Open source support in Managed services

Because Managed services contains open source software, IBM offers some support for the open source software that it uses.

IBM uses open source software in three ways:

  • To help its valued customers avoid vendor lock-in
  • To ensure compatibility with the broadest ecosystem of software
  • To accelerate development of its products

The mature, enterprise-level open source components that are used in Managed services was carefully selected, integrated, and tested to work as described in the product documentation and licenses. The components include integral open source components like Terraform, Kubernetes, Docker Engine, Helm, and ELK stack.

The IBM Support Guide is the definitive reference for IBM's open source support statement. To review IBM's open source support statement, see Third party software and Open Source software External link icon in the IBM Support Guide. The IBM Support team uses the information in this statement to scope its interactions with you.

The main goal of the IBM Support team is to help paying customers get their supported product functional again as quickly as possible. Although the community support options are available for all Managed services users, contacting IBM Support is the best support option for users of the different bundled enterprise editions of Managed services. The community support channels are the only support options forManaged services Community Edition users.

When you contact IBM Support, there are two phases of open source support:

  1. The problem determination phase. During this phase, IBM Support engineers determine whether the root cause of an issue is due to open source code or IBM code.
  2. The open source support phase. If the root cause is due to open source code, IBM Support engineers identify which open source project contains the issue and work with you to identify next steps.

If a critical defect is found in the open source software within Managed services, IBM engineers use open source community resources to deliver a fix to the problem. The resulting fix is integrated, tested, and released to customers as an emergency update and in the next product release. If no fix is available from the community for a critical defect, IBM might use reasonable commercial efforts to provide a test fix to customers and then work with the specific open source community to create an official fix. The final arbiter over whether a supported fix can be provided belongs to the open source community.

Note that if any enterprise-level open source project has a critical defect, many clients are affected, and the community works as fast as possible to resolve it. It is unusual for only one customer to encounter a critical open source defect.

IBM cannot support any open source software that is not packaged with Managed services. In addition, if a client chooses to make any additions, subtractions, or upgrades to the Managed services open source code outside of product updates, that code is not supported. For Cloud Foundry, IBM might assist you with reporting defects in community buildpacks and runtimes to the appropriate open source community. IBM cannot provide fixes for these Cloud Foundry community buildpacks and runtimes.

Note: Managed services will support new versions of supported operating systems, Kubernetes, Docker, and other dependent infrastructure after new releases happen and when they are fully tested by the Managed services team.