On 06/26/2017 02:02 PM, Andreas Benzler wrote: > Sorry Hughes, > > got some questions. > > I have the feeling that I do a lot wrong. Today I sent a mailing post > at fedora where it is also about btrfs under fedora. > > In time when i write the mail i forward it my patch for fedora 25 > pretransaction & snapper.yp, with the hope of feedback. > > https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject > .org/thread/NLFYHW3IEJHSFBUOEAVHDHBVTL7TOHYZ/ > > Sometimes I don't know where to push the information. > > on https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/andybe/CentOS7Python34/ > > I release a ticket because snapper gui do not build on there repo. > Local with mock or without it never fails. No response. > > Since yesterday learned how to use snapper against the dbus api. What > is the better way in my opinion. After some rest i will do it first on > centos and it back into fedora "dnf" later on. > > It looks to me as if in a Fedora release little movement. If someone > wants to upgrade something you simply move it there gladly times on the > next release. This generates a high unwilling something at all a > working release to submit an improvement. This is a lot better under > Centos, although Redhat is very slow with its update cycles. > > Too bad the feedback is not as good as under Centos. > > In principal there are to many ways to push errors or improvments on > each (centos, redhat, fedora) distros. > > Or am I doing something wrong. Is there anything I can do better? > > It is hopefully not that I care 3 various Linux (This time > Arch/Manjaro, Fedora, Centos). It helps to get ideas. > Well .. CentOS Linux (The os/, cr/ , fasttrack/ , and updates/ repos) are exact rebuilds of upstream RHEL source code with only branding changes. We do no technical changes to this sorce code at all. We build it .. end of story. If something does not work in CentOS Linux and it also does not work in RHEL .. then great. We want CentOS Linux to work exactly that way .. so we will NOT make technical changes to get it to work in CentOS Linux. The only exception: if the CentOS team introduced a bug in our rebuild that is not present in RHEL source code, we will not fix it. That is just what CentOS Linux is. If you want to get something fixed in CentOS that is also broken in RHEL, you must submit the changes to Red Hat via either the Fedora or RHEL bug processes. Once those changes are in released into RHEL (and therefore into the public RHEL source code) they will rolled into CentOS Linux. For other CentOS repositories where we actually manage the content and DO make technical changes (extras/ , centosplus/ any of the SIG repos, etc), you can submit changes to CentOS to get things fixed. Hopefully this clears up what CentOS Linux is defined as and why we don't make technical changes.
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