Making A request to IBM (Was: Re: How does one compile to assembly?)
Julie A. Levell
julie at levell.austin.ibm.com
Sat Mar 16 08:28:36 AEST 1991
In article <1991Mar15.123532.8036 at odi.com> benson at odi.com (Benson I. Margulies) writes:
>From my experience, many of these messages are not correct.
>
>Defect support is for defects. Bugs. When you submit a defect, the
>person from defect support creates an APAR and sends it to the
>developer.
Sends it to the Change Team (or Level 3)
>If the developer decided that it is a design issue, and not a bug,
>they will tell defect support to tell you that "The software is
>working as designed." The APAR is rejected, and defect support will
>tell you politely but firmly that your only recourse is a DCR (Design
>Change Request). Defect support cannot and will not create such
>things. Your SE/marketing rep can do this, via a form called a PASR.
>If there is such a thing as a Design APAR, I've never had someone from
>defect support admit it or be willing to initiate it.
Not true. Each apar is handled on a case by case basis, but when we
see an apar that is a design change, that just isn't do-able as a "code fix",
we close the apar and open a "Design" for development. Then the architects
look at it. I've opened a few for security and lvm.
>Further, the developer can decide that your problem, while a bug, is a
>"permanent restriction," (i.e., too hard to fix) and decline to fix
>it, ever. This is what happened to me when I reported that AIX dbx,
>unlike any other, can't trace the stack below a sigaction-established
>SIGSEGV handler.
Can't comment on this one, I don't know the story behind it.
>There appears to be no way to instigate a management review of the
>designation "permanent restriction" via defect support. The
>immediately responsible developer calls the shot. All you can do is
>submit a DCR.
Again, not true. Every apar that we close as "permanent restriction" is
brought to upper level management review. I can't close PRS without
going thru managment. We don't like telling customers
"that's just the way it is", but sometimes it does have to happen.
It's not a perfect system, but we're trying.
>Benson I. Margulies
Your humble Change Team servant,
Julie Levell
--
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Julie A. Levell IBM Advanced Workstation Division Austin, Texas
Internet: julie at aixwiz.austin.ibm.com IBM VMNET: JULIEL at AUSVMQ
DeskNet: 4C-29/994 SpeakNet: 823-5178 (Tie 793-5178)
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