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Makini supports over 2,000 industrial systems across ERP, CMMS, and WMS categories. This includes major platforms like SAP (ECC, S4/HANA, Business One), Oracle NetSuite, Microsoft Dynamics, IBM Maximo, and specialized industrial systems. We support both cloud-based and on-premises installations. If you need to connect to a system we don't currently support, we're committed to building that integration for you at no additional charge—most new integrations are completed within one business day. You can view our full list of supported systems at makini.io/integrations.
Makini's unified API acts as a common denominator across all connected systems. We map each system's data structure to a standardized data model, exposing consistent endpoints regardless of the underlying platform. This means you write the same code to retrieve purchase orders from SAP, NetSuite, or Dynamics—the API calls and response formats are identical. You always get data in the same structure, making it easy to build consistent business logic. The unified approach eliminates the need to learn each system's unique API, manage multiple authentication methods, or handle varying data formats.
The initial sync occurs when you first connect a system and retrieves historical data to establish a baseline. This includes records from a configurable time period (typically 30-90 days) and can take several minutes to hours depending on data volume. Initial syncs are complete snapshots of the requested data. Incremental syncs occur on subsequent runs and retrieve only records created or modified since the last successful sync. Makini tracks sync timestamps and uses them to query for changes efficiently. Incremental syncs are much faster, usually completing in seconds to minutes. This approach minimizes API load on source systems while keeping your data current.
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.
