Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) is a managed service that you can use to run Kubernetes on Azure without needing to install, operate, and maintain your own Kubernetes control plane or nodes.
Release | Released | End of Support |
---|---|---|
1.25 | 1 month and 1 week ago (14 Dec 2022) |
Ends
in 8 months (30 Sep 2023)
|
1.24 | 5 months ago (19 Aug 2022) |
Ends
in 5 months (30 Jun 2023)
|
1.23 | 9 months ago (26 Apr 2022) |
Ends
in 2 months and 1 week (31 Mar 2023)
|
1.22 | 2 years ago (10 Jan 2021) |
Ended
1 month and 2 weeks ago (04 Dec 2022)
|
1.21 | 1 year and 6 months ago (26 Jul 2021) |
Ended
5 months and 3 weeks ago (31 Jul 2022)
|
AKS defines a generally available version as a version enabled in all SLO or SLA measurements and available in all regions. AKS supports three GA minor versions of Kubernetes:
- The latest GA minor version released in AKS.
- Two previous minor versions.
Each supported minor version also supports a maximum of two stable patches.
AKS release notes are available on https://github.com/Azure/AKS/. News about AKS can be received by following the AKS feed in Azure Updates. Release status by regions can be monitored at AKS-Release-Tracker. AKS Docs include an Upgrade Guide.
Note that Calico isn’t supported in AKS 1.25 and above.
More information is available on the Azure Kubernetes Service website.
az aks show --resource-group myResourceGroup --name myAKSCluster
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A JSON version of this page is available at /api/azure-kubernetes-service.json. See the API Documentation for more information. You can subscribe to the iCalendar feed at /calendar/azure-kubernetes-service.ics.
This page was last updated on 28 December 2022.