Updated on 2025-02-22 GMT+08:00

Kubernetes Version Policy

CCE provides highly scalable, high-performance, enterprise-class Kubernetes clusters. As the Kubernetes community periodically releases Kubernetes versions, CCE will release cluster Open Beta Test (OBT) and commercially used versions accordingly. This section describes the Kubernetes version policy of CCE clusters.

Lifecycle of CCE Cluster Versions

Kubernetes Version

Status

Community Release In

OBT of CCE Clusters

Commercial Use of CCE Clusters

EOS of CCE Clusters

v1.31

OBT

August 2024

January 2025

-

-

v1.30

In commercial usea

April 2024

September 2024

October 2024

October 2026

v1.29

In commercial usea

November 2023

April 2024

June 2024

June 2026

v1.28

In commercial usea

August 2023

December 2023

February 2024

February 2026

v1.27

In commercial useb

April 2023

August 2023

October 2023

October 2025

v1.25

In commercial useb

August 2022

November 2022

March 2023

March 2025

v1.23

EOS

December 2021

April 2022

September 2022

September 2024

v1.21

End of service (EOS)

April 2021

December 2021

April 2022

April 2024

v1.19

EOS

August 2020

December 2020

March 2021

September 2023

v1.17

EOS

December 2019

/

July 2020

January 2023

v1.15

EOS

June 2019

/

December 2019

September 2022

v1.13

EOS

December 2018

/

June 2019

March 2022

v1.11

EOS

August 2018

/

October 2018

March 2021

v1.9

EOS

December 2017

/

March 2018

December 2020

The CCE console supports clusters of the latest two commercially used versions:

  • a: Clusters created using the console or APIs
  • b: Clusters created only using APIs

Phases of CCE Cluster Versions

  • OBT: You can experience the latest features of this cluster version. However, the stability of clusters of this version has not been completely verified, and the Service Level Agreement (SLA) of CCE is not valid for such clusters.
  • In commercial use: The cluster version has been fully verified and is stable and reliable. You can use clusters of this version in the production environment, and the CCE SLA is valid for such clusters.
  • EOS: After the cluster version EOS, CCE does not support the creation of new clusters or provide technical support including new feature updates, vulnerability or issue fixes, new patches, work order guidance, and online checks for the EOS cluster version. The CCE SLA is not valid for such clusters.

CCE Cluster Versions

CCE clusters are updated according to the versions available in the Kubernetes community. This means that a CCE cluster version is made up of both the Kubernetes community version number and the CCE patch version number. The CCE cluster version is in the format of vX.Y.Z-rN, such as v1.28.2-r0.

  • A Kubernetes version is in the format of X.Y.Z, which inherits the community version policy. The major Kubernetes version is represented by X, the minor Kubernetes version is represented by Y, and the Kubernetes patch version is represented by Z. For details, see the Kubernetes version policies. For details about the Kubernetes versions supported by CCE, see Kubernetes Version Release Notes.
  • A CCE patch version is in the format of, for example, v1.30.4-rN. New patches are released on an irregular basis for Kubernetes versions that are still in the maintenance period. If a new patch version provides new features, bug fixes, vulnerability fixes, or scenario optimizations compared with the previous version, the N version number increases. For details about CCE patch versions, see Patch Versions.

Cluster Upgrade

Periodically upgrade CCE clusters for better user experience. Using an EOS version, you cannot obtain technical support and CCE SLA assurance. Upgrade CCE clusters in a timely manner.

On the CCE console, you can easily upgrade clusters in a visualized manner, improving the stability and reliability of clusters.