Ember.js 2.4-LTS, 2.5, and 2.6 Beta Released

Ember 2.4-LTS, the first Ember Long-Term Support release, lands today as Ember 2.4.5. Future versions of 2.4 will be considered part of the LTS channel. The LTS channel comes with a commitment that low-risk critical bugfixes and security patches will be backported to these versions. Additionally, any change to commonly used private APIs must be deprecated in at least one LTS release before removal, making LTS releases a slower moving target for addons to support.

2.4-LTS will receive critical bugfixes for the next 6 release cycles (until roughly November 2016) and security patches for the next 10 release cycles (until roughly April 2017). For more information about how the LTS process works, see the blog post Announcing Ember's First LTS Release.

Ember 2.5, a minor version release of Ember with backwards compatible changes, is also released today.

Ember 2.6 beta, the branch of Ember that will be released as stable in roughly six weeks, is released today.

Notable deprecations in Ember 2.4-LTS

Ember 2.4-LTS deprecates two private APIs. Support for these private APIs will be removed in Ember 2.6.

The ember-legacy-views and ember-legacy-controllers addons, which rely upon private API, will be supported on Ember 2.4-LTS with a deprecation notice. Although Ember 2.5 will also support these addons, 2.4-LTS will be a supported platform for much longer than 2.5. Ember 2.6 and 2.8-LTS, when they are released, will not support these addons.

Use of the {{#render}} helper in block form is deprecated. Block form usage was an un-documented and un-intended feature, and will be removed in Ember 2.6. In general, uses of {{render}} should be replaced with components.

Changes in Ember 2.5

Ember 2.5 introduces several minor public API additions.

Ember.assign

Ember.assign is a polyfill for the ES2015 Object.assign feature. assign copies the values of all enumerable own properties from one or more source objects to a target object. For example:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 let a = { first : ' John ' }; let b = { last : ' Lennon ' }; let c = { band : ' The Beatles ' }; Ember.assign(a, b, c);

For more specifics on assign , see the Ember API documentation and MDN documentation.

Local Lookup Compatibility

As part of the new directory layout effort currently organized around the Module Normalization RFC, we intend to introduce a feature called "local lookup". This feature will allow for the creation of components or helpers available only in a single template, instead of being globally scoped as they must be today. lookup and resolve in Ember 2.5 will accept an optional source property on their options argument. This API change will allow local lookup to be implemented outside of Ember via the ember-cli/ember-resolver library.

Native Event Test Helpers

Ember's acceptance test helpers, such as click() , have previously used jQuery event triggers. In 2.5 this behavior has been altered to trigger native events via dispatchEvent . This change is expected to be completely backwards compatible and was uncontroversial during the six week beta cycle. It allows the triggering of non-jQuery event listeners in acceptance tests.

For more details on changes landing in Ember 2.5, review the Ember.js 2.5.0 CHANGELOG.

Ember.js 2.6 beta

No new features are added in Ember core in 2.6. In general the core team and community have remained active around other highly visible parts of the Ember stack (Ember Data, FastBoot, Glimmer, etc).

Notable Deprecations

The following deprecations are scheduled for release with Ember 2.6 and will be removed in Ember 3.0:

Ember.String.htmlSafe(aString) is the preferred API for marking a string XSS safe for the rendering layer. Use of Ember.Handlebars.SafeString as a constructor for safe strings is deprecated, and will be removed. See the deprecation guide for more details.

is the preferred API for marking a string XSS safe for the rendering layer. Use of as a constructor for safe strings is deprecated, and will be removed. See the deprecation guide for more details. The didInitAttrs hook for component lifecycles is deprecated in favor of simply using init . didInitAttrs had confusing timing issues, and init fulfills the same role. See the deprecation guide for more details.

hook for component lifecycles is deprecated in favor of simply using . had confusing timing issues, and fulfills the same role. See the deprecation guide for more details. Passing a model argument to {{render}} is deprecated in favor of using a component for the same cases. For example {{render 'chat' roomModel}} can be refactored into a chat-room component. See the deprecation guide for more details.

For more details on changes landing in 2.6 beta, review the Ember.js 2.6.0-beta.1 CHANGELOG.