Automate Make (Integromat) tasks via Rube MCP (Composio): operations, enums, language and timezone lookups. Always search tools first for current schemas.
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Automate Make (formerly Integromat) operations through Composio's Make toolkit via Rube MCP.
Toolkit docs: composio.dev/toolkits/make
RUBE_MANAGE_CONNECTIONS with toolkit makeRUBE_SEARCH_TOOLS first to get current tool schemasGet Rube MCP: Add https://rube.app/mcp as an MCP server in your client configuration. No API keys needed — just add the endpoint and it works.
RUBE_SEARCH_TOOLS respondsRUBE_MANAGE_CONNECTIONS with toolkit makeWhen to use: User wants to retrieve operation logs or usage data from Make scenarios
Tool sequence:
MAKE_GET_OPERATIONS - Retrieve operation records [Required]Key parameters:
Pitfalls:
When to use: User wants to see supported languages for Make scenarios or interfaces
Tool sequence:
MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_LANGUAGES - Get all supported language codes [Required]Key parameters:
Pitfalls:
When to use: User wants to see supported timezones for scheduling Make scenarios
Tool sequence:
MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_TIMEZONES - Get all supported timezone identifiers [Required]Key parameters:
Pitfalls:
When to use: User needs to configure scenarios with correct language and timezone values
Tool sequence:
MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_LANGUAGES - Get valid language codes [Required]MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_TIMEZONES - Get valid timezone identifiers [Required]Key parameters:
Pitfalls:
Before configuring any Make scenario properties that accept language or timezone:
1. Call MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_LANGUAGES or MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_TIMEZONES
2. Verify the desired value exists in the returned list
3. Use the exact string value from the enum list1. Call MAKE_GET_OPERATIONS with date range filters
2. Analyze operation counts, statuses, and error rates
3. Identify failed operations for troubleshootingSince language and timezone lists are static:
1. Call MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_LANGUAGES once at workflow start
2. Store results in memory or local cache
3. Validate user inputs against cached values
4. Refresh cache only when starting a new sessionFor scenario health monitoring:
1. Call MAKE_GET_OPERATIONS with recent date range
2. Group operations by scenario ID
3. Calculate success/failure ratios per scenario
4. Identify scenarios with high error rates
5. Report findings to user or notification channelMake workflows often connect to other apps. Compose multi-tool workflows:
1. Call RUBE_SEARCH_TOOLS to find tools for the target app
2. Connect required toolkits via RUBE_MANAGE_CONNECTIONS
3. Use Make operations data to understand workflow execution patterns
4. Execute equivalent workflows directly via individual app toolkitsLimited Toolkit:
Operations Data:
Response Parsing:
data keyRate Limits:
Authentication:
| Task | Tool Slug | Key Params |
|---|---|---|
| Get operations | MAKE_GET_OPERATIONS | (check schema for filters) |
| List languages | MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_LANGUAGES | (none) |
| List timezones | MAKE_LIST_ENUMS_TIMEZONES | (none) |
Since the Make toolkit has limited tools, consider these alternatives for common Make use cases:
| Make Use Case | Alternative Approach |
|---|---|
| Trigger a scenario | Use Make's native webhook or API endpoint directly |
| Create a scenario | Use Make's scenario management API directly |
| Schedule execution | Use RUBE_MANAGE_RECIPE_SCHEDULE with composed workflows |
| Multi-app workflow | Compose individual toolkit tools via RUBE_MULTI_EXECUTE_TOOL |
| Data transformation | Use RUBE_REMOTE_WORKBENCH for complex processing |
Instead of relying solely on Make's toolkit, build equivalent automation directly:
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