Not comparable, TravisCI is a platform for continuous integration. But
it supports OSX and we build Wget2 on it, using homebrew to install
dependencies. So anyone making up a homebrew formula might take it as
quick starter.

On 27.09.19 17:20, Peng Yu wrote:
> What is the pros and cons of TravisCI vs homebrew?
> 
> On 9/27/19, Tim Rühsen <[email protected]> wrote:
>> You have to clone the project via
>> git clone https://gitlab.com/gnuwget/wget2.git
>>
>> If it helps, we have TravisCI OSX build rules in .travis_setup.sh and
>> .travis.sh in the project directory. It uses homebrew to install
>> dependencies.
>>
>> Regards, Tim
>>
>>
>> On 27.09.19 15:50, Peng Yu wrote:
>>> I don't find wget2 on homebrew. Can anybody make a formula for it?
>>>
>>> On Fri, Sep 27, 2019 at 5:53 AM Tim Rühsen <[email protected]
>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>
>>>     Hi Pen Yu,
>>>
>>>     --compression=gzip
>>>
>>>     With Wget2 these compression types are automatically use (if built
>>> in):
>>>     gzip, deflate, bzip2, xz, lzma, br, zstd, lzip
>>>
>>>     Regards, Tim
>>>
>>>     On 27.09.19 05:03, Peng Yu wrote:
>>>     > Hi,
>>>     >
>>>     > curl has the option `--compressed` which will decompress the data
>>>     > automatically. But I don't think wget's option --compression can
>>>     > automatically decompress the data.
>>>     >
>>>     > Is there a way to let wget automatically decompress the data?
>>> Thanks.
>>>     >
>>>
>>> --
>>> Regards,
>>> Peng
>>
>>
> 
> 

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