In the course of troubleshooting a netfilter problem, I've run into a scenario where I can reliably generate an oops with the netfilter module(s). I generally like perusing the bugs on Red Hat's bugzilla system because I can usually find solutions or patches to issues I encounter there. In this case, I couldn't. What do CentOS users do when they discover bugs? Will Red Hat consider it? Do I file it against "Red Hat Enterprise 3" if I'm running CentOS 3.5? I'm concerned if things like System.map, etc. don't match between the RHEL kernel and the CentOS kernel. Any suggestions? Thanks, Greg
Maciej Żenczykowski
2005-Sep-14 23:01 UTC
[CentOS] Does Red Hat care about kernel bugs in CentOS?
> In the course of troubleshooting a netfilter problem, I've run into a > scenario where I can reliably generate an oops with the netfilter module(s). > > I generally like perusing the bugs on Red Hat's bugzilla system because I can > usually find solutions or patches to issues I encounter there. In this case, > I couldn't. What do CentOS users do when they discover bugs? Will Red Hat > consider it? Do I file it against "Red Hat Enterprise 3" if I'm running > CentOS 3.5? I'm concerned if things like System.map, etc. don't match > between the RHEL kernel and the CentOS kernel. > > Any suggestions?I guess the best would be to get an actual RHEL3 system to test on and get the oops to appear - if the oops is reproducable this shouldn't be that hard to do. Possibly just post the method to the list and maybe someone else with a RHEL3 system will take care of it? Cheers, MaZe.
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