I'm wondering, how Github is able to handle so many public keys, which are used for authenticating over ssh.
One user owns aprox 3 certificates and how many users are on Github - millions? Easy multiplication gives us millions of certificates. It isn't in one .ssh/authorized_keys
file for user git I guess, right?
They have own ssh server implemented, or exists any mod for OpenSSH solving this kind of problem?
Thanks.
git:
URLs have the username embedded, and it becomes far less of an issue. What is an issue (imo) is that they will tell you if you're using a duplicate key, and refuse to accept it (makes shared accounts harder).https://github.com/sourcejedi/Bonfire.git
andgit://github.com/sourcejedi/Bonfire.git
have your username in them. And unless your GH account is different from mine, you'll see the same thing in the read-write URLs.