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Integration timelines vary by complexity. For standard implementations with no customizations, connections can be live within 1-2 weeks. This includes authentication setup and basic workflow configuration. For implementations requiring custom workflows or specific business logic, timelines typically range from 2-6 weeks depending on the scope. Complex enterprise deployments with multiple systems and custom requirements may take 6-10 weeks. These timelines are significantly shorter than traditional integration projects, which often take 2-24 months.
Industrial systems are often heavily customized, and Makini is built to handle this. For reading data, Makini can access virtually any field or custom table in connected systems. Through the connection settings interface, you can specify custom fields, tables, or entities to include in API responses. These show up alongside standard fields in the unified model. For custom objects not in our default model, you can request them through the interface and they'll be available immediately. For writing data, customization support varies by system but covers most common scenarios. During implementation, we work with you to identify required customizations and ensure they're properly configured before going live.
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.
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.
