Version numbering

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What do the numbers in a release version mean?

  • 1.x.y.z? And why is it sometimes 1.x.y(z)?
  • For example, version 1.21.6(99587)


These version numbers follow a four place version convention common to the software industry. The four places of w.x.y.z-style release numbers are typically described as Major.Minor.Patch.Revision.


w (Major)
The first place in each version number represents the "generation" of Second Life. Changes in the Major revision are reserved for comprehensive changes in the way Second Life looks and/or functions. The best example is Viewer 2, which constituted a significant change in the look, feel and operation of Second Life - thereby justifying the increment from 1.23 to 2.0.


.x (Minor) and .y (Patch)

  • Linden Lab uses the second digit x to denote a substantial new feature or sizable release, for example:
    • 1.10 introduced flexi prims
    • 1.11 was a revamp of the UI layer
    • 1.12 had groups and estates improvements
    • 1.14 introduced render pipeline improvements
    • 1.20 introduced a "Silver" skin for the user interface
    • 1.21 introduced the ability to save scripts with the Mono scripting engine
    • 1.22 was a maintenance release with many bug fixes
    • and so on.
    • (The SL History Wiki http://secondlife.wikia.com/index.php/Release_Notes has unofficial archives of the release notes.)


  • In between these Minor 1.x versions are any improved builds (small iterations of little bug fixes) denoted by the third digit .y.
    • Most often, while a Minor 1.x version is in its beta or Release Candidate RC status, it will undergo 3-6 such build iterations. Thus it will typically become "official" with a number like 1.20.6.
    • EXCEPTION: In the versions from 1.15 to 1.19, Linden Lab switched to having the second digit (e.g. 1.19) denote a new viewer which was a mandatory upgrade for Residents, to go along with a server-side upgrade. Thus, from version 1.15 to 1.19, the in-between 1.x.y versions were any optional upgrades denoted by the third digit, y -- even those with substantial new features -- such as 1.19.1 introduced WindLight atmospheric rendering.


.z (Revision)
The final digit always represents a unique Revision number, which denotes internal changes only. The official released version of the Second Life viewer will only use the first three digits to have meaning (e.g. 1.20.6).

  • Some parts of the Second Life UI and Web site show this last digit in parenthesis (z) to emphasize the, er, parenthetical nature of that field - it shouldn’t be important except to software developers seeking a precise snapshot of when the code was packaged.