Ember is an open-source JavaScript web framework for building modern web applications.
Release | Released | Active Support | Security Support | Latest |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 |
1 year ago (15 Nov 2021)
|
Yes | Yes |
4.9.3
(13 Dec 2022)
|
3.28 (LTS) |
1 year and 4 months ago (09 Aug 2021)
|
Ended
3 months and 3 weeks ago (29 Aug 2022)
|
Ends
in 1 week and 6 days (02 Jan 2023)
|
3.28.11
(30 Nov 2022)
|
3.24 (LTS) |
1 year and 11 months ago (28 Dec 2020)
|
Ended
1 year and 1 month ago (04 Nov 2021)
|
Ended
9 months ago (10 Mar 2022)
|
3.24.7 |
Ember follows Semantic Versioning. The Ember team aims to ship new features in minor releases, and make major releases as rare as possible. A minor release is published about once every six weeks.
Long Term Support
Once a release of Ember gets promoted to LTS, it receives bugfixes for 36 weeks and security updates for 54 weeks.
An LTS is declared roughly every 4 minor versions, excluding the x.0 minor version. The last minor version before the next major release is also considered to be an LTS. For example, in Ember 2.x, the following versions were considered LTS’s: 2.4, 2.8, 2.12, 2.16, and 2.18 (last version).
Before a version can be called an “LTS” release, it has to spend at least 6 weeks as a stable release, where it is used and tested by thousands of developers.
More information is available on the Ember website.
You should be running one of the supported release numbers listed above in the rightmost column.
You can submit an improvement to this page on GitHub . This page has a corresponding Talk Page.
A JSON version of this page is available at /api/emberjs.json. See the API Documentation for more.
This page was last updated on 14 December 2022. Latest releases are automatically updated.