Let's be honest, we might see things differently but neither of us is perfect (yet!). From time to time, we make mistakes that lead to bugs in OBS, and it's not uncommon that you need a little help understanding something within OBS. But don't worry! As a Free Software project, we're committed to working together and collaborating. Here's how we do it.
There is a vibrant community of developers, admins, and users who support each other in their use of OBS. They connect online in the OBS IRC chat or on the OBS mailing list (archive). Here, you can ask questions if you're having trouble understanding something, seek advice, and mingle with other members of the OBS community.
In the unfortunate event you've hit a bug in the OBS we depend on you to report them. A bug can be a defect in the software, a wrong paragraph in the documentation, a dead link on the website or any other problem you are sure you can't do anything about. We track code bugs on github. Problems regarding the setup of distributions or with any other content of build.opensuse.org need to be reported either on the mailing lists or in bugzilla. If you need help entering an issue, github has a a great blogpost about that.
Sometimes it's not really a defect that is bugging you but missing functionality. You have an idea how to make OBS better, faster, stronger. Those ideas we call feature and we track them on GitHub.
We ourselves currently have no product or service offering around OBS. But we are cooperating with preferred partners to allow customers using OBS in productive build environments. So if you need consulting, training or support with respective service level agreements (SLA) please contact a partner listed below.
B1 Systems offers consulting, customizing, general support and trainings around the OBS.