Re: Combining APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO=1 and NO_OPENSSL=1 produces unexpected result

2016-01-02 Thread David Aguilar
On Sun, Dec 27, 2015 at 06:29:29PM -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Eric Sunshine writes: > > > So, it might be easier to think of NO_OPENSSL as really meaning NO_SSL > > (that is, "disable all SSL-related functionality"). Since the only SSL > > implementation Git knows

Re: Combining APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO=1 and NO_OPENSSL=1 produces unexpected result

2015-12-27 Thread Junio C Hamano
Eric Sunshine writes: > So, it might be easier to think of NO_OPENSSL as really meaning NO_SSL > (that is, "disable all SSL-related functionality"). Since the only SSL > implementation Git knows how to use is OpenSSL, perhaps one can > consider the name NO_OPENSSL a

Re: Combining APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO=1 and NO_OPENSSL=1 produces unexpected result

2015-12-23 Thread Eric Sunshine
On Wed, Nov 25, 2015 at 10:10 AM, Jack Nagel wrote: > When compiling git on OS X (where APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO=1 is the > default) and specifying NO_OPENSSL=1, the resulting git uses the > BLK_SHA1 implementation rather than the functions available in > CommonCrypto. > > $ make

Combining APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO=1 and NO_OPENSSL=1 produces unexpected result

2015-11-25 Thread Jack Nagel
When compiling git on OS X (where APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO=1 is the default) and specifying NO_OPENSSL=1, the resulting git uses the BLK_SHA1 implementation rather than the functions available in CommonCrypto. $ uname -a Darwin broadwell.local 15.0.0 Darwin Kernel Version 15.0.0: Sat Sep 19 15:53:46