242

I am unable to clone a Git repository, and getting this error:

krishna.soni@KRISHNACHANDRAS /c/Projects $ git clone http://stage.abc.com:10088/pqr
http://<url>/<repository> Cloning into '<repository>'... fatal: could not read Username for 'http://<url>': No such file or directory

I've read Bitbucket, Windows and “fatal: could not read Password for”, but still have the problem.

I proceeded further but am now getting this error

sh.exe": chown: command not found

krishna.soni@KRISHNACHANDRAS /c
$ git clone ssh://[email protected].
/projects
Cloning into 'C:/projects'...
Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.

Please make sure you have the correct access rights
and the repository exists.

> krishna.soni@KRISHNACHANDRAS /c
>     $ git clone ssh:<url>
>     ts
>     Cloning into 'C:/projects'...
>     Permission denied (publickey).
>     fatal: Could not read from remote repository.

Please make sure you have the correct access rights

and the repository exists.

5
  • Are you sure it's a git repository?
    – gravetii
    Jan 21, 2014 at 10:42
  • yes , it is . I am new to git, getting this error while cloning . I added email and name in global config file using commands git config --global user.name "John Doe" $ git config --global user.email [email protected]
    – KCS
    Jan 21, 2014 at 10:44
  • The main reason is that the repo can't recognize you as a user the git-server. Could you access the server via ssh? Jan 21, 2014 at 10:51
  • If someone is having this issue while using Github, follow the steps mentioned here: help.github.com/en/articles/… It worked for me.
    – Rounak
    Mar 6, 2019 at 21:59
  • The issue is with the ssh key, As you are using ssh, its needs a ssh key which matches with the git repo. To do so, follow the below commands : 1. ssh-keygen, press enter till the ssh key generates. 2. Copy the ssh key from the location "Your public key has been saved in <Loc>" cat <Loc>. 3. Now in github, goto profile -->setting -->ssh and gpg key and add new ssh key and save. 4. Now clone again
    – rich
    Oct 28, 2022 at 6:10

34 Answers 34

302

For people that come here that are just trying to get the repository but don't care about the protocol (ssh / https), you might just want to use https instead of ssh (if it's supported).

So for example you use

git clone https://github.com/%REPOSITORYFOLDER%/%REPOSITORYNAME%.git

instead of

git clone [email protected]:%REPOSITORYFOLDER%/%REPOSITORYNAME%.git

Note that GitHub deprecated password authentication (https login) for private repositories due to it not keeping up with the latest security standards, use a personal access token.

Note also that since March 1, 2022, Bitbucket users are no longer able to use their Atlassian account password with git over https as well, but instead need to use Bitbucket app passwords.

6
  • 9
    This is the most appropriate fallback plan if ssh permissions don't get resolved or you want to skip that part. Apr 30, 2016 at 11:12
  • 62
    This answer changed the mechanism from ssh to https. It is not solving the original problem by using ssh to access the repository. I wonder how this can keep getting upvoted as a good answer to the question. The other answers down below are solving it properly.
    – Armin
    May 5, 2018 at 10:14
  • 9
    The original problem is a git newbie trying to clone a repo. If the goal is to pull down a public repo, this is the quickest effective answer. Oct 29, 2018 at 18:46
  • 3
    Https is no longer supported when cloning private repositories - only ssh or a PAT are supported. This answer should clarify that https is only reliable for public repos.
    – Stardust
    Sep 9, 2021 at 15:43
  • 1. Create App Password - Give all permissions 2. Change the remote url to https counterpart 3. Pull/Push/Commit - when asked for password give the password obtained in 2 Sep 16, 2022 at 8:33
157

If there is still issue around access after creating SSH and adding it in your Bitbucket account or wherever, you need to do the following in terminal on GitBash, OSX or Linux:

# Lists already added identities (‘ssh keys’)
ssh-add -l

Then, if you don't see your key listed, add it with the following (replace identity with its real name):

# Add a new identity
ssh-add ~/.ssh/identity

This worked for me.

16
  • 6
    ssh-add ~/.ssh/identity return error /Users/lee/.ssh/identity: No such file or directory
    – lee
    Dec 22, 2016 at 3:52
  • 17
    Running "ssh-add" from "~/.ssh" (and entering the passphrase for my "~/.ssh/id_rsa" file when prompted) solved the problem for me. Jan 18, 2017 at 8:14
  • 1
    I was able to pull my repo but not push without doing this, cheers! Mar 8, 2017 at 17:52
  • 5
    To load the SSH agent with your private key eval $(ssh-agent) ssh-add ~/.ssh/<private_key>
    – Îsh
    Nov 12, 2018 at 22:13
  • 9
    worked for me... after hours of sweating and trying different things. Only thing is instead of identity in the end use the name in your own system. Go to .ssh folder by doing cd command in terminal and then type 'ls' command in terminal. And then replay the "identity" from above command with your own file. Go to sourcetree terminal and: cd ~ then cd .ssh then ls then (copy the name without .pub extension) then (run this command) ssh-add ~/.ssh/(copied name)
    – Tejas
    Apr 17, 2019 at 2:40
76

It looks like a permissions issue - not a Windows 7 issue.

Your ssh key is not authorised - Permission denied (publickey).

You need to create a public ssh key and ask the administrator of the Git repository to add the ssh public key

Information on how to do this: Saving ssh key fails

5
  • 39
    This is weird. The repository is public and I am cloning the public repository. I am not sure why I should ask the administrator for permission to clone his/her public repository hosted on Github.
    – Shailen
    Jul 30, 2014 at 15:35
  • 7
    Yeah, is false, you don't need to ask the administrator anything, is a problem with the local git. Aug 7, 2014 at 22:22
  • 4
    Why is it difficult? I succeeded but it was not painless. Feb 21, 2015 at 19:00
  • 13
    You don't need to authorize a key for public repos, just use HTTPS protocol: stackoverflow.com/a/33072867/1385678
    – Diego V
    Jan 5, 2016 at 10:05
  • 1
    Thanks @First Zero I have struggled with this problem. Firstly I have set up SSH-Agent, then have added Keys to SSH Agent (you can use this link https://www.toolsqa.com/git/clone-repository-using-ssh/ and then I have copyed key from generated file and create SSH-Key in settings my profile in Bitbucket
    – Monica
    May 12, 2022 at 11:49
46

I faced the same problem with GitHub. Here's how to solve it!

  1. Generate a SSH key on your computer as described here : Generating SSH keys.
  2. Login your GitHub account: GitHub Login.
  3. In your account, add the newly generated SSH Key: My account SSH keys.
  4. Try again to git clone the project.
7
  • Worked like charm!! Jan 4, 2019 at 23:42
  • 4
    I've now used this answer on 3 new operating systems in the last 5 years and it's worked perfectly every time.
    – kotoole
    May 13, 2020 at 19:14
  • Apparently High Sierra requires user to register the key in .ssh/config file. El Capitan somehow managed without it.
    – dsomnus
    Jun 18, 2020 at 7:11
  • This doesn't give a solution to the question, it just links to the documentation. After step 3, ssh -T [email protected] works fine, but git clone fails.
    – Stardust
    Sep 9, 2021 at 15:40
  • 1
    In case someone found this answer doesn't work, you might need to restart your machine. This helps me solve my problem
    – Sta_Doc
    Feb 28, 2022 at 7:18
23

I've had this issue on a Mac - while I setup SSH correctly to access my Git repository, after restart (and some time the Mac was on a standoff), all my credentials were removed. Apparently, for some reason the pub key was set to 644 which caused it to be removed from the keychain. To readd:

  • chmod 600 the public key
  • ssh-add ~/.ssh/[your private key] - this should display that identity has been added. The key file you want is the one without the .pub extension.
  • ssh-add -l should show you newly added identity

edit: apparently MacOS has tendency of removing keys - after downloading the High Sierra update (but I've not installed it yet) my key has been removed and I've had to add it again via ssh-add

2
  • 2
    This solution is still accurate after you upgrade macOS High Sierra to Version 10.13.1. Specifically, Sourcetree was the app that surfaced the issue when I tried to push a commit up to a remote repository. The above steps fixed the issue for me. Nov 2, 2017 at 17:25
  • I had this issue on 10.13.4 and this solution worked for me. May 1, 2018 at 10:46
18

For me, when i wanted to clone from my repository, i had the same message noticed before "Permission denied (publickey) fatal: Could not read from remote repository". The solution for my case is to not use sudo before clone That's it.

1
  • Well yeah that makes sense because when you sudo you are doing things as root. It's unlikely that root has access to your repository.
    – Pshock13
    Mar 5 at 15:22
13

I also faced the same issue. I did the following and it worked for me:

  1. Generate Keys from the GIT GUI client on Windows. Copy this key to the clipboard.
  2. Open up your account on bitBucket/ git website, and add this key to your profile. This way, the server knows that you are a legitimate user accessing from a legitimate system.
  3. That's it. All push commands worked for me henceforth.
2
  • This helped me see that I had generated my RSA without running Git Bash as Administrator which placed my RSA key in the "h" drive :oops: Mar 22, 2018 at 6:52
  • Definitely the best option in Windows.
    – Tim
    Apr 5, 2021 at 15:01
10

I had the similar issue. I change the ssh keys and restarted and tried all other 'n' solutions. But the actual issue for me was our gitlab default protocol changed from ssh to https.

check the remote url with

git remote -v

change the remote url

git remote set-url origin https://URL
5
  • It's perfect, We don't need to configure ssh. May 6, 2019 at 7:56
  • I had to do the same. The ssh key was not working for me in this case
    – Dani
    Jan 30, 2020 at 9:06
  • fatal: unable to access 'bitbucket.org:xxxxxx/xxxxxxxxt': Port number ended with 'r' Jul 14, 2020 at 15:10
  • I had similar issue. My ssh key is properly configured but only difference I observed is with cloned repo the different protocol. set it with https worked for me. Dec 7, 2020 at 4:19
  • This method worked perfectly for me. Swapping the remote origin from git@ to https://.
    – zeropsi
    May 13, 2022 at 1:34
8

Github(or Bitbucket) can't find your ssh key in their server.

Just add your key in your account setting.

7

If you generate new public ssh key and inserted it to bitbucket or github and

it not helped - please try to restart your PC. It helped me!!

1
  • I had to close the terminal and open a new one to see it working.
    – rahul
    Dec 24, 2019 at 8:16
7

For Fedora 33+ and Bitbucket users:

The issue happens because the hash algorithm is outdated. As mentioned on Bitbucket there are two options:

Option 1:

Add to the ~/.ssh/config file. (If the file doesn't exist, just create it.)

Host bitbucket.org
  PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes +ssh-rsa

Option 2:

Using a more secure algorithm.

ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C "[email protected]"
1
  • The accepted key types line worked for me!
    – tpb261
    Dec 22, 2021 at 9:54
6

You need to create a new ssh key by running ssh-keygen -t rsa.

0
6

In macOS / Linux (Ubuntu):

1. To Authenticate you need to add your public part of your SSH key pair to bitbucket from within your user settings: User Settings --> SSH keys

You will find the said public part in your ~/.ssh directory, usually id_rsa.pub . note the .pub part of the file name for Public. it will help you to generate one if you don't already have one

You are not done yet ...

2. You need to let your system know what key to use with which remote host, so add these lines to your ~/.ssh/config file

Host bitbucket.org
 IdentityFile ~/.ssh/PRIVATE_KEY_FILE_NAME

Where PRIVATE_KEY_FILE_NAME is the name of private part of your SSH key pair, if you haven't messed with it, usually its default name is : id_rsa in this case replace PRIVATE_KEY_FILE_NAME above with id_rsa(the private key DOES NOT have a .pub extension)

1
  • Note, you misspelled "Ubuntu" -- edits must be at least 6 chars so I can't suggest the edit :) Mar 7, 2018 at 0:47
5

I got the error...

Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
Please make sure you have the correct access rights
and the repository exists.

...when I was trying to make contact from a Git Bash prompt to Bitbucket after my laptop died from a bad Windows 10 update and was returned to factory settings. I had restored all my ssh files from a backup.

The cause of the error turned out to be a mismatch in my Windows account name after the computer rebuild. I learned that the public key file id_rsa.pub ends with an easily readable string comprising my Windows account name followed by an @ sign and then the computer name.

When I originally set up my computer, I created my Windows account name including my middle initial but when my computer was reset to factory settings, our new DevOps guy created my account name without my middle initial.

To resolve the issue, I simply edited my public key file id_rsa.pub and removed the middle initial in my name at the end. I had stuck with the same computer name so that was okay. I copied the file contents to the Windows clipboard. I then signed into Bitbucket, went to Bitbucket Settings under my avatar, and added a new public key where I pasted in the new contents.

Back at the Git Bash prompt, I confirmed that it now worked by entering the command...

ssh -T [email protected]

...and I got back a message that I was signed in.

5

Useful thread and I don't bring much new to the table. The step I took is also part of the description Maxime helpfully points to but some may overlook it. The section is Adding your SSH key to the ssh-agent.

I had already generated my ssh-key but after a reboot I was unable to clone one of my own repositories.

I had to start the ssh-agent and add the private key to this agent in order to clone.

eval $(ssh-agent -s)
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
1
  • This method worked for me. I think the ssh authentication agent had not picked up the recently generated keys, and running these commands solved my problem. Apr 5, 2022 at 13:33
5

After changing permissions of folder in which I was cloning, it worked:

sudo chown -R ubuntu:ubuntu /var/projects

2
  • This did the trick, weird enough that sudo does not enable you to do that :/ Jun 17, 2021 at 8:58
  • What exactly does this do? Who is ubuntu? Oct 13, 2021 at 19:32
3

I faced the same issue while running git clone command from windows command line. But the command runs successfully from Git Bash.

3

You can try adding your ssh key to your private keychain. It worked for me

ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/[your-private-key]
2
  • 1
    "unknown option -- K" Nov 26, 2019 at 13:52
  • Out of all answers given this is the only answer that solved my problem. Thanks Dec 21, 2020 at 13:30
2

If all fails, as was the case with me, Uninstall GIT, reinstall. For some reason this fixes.

P.S.

  1. I tried generating new Keys and Updating at SSH public keys
  2. Also tried deleting all keys and tried to create a fresh key.
  3. And NO, nothing wrong with my .gitconfig
2

fix for hub cli tool:

  • git config --global hub.protocol https for long term
  • git remote add OOPS https://github.com/isomorphisms/go.git && git push OOPS for immediate fix

This error occurs with the hub command line tool because of their wrong default hub.protocol git-config value. They set repos to

git://github.com/schacon/ticgit.git

instead of what github actually accepts, namely https://github.com/schacon/ticgit.git.


Reading LESS=+/"HTTPS instead" man hub will explain where the above "long-term fix" command comes from.

0
1

While cloning, I had a similar issue [ my ERROR: Permission denied (publickey). fatal: Could not read from remote repository. Please make sure you have the correct access rights .. etc ]

-- I was using bitBucket/UBUNTU14.04 in my case, but ALREADY had a set of key files that I had previously generated AND I had changed the name of the files. I simply COPIED the files to the standard id_rsa & id_rsa.pub name format. I then re-ran the command with out issue.

OBTW: I could have also used the password prompt by using the HTTP style clone.

0
1

If you want to clone open source projects to submit a Pull Request:

I wanted to clone an open source project so I could submit some pull requests. The problem was that I didn't have permissions from the owner of the project. No matter, since my intention was to submit a PR, here is a viable alternative:

My solution:

  1. Fork Repository

Fork Repo

  1. Then clone from your forked repository. Clone from forked Repo

  2. Work on your features and then submit a pull request.

1

Remove remote origin

git remote remove origin

Add HTTP remote origin

1
  • It's helped a lot! Thanks Mar 10, 2022 at 23:31
1
  1. sudo ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C "[email protected]"
  2. sudo cat /var/root/.ssh/{generated}.pub | pbcopy
  3. Add it to SSH keys
  4. Be sure your remote URL is https not ssh.
1
  • 1
    wow <3 after 2 hours ! the last comment saved me! thankkkkkksss!!
    – Unna
    Dec 28, 2023 at 11:22
0

I had a similar problem on linux. I solved the problem by logging into the github server and creating a deploy key. That's under settings for the repository. Then, I copied and pasted my public key (which is usually in ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub, but your configuration might be different). There is a check box to give this key write access. Click on it (unless you are using git to deploy only, in which case, don't click on it).

0

I had the same error. My solution was to logout and login again as my ssh-agent had become out of sync with the remote ssh key.

Adding this here just in case anyone has seen that the other answers don't seem to apply to their situation.

0

I was facing the same issue while setting up ssh for gitlab. I already have ssh for github and i could not overwrite that. The steps that worked for me are :

  1. Generate SSH with new path and add it to ssh list ssh-add /path/to/new/id_rsa.
  2. Create a file named config in ~/.ssh/ using. I used vi ~/.ssh/config/.
  3. Add this to the newly created file

# GitLab.com server Host gitlab.com RSAAuthentication yes IdentityFile /path/to/new/id_rsa

  1. Save and quit.

After that restart the terminal and try pushing, it should work

0

solution: On the server you are trying to clone to or push from cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub Go to GitHub, settings, SSH and GPG Keys , New SSH key paste key.

0

I see this errormessage has a lot of different reasons. I had the same error when trying to set up locally another repository alongside one already fully working with ssh etc. and connect it to same server, but other repository. No answers were here to be found, but I figured it out. So I post it. Hopefully helps someone.

git remote add origin [email protected]:teamalpha/repositorytwo.git
0

if none of these answers help and

  1. you are using Windows
  2. you generate your key with Putty or you have installed Putty on your PC
  3. you generate your key with CMD or PowerShell

Try

  1. delete your keys
  2. search on windows for Git Bash, then generate a new key with Git Bash command line
  3. add public key to your online Repo

Then, you will find after git clone and type yes to confirm, it should begin to clone

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