
Windows Security Center), or SP3 and SP4 of the heavily database dependent Trainz 2009: World Builder Edition.

They may also bring, besides bug fixes, entirely new features, as is the case of SP2 of Windows XP (e.g. Service packs are usually numbered, and thus shortly referred to as SP1, SP2, SP3 etc. Installing a service pack is easier and less error-prone than installing many individual patches, even more so when updating multiple computers over a network, where service packs are common. In large software applications such as office suites, operating systems, database software, or network management, it is not uncommon to have a service pack issued within the first year or two of a product's release.

Companies often release a service pack when the number of individual patches to a given program reaches a certain (arbitrary) limit, or the software release has shown to be stabilized with a limited number of remaining issues based on users' feedback and bug reports. In computing, a service pack comprises a collection of updates, fixes, or enhancements to a software program delivered in the form of a single installable package.
