



Flow refers to a workflow automation concept or tool that enables organisations to build, visualise, and execute automated processes by defining triggers, conditions, and actions without extensive coding. Such platforms streamline repetitive tasks and connect disparate systems into automated sequences.
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Makini is a unified API platform for industrial systems integration. We provide connectivity to over 2,000 ERP, CMMS, and WMS systems through a single, standardized API. Instead of building separate integrations for each system, you connect once to Makini and gain access to all supported platforms. This approach transforms integration projects that typically cost tens of thousands of dollars and take months into a manageable operational expense with deployment times of 1-2 weeks.
Makini's API supports date filtering on most endpoints using query parameters. You can filter by creation date, modification date, or entity-specific date fields like order date or delivery date. Common patterns include `modified_after=2024-01-01` to retrieve records updated since a specific date, or relative timestamps like `modified_after=2024-01-01T00:00:00Z`. For optimal performance, use incremental data retrieval patterns rather than repeatedly fetching all records. The sync status endpoint provides the last sync timestamp, which you can use as the `modified_after` value for your next query. This approach minimizes data transfer and API load while ensuring you capture all changes.
Design your webhook receiver to handle duplicates and out-of-order webhooks, as network issues or retries can cause both scenarios. Keep the receiver lightweight—ideally writing incoming webhooks to a queue or reliable storage—then process them asynchronously. This prevents timeouts and allows your system to handle high-volume webhook spikes. Respond with a 200 status code immediately after receiving the webhook, before processing begins. Implement idempotency by tracking processed webhook IDs and skipping duplicates. Use constant-time comparison for signature verification to prevent timing attacks. If webhook processing fails, log the error but still return 200 to prevent unnecessary retries. Set up monitoring and alerts for webhook failures so you can investigate issues promptly. For critical workflows, combine webhooks with periodic polling as a fallback mechanism.
Write operation limitations vary by system. Common limitations include: field-level restrictions (some fields may be read-only), business rule validation (orders may require certain fields or valid vendor codes), permission requirements (the connected account needs specific permissions), timing restrictions (some systems prevent modifications after certain workflow states), and rate limits on write operations. Custom fields in target systems may not be writable through standard APIs. Some systems have transactional requirements—for example, purchase order line items must be created in the same transaction as the order header. During implementation, we identify write operation limitations for your specific use cases and design workflows that work within those constraints.
