Versioning policy for Azure services, SDKs, and CLI tools
Most Azure services let you programmatically control and manage their resources with REST APIs. Services evolve through new published versions of their APIs with different contracts that add new features and/or modify their behaviors.
This article outlines the policy that the Azure service, SDK, and CLI teams use for versioning the Azure REST APIs. While Azure teams make every effort to adhere to this policy, deviations may occasionally occur.
Service versioning
Each published version of an API is identified by a date value in YYYY-MM-DD
format, called the api-version
. Newer versions have later dates.
All API operations require clients to specify a valid API version for the service via the api-version
query string parameter in the URL. For example: https://management.azure.com/subscriptions?api-version=2020-01-01
. Client SDKs and tools include the api-version
value automatically. For more considerations, see the Client SDKs and service versions section later in this article.
Usually, published service versions remain available and supported for many years, even as newer versions become available. In most cases, the only time you should adopt a new service version within existing code is to take advantage of new features.
Stable versions
Most service versions published are stable versions. Stable versions are backwards compatible, meaning that any code you write that relies on one version of a service can adopt a newer stable version without requiring any code changes to maintain correctness or existing functionality.
Breaking change versions
A breaking change version of a service isn't backwards compatible. Adopting a breaking change version in existing client code may require code changes to ensure the client behaves exactly as it did when targeting the previous version.
Breaking change versions are rare, announced via documentation, and are typically preceded by publication of a preview version. Publication of a breaking change version may prompt the eventual retirement of existing stable versions, which will remain available for at least three years after the breaking change version releases. For breaking changes published due to security or compliance issues, existing stable service versions may remain available for one year or less depending on the severity of the issue.
Due to the rapid innovation and developments in AI, AI-driven services may have a reduced minimum availability of one year. Each service will publish its breaking change policy.
Any Azure service dependent on a non-Microsoft component can shrink its support policy to match that of the component's policy. Any breaking change due to this will link to the component vendor's policy showing the date when the component is no longer supported.
Preview versions
Occasionally, Microsoft publishes a preview version of a service to gather feedback about proposed changes and new features. Preview service versions are identified with the suffix -preview
in their api-version
- for example, 2022-07-07-preview
.
Unless explicitly intended to introduce a breaking change from the previous stable version, new preview versions include all the features of the most recent stable version and add new preview features. However, between preview versions, a service may break any of the newly added preview features.
Previews aren't intended for long-term use. Anytime a new stable or preview version of a service becomes available, existing preview versions may become unavailable as early as 90 days from the availability of the new version. Use preview versions only in situations where you're actively developing against new service features and you're prepared to adopt a new, non-preview version soon after it's released. If some features from a preview version are released in a new stable version, remaining features still in preview will typically be published in a new preview version.
Client SDKs and service versions
The Azure SDKs aim to eliminate service versioning as a concern when writing code. Each SDK is composed of client libraries, one for each service, and each client library version targets a single version of the service it relies on.
When you use an SDK to access an Azure service, taking advantage of new versions and features typically requires upgrading the client library version used by the application. New stable versions of services are accompanied by new point releases of client libraries. For new breaking change versions, new client libraries are published as either point release versions or major release versions. The type of release depends on the nature of the service's change and the way the library is able to accommodate it. Only beta-version client libraries use preview service versions.
SDK client libraries support manual overriding of the service version. Overriding a client library's default service version is an advanced scenario and may lead to unexpected behavior. If you make use of this feature, test your application thoroughly to ensure it works as desired.
Azure command line tools
As with the SDKs, the Azure command line tools (including the Azure CLI and Azure PowerShell) are designed to allow usage of Azure management services without regard for versions. Accessing new service features often requires a new version of a tool. New backward-compatible tool versions are released monthly. Versions with breaking changes are released approximately twice a year, or as required to fix critical security issues.
The Azure command line tools may occasionally expose preview features. These commands are marked with a Preview
label and will output a warning indicating limited support and potential changes in future tool versions.