Saturday, May 30, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
Technology Tutorials & Latest News | ByteBlock
  • Home
  • Tech News
  • Tech Tutorials
    • Networking
    • Computers
    • Mobile Devices & Tablets
    • Apps & Software
    • Cloud & Servers
    • IT Careers
    • AI
  • Reviews
  • Shop
    • Electronics & Gadgets
    • Apps & Software
    • Online Courses
    • Lifetime Subscription
No Result
View All Result
Tech Insight: Tutorials, Reviews & Latest News
No Result
View All Result
Home News Google

Guide to Gemini Enterprise and A2UI integration

May 30, 2026
in Google
0 0
0

The problem: agents speak text, but users want UI

Most agent frameworks today return strings. That’s fine for short answers, but it breaks down quickly:

  • Multi-turn slot filling (date, time, party size) burns turns and patience.

  • Choices among options (which restaurant? which insurance plan?) become long bulleted lists the user has to copy-paste back.

  • Spatial information (locations, routes, floor plans) is reduced to addresses.

Developers have tried to patch this by sending HTML or JavaScript fragments, but that introduces real risks: cross-site scripting, UI injection from a remote agent you don’t fully control, and visual drift from the host app’s design system. What’s needed is a way to transmit UI that’s safe like data and expressive like code.

What A2UI is

A2UI is an open protocol, introduced by Google and co-developed with the Flutter team and product teams behind Gemini Enterprise. Instead of returning text or HTML, an agent returns a JSON payload that describes a UI: a tree of components (Card, Text, Button, ChoicePicker, Image, …) and a separate data model holding the values those components display.

Three properties make this useful in practice:

  • Declarative, not executable. The payload is data. The client only renders components from a pre-approved catalog, so a remote agent can’t inject arbitrary code or steal credentials through a UI widget.

  • Streaming-friendly. The format is a flat list of small JSON messages, so the LLM can emit them incrementally and the client can paint as they arrive.

  • Framework-agnostic. The same agent response renders through Lit, Angular, Flutter, or native mobile. The agent doesn’t know — or care — what’s on the other end.

A2UI is also transport-agnostic. The messages ride inside whatever pipe you already use: A2A JSON-RPC, AG-UI, WebSockets, SSE. In our reference implementation, A2UI rides inside the A2A protocol as DataPart objects with the MIME type application/json+a2ui.

Where A2UI sits in the stack

A2UI is one piece of a four-layer stack. Confusion usually comes from conflating these layers — they’re each doing a different job:

Layer

Owns

Examples

App experience

Client shell and conversation state — chat window, input box, message history

CopilotKit, AG-UI

Pixel drawing

Turning component descriptions into actual rendered UI

Lit, Flutter, Angular

Conversation pipeline

Client–server transport — sending messages, receiving responses

A2A Protocol

Cargo (data format)

The thing flowing through the pipeline that describes the UI

A2UI

Read top to bottom: CopilotKit/AG-UI owns the app experience. Lit/Flutter/Angular own the rendering. While CopilotKit and AG-UI provide valuable abstractions, they remain strictly optional for implementing A2UI. In this architecture, A2A serves as the underlying conversation pipeline, while A2UI represents the structured cargo that actually traverses that pipe.

That separation is why the same A2UI payload renders identically in three very different deployment shapes:

  • Bespoke web app — a custom client shell (like the reference repo’s Lit frontend/) plus a custom A2UI renderer.

  • CopilotKit / AG-UI app — CopilotKit owns the chat shell, an A2UI renderer is registered inside it for rich cards.

  • Gemini Enterprise — GE is the shell, the renderer, and the transport client. You only build the agent.

So for the GE path, the stack collapses to two layers you control: the A2A endpoint (your agent) and the A2UI cargo it emits. The other two layers are GE’s responsibility. CopilotKit and AG-UI are great if you’re building a standalone product UI elsewhere — they’re just out of scope for embedding an agent inside Gemini Enterprise.

Pattern revisions

The protocol evolves quickly, and different clients support different revisions. Two patterns are common today:

  • Inline pattern — the agent sends a component tree with the data baked into each component (the pattern Gemini Enterprise renders today).

  • Decoupled pattern — the agent sends the component tree and the data model as separate messages, so subsequent turns can update one without re-sending the other. This reduces tokens and latency for long-running conversations and is the direction the protocol is heading.

The reference repo serves both patterns from one backend, picking which to emit per request based on the client’s X-A2A-Extensions header. As new revisions ship, you add another catalog and the same negotiation pattern keeps working.

How A2UI works inside Gemini Enterprise

Gemini Enterprise ships with a built-in A2UI renderer. For the developer, that means the integration story is short:

  1. Build your A2A agent, embedding an A2UI catalog and example payloads alongside the regular tool definitions.

  2. Register the agent with Gemini Enterprise as an A2A endpoint. (Use make register-gemini-enterprise in the reference repo.)

  3. A GE admin shares the agent with employees, just like any other agent in the GE catalog.

At runtime, the flow looks like this:

  1. The user types a request in the GE chat. GE calls your agent’s A2A endpoint and sends along GE’s own A2UI catalog — the list of UI components GE knows how to render.

  2. Your agent decides whether a UI widget is the right response. If yes, it emits an A2UI JSON message (e.g., a ChoicePicker of restaurant options). If no, it falls back to text. Both can coexist in the same response.

  3. GE receives the JSON, validates it against its catalog, and renders the widget natively in GE’s own design language — so it visually matches the rest of the chat surface.

  4. When the user interacts with the widget (selects three options, picks a date), GE serializes the interaction back into JSON and sends it to your agent as the next turn. Your agent processes structured input, not free-form text.

One thing worth flagging: because your agent doesn’t ship its own renderer for GE, you don’t need to choose a frontend framework to start. Your A2A endpoint can run anywhere — Cloud Run, GKE, on-prem — and GE handles the rendering.

High-level architecture example

The reference implementation is an ADK backend on Cloud Run designed to plug seamlessly into Gemini Enterprise.

ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Using Connected Sheets to analyze BigQuery data

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You might also like

Guide to Gemini Enterprise and A2UI integration

May 30, 2026

Using Connected Sheets to analyze BigQuery data

May 30, 2026

AlloyDB Hot Standby: Faster Failovers & Consistent Performance

May 30, 2026

AI-focused innovations in Dataflow | Google Cloud Blog

May 29, 2026

Nano Banana 2 and Nano Banana Pro available for everyone

May 29, 2026

App-centric maintenance visibility in Unified Maintenance

May 29, 2026
monotone logo block byte

Stay ahead in the tech world with Tech Insight. Explore in-depth tutorials, unbiased reviews, and the latest news on gadgets, software, and innovations. Join our community of tech enthusiasts today!

Stay Connected

  • Home
  • Tech News
  • Tech Tutorials
  • Reviews
  • Shop
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2024 Byte Block - Tech Insight: Tutorials, Reviews & Latest News. Made By Huwa.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Sign Up with Google
Sign Up with Linked In
OR

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Tech News
  • Tech Tutorials
    • Networking
    • Computers
    • Mobile Devices & Tablets
    • Apps & Software
    • Cloud & Servers
    • IT Careers
    • AI
  • Reviews
  • Shop
    • Electronics & Gadgets
    • Apps & Software
    • Online Courses
    • Lifetime Subscription

© 2024 Byte Block - Tech Insight: Tutorials, Reviews & Latest News. Made By Huwa.

Login