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Spring Framework Versions

Sam Brannen edited this page Sep 23, 2019 · 56 revisions

This document describes new features, noteworthy changes, and provides guidance on upgrading from earlier versions. If you see anything missing or inaccurate, please submit a pull-request against individual pages, or create an issue.

Supported Versions

  • 5.2.x is the latest production line (generally available as of the end of September 2019).
  • 5.1.x is the current mainstream line (since September 2018), supported until Q1 2020.
  • 5.0.x entered its EOL phase as of Q2 2019. As a courtesy to 5.0.x users, further maintenance releases will be provided until Q1 2020.
  • 4.3.x is the last feature branch of the 4th generation. It comes with extended maintenance until Q1 2020 and security patches even beyond that point, so you may migrate your applications to 5.x at your own pace.
  • 3.2.x is EOL (reached its end of life) as of December 31st, 2016. No further maintenance releases and security patches are planned in that line. Please migrate to 4.3 or 5.x at your earliest convenience!

We recommend upgrading to the latest Spring Framework 5.2.x or 5.1.x release from Maven Central.

JDK Version Range

  • Spring Framework 5.2.x: JDK 8-14
  • Spring Framework 5.1.x: JDK 8-12
  • Spring Framework 5.0.x: JDK 8-10
  • Spring Framework 4.3.x: JDK 6-8

We fully test and support Spring on Long-Term Support (LTS) releases of the JDK, i.e. currently JDK 8 and 11 (both with a lifetime until 2023). Additionally, there is support for intermediate releases such as JDK 9/10/12/13 or the upcoming JDK 14 on a best-effort basis, meaning that we accept bug reports and will try to address them as far as technically possible but won't provide any service level guarantees.

Please upgrade to Spring Framework 5.1+ (and the corresponding Spring Boot 2.1+) for JDK 11+ support, as the common Long-Term Support migration path from JDK 8. No earlier Spring versions are officially supported on JDK 11, in particular not with JDK 11 bytecode level. Note that third-party components might not fully support JDK 11 yet, so you are likely to be limited in your full-stack options.

What's New

Upgrade Considerations