diff --git a/src/pages/docs/infrastructure/workers/dynamic-worker-pools.md b/src/pages/docs/infrastructure/workers/dynamic-worker-pools.md index 7a503abc60..45e38e7913 100644 --- a/src/pages/docs/infrastructure/workers/dynamic-worker-pools.md +++ b/src/pages/docs/infrastructure/workers/dynamic-worker-pools.md @@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ Each worker is provisioned exclusively to a specific customer, and is completely ## Dynamic Worker Images -Each dynamic worker pool can specify the worker image used. Ubuntu Linux 22.04 is the default. Windows Server Core 2019 and 2022 worker images are also available. +Each dynamic worker pool can specify the worker image used. Ubuntu Linux 22.04 is the default. Windows Server Core 2019 (end-of-life, see [below](#Windows-Server-Core-2019)) and 2022 worker images are also available. Editing a dynamic worker pool allows you to modify the image used. @@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ Ubuntu 18.04 images are no longer available as of 3 April 2023. Please refer to ### Windows Server Core 2019 :::div{.warning} -Windows 2019 is currently the `Windows (default)` image. Windows 2019 images will be deprecated on 9 January 2024. You are advised to test your deployment processes with our Windows 2022 images. Please refer to [Windows 2019 end-of-life](/docs/infrastructure/workers/dynamic-worker-pools/windows-2019-end-of-life) for further details. +Windows 2019 images will be removed on 9 January 2024. Please refer to [Windows 2019 end-of-life](/docs/infrastructure/workers/dynamic-worker-pools/windows-2019-end-of-life) for further details. ::: Each `Windows Server Core 2019` worker is provisioned with a baseline of tools including (but not limited to): @@ -118,6 +118,9 @@ We recommend execution containers as the preferred option for steps requiring ex ::: ### Windows Server Core 2022 +:::div{.hint} +Windows 2022 is currently the `Windows (default)` image. If you are having issues with your deployments using Windows 2022, you can revert your Dynamic Worker pool(s) to use Windows 2019. However, note that this is only a temporary workaround as Windows 2019 images will be removed on 1 January 2024. Please refer to [Windows 2019 end-of-life](/docs/infrastructure/workers/dynamic-worker-pools/windows-2019-end-of-life) for further details. +::: Each `Windows Server Core 2022` worker is provisioned with a baseline of tools including (but not limited to):