How do I make an enterprise system AI-ready?
This section is the integrator path. You connect Connected Systems, model Business Entities with business metadata, link cross-system relationships, enforce protection, expose governed capabilities, validate, test, publish, certify, and maintain lifecycle — so Role Assistants can use the system inside Operational Trust.
In the dataplane UI, a Connected System is a vendor or platform integration. Each Business Entity is one governed business resource exposed to AI from that system.
Start here: Quickstart: new Connected System
Three layers (how humans and agents build)
| Layer | What it does | Who uses it |
|---|---|---|
| Workspace orchestration | Wizard, repair, validate, test, certify, upload dev | Builder CLI and Builder API |
| Enterprise MCP | Published capabilities after upload | Role Assistants and MCP clients |
| Role assistants + RBAC | Scoped tool subsets for business roles | Operators and business users |
Configure pages describe what to set on each Connected System and Business Entity. Command flags and help topics live in the reference tier.
Why this path exists
Integration platforms move data. AI Fabrix makes data meaningful and governable for AI:
- Business metadata — what records mean in business language
- Cross-system relationships — how customers, contracts, and documents connect
- Governed capabilities — business actions AI may request, not raw APIs
- Certification — proof across operations, agent metadata trust, and governance
- Evidence — completed work creates learning, not chat history
Without this path, AI gets access without authority — unsafe for enterprise roles, audits, and recurring work.
Build phases
| Phase | You prove… | Entry |
|---|---|---|
| 01 — Get started | You can scaffold an integration from OpenAPI/MCP | Create a Connected System |
| 02 — Connected Systems | System auth, roles, AI interfaces, lifecycle | Basics and kind |
| 03 — Business Entities | Business vocabulary, policies, sync, entity guides | Entity basics |
| 04 — Validate and test | Config behaves correctly before publish | Validation and repair |
| 05 — Publish and certify | Capabilities are live and certified | Certification |
| 06 — Operate | You can maintain and re-certify over time | Operate overview |
| Reference | Minimum viable checklist (schema + CLI) | Checklist |
Build path
Choose system
↓
Scaffold (aifabrix create) + copy fixture
↓
Register resource types + model JSON
↓
Configure authentication
↓
Model business metadata
↓
Define dimensions and protection
↓
Link cross-system relationships
↓
Expose governed capabilities
↓
Validate and repair
↓
Test (integration → E2E → governance)
↓
Publish and certify
↓
Operate and improve
flowchart TB
GS[01 Get started]
CS[02 Connected Systems]
BE[03 Business Entities]
VT[04 Validate and test]
PC[05 Publish and certify]
OP[06 Operate]
GS --> CS --> BE --> VT --> PC --> OP
Enterprise AI Certification
Before Role Assistants rely on a connected system, integrators run three certification pillars (Builder CLI):
| Pillar | Command | Proves |
|---|---|---|
| Operations | verify-operations |
Validate, test, integration, E2E against live or sandbox systems |
| Agent metadata trust | verify-trust |
Business metadata complete for AI agents |
| Governance | verify-governance |
Subject-scoped ABAC visibility matches policy |
Then read the report: aifabrix lifecycle <systemKey>. Details: Certification.
Certification is readiness proof, not zero-risk guarantee.
Prerequisites
- Builder CLI installed;
aifabrix auth status(login if needed) - Dataplane reachable for your environment
- OpenAPI or MCP source for the target system
- Test credentials resolved via
kv://inenv.template
Typical integration folder
integration/<systemKey>/
application.yaml
<systemKey>-system.json
<systemKey>-datasource-*.json # Business Entity manifests (one file per entity)
env.template
<systemKey>-deploy.json
Local files are source of truth until upload. Use aifabrix repair when manifest and JSON drift.
Who should read this section
| Role | Use |
|---|---|
| Integrator / developer | Full build path and CLI commands |
| Architect | Phase map + link to Adopt for operating model |
| Operator | Certification outcomes and lifecycle maintenance |
Product context
- What is AI Fabrix?
- Operational Trust — governable AI
- Enterprise Knowledge — business context
- Role Assistants — role-scoped workers
- Evidence Fabrix — proof from completed work
Command quick reference
| When | Command |
|---|---|
| Scaffold | aifabrix wizard |
| Validate | aifabrix validate <systemKey> |
| Upload | aifabrix upload <systemKey> --probe |
| E2E test | aifabrix test-e2e <systemKey> |
| Certify | verify-operations → verify-trust → verify-governance → lifecycle |
| Maintain | aifabrix show <systemKey> --online, repair, download |
See CLI workflow reference for the full ladder.
Common integrator mistakes
| Mistake | Why it fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Skipping business metadata | AI sees vendor field names only | Configure business vocabulary |
| OAuth left on API-key systems | Auth fails at test/E2E | repair --auth apikey |
| No dimensions before AI use | ABAC cannot scope data | Configure business policies |
Certifying with verify-trust only |
Governance and ops not proven | Full certification ladder |
| Editing cloud-only config | Local folder drifts from deployed | download, repair, re-upload |
Phase detail (what each folder proves)
01 — Get started
Scaffold from OpenAPI or MCP, resolve credentials via kv://, and align on systemKey / datasourceKey (Business Entity key) naming. The primary walkthrough is the recommended first read; Quickstart is the command-heavy variant.
02 — Connected Systems
Configure the Connected System manifest: auth, roles, subscriptions, AI interfaces, and lifecycle. See Connected Systems band.
03 — Business Entities
Model each Business Entity: entity types, business vocabulary, data flow, AI contract, sync, and policies. See Business Entities band.
04 — Validate and test
Schema validation, repair for manifest drift, integration tests, and E2E against sandbox or production test tenants. Do not upload broken JSON — validate is cheaper than debugging cloud drift.
05 — Publish and certify
Expose governed capabilities, upload to the dataplane, run the three certification pillars plus lifecycle. Publication makes capabilities available to Enterprise MCP and Role Assistants; certification proves readiness.
06 — Operate
Download online config, repair local folders, re-certify after vendor API changes, and extend integrations with Role Assistant capabilities. Treat integration folders as long-lived products, not one-off scripts.
When to use which get-started page
| Page | Best for |
|---|---|
| Create enterprise external system | First-time integrators; business-readable 12-step flow |
| Developer journey | Role-based map of the same path |
| Quickstart | Copy-paste command ladder |
| Wizard basics | Wizard cluster index |
| AI Wizard overview | Wizard inputs and outputs |
| Create integration | Folder layout and scaffold only |
Evidence and Role Assistant handoff
Certified capabilities feed Enterprise MCP and Role Assistant task design. Operators do not configure raw API endpoints for workers — they assign roles and capabilities within certified scope. Completed tasks produce evidence under Evidence Fabrix, separate from chat transcripts.
For a single end-to-end path from multiple integrations to a live worker, see From integrations to Role Assistant and Operate your first Role Assistant.
When expanding from one pilot system to many, repeat phases 02–05 per systemKey before widening worker scope.
Success criteria (integrator checklist)
You can consider a system AI-ready for a defined scope when:
- Business Entities validate and E2E tests pass for exposed entities
- Business metadata and resource types are documented for operators
- Dimensions and foreign keys match governance sign-off
- Governed capabilities upload successfully and appear online
- All three certification pillars plus
lifecyclereport pass for that scope - Operators know which Role Assistant roles may use which capabilities
AI-ready does not mean “every possible AI feature enabled globally.” It means certified, governed access for the integration and roles you configured.
Limits
Some Role Assistant evidence and UI surfaces vary by deployment. Certification proves readiness for the integration you configured — not every future AI feature in every environment.