




EAM360 is a mobile-first enterprise asset management application designed to extend and enhance IBM Maximo. It supports work orders, inspections, asset history, inventory tracking and offline field execution, helping maintenance teams streamline daily operations.
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When customers change their system credentials, the existing Makini connection will lose access and workflows will begin failing with authentication errors. Makini provides webhook notifications when connections require reauthorization, allowing you to proactively notify customers. Customers can reconnect by logging into the system through Makini's authentication flow again, which issues a new API token. The reconnection process takes only a few minutes. Best practice is to implement connection health monitoring and automated alerts when connections require attention, so you can address issues before they impact operations.
Makini Flows is our embedded workflow automation platform, built on n8n, which we consider the best workflow automation tool available. It's fully integrated into Makini and runs on our infrastructure. Flows allows you to build complex integration logic using a visual workflow builder—no code required, though code is supported for advanced use cases. Workflows can be triggered by schedules, webhooks, API calls, or events from connected systems. You can perform data transformations, implement conditional logic, call external APIs, and orchestrate multi-step processes. Flows includes over 1,000 pre-built connectors beyond Makini's industrial systems, enabling integrations with databases, messaging platforms, cloud services, and more. Most customer activations are completed using Flows due to its flexibility and ease of use.
Makini uses standard HTTP status codes and structured error responses. Error responses include an error code (e.g., `AUTHENTICATION_FAILED`, `RATE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED`), error type for categorization, a human-readable error message, and a unique request ID for support inquiries. Common status codes include 400 for invalid requests, 401 for authentication failures, 403 for permission issues, 429 for rate limiting, 500 for server errors, and 503 for service unavailability. Use the error code for programmatic error handling rather than parsing error messages. The request ID helps our support team quickly identify and investigate specific issues.
For bulk operations, we recommend batch processing with appropriate rate limiting and error handling. Makini Flows provides built-in batch processing capabilities with configurable batch sizes, delays between batches, and error handling. For API-based bulk operations, implement pagination when retrieving large datasets—our API returns results in pages with continuation tokens for fetching subsequent pages. When writing large volumes of data, break operations into smaller batches (typically 50-100 records per batch) with delays between batches to avoid overwhelming the target system. Implement comprehensive error logging to identify which specific records fail in a batch. For very large operations (thousands of records), consider asynchronous processing patterns where you queue operations and process them in the background.
