On Sat, Jun 24, 2023 at 3:05 PM Michael Catanzaro <mcatanz...@redhat.com> wrote:

> But in practice, we actually currently have a lot of desynced packages
> where RHEL is ahead of CentOS Stream for various reasons. I believe
> most such cases are mistakes that need to be corrected, not intentional
> delays. E.g. if a particular developer just forgets to fix the CVE in
> CentOS Stream, currently nobody is checking to catch that and complain
> and get things fixed. Red Hat needs to catch and fix these issues
> proactively, but is not currently doing so. Since only Red Hat is able
> to commit to CentOS Stream, the community is limited to tracking
> desyncs and complaining when it happens. (That would be really valuable
> to do IMO.)

Most of the time, as you say, things work well (at
least in my experience).

If one does find a security update that did not get
streamed, is there a way for a non-customer[0] to
open an appropriate ticket both now, and in the
future when RH moves their internal bug tracker
to jira[1]?


[0] There are those that have used the clones
and streams for some time without having to
sign up with RH.

[1] It is not clear to me if one will need a formal
support contract in order to open tickets into
the future jira instances.
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