Versioning Policy#

Starting with vLLM 0.7.x, the vLLM Ascend Plugin (vllm-project/vllm-ascend) project follows PEP 440 to publish versions matching vLLM (vllm-project/vllm).

vLLM Ascend Plugin versions#

Each vLLM Ascend release is versioned as v[major].[minor].[micro][rcN][.postN] (such as v0.7.3rc1, v0.7.3, v0.7.3.post1)

  • Final releases: Typically scheduled every three months, with careful alignment to the vLLM upstream release cycle and the Ascend software product roadmap.

  • Pre releases: Typically issued on demand, labeled with rcN to indicate the Nth release candidate. They are intended to support early testing by users ahead of the final release.

  • Post releases: Typically issued on demand to address minor errors in a final release. Different from PEP-440 post release note convention, these versions include actual bug fixes, as the final release version must strictly align with the vLLM final release format (v[major].[minor].[micro]). Any post version must be published as a patch version of the final release.

For example:

  • v0.7.x: first final release to match the vLLM v0.7.x version.

  • v0.7.3rc1: first pre version of vLLM Ascend.

  • v0.7.3.post1: post release for the v0.7.3 release if it has some minor errors.

Release compatibility matrix#

The table below is the release compatibility matrix for vLLM Ascend release.

vLLM Ascend

vLLM

Python

Stable CANN

PyTorch/torch_npu

Triton Ascend

v0.15.0rc1

v0.15.0

>= 3.10, < 3.12

8.5.0

2.9.0 / 2.9.0

3.2.0

v0.14.0rc1

v0.14.1

>= 3.10, < 3.12

8.5.0

2.9.0 / 2.9.0

3.2.0

v0.13.0

v0.13.0

>= 3.10, < 3.12

8.5.0

2.9.0 / 2.8.0.post2

3.2.0

v0.13.0rc2

v0.13.0

>= 3.10, < 3.12

8.5.0

2.8.0 / 2.8.0.post1

3.2.0

v0.13.0rc1

v0.13.0

>= 3.10, < 3.12

8.3.RC2

2.8.0 / 2.8.0

v0.12.0rc1

v0.12.0

>= 3.10, < 3.12

8.3.RC2

2.8.0 / 2.8.0

v0.11.0

v0.11.0

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.3.RC2

2.7.1 / 2.7.1.post1

v0.11.0rc3

v0.11.0

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.3.RC2

2.7.1 / 2.7.1.post1

v0.11.0rc2

v0.11.0

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.3.RC2

2.7.1 / 2.7.1

v0.11.0rc1

v0.11.0

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.3.RC1

2.7.1 / 2.7.1

v0.11.0rc0

v0.11.0rc3

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.2.RC1

2.7.1 / 2.7.1.dev20250724

v0.10.2rc1

v0.10.2

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.2.RC1

2.7.1 / 2.7.1.dev20250724

v0.10.1rc1

v0.10.1/v0.10.1.1

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.2.RC1

2.7.1 / 2.7.1.dev20250724

v0.10.0rc1

v0.10.0

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.2.RC1

2.7.1 / 2.7.1.dev20250724

v0.9.2rc1

v0.9.2

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.1.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1.post1.dev20250619

v0.9.1

v0.9.1

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.2.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1.post1

v0.9.1rc3

v0.9.1

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.2.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1.post1

v0.9.1rc2

v0.9.1

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.2.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1.post1

v0.9.1rc1

v0.9.1

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.1.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1.post1.dev20250528

v0.9.0rc2

v0.9.0

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.1.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1

v0.9.0rc1

v0.9.0

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.1.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1

v0.8.5rc1

v0.8.5.post1

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.1.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1

v0.8.4rc2

v0.8.4

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.0.0

2.5.1 / 2.5.1

v0.7.3.post1

v0.7.3

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.1.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1

v0.7.3

v0.7.3

>= 3.9, < 3.12

8.1.RC1

2.5.1 / 2.5.1

Note

If you’re using v0.7.3, don’t forget to install mindie-turbo as well.

For main branch of vLLM Ascend, we usually make it compatible with the latest vLLM release and a newer commit hash of vLLM. Please note that this table is usually updated. Please check it regularly.

vLLM Ascend

vLLM

Python

Stable CANN

PyTorch/torch_npu

main

4572a06afe96d0a6d5d3efacf130c71505dd2bc9, v0.16.0 tag

>= 3.10, < 3.12

8.5.0

2.9.0 / 2.9.0

Release cadence#

Release window#

Date

Event

2026.02.27

Release candidates, v0.15.0rc1

2026.02.06

v0.13.0 Final release, v0.13.0

2026.01.26

Release candidates, v0.14.0rc1

2026.01.24

Release candidates, v0.13.0rc2

2025.12.27

Release candidates, v0.13.0rc1

2025.12.16

v0.11.0 Final release, v0.11.0

2025.12.13

Release candidates, v0.12.0rc1

2025.12.03

Release candidates, v0.11.0rc3

2025.11.21

Release candidates, v0.11.0rc2

2025.11.10

Release candidates, v0.11.0rc1

2025.09.30

Release candidates, v0.11.0rc0

2025.09.16

Release candidates, v0.10.2rc1

2025.09.04

Release candidates, v0.10.1rc1

2025.09.03

v0.9.1 Final release, v0.9.1

2025.08.22

Release candidates, v0.9.1rc3

2025.08.07

Release candidates, v0.10.0rc1

2025.08.04

Release candidates, v0.9.1rc2

2025.07.11

Release candidates, v0.9.2rc1

2025.06.22

Release candidates, v0.9.1rc1

2025.06.10

Release candidates, v0.9.0rc2

2025.06.09

Release candidates, v0.9.0rc1

2025.05.29

v0.7.3 post release, v0.7.3.post1

2025.05.08

v0.7.3 Final release, v0.7.3

2025.05.06

Release candidates, v0.8.5rc1

2025.04.28

Release candidates, v0.8.4rc2

2025.04.18

Release candidates, v0.8.4rc1

2025.03.28

Release candidates, v0.7.3rc2

2025.03.14

Release candidates, v0.7.3rc1

2025.02.19

Release candidates, v0.7.1rc1

Branch policy#

vLLM Ascend includes two branches: main and dev.

  • main: corresponds to the vLLM main branch and latest 1 or 2 release version. It is continuously monitored for quality through Ascend CI.

  • releases/vX.Y.Z: development branch, created with part of new releases of vLLM. For example, releases/v0.13.0 is the dev branch for vLLM v0.13.0 version.

Commits should typically be merged into the main branch first, and only then backported to the dev branch, to reduce maintenance costs as much as possible.

Maintenance branch and EOL#

The table below lists branch states.

Branch

Time Frame

Summary

Maintained

Approximately 2-3 minor versions

Bugfixes received; releases produced; CI commitment

Unmaintained

Community-interest driven

Bugfixes received; no releases produced; no CI commitment

End of Life (EOL)

N/A

Branch no longer accepting changes

Branch states#

Note that vLLM Ascend will only be released for a certain vLLM release version, not for every version. Hence, you may notice that some versions have corresponding dev branches (e.g. releases/v0.13.0), while others do not (e.g. releases/v0.12.0). The vLLM Ascend release branch now follows the releases/vX.Y.Z naming convention, replacing the previous vX.Y.Z-dev format to align with vLLM’s branch naming standards.

Usually, each minor version of vLLM (such as 0.7) corresponds to a vLLM Ascend version branch and supports its latest version (such as 0.7.3), as shown below:

Branch

State

Note

main

Maintained

CI commitment for vLLM main branch and vLLM 0.13.0 tag

releases/v0.13.0

Maintained

CI commitment for vLLM 0.13.0 version

v0.11.0-dev

Maintained

CI commitment for vLLM 0.11.0 version

v0.9.1-dev

Maintained

CI commitment for vLLM 0.9.1 version

v0.7.3-dev

Maintained

CI commitment for vLLM 0.7.3 version

v0.7.1-dev

Unmaintained

Replaced by v0.7.3-dev

Feature branches#

Branch

State

RFC Link

Scheduled Merge Time

Mentor

rfc/long_seq_optimization

Maintained

vllm-project/vllm#22693

930

wangxiyuan

  • Branch: The feature branch should be created with a prefix rfc/ followed by the feature name, such as rfc/feature-name.

  • State: The state of the feature branch is Maintained until it is merged into the main branch or deleted.

  • RFC Link: The feature branch should be created with a corresponding RFC issue. The creation of a feature branch requires an RFC and approval from at least two maintainers.

  • Scheduled Merge Time: The final goal of a feature branch is to be merged into the main branch. If it remains unmerged for more than three months, the mentor maintainer should evaluate whether to delete the branch.

  • Mentor: The mentor should be a vLLM Ascend maintainer who is responsible for the feature branch.

Backward compatibility#

For main branch, vLLM Ascend should work with vLLM main branch and latest 1 or 2 releases. To ensure backward compatibility, do as follows:

  • Both main branch and target vLLM release, such as the vLLM main branch and vLLM 0.8.4, are tested by Ascend E2E CI.

  • To make sure that code changes are compatible with the latest 1 or 2 vLLM releases, vLLM Ascend introduces a version check mechanism inside the code. It checks the version of the installed vLLM package first to decide which code logic to use. If users hit the InvalidVersion error, it may indicate that they have installed a dev or editable version of vLLM package. In this case, we provide the env variable VLLM_VERSION to let users specify the version of vLLM package to use.

  • Document changes should be compatible with the latest 1 or 2 vLLM releases. Notes should be added if there are any breaking changes.

Document branch policy#

To reduce maintenance costs, all branch documentation content should remain consistent, and version differences can be controlled via variables in docs/source/conf.py. While this is not a simple task, it is a principle we should strive to follow.

Version

Purpose

Code Branch

latest

Doc for the latest rc release of main branch

main branch

rc version

Doc for RC released versions

vX.Y.ZrcN –> vX.Y.ZrcN tag

version

Doc for historical released versions

vX.Y.Z –> releases/vX.Y.Z branch

Notes:

  • latest documentation: always points to latest rc release of main branch.

  • rc version documentation: there are no further updates after release.

  • version documentation: keep updating the releases/vX.Y.Z branch documentation to fix doc bugs.

Software dependency management#

  • torch-npu: Ascend Extension for PyTorch (torch-npu) releases a stable version to PyPi every 3 months, a development version (aka the POC version) every month, and a nightly version every day. The PyPi stable version CAN be used in vLLM Ascend final version, the monthly dev version ONLY CAN be used in vLLM Ascend RC version for rapid iteration, and the nightly version CANNOT be used in vLLM Ascend any version and branch.