I'm setting up git on my new Windows 7 machine and I'm hitting a roadblock when it comes to getting github to acknowledge my ssh key. I am doing things a little different from the standard script in that I would rather not use cygwin and prefer to use my powershell prompt. The following is what I did:

  1. I installed msysgit (portable).
  2. I went to C:\program files\git\bin and used ssh-keygen to generate a public/private ssh keypair which I put in c:\Temp
  3. I then created a directory named .ssh\ in c:\Users\myusername\ (on windows 7)
  4. I moved both the files generated by the ssh-keygen (id_rsa and id_rsa.pub) into the .ssh directory
  5. I went to my account on github, created a new public key, copy-pasted the contents of id_rsa.pub into it and saved
  6. I now go to my powershell prompt, set-alias git 'C:\program files\git\bin\git.exe'
  7. I try to now do a clone git@github.com:togakangaroo/ps-profile.git which rejects my authentication:

    Permission denied (publickey). fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly

Past experience says that this means git is not recognizing my key. What steps am I missing?

I have a feeling that I need to somehow configure git so that it knows where my ssh keys are (though it would seem it should look there automatically) but I don't know how to do that.

Another possible clue is that when I try to run git config --global user.name "George Mauer" I get an error

fatal: $HOME not set

I did however set up a HOME environment user variable with the value %HOMEDRIVE%%HOMEPATH%

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4 Answers

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The command you're looking for is: ssh-add C:\path\to\key

First, you may want to find out where ssh is currently looking for your keys, by running ssh -v git@github.com

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are ssh and ssh-add utilities that are in the git\bin directory? I'm not using bash here – George Mauer Feb 24 '10 at 18:59
Sorry, spoke too soon, I see that they are there. I get this when I run ssh: pastebin.com/G6FPN9As What in the world does it all mean? – George Mauer Feb 24 '10 at 19:03
It looks like ssh is looking for the keys in C:\program files\git\bin\.ssh. The simplest solution would be to copy the keys to that directory. But if you like where they are, then run ssh-add c:\Users\myusername\.ssh . – Nick Novitski Feb 24 '10 at 19:37
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I think I'd prefer to keep it well organized - but running ssh-add gives me "Could not open a connection to your authentication agent." – George Mauer Feb 24 '10 at 19:43
Try setting the path to include the portable installation's cmd directory: set path=c:\yourpath\portablegit\cmd;%path%. See if that temporarily helps ssh-add or git-config work. – Nick Novitski Feb 25 '10 at 15:21
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I had the same problem. I accidently added the wrong directory to the path.

After I changed that from *\Git\bin\ to *\Git\cmd\ everything worked.

git.cmd sets up the environment variables.

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I had this problem on Windows 7. Once I addressed the missing HOME environment variable by pointing HOME to c/Users/wherever the problem was fixed.

More here: http://code.google.com/p/msysgit/issues/detail?id=482

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I had the problem, but it was caused by Internet Explorer 8.0.7600 having a javascript error when trying to perform the "add key" button functionality on my GitHub login "Account Settings" page "SSH Public Keys". This meant that the add key failed, and the key was not listed on the page of public keys above the link "Add another key". I switched to Firefox.

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