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Release FAQ

Which versions are currently supported?​

We are supporting the latest version, and the two previous minor series. We also work on the next version being developed, which will become the new stable after its 0.Y.0 release.

You can learn more about the release support policy in the releases repository.

What is a qualified pick request?​

Judgement call, but using these dimensions to evaluate:

  • Is it a fix for a regression introduced by the current release (for example, did it work in v0.67.0 but it's broken in v0.68.0)?
  • Is it a fix for a critical developer workflow?

What is release blocking?​

Judgement call, but using these dimensions to evaluate:

  • Is it a new issue on the release candidate?
  • Is it breaking a core experience of working in React Native?

When will my fix make it into a release?​

We follow a release cycle that is not strictly monthly - you can read more about it here. When creating a new release, we cut a new branch from main (e.g. 0.67-stable), with all the merged commits up to this point. After this initial cut, new commits on main will only be included on this release if they get manually cherry picked. Otherwise, they will be included in the next stable version (when a new cut from main will happen). This means that once a pull request is merged to the core react-native repo, it may take one or two months for the changes to make it into a stable React Native release.

How do I know if my fix/feature is in a certain release?​

To determine whether a fix or feature is present in a given release, you will need the commit hash where the fix or feature was added to the main branch of the core react-native repo. If you know the PR, you can look for the comment from @facebook-github-bot that says 'closed this in <COMMIT_HASH>'.

Once you have the commit hash, navigate to https://github.com/facebook/react-native/commit/<COMMIT_HASH>. Look closely at the commit message, underneath which you will find a list of tags associated with the commit. These tags will tell you which releases contains this commit. For example, commit a6768bfd70187634e587d7b2e92d2b6735a4037e has the following tags as of this writing:

v0.67.0-rc.3 v0.67.0-rc.2 v0.67.0-rc.1 v0.67.0-rc.0 v0.66.3 v0.66.2 v0.66.1 v0.66.0 v0.66.0-rc.4 v0.66.0-rc.3 v0.66.0-rc.2 v0.66.0-rc.1 v0.66.0-rc.0 latest

These tags tell us that the commit first made it into the 0.66 release candidate, eventually landing in the 0.66 stable release. It is also present, as you'd expect, in the 0.67 release candidate (and should make it to 0.67 stable, and so on).

If the commit is only present in main (i.e. has no tags), then the commit has yet to be picked up by a release (or it may have been included in a follow up cherry pick for a patch version). You can expect it to be included in the next release candidate that is cut once the designed features have all landed.

How can I find the status of the current release?​

We have a dedicated release discussions repo. We have a category for new releases and one for patches.

  • For a new release version, we track the status of each new release candidate patch with any ongoing blocking issues and checklist of work. Example of releasing 0.67
  • For patches, a discussion is opened asking whether there are picks that qualify to run a patch (see qualifying picks). People can comment and share any picks from main and the release captain will run a patch when necessary and subsequently open a new discussion for the next patch version. Example of discussion for 0.66.4, once it was released, the discussion is locked and a discussion for 0.66.5 is opened.

What if I find a release blocker that needs escalation?​