



Elasticsearch is a distributed search and analytics engine designed for real-time indexing, full-text search, and data exploration across large datasets. It enables fast search and aggregation capabilities for both structured and unstructured data, making it suitable for powering advanced search experiences, log analytics, and operational insights in complex applications.
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Testing should cover authentication, data retrieval, data writing, error handling, and workflow logic. Start by connecting a test system through Makini's authentication flow. Use sandbox or non-production instances of your target systems when available. Test API calls for each entity type you'll use (purchase orders, work orders, etc.) to verify data mapping and field coverage. Test error scenarios by providing invalid inputs or attempting operations without proper permissions. For workflow-based integrations, test each workflow step independently before testing end-to-end. Verify webhook delivery and signature verification. Test with realistic data volumes to identify performance issues. Include tests for connection failure scenarios and verify your error handling and retry logic work correctly.
Makini provides webhook testing tools in the dashboard where you can trigger test webhook deliveries to verify your endpoint configuration. Test webhooks use sample payloads matching actual event structures. Verify your endpoint receives the webhook, validates the signature correctly, and responds with a 200 status code within 10 seconds. Test webhook retries by having your endpoint return error codes or timeout, then verify Makini retries as expected. Test duplicate handling by processing the same webhook multiple times. For local development, use tools like ngrok to expose your local endpoint for webhook testing. The webhook logs in the Makini dashboard show delivery attempts, response codes, and timing, helping debug delivery issues.
When a system becomes unavailable, Makini detects the connectivity failure and marks the connection status accordingly. Scheduled syncs will fail with connectivity errors. API requests to the connection will return error responses indicating the system is unreachable. Makini continues attempting scheduled syncs using exponential backoff—initial retries happen frequently, then progressively less often to avoid overwhelming the system when it comes back online. Webhooks notify you of the connection status change. When the system comes back online, normal operations resume automatically. For temporary outages, no action is required. For extended outages, you may want to notify the customer. Connection credits remain consumed during outages since the connection configuration persists.
Makini provides tiered support plans. Standard support includes email support with business hours response times, access to documentation and knowledge base, and webhook notifications for issues. Extended support adds direct access to our engineering team, faster response times including after-hours support for critical issues, proactive monitoring and recommendations, and assistance with custom development. Enterprise support includes dedicated support contacts, participation in architecture planning, quarterly business reviews, and priority feature requests. All plans include access to our API documentation, authentication guides, and community resources. Support hours can be added to any plan based on your anticipated needs.
