Reference: Semantic Versioning
Legend:
- X.Y.Z refers to the version (git tag) of Kubernetes that is released. This versions all components: apiserver, kubelet, kubectl, etc. (X is the major version, Y is the minor version, and Z is the patch version.)
- X.Y.0-{alpha,beta}.W, W > 0 (Branch: master)
- Alpha and beta releases are created roughly every two weeks directly from the master branch.
- Depending on the release schedule progress, the release team decides when to move from alpha.W to beta releases, which then start again at beta.0.
- No cherrypick releases. If there is a critical bugfix, a new release from master can be created ahead of schedule.
- X.Y.Z-rc.W (Branch: release-X.Y)
- When master is feature-complete for X.Y, we will cut the release-X.Y branch 2 weeks prior to the desired X.Y.0 date and cherrypick only PRs essential to X.Y.
- This cut will be marked as X.Y.0-rc.0, and master will be revved to X.Y+1.0-alpha.0.
- If we're not satisfied with X.Y.0-rc.0, we'll release other rc releases, (X.Y.0-rc.W | W > 0) as necessary.
- X.Y.0 (Branch: release-X.Y)
- Final release, cut from the release-X.Y branch cut two weeks prior.
- X.Y.1-rc.0 will be tagged at the same commit on the same branch.
- X.Y.0 occur 3 to 4 months after X.(Y-1).0.
- X.Y.Z, Z > 0 (Branch: release-X.Y)
- Patch releases are released as we cherrypick commits into the release-X.Y branch, (which is at X.Y.Z-beta.W,) as needed.
- X.Y.Z is cut straight from the release-X.Y branch, and X.Y.Z+1-beta.0 is tagged on the followup commit that updates pkg/version/base.go with the beta version.
- X.Y.Z, Z > 0 (Branch: release-X.Y.Z)
- These are special and different in that the X.Y.Z tag is branched to isolate the emergency/critical fix from all other changes that have landed on the release branch since the previous tag
- Cut release-X.Y.Z branch to hold the isolated patch release
- Tag release-X.Y.Z branch + fixes with X.Y.(Z+1)
- Branched patch releases are rarely needed but used for emergency/critical fixes to the latest release
- See #19849 tracking the work that is needed for this kind of release to be possible.
There is no mandated timeline for major versions and there are currently no criteria
for shipping 2.0.0. We haven't so far applied a rigorous interpretation of semantic
versioning with respect to incompatible changes of any kind (e.g., component flag changes).
We previously discussed releasing 2.0.0 when removing the monolithic v1
API
group/version, but there are no current plans to do so.
- Continuous integration versions also exist, and are versioned off of alpha and beta releases. X.Y.Z-alpha.W.C+aaaa is C commits after X.Y.Z-alpha.W, with an additional +aaaa build suffix added; X.Y.Z-beta.W.C+bbbb is C commits after X.Y.Z-beta.W, with an additional +bbbb build suffix added. Furthermore, builds that are built off of a dirty build tree, (during development, with things in the tree that are not checked it,) it will be appended with -dirty.
We expect users to stay reasonably up-to-date with the versions of Kubernetes they use in production, but understand that it may take time to upgrade, especially for production-critical components.
We expect users to be running approximately the latest patch release of a given minor release; we often include critical bug fixes in patch releases, and so encourage users to upgrade as soon as possible.
Different components are expected to be compatible across different amounts of skew, all relative to the master version. Nodes may lag masters components by up to two minor versions but should be at a version no newer than the master; a client should be skewed no more than one minor version from the master, but may lead the master by up to one minor version. For example, a v1.3 master should work with v1.1, v1.2, and v1.3 nodes, and should work with v1.2, v1.3, and v1.4 clients.
Furthermore, we expect to "support" three minor releases at a time. "Support" means we expect users to be running that version in production, though we may not port fixes back before the latest minor version. For example, when v1.3 comes out, v1.0 will no longer be supported: basically, that means that the reasonable response to the question "my v1.0 cluster isn't working," is, "you should probably upgrade it, (and probably should have some time ago)". With minor releases happening approximately every three months, that means a minor release is supported for approximately nine months.
Patch releases are intended for critical bug fixes to the latest minor version, such as addressing security vulnerabilities, fixes to problems affecting a large number of users, severe problems with no workaround, and blockers for products based on Kubernetes.
They should not contain miscellaneous feature additions or improvements, and especially no incompatibilities should be introduced between patch versions of the same minor version (or even major version).
Dependencies, such as Docker or Etcd, should also not be changed unless absolutely necessary, and also just to fix critical bugs (so, at most patch version changes, not new major nor minor versions).
- Users can upgrade from any 1.x release to any other 1.x release as a
rolling upgrade across their cluster. (Rolling upgrade means being able to
upgrade the master first, then one node at a time. See #4855 for details.)
- However, we do not recommend upgrading more than two minor releases at a time (see Supported releases and component skew), and do not recommend running non-latest patch releases of a given minor release.
- No hard breaking changes over version boundaries.
- For example, if a user is at 1.x, we may require them to upgrade to 1.x+y before upgrading to 2.x. In others words, an upgrade across major versions (e.g. 1.x to 2.x) should effectively be a no-op and as graceful as an upgrade from 1.x to 1.x+1. But you can require someone to go from 1.x to 1.x+y before they go to 2.x.
There is a separate question of how to track the capabilities of a kubelet to facilitate rolling upgrades. That is not addressed here.