This topic describes the life cycle stages that Google Maps Platform products
and features may move through, such as the launch stages Experimental, Preview,
and General Availability (GA), or end-of-life stages Deprecated and
Decommissioned. Features in non-GA stages are tagged as such in the
documentation with icons and notes.
Experimental
Experiments are focused on getting customer feedback about a prototype. They are
not intended for production use or covered by any SLA, support obligation, or
deprecation policy and might be subject to backward-incompatible changes.
Experimental releases are generally suitable for use in test environments only
and typically last up to 12 months, but this may vary.
Experimental is a pre-GA offering whose terms and conditions are defined in the
Google Maps Platform Service Specific Terms under
Pre-GA Offerings
.
Preview
At Preview, a product or feature is ready for testing by customers before
adopting it for production use at GA. Preview offerings are often publicly
announced, but are not necessarily feature-complete, and Google provides no SLAs
or technical support commitments for these. Unless stated otherwise by Google,
Preview offerings are intended for use in test environments only. Subject to the
terms described below, features in Preview are typically expected to reach GA
within 12 months, but this may vary.
Preview is a pre-GA offering whose terms and conditions are defined in the Google Maps Platform Service Specific Terms under
Pre-GA Offerings
.
General Availability (GA)
General Availability products and features are "production ready," though not
always universally available. Some GA releases may only be available to a
limited group of customers. General Availability releases are covered by the
Google Maps Platform Terms of Service
,
including the
Google Maps Platform SLA
and
Google Maps Platform Technical Support Services Guidelines
,
where applicable. Google typically supports General Availability products and
features through APIs, SDKs, and the Google Cloud Console, except in unusual
circumstances where providing one or more of the foregoing capabilities is
unreasonable in the context of the particular product or feature.
Early Access, Alpha, and Beta
Some products or artifacts, such as client SDKs and the Maps JavaScript API, deliver pre-GA releases under industry-standard
stability levels
, such as "alpha" and
"beta" channels. See the Maps JavaScript API
Versioning
topic as an example. Also,
Google Maps Platform SDKs for Android and iOS may use version numbers that
contain an industry-standard stability level such as "beta" in the version
numbering, such as
v3.1.0-beta
.
Some products and features that were released prior to the introduction of
"Experimental" and "Preview" may be labeled with legacy launch stages such as
"Early Access," "Alpha," and "Beta." Those legacy terms will continue to be used
for the duration of those launches. In general, Early Access and Alpha are
similar to Experimental, and Beta is similar to Preview. Any use of an Early
Access, Alpha, or Beta is subject to the terms and conditions defined in the
Google Maps Platform Service Specific Terms
.
Additional life cycle stages
Deprecated
Marking an offering deprecated indicates that the product, feature, or version
should no longer be used. For more information, see the "Deprecation Policy"
section of the
Google Maps Platform Terms of Service
.
Features and products in the Google Maps Core Services listed at
https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/terms/maps-deprecation
are subject to the Deprecation Policy.
For a list of deprecated products and features, see the Google Maps Platform
Deprecations
topic.
Decommissioned
Decommissioning an offering means that the product or feature is no longer
available. Calling decommissioned software can result in unpredictable behavior
or invalid responses.
Decommissioned offerings are removed from documentation. For a list of
decommissioned offerings, see the Google Maps Platform
Deprecations
topic.