalone)
License
MIT

Adapted from the open-source davila7/claude-code-templates project and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. View source on GitHub.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Prisma Expert skill?
Prisma Expert is a ready-to-run software development skill on Zeplik. Prisma ORM: schema design, migrations, relations modeling, query optimization, connection issues. Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.
How do I use Prisma Expert on Zeplik?
Sign in to Zeplik and ask in plain language, or type /prisma-expert in any chat to invoke it directly. The skill applies its method and returns a result you can refine in the same conversation.
Which AI model does the Prisma Expert skill use?
Any model you choose. Zeplik works across every model in one chat, so the Prisma Expert skill runs on your preferred model for the task.
Where does the Prisma Expert skill come from?
The Prisma Expert skill is adapted from the open-source davila7/claude-code-templates project (MIT) and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. The original source is linked on this page.
How much does the Prisma Expert skill cost?
Using the skill is free to start. You only spend Zeplik credits when the assistant runs, and new accounts begin with free credits.

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