Supported Releases

This page lists the status, timeline and policy for currently supported releases.

Each release is supported for a period of four months, and we aim to create a new release every two months.

Supported releases

Release Release Date End of Life Supported Kubernetes versions Supported OpenShift versions
1.6 Oct 26, 2021 Mar 30, 2022 1.17 → 1.22 4.4 → 4.9
1.5 Aug 11, 2021 Jan 26, 2022 1.16 → 1.22 4.3 → 4.8

Upcoming releases

Release Release Date End of life Supported Kubernetes versions Supported OpenShift versions
1.7 Jan 26, 2022 May 26, 2022 1.18 → 1.23 4.5 → 4.9
1.8 Mar 30, 2022 June 8, 2022 To be confirmed To be confirmed

Note that dates in the future are uncertain and might change.

Old releases

Release Release Date EOL Compatible Kubernetes versions Compatible OpenShift versions
1.4 Jun 15, 2021 Oct 26, 2021 1.16 → 1.21 4.3 → 4.7
1.3 Apr 08, 2021 Aug 11, 2021 1.16 → 1.21 4.3 → 4.7
1.2 Feb 10, 2021 Jun 15, 2021 1.16 → 1.21 4.3 → 4.7
1.1 Nov 24, 2021 Apr 08, 2021 1.11 → 1.21 3.11 → 4.7
1.0 Sep 02, 2020 Feb 10, 2021 1.11 → 1.21 3.11 → 4.7
0.16 Jul 23, 2020 Nov 24, 2020 1.11 → 1.21 3.11 → 4.7
0.15 May 06, 2020 Sep 02, 2020 1.11 → 1.21 3.11 → 4.7
0.14 Mar 11, 2020 Jul 23, 2020 1.11 → 1.21 3.11 → 4.7
0.13 Jan 21, 2020 May 06, 2020 1.11 → 1.21 3.11 → 4.7
0.12 Nov 27, 2019 Mar 11, 2020 1.11 → 1.21 3.11 → 4.7
0.11 Oct 10, 2019 Jan 21, 2020 1.9 → 1.21 3.09 → 4.7

You can find available releases on the releases page. You can find the release notes for each minor release here, and the upgrade instructions are here. The cert-manager release process is documented on the release-process page.

Support policy

What we mean by support

Our support window is four months for each release branch. In the below diagram, release-1.2 is an example of a release branch. The support window corresponds to the two latest releases, given that we produce a new final release every two months. We offer two types of support:

For example, imagining that the latest release is v1.2.0, you can expect support for both v1.2.0 and v1.1.0. Only the last patch release of each branch is actually supported.

   v1.0.0                                                          ^
 Sep 2, 2020                                                       | UNSUPPORTED
------+---------------------------------------------> release-1.0  | RELEASES
       \                                                           v
        \
         \       v1.1.0
          \    Nov 24, 2020                                        ^
           ---------+-------------------------------> release-1.1  |
                     \                                             | SUPPORTED
                      \                                            | RELEASES
                       \         v1.2.0                            | = the two
                        \      Feb 10, 2021                        |   last
                         ------------+--------------> release-1.2  |   releases
                                      \                            v
                                       \
                                        \
                                         \
                                          -----------> master branch
                                                       April 1, 2021

Technical support

Technical assistance is offered on a best-effort basis for supported releases only. You can request support from the community on Kubernetes Slack (in the #cert-manager channel), using GitHub Discussions or using the cert-manager-dev Google group.

Security and bug fixes

We back-port important bug fixes — including security fixes — to all currently supported releases.

Security issues

Security issues are fixed as soon as possible. They get back-ported to the last two releases, and a new patch release is immediately created for them.

Critical bugs

Critical bugs include both regression bugs as well as upgrade bugs.

Regressions are functionalities that worked in a previous release but no longer work. #4142, #3393 and #2857 are three examples of regressions.

Upgrade bugs are issues (often Helm-related) preventing users from upgrading to currently supported releases from earlier releases of cert-manager. #3882 and #3644 are examples of upgrade bugs.

Note that intentional breaking changes do not belong to this category.

Fixes for critical bugs are (usually) immediately back-ported by creating a new patch release for the two currently supported releases.

Long-standing bugs

Long-standing bug: sometimes a bug exists for a long time, and may have known workarounds. #3444 is an example of a long-standing bug.

Where we feel that back-porting would be difficult or might be a stability risk to clusters running cert-manager, we’ll make the fix in a major release but avoid back-porting the fix.

Breaking changes

Breaking changes are changes that intentionally break the cert-manager Kubernetes API or the command line flags. We avoid making breaking changes where possible, and where they’re required we’ll give as much notice as possible.

How we determine supported Kubernetes versions

The list of supported Kubernetes versions displayed in the Supported Releases section depends on what the cert-manager maintainers think is reasonable to support and to test.

As of 16 Dec 2021, our testing coverage is:

Release branch Prow configuration Dashboard Kubernetes versions tested Periodicity
PRs presubmits.yaml presubmits-blocking 1.22 On each PR
master periodics.yaml master 1.18 → 1.23 Every 2 hours
release-1.7 n/a* n/a n/a n/a
release-1.6 previous-periodics.yaml previous 1.18 → 1.23 Every 2 hours
release-1.5 n/a n/a n/a

*The release-1.7 is currently equal to release-1.6; we decided to disable the periodic tests until we release 1.7.0-alpha.0. The disabling of the periodic tests was performed in the testing PR 606. This note should be removed as soon as we release 1.7.0-alpha.0.

The oldest Kubernetes release supported by cert-manager is 1.16, as we want to be supporting most commercial Kubernetes offerings.

Vendor Oldest Kubernetes Release* Other Old** Kubernetes Releases
EKS 1.18 (EOL Feb 2022) 1.19 (EOL Apr 2022), 1.20 (EOL Jul 2022)
GKE 1.18 (EOL Mar 2022) 1.19 (EOL Jun 2022), 1.20 (EOL Aug 2022)
AKS 1.19 (EOL Jan 2022) 1.20 (EOL Feb 2022)
OpenShift 4 1.18 (4.5, EOL July 2021) 1.19 (4.6 EUS, EOL May 2022)

*Oldest release relevant to the next cert-manager release, as of 2021-11-19

**We say that a Kubernetes offering is “old” when it is not supported upstream as per the Version Skew Policy page.

With regard to OpenShift Container Platform 3, cert-manager 1.2 is the last release to support OpenShift 3.11 (Kubernetes 1.11). Although OpenShift 3.11 is still supported by Red Hat until June 2022, keeping support for very old versions of Kubernetes had become too much of a burden.

Note: the following table presents the mapping between each OpenShift version and its associated Kubernetes version:

OpenShift versions Kubernetes version
4.10 1.23
4.9 1.22
4.8 1.21
4.7 1.20
4.6 1.19
4.5 1.18
4.4 1.17
4.3, 3.11 1.16
4.2 1.14
4.1 1.13

Terminology

The term “release” (or “minor release”) refers to one minor version of cert-manager. For example, 1.2 and 1.3 are two releases. Note that we do not use the prefix v for releases (just “1.2”). This is because releases are not used as git tags.

Patch releases use the v prefix (e.g., v1.2.0, v1.3.1…) since one patch release = one git tag. The initial patch release is called “final release”:

Type of release Example of git tag Corresponding release Corresponding release branch*
Final release v1.3.0 1.3 release-1.3
Patch release v1.3.1 1.3 release-1.3
Pre-release v1.4.0-alpha.0 N/A** release-1.4

*For maintainers: each release has an associated long-lived branch that we call the “release branch”. For example, release-1.2 is the release branch for release 1.2.

**Pre-releases (e.g., v1.3.0-alpha.0) don’t have a corresponding release (e.g., 1.3) since a release only exists after a final release (e.g., v1.3.0) has been created.

Our naming scheme mostly follows Semantic Versioning 2.0.0 with v prepended to git tags and docker images:

v<major>.<minor>.<patch>

where <minor> is increased for each release, and <patch> counts the number of patches for the current <minor> release. A patch is usually a small change relative to the <minor> release.