The Cardano Foundation has released Cardano Rosetta Java v2.1.0, introducing complete Conway-era governance functionality through standardized Mesh API endpointsThe Cardano Foundation has released Cardano Rosetta Java v2.1.0, introducing complete Conway-era governance functionality through standardized Mesh API endpoints

Cardano Foundation Updates Its Exchange API to Include Full Governance Support

2026/03/02 14:45
4 min read

The Cardano Foundation has released Cardano Rosetta Java v2.1.0, introducing complete Conway-era governance functionality through standardized Mesh API endpoints, allowing exchanges and developers to interact with Cardano’s decentralized governance infrastructure for the first time through the Rosetta interface.

What the Update Adds

The Conway ledger era, also referred to as the Voltaire phase, represents Cardano’s transition toward on-chain governance where ADA holders, Stake Pool Operators, and Delegated Representatives participate directly in protocol decisions. Until v2.1.0, this governance layer was not accessible through the Rosetta API that exchanges and institutional integrators rely on for standardized blockchain interaction.

The release closes that gap across both construction and data endpoints.

SPOs can now cast on-chain votes on governance actions directly through the API. Users can delegate their voting power to DReps through the same interface rather than requiring separate tooling. CIP-129 support has been added, enabling automatic DRep type inference from prefixed identifiers, which simplifies how governance participant identities are handled during transaction construction. The governance operations, including dRepVoteDelegation, are now correctly identified and returned across the block, block/transaction, and construction/parse endpoints.

For exchanges in particular, the standardized endpoint coverage means that governance-related transactions can be parsed, validated, and displayed using the same infrastructure already in place for standard ADA transfers and staking operations.

The Technical Improvements

Beyond governance, v2.1.0 includes several infrastructure refinements. Operations within data endpoints are now sorted by index in ascending order, improving consistency for developers parsing transaction data programmatically. HTTP status code handling has been corrected to align error types with appropriate response codes: non-retriable errors now return 400 Bad Request rather than 500 Internal Server Error, a change that makes error handling more predictable for integrators. An experimental admin interface for the indexer is now accessible at localhost for developers running local instances.

None of those changes are headline features, but the HTTP status code correction is the kind of fix that eliminates a category of debugging confusion that has frustrated developers integrating the prior version. Small improvements to error handling tend to have outsized practical impact.

Upgrade Path and Compatibility

The upgrade path from v2.0.0 is fully compatible and requires no data resync, meaning exchanges and infrastructure operators on the current major version can apply the update without operational downtime. For operators still running v1.x.x, a full genesis resync of the yaci-indexer is required, though existing Cardano Node data can be retained throughout the process.

The distinction matters practically. Operators who moved to v2.0.0 during its February 2026 release get a smooth upgrade. Those who have not yet migrated from v1.x.x face a more involved process before accessing the governance features in v2.1.0.

Context From the v2.0.0 Release

The v2.0.0 release in early February 2026 was the preceding significant update, which reduced network synchronization time by approximately 30%, bringing sync from 52 hours down to roughly 37 hours. That reduction was meaningful for exchanges and developers running full node infrastructure, cutting the time to operational readiness by over 15 hours for new deployments.

v2.1.0 builds on that foundation by adding the governance layer rather than replacing or modifying the synchronization improvements. The two releases together represent a reasonably compressed timeline of infrastructure advancement: faster sync in February, governance API integration in the same month.

Bitwise Data Shows Bitcoin Investors Who Held Three or More Years Have Only a 0.7% Chance of a Loss

Why Governance API Access Matters

Cardano’s on-chain governance model is a relatively new and still-maturing component of the protocol. The ability for SPOs and ADA holders to participate in governance actions exists at the protocol level, but participation rates depend in part on how accessible the tooling is for the platforms where most users interact with their holdings.

An exchange that can now surface governance participation directly through standardized API endpoints removes a step from the process for users who would otherwise need external tooling to vote or delegate. Whether that friction reduction translates to meaningfully higher governance participation rates is a question the on-chain data following the release will eventually answer.

The post Cardano Foundation Updates Its Exchange API to Include Full Governance Support appeared first on ETHNews.

Market Opportunity
ERA Logo
ERA Price(ERA)
$0.1453
$0.1453$0.1453
-1.02%
USD
ERA (ERA) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.