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This document defines the canonical structure for AdCP responses transmitted over the A2A protocol.

A2A Wire Format

Examples below use A2A 1.0 wire format: Parts carry no kind discriminator (content type is implied by which field is set — text, data, url, or raw), roles are ROLE_USER / ROLE_AGENT, and task states are TASK_STATE_* (ProtoJSON canonical). See the A2A Guide for a side-by-side with v0.3. AdCP’s top-level unified status field (returned by @adcp/sdk) continues to use the lowercase shorthand ("completed", "failed", "working", "input-required", "submitted"). That is an AdCP abstraction over status.state — not an A2A wire value. For v0.3 servers, the same DataPart becomes { "kind": "data", "data": {...} } and states become lowercase. Extraction clients accept both shapes during the compatibility period.

Required Structure

Final Responses (status: “completed”)

AdCP responses over A2A MUST:
  • Include at least one DataPart (a Part carrying a non-null data field) containing the task response payload
  • Use single artifact with multiple parts (not multiple artifacts)
  • Use the last DataPart as authoritative when multiple data parts exist
  • NOT wrap AdCP payloads in custom framework objects (no { response: {...} } wrappers)
Recommended pattern:
  • TextPart (Part with text field): Human-readable summary — recommended but optional
  • DataPart (Part with data field): Structured AdCP response payload — required
  • FilePart (Part with url or raw field): Optional file references (previews, reports)
Multiple artifacts: Only for fundamentally distinct deliverables (e.g., creative asset + separate trafficking report). Rare in AdCP - prefer single artifact with multiple parts.

Interim Responses (working, submitted, input-required, auth-required)

Interim status updates are delivered as TaskStatusUpdateEvent, with optional progress/challenge data carried in status.message.parts[] (not in artifacts). Artifacts accumulate during the task lifecycle but are read as the final deliverable once the task reaches a terminal state.
When delivered over SSE or as a push notification, this event is wrapped in the A2A 1.0 StreamResponse oneof: { "statusUpdate": { … } }. Non-streaming responses (e.g. tasks/get) deliver the bare object. Clients unwrap before reading status.state — see A2A Response Extraction. Interim response characteristics:
  • TextPart is recommended for human-readable status
  • DataPart is optional but follows AdCP schemas when provided
  • Interim status schemas (*-async-response-working.json, *-async-response-input-required.json, etc.) are work-in-progress and may evolve
  • Implementors may choose to handle interim data more loosely given schema evolution
When final status is reached (completed, failed, canceled, or rejected), the full AdCP task response is delivered on a Task object with the DataPart in .artifacts[0].parts[].

Framework Wrappers (NOT PERMITTED)

CRITICAL: DataPart content MUST be the direct AdCP response payload, not wrapped in framework-specific objects.
Why this matters:
  • Breaks schema validation (clients expect products at root, not response.products)
  • Adds unnecessary nesting layer
  • Violates protocol-agnostic design (wrapper is framework-specific)
  • Complicates client extraction code
If your implementation adds wrappers, this is a bug that should be fixed in the framework layer, not worked around in client code.

Canonical Client Behavior

This section defines EXACTLY how clients MUST extract AdCP responses from A2A protocol responses.

Quick Reference

Key Insights:
  • Final statuses use Task object with data in .artifacts. If a server has no structured payload (e.g., JSON-RPC parse error, pre-task auth failure), it may place only a text message in status.message.parts — clients fall back to that location.
  • Interim statuses use TaskStatusUpdateEvent with optional data in status.message.parts[].
  • Stream/webhook delivery wraps the payload in the A2A 1.0 StreamResponse oneof ({ task }, { statusUpdate }, { artifactUpdate }, { message }). Clients unwrap before reading fields.
  • All statuses use AdCP schemas when data is present.
  • Interim status schemas are work-in-progress and may evolve.

Rule 1: Status-Based Handling

Clients MUST branch on the normalized status to determine the correct data extraction location. The status referenced here is AdCP’s unified lowercase value (e.g. "completed"); the raw A2A wire value at status.state is TASK_STATE_COMPLETED in 1.0 or completed in v0.3. Normalize before comparing — see A2A Response Extraction.
Critical:
  • Interim statuses use TaskStatusUpdateEvent → extract from status.message.parts[]
  • Final statuses use Task object → extract from .artifacts[0].parts[], falling back to status.message.parts[] if artifacts are empty

Rule 2: Data Extraction Helpers

Extract data from the appropriate location based on webhook type:
These detectors work for both wire formats: a 1.0 DataPart has data set (no kind), a v0.3 DataPart has kind: "data" and data set — both satisfy p.data != null.

Rule 3: Schema Validation

All AdCP responses use schemas, but validation approach varies by status:
Schema Evolution Note: Interim status schemas (*-async-response-working.json, etc.) are work-in-progress. Implementors may choose to handle these more loosely while schemas stabilize.

Complete Example

Putting it all together with proper handling of both Task and TaskStatusUpdateEvent payloads:

Last Data Part Authority Pattern

Test Cases

✅ Correct Behavior

❌ Incorrect Behavior (Common Mistakes)

Error Handling

Task-Level Errors (Partial Failures)

Task executed but couldn’t complete fully. Use errors array in DataPart with status: "completed":
When to use errors array:
  • Platform authorization issues (PLATFORM_UNAUTHORIZED)
  • Partial data availability
  • Validation issues in subset of data

Protocol-Level Errors (Fatal)

Task couldn’t execute. Use status: "failed" with message:
When to use status: failed:
  • Authentication failures (invalid credentials, expired tokens)
  • Invalid request parameters (malformed JSON, missing required fields)
  • Resource not found (unknown taskId, expired context)
  • System errors (database unavailable, internal service failure)

Where the Error Lives: Decision Rule

Placement is chosen by what the server has and which state it’s in: Rule of thumb: if the server has structured error data, put it in artifacts as a DataPart. status.message is the free-text fallback for cases where no task artifact was ever produced (JSON-RPC parse errors, auth handshake failures, malformed requests, or a user-initiated cancel with no further detail). A2A 1.0 §3.7 reinforces this: “Messages SHOULD NOT be used to deliver task outputs. Results SHOULD be returned using Artifacts.” rejected vs failed. Use rejected when the server refuses to attempt the task (policy/tier/validation check, before any work is started). Use failed when work started and encountered a fatal error. Both carry adcp_error in the artifact — the state distinguishes when the failure occurred, which drives different retry and UX behavior on the caller side. Cancel origin is client-reconciled, not seller-attributed. status.state: "canceled" (or TASK_STATE_CANCELED) does not tell the caller whether the cancel was user-initiated or system-initiated — a seller could place adcp_error in artifacts for what was actually a user-initiated cancel to mislead the buyer’s bookkeeping or retry logic. Clients MUST reconcile cancel origin locally: if the caller has an outstanding tasks/cancel request for this taskId, treat the cancel as user-initiated regardless of payload and ignore any adcp_error the seller attached. Clients MUST NOT retry a user-initiated cancel on the basis of a seller-sent adcp_error.recovery hint.

Status Mapping

AdCP uses A2A’s TaskState enum directly:

Webhook Payloads

Async operations (status: "submitted") deliver the same artifact structure in webhooks:
Extract AdCP data using the same last-DataPart pattern. For webhook authentication, retry patterns, and security, see Webhooks.

File Parts in Responses

Creative operations MAY include file references:
File part usage: Preview URLs, generated assets, trafficking reports. Not for raw AdCP response data (always use DataPart).

Retry and Idempotency

TaskId-Based Deduplication

A2A’s taskId enables retry detection. Agents SHOULD:
  • Return cached response if taskId matches a completed operation (within TTL window)
  • Reject duplicate taskId submission if operation is still in progress

Examples

Implementation Checklist

When implementing A2A responses for AdCP: Final Responses (status: “completed” or “failed”) - Use Task object:
  • Always include status field from TaskState enum
  • Use .artifacts array with at least one DataPart containing AdCP response payload
  • Include TextPart with human-readable message (recommended for UX)
  • Use single artifact with multiple parts (not multiple artifacts)
  • Use last DataPart as authoritative if multiple exist
  • Never nest AdCP data in custom wrappers (no { response: {...} } objects)
  • DataPart content MUST match AdCP schemas (validate against [task]-response.json)
Interim Responses (status: “working”, “submitted”, “input-required”) - Use TaskStatusUpdateEvent:
  • Use status.message.parts[] for optional data (not .artifacts)
  • TextPart is recommended for human-readable status updates
  • DataPart is optional but follows AdCP schemas when provided ([task]-async-response-[status].json)
  • Interim schemas are work-in-progress - clients may handle more loosely
  • Include progress indicators when applicable (percentage, current_step, ETA)
Error Handling:
  • Use status: "failed" for protocol errors only (auth, invalid params, system errors)
  • Use errors array for task failures (platform auth, partial data) with status: "completed"
General:
  • Include taskId and contextId for tracking
  • Follow discriminated union patterns for task responses (check schemas)
  • Use correct payload type: Task for final states, TaskStatusUpdateEvent for interim
  • Support taskId-based deduplication for retry detection

See Also