Given it is in contrib, presumably it got its own upstream?
On Apr 21, 2024 at 11:24 +0800, Fred Wright <f...@fwright.net>, wrote:
>
> On Sat, 20 Apr 2024, Saagar Jha wrote:
>
> > Wait, I use osxkeychain. It’s basically a requirement if you’re pushing
> > to an authenticated server over HTTPS and don’t want to have to deal
> > with storing keys yourself. I suspect it is used a lot for this.
>
> I have yet to see a Git repo that didn't allow you to push via SSH
> (git://) rather than HTTPS, and that's preferable, anyway. I usually
> configure repos to use git:// in both directions, though git allows you to
> configure fetch and push separately if you want.
>
> I avoid Keychain as much as I possibly can, after reading in some
> documentation somewhere that it stores all your passwords on the disk in
> cleartext the entire time you're logged in.
>
> I have no objection to having the osxkeychain feature, but I don't
> recommend actually using it.
>
> Fred Wright
>
> > > On Apr 19, 2024, at 23:52, Kirill A. Korinsky <kir...@korins.ky> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Sat, 20 Apr 2024 00:25:47 +0200,
> > > Sergio Had wrote:
> > > >
> > > > What do we do? :)
> > >
> > > To fix the build you have two options:
> > > 1. Revert that patch for system before 10.7
> > > 2. Remove folder contrib/credential/osxkeychain
> > >
> > > I suggest to follow (2) as simpler thay and the good news that osxkeychain
> > > is something that isn't often used.

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