On Fri, 29 May 2020 13:56:34 -0500, Roger Heflin wrote:
I don't believe the
kernel.org developers work out of the fedora
bugzilla (or any distro's bugzilla), so no one who knows anything is
likely to find and/or see the bug.
To get a kernel developer you would need to at least post a summary to
the kernel subsystem list if you know which subsystem or the main
kernel if you don't.
This makes no sense, given that Fedora introduced ABRT, the automatic bug
reporting tool. Distribution users enter their crash reports into the
distribution's bug tracker, of course, assuming it is the primary point of
contact and that bug reports are appreciated and won't be lost. And in this
case, the bug reporter didn't only dump an uncommented backtrace into
bugzilla.
And the
kernel.org guys do not care about any testing done on a
fedora
delivered kernel as they don't know what code is in it, so you would
need to install a
kernel.org kernel and bot from it and verify you
have the issue on the newest released one.
??? Which is why Fedora users assume that Fedora developers know the right
thing to do in case of problems, such as suggesting that it could be
fruitful to discuss a problem on some specific mailing-list or where to
report it instead.