As far as I know, Git is licensed under the GNU GPL v2.0. Stock git
never tells you to accept its licence, though. This seems to be a
legal issue for me, as it seems that they are relicensing Git under
their own. Still, this is not in the reach of this list.
On 22 September 2014 14:31, Anthony V
I hadn't looked at it that way. Yes, I guess I may be addressing the wrong
list. I was just kind of hoping someone would be able to give me a quick
it's because of x,y,z answer. Thanks.
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I guess you were addressing the wrong list with this question. You
should report it to the X-Code support/mailing list/whatever.
Although I’m not a lawyer, my guess is that they are not connected in
any way. Git is one product with its on licence, X-Code is another.
On 22 September 2014 10:46, An
After updating Xcode on my Mac Git has stopped working and reports:
"Agreeing to the Xcode/iOS license requires admin privileges, please re-run
as root via sudo."
I presume once I spin up X-Code and accept the t&c's Git will start working
again.
My question is: Why are the two linked? How co