1800

A rather unusual situation perhaps, but I want to specify a private SSH-key to use when executing a shell (git) command from the local computer.

Basically like this:

git clone [email protected]:TheUser/TheProject.git -key "/home/christoffer/ssh_keys/theuser"

Or even better (in Ruby):

with_key("/home/christoffer/ssh_keys/theuser") do
  sh("git clone [email protected]:TheUser/TheProject.git")
end

I have seen examples of connecting to a remote server with Net::SSH that uses a specified private key, but this is a local command. Is it possible?

7

42 Answers 42

1672

None of these solutions worked for me.

Instead, I elaborate on @Martin v. Löwis 's mention of setting a config file for SSH.

SSH will look for the user's ~/.ssh/config file. I have mine setup as:

Host gitserv
    Hostname remote.server.com
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa.github
    IdentitiesOnly yes # see NOTES below
    AddKeysToAgent yes

And I add a remote git repository:

git remote add origin git@gitserv:myrepo.git

(or clone a fresh copy of the repo with git@gitserv:myrepo.git as address)

And then git commands work normally for me.

git push -v origin master

If you have submodules, you can also execute the following in the repo directory, to force the submodules to use the same key:

git config url.git@gitserv:.insteadOf https://remote.server.com

NOTES

  • The IdentitiesOnly yes is required to prevent the SSH default behavior of sending the identity file matching the default filename for each protocol. If you have a file named ~/.ssh/id_rsa that will get tried BEFORE your ~/.ssh/id_rsa.github without this option.

  • AddKeysToAgent yes lets you avoid reentering the key passphrase every time.

  • You can also add User git to avoid writing git@ every time.

References

17
  • 33
    I found that when you specify multiple keys using .ssh/config, you need to use host friend name in line "Host" as part of "git remote add" command. If line is "Host stg", then you need to use git remote add <someName> user@stg:/path_to_git_repo.git ". If you use exact server name like [email protected]:/path_to_git_repo.git, the config file is not picked by git. Hence, it is not picking private key file correctly. I tried this by pushing same content to github and heroku and works only when you give friendly name in "git remote add" Jul 15, 2013 at 23:46
  • 3
    I wasn't sure about the Host for github. I found this link: gist.github.com/jexchan/2351996.
    – Karsten
    Jul 15, 2014 at 9:40
  • 1
    Take a look here if you want to have few key files for few git repositories
    – e271p314
    Sep 9, 2014 at 14:37
  • 5
    You could use Host remote.server.com and keep using the original URL
    – MauganRa
    Aug 9, 2016 at 13:03
  • 29
    This worked for me after two changes. If the config file is new, don't forget to do chmod 600 ~/.ssh/config (see here). And if you are using GitHub, replace Host gitserv with Host github.com, omit Hostname remote.server.com, and add remote with git remote add origin [email protected]:user_name/repo_name.git. Jun 21, 2018 at 11:30
1130

Something like this should work (suggested by orip):

ssh-agent bash -c 'ssh-add /somewhere/yourkey; git clone [email protected]:user/project.git'

if you prefer subshells, you could try the following (though it is more fragile):

ssh-agent $(ssh-add /somewhere/yourkey; git clone [email protected]:user/project.git)

Git will invoke SSH which will find its agent by environment variable; this will, in turn, have the key loaded.

Alternatively, setting HOME may also do the trick, provided you are willing to setup a directory that contains only a .ssh directory as HOME; this may either contain an identity.pub, or a config file setting IdentityFile.

14
  • 12
    But this will add the key permanently as an accepted SSH-key, right? I want to avoid that so that theuser2 can't mess with theuser's projects. It's for a web application so it's not practical to use different OS-users, which would have been the best option. Dec 30, 2010 at 19:55
  • 45
    No, when git completes, ssh-agent terminates, and the key is forgotten. Dec 30, 2010 at 19:56
  • 7
    this command does'not work on windows git bash. It says syntax error near unexpected token 'ssh-add'
    – Mohit
    Sep 19, 2011 at 19:02
  • 121
    Fixed command line (for windows or linux) would be something like: ssh-agent bash -c 'ssh-add sshkey; git clone url'
    – orip
    Nov 10, 2011 at 0:00
  • 8
    The ssh-agent $(..) syntax isn't working for me and I'm not sure how this is suppose to work: (ba)sh should execute the commands inside $(..) first, then run ssh-agent with the output as parameter. Dec 28, 2015 at 11:55
909

Starting from Git 2.3.0 we also have the simple command (no config file needed):

GIT_SSH_COMMAND='ssh -i private_key_file -o IdentitiesOnly=yes' git clone user@host:repo.git

Note the -o IdentitiesOnly=yes is required to prevent the SSH default behavior of sending the identity file matching the default filename for each protocol as noted in the answer above.

14
  • 3
    I get cannot run ssh -i /home/vagrant/.ssh/git: No such file or directory though it exists 444 Nov 16 18:12 /home/vagrant/.ssh/git from ls -l /home/vagrant/.ssh/git
    – ted
    Nov 16, 2015 at 18:28
  • 3
    @ted: chmod 400 /home/vagrant/.ssh/git
    – Yash
    Feb 15, 2016 at 12:43
  • 10
    Nice and easy solution. I suggest creating an alias if you need to do this a lot. Jul 25, 2016 at 10:55
  • 10
    Don't forget to chmod 400 <path-to-private-key-file>. Otherwise git command may fail with no special error message...
    – eonil
    Dec 10, 2017 at 14:48
  • 9
    It would be good if this answer also included -o IdentitiesOnly=yes to make sure that the key specified with -i gets used (as opposed to a key from SSH agent).
    – robinst
    Jan 6, 2020 at 3:23
538

Other people's suggestions about ~/.ssh/config are extra complicated. It can be as simple as:

Host github.com
  IdentityFile ~/.ssh/github_rsa
8
  • 39
    You need the IdentitiesOnly option, too.
    – Flimm
    Jul 3, 2015 at 14:56
  • 7
    @EnzeChi you can have multiple github accounts by manipulating the remotes: git remote add ssh://personal/org/proj.git && git remote add ssh://corporate/org/proj.git. Then you config looks like Host personal HostName github.com ... Host corporate HostName github.com
    – emory
    May 4, 2017 at 11:52
  • 10
    Mine works without the IdentitiesOnly option. Can someone explain why this should be required? Aug 18, 2020 at 4:16
  • 3
    Not exactly fitting granularity. My company has an organisation on github and I have a personal account on github, so with just the host it does not work nicely.
    – anydoby
    Jan 4, 2022 at 13:11
  • 1
    Is there a difference between Host *.github.com and Host github.com?
    – minseong
    Nov 18, 2022 at 19:22
397

With git 2.10+ (Q3 2016: released Sept. 2d, 2016), you have the possibility to set a config for GIT_SSH_COMMAND (and not just an environment variable as described in Rober Jack Will's answer)

See commit 3c8ede3 (26 Jun 2016) by Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy (pclouds).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster -- in commit dc21164, 19 Jul 2016)

A new configuration variable core.sshCommand has been added to specify what value for GIT_SSH_COMMAND to use per repository.

core.sshCommand:

If this variable is set, git fetch and git push will use the specified command instead of ssh when they need to connect to a remote system.
The command is in the same form as the GIT_SSH_COMMAND environment variable and is overridden when the environment variable is set.

It means the git pull can be:

cd /path/to/my/repo/already/cloned
git config core.sshCommand 'ssh -i private_key_file' 
# later on
git pull

When cloning a new repo, where there is not yet any .git/config to modify, can first set it for just one command like git clone or git submodule add:

git -c core.sshCommand="ssh -i private_key_file" clone host:repo.git

Once the repo exists you can set the option permanently in the .git/config:

cd <repo or submodule you just cloned>
git config core.sshCommand "ssh -i private_key_file"

This is easier than setting a GIT_SSH_COMMAND environment variable, which, on Windows, as noted by Mátyás Kuti-Kreszács, would be

set "GIT_SSH_COMMAND=ssh -i private_key_file"

For all those commands, you can add a -o IdentitiesOnly=yes to limit SSH to the the private/public key you are specifying:

git config core.sshCommand 'ssh -i private_key_file -o IdentitiesOnly=yes' 
# or
git -c core.sshCommand="ssh -i private_key_file -o IdentitiesOnly=yes" clone host:repo.git
# or
set "GIT_SSH_COMMAND=ssh -i private_key_file -o IdentitiesOnly=yes"

gsullins suggests in the comments to adds to the .zshrc the following alias:

alias git.key1="git config core.sshCommand 'ssh -i <absolute path to private key>'"

As noted by Jaredo Mills in a comment:

One pitfall: if you mirror your repo to more than one host (Github, Gitlab), with different private keys, this method will send the wrong key.
The key is not associated with the repo, but with a username and hostname. ~/.ssh/config is the right place to get the association right, and it has the right matching capabilities for the job (see man ssh_config).

See HeyWatchThis's answer for illustration.

6
  • 17
    Works. Folks should consider this the best answer. Once issued, it can be informative to diff the .git/config file with a version copied to /tmp beforehand. A new entry has been created: sshCommand = ... For what it's worth, I used 'git config core.sshCommand "ssh -i $HOME/.ssh/privatekeyfile". Mar 8, 2018 at 23:02
  • 1
    Only works with an existing git directory. Otherwise you need to set it globally which isn't really what you want.
    – Spanky
    Dec 6, 2018 at 19:49
  • 11
    @Spanky You can do the inline command git -c core.sshCommand="ssh -i private_key_file" clone host:repo.git followed by the config set git config core.sshCommand 'ssh -i private_key_file'
    – dav_i
    Jan 9, 2020 at 16:33
  • 2
    This works great thank you. Had to workaround another issue on Windows, if you are using the native Windows ssh and the Windows ssh-agent service you will need to specify the path to the windows ssh otherwise it will use the ssh shipped with git and you'll have to type the password in every time. git config core.sshCommand 'C:/Windows/System32/OpenSSH/ssh.exe -i C:/Users/firstname.lastname/.ssh/mygitkey_ed25519 -o IdentitiesOnly=yes'
    – holytshirt
    Apr 20, 2022 at 15:12
  • @holytshirt True. I always set the PATH to reference the ssh I want (C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\ssh.exe in my case). That way, no full path to specify.
    – VonC
    Apr 20, 2022 at 17:24
165

Contents of my_git_ssh_wrapper:

#!/bin/bash

ssh -i /path/to/ssh/secret/key $1 $2

Then you can use the key by doing:

GIT_SSH=my_git_ssh_wrapper git clone [email protected]:TheUser/TheProject.git
5
  • 1
    Nice solution. You can also simplify this with > GIT_SSH=my_git_ssh_wrapper; git clone [email protected]:TheUser/TheProject.git
    – Shiva
    May 6, 2014 at 23:40
  • 2
    This solution also covers situations when you want to use git from account without home directory.
    – piotrekkr
    May 19, 2014 at 8:14
  • Fantastic. You can use this way to private servers too: GIT_SSH="git_wrapper" git clone ssh://user@server/path/to/project"
    – ton
    Apr 10, 2015 at 22:41
  • 1
    Don't forget to add executable permissions to script to avoid "Permission denied" error
    – Panoptik
    Oct 19, 2020 at 14:48
  • After cloning with this wrapper, you can set the wrapping command inside this particular project's git config cd projectname ; git config core.sshCommand 'ssh -i private_key_file -o IdentitiesOnly=yes' , and then you wont need to use wrapper for subsequent pulls
    – rilian
    Jul 10, 2023 at 15:03
160

To sum up answers and comments, the best way to set up git to use different key files and then forget about it, which also supports different users for the same host (e.g. a personal GitHub account and a work one), which works on Windows as well, is to edit ~/.ssh/config (or c:\Users\<your user>\.ssh\config) and specify multiple identities:

Host github.com
HostName github.com
IdentityFile /path/to/your/personal/github/private/key
User dandv

Host github-work
HostName github.com
IdentityFile /path/to/your/work/github/private/key
User workuser

Then, to clone a project as your personal user, just run the regular git clone command.

To clone the repo as the workuser, run git clone git@github-work:company/project.git.

6
  • 4
    I downvoted you because everything you say is already covered in the answers above, and in my eyes, even more clearly. For instance, why exactly do you define the User to e dandv and workuser, respectively?
    – hroptatyr
    Mar 27, 2015 at 12:34
  • 3
    You answered a 4 year old question with no new informations and you are claiming that your answer is "the best way". Moreover you downvoted and hassled other users to remove their answer ... just to get your one pushed up.
    – rudimeier
    Mar 27, 2015 at 13:03
  • @hroptatyr: I've used dandv and workuser to support my example, "e.g. a personal GitHub account and a work one". dandv is my GitHub username. Mar 28, 2015 at 7:50
  • 1
    You've actually got the right idea here, but this won't work. You have to use user 'git'. The problem is, you're duplicating thamster's reply from 2012.
    – jthill
    May 8, 2015 at 15:39
  • 3
    I like this answer. However, for me this only works if I add IdentitiesOnly yes to my ssh config file.
    – winni2k
    Feb 17, 2017 at 11:14
111

The problem is when you have different remote repositories on the same host (say github.com), and you want to interact with them using different ssh keys (i.e. different GitHub accounts).

In order to do that:

  1. First you should declare your different keys in ~/.ssh/config file.

    # Key for usual repositories on github.com
    Host github.com
    HostName github.com
    User git
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
    
    # Key for a particular repository on github.com
    Host XXX
    HostName github.com
    User git
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_other_rsa
    

    By doing this you associate the second key with a new friendly name "XXX" for github.com.

  2. Then you must change the remote origin of your particular repository, so that it uses the friendly name you've just defined.

    Go to your local repository folder within a command prompt, and display the current remote origin:

    >git remote -v
    origin  [email protected]:myuser/myrepo.git (fetch)
    origin  [email protected]:myuser/myrepo.git (push)
    

    Then change origin with:

    >git remote set-url origin git@XXX:myuser/myrepo.git
    >git remote -v
    origin  git@XXX:myuser/myrepo.git (fetch)
    origin  git@XXX:myuser/myrepo.git (push)
    

    Now you can push, fetch... with the right key automatically.

4
  • 1
    This sounds like exactly what I'm looking for, but I can't get it working. Whenever I run a git command I get: ssh: Could not resolve hostname helloworld-wp-github: Name or service not known fatal: Could not read from remote repository. Feb 15, 2021 at 23:21
  • Did you add a new entry in your ~/.ssh/config ? This is how you tell ssh that your "helloworld-wp-github" is an alias for "github.com". Then, and only then, you can use your alias as remote server in git commands.
    – rodzmkii
    Feb 16, 2021 at 15:20
  • 1
    Adding User git was what I was missing. You can test connection with ssh -vT XXX ( docs.github.com/en/authentication/troubleshooting-ssh/… )
    – arsenik
    Nov 25, 2021 at 13:31
  • this is a horrible answer to be honest. you now have to remember all these special domain names and any tooling that relies on the git remote being correctly transferrable to a http web interface is now broken. what's that somerandomproject.github.com doesn't exist? oh no? dramalama! The correct solution is to use the core.sshCommand, bonus points if you persist it with your ~/.dotfiles/.gitconfig and make use of includeif logic 👍
    – airtonix
    Feb 25, 2022 at 3:29
99

As stated here: https://superuser.com/a/912281/607049

You can configure it per-repo:

git config core.sshCommand "ssh -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa_example -F /dev/null"
git pull
git push
4
  • 1
    What does -F /dev/null do? As far as I can see this will change configFile from the ~/.ssh/config default but why is that desired? To ensure a sandboxed command?
    – Dominic
    Mar 23, 2017 at 12:26
  • 4
    linuxcommand.org/man_pages/ssh1.html, specifies no config file, so when git will run ssh, no config file will be passed (in fact it's a kind of sandbox mode, just ignore user config default options) Original thread in superuser has more info about -F
    – David
    Mar 23, 2017 at 16:04
  • Why would you put this in your .bash_profile as an alias? You just run it once (for each repo). In general, use functions instead of aliases and your life will be easier; but both are slightly hard if you are confused about quoting.
    – tripleee
    Mar 4, 2020 at 19:57
  • git -c core.sshCommand="ssh -i ~/.ssh/{key}" clone {repo} Feb 26, 2023 at 9:24
68

The fastest and simplest way of doing it is by:

Clone your repo with ssh:

git -c core.sshCommand="ssh -i ~/.ssh/<your_key>" clone [email protected]:<user>/<repo>.git

then cd into you cloned repo and:

git config core.sshCommand 'ssh -i ~/.ssh/<your_key>'

To test it's working:

git --git-dir=/path/to/repo/.git pull

So you may wonder: why my created ssh key does not work after I planted the .pub in github and the private is in the default directory?

The documentation gives us a command that clarifies the issue: ssh -vT [email protected]

The output shows a list of ssh keys names git looks for. So, you may want to create your key with one of those names, or use the above process to include the one you need.

3
  • To add to this, you should be configuring this by using another feature of gitconfig: includeif.
    – airtonix
    Feb 25, 2022 at 3:24
  • You can replace the two commands with this one command: git clone -c "core.sshCommand=ssh -i ~/.ssh/<your_key>" [email protected]:<user>/<repo>.git . Notice the -c option comes after clone, not before.
    – Flimm
    Jun 24, 2022 at 14:00
  • -i is merely a suggestion without further flags. To avoid this heresy, expand it to ssh -o IdentitiesOnly=yes -o IdentityFile=~/.ssh/<your_key> --identity_file=~/.ssh/<your_key>.
    – airtonix
    Oct 4, 2022 at 22:56
49
GIT_SSH_COMMAND="ssh -i /path/to/git-private-access-key" git clone $git_repo

or

export GIT_SSH_COMMAND="ssh -i /path/to/git-private-access-key"
git clone REPO
git push
1
  • That is clean. I want to add GIT_SSH_COMMAND="ssh -i /path/to/git-private-access-key" git clone repo if anyone want to use it temporarily. Oct 17, 2022 at 18:05
42

Way better idea to add that host or ip to the .ssh/config file like so:

Host (a space separated list of made up aliases you want to use for the host)
    User git
    Hostname (ip or hostname of git server)
    PreferredAuthentications publickey
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa_(the key you want for this repo)
4
  • 1
    That's useful, but makes you use the repo key for all interaction with that hostname. If there are other repos on the same server that require different keys, using a wrapper and telling git to use it with GIT_SSH is better.
    – Joe Block
    Jan 3, 2013 at 22:27
  • 11
    That's not necessarily true. I use multiple keys for Github - one for work and one for my personal account. You don't have to put a domain name for "Host". You can put any kind of alias you want. For example, I use gh-home and gh-work as my hostnames and when I clone I use, for example, git clone git@gh-work:repo/project.git In my ~/.ssh/config I have two sections that both use github.com for HostName. They just have different IdentityFile and Host
    – blockloop
    Dec 18, 2013 at 17:35
  • @brettof86 this strategy works for the most part, but what do you do when a repository you are checking out depends on a gem which is also hosted on github? The the reference to the github repo in the Gemfile wont contain your "alias", well not unless you want to break things for other developers on the project...
    – ktec
    Mar 28, 2015 at 16:58
  • The gist is here gist.github.com/justbrettjones/…
    – blockloop
    Aug 6, 2015 at 22:41
42

From Git version 2.10.0, you can configure this per repo or globally

git config core.sshCommand "ssh -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa_example -o 'IdentitiesOnly yes'"

This will specify for the current repo what ssh key will use. I assume if you want to specify this global only need to set the --global option.

3
  • 1
    How do I specify this for checkout? I mean, I've just created a new empty folder, opened console, went inside this folder and executed this command. It tells me: fatal: not in a git directory.
    – izogfif
    Mar 26, 2021 at 12:27
  • 2
    You need to initialize git, with git init
    – J.T
    Mar 28, 2021 at 2:17
  • Using WSL2 I had originally set the path using standard forward-slashes \ including the C:\Users path but had to alter it verbatim as you had it with the standard Unix path syntax ~/. This worked perfectly for my and especially helpful with the note about setting the --global option which was all but implied for most cases
    – tijko
    Mar 9, 2022 at 0:42
36

This command clones the repo and configures the SSH key to use permanently:

git clone -c "core.sshCommand=ssh -i ~/.ssh/<key>" [email protected]:<user>/<repo>.git

Now, if you run git fetch, git pull, or git push, it will use the SSH key configured in core.sshCommand (saved in .git/config).

0
33

I went with the GIT_SSH environment variable. Here's my wrapper, similar to that from Joe Block from above, but handles any amount of arguments.

File ~/gitwrap.sh

#!/bin/bash
ssh -i ~/.ssh/gitkey_rsa "$@"

Then, in my .bashrc, add the following:

export GIT_SSH=~/gitwrap.sh
5
  • I did set this on .bashrc. But when I login to openshift instance, it does not seems to be calling it. Am I missing something ?
    – Jigar Shah
    Feb 11, 2013 at 6:48
  • It fails with an error for me.. its not able to find the script event though its there.. not sure whats going on...error: cannot run /tmp/gitwrap.sh: No such file or directory
    – ap1234
    Jul 26, 2016 at 0:24
  • If you face "No such file or directory" error, put full path of gitwrap.sh, for example /home/ubuntu/gitwrap.sh Oct 27, 2017 at 13:15
  • you might want to add -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no to the ssh command
    – dan-man
    Feb 21, 2019 at 12:53
  • I tried to implement this, but I was not happy with the fact that I needed an extra script file to act as a wrapper, and when I checked the documentation, I found an easier way. You can use GIT_SSH_COMMAND to specify the command you want git to use. In my case (different private key), I had to do this: export GIT_SSH_COMMAND="ssh -i ~/.ssh/my_alternative_private_key" and then continue to use git as normal in the script.
    – Luxian
    Mar 7, 2023 at 22:50
19

If none of the other solutions here work for you, and you have created multiple ssh-keys, but still cannot do simple things like

git pull

then assuming you have two ssh key files like

id_rsa
id_rsa_other_key

then inside of the git repo, try:

# Run these commands INSIDE your git directory
eval `ssh-agent -s`
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa_other_key

and also make sure your github default username and userid are correct by:

# Run these commands INSIDE your git directory
git config user.name "Mona Lisa"
git config user.email "[email protected]"

See https://gist.github.com/jexchan/2351996 for more more information.

3
  • 2
    Note if you get Could not open a connection to your authentication agent., try $ eval `ssh-agent -s`, and try again. Feb 14, 2019 at 23:09
  • Why do you think it matters in which directory you run ssh-add?
    – tripleee
    Mar 4, 2020 at 19:59
  • @BenCartwright Because you are modifying local settings, not global settings. This approach modifies .git inside the repo not the git program globally. You can use --global to set global username and email. Mar 5, 2020 at 20:52
19

2021. If you're on a Mac.

Say you have an ubuntu server on aws, which you normally connect to like this:

% ssh -i blah/yourkeypair.pem [email protected]

In terminal just

% export GIT_SSH_COMMAND="ssh -i /Users/fattie/Desktop/blah/yourkeypair.pem"

After you have done that. You can then freely ...

% git clone [email protected]:/home/ubuntu/teste.git  

That will clone the repo on your server to your local folder "teste",

you can then freely when in teste/ do the usual commands such as ...

% git push origin master

and so on.

--

Note also: https://stackoverflow.com/a/67287133/294884


As for on the server, it seems you basically

] git clone --bare the-actual-folder teste.git

and then in teste.git

] git init --bare --shared
0
16

I just needed to add the key and then rerun the git clone.

ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa_mynewkey
eval $(ssh-agent -s)
git clone [email protected]:mycompany/myrepo.git
1
14

When you need to connect to github with a normal request (git pull origin master), setting the Host as * in ~/.ssh/config worked for me, any other Host (say, "github" or "gb") wasn't working.

Host *
    User git
    Hostname github.com
    PreferredAuthentications publickey
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa_xxx
3
  • Might as well leave the entire "Host *" line out then.
    – lionello
    Jun 26, 2014 at 4:22
  • 1
    It probably wasn't working because it didn't match your remote URL. If you want to use Host my-host-alias, you have to set remote.origin.url=git@my-host-alias:[username]/[repo].git. Apr 18, 2016 at 17:15
  • Thanks a lot! I didn't have a config file and I kept getting Permission denied (publickey). fatal: Could not read from remote repository. error and making new keys didn't help.
    – psyguy
    Mar 18 at 12:33
14

Many of these solutions looked enticing. However, I found the generic git-wrapping-script approach at the following link to be the most useful:

How to Specify an ssh Key File with the git command

The point being that there is no git command such as the following:

git -i ~/.ssh/thatuserkey.pem clone [email protected]:/git/repo.git

Alvin's solution is to use a well-defined bash-wrapper script that fills this gap:

git.sh -i ~/.ssh/thatuserkey.pem clone [email protected]:/git/repo.git

Where git.sh is:

#!/bin/bash

# The MIT License (MIT)
# Copyright (c) 2013 Alvin Abad
# https://alvinabad.wordpress.com/2013/03/23/how-to-specify-an-ssh-key-file-with-the-git-command

if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
    echo "Git wrapper script that can specify an ssh-key file
Usage:
    git.sh -i ssh-key-file git-command
    "
    exit 1
fi

# remove temporary file on exit
trap 'rm -f /tmp/.git_ssh.$$' 0

if [ "$1" = "-i" ]; then
    SSH_KEY=$2; shift; shift
    echo "ssh -i $SSH_KEY \$@" > /tmp/.git_ssh.$$
    chmod +x /tmp/.git_ssh.$$
    export GIT_SSH=/tmp/.git_ssh.$$
fi

# in case the git command is repeated
[ "$1" = "git" ] && shift

# Run the git command
git "$@"

I can verify that this solved a problem I was having with user/key recognition for a remote bitbucket repo with git remote update, git pull, and git clone; all of which now work fine in a cron job script that was otherwise having trouble navigating the limited-shell. I was also able to call this script from within R and still solve the exact same cron execute problem (e.g. system("bash git.sh -i ~/.ssh/thatuserkey.pem pull")).

Not that R is the same as Ruby, but if R can do it... O:-)

1
13

A lot of good answers, but some of them assume prior administration knowledge.

I think it is important to explicitly emphasize that if you started your project by cloning the web URL - https://github.com/<user-name>/<project-name>.git
then you need to make sure that the url value under [remote "origin"] in the .git/config was changed to the SSH URL (see code block below).

With addition to that make sure that you add the sshCommmand as mentioned below:

user@workstation:~/workspace/project-name/.git$ cat config
[core]
    repositoryformatversion = 0
    filemode = true
    bare = false
    logallrefupdates = true
    sshCommand = ssh -i ~/location-of/.ssh/private_key -F /dev/null <--Check that this command exist
[remote "origin"]
    url = [email protected]:<user-name>/<project-name>.git  <-- Make sure its the SSH URL and not the WEB URL
    fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
[branch "master"]
    remote = origin
    merge = refs/heads/master

Read more about it here.

1
  • 1
    Solid answer, provides info for project level config instead of system wide config. Other answers seem to ignore that you basically only run into this problem if you don't have a system wide configuration!
    – Malcolm
    Jul 22, 2020 at 19:00
9

if you have directory on your path where you want to sign with a given identifyfile you can specify to use a specific identify file via the .ssh/config file by setting the ControlPath e.g.:

host github.com
  ControlPath ~/Projects/work/**
  HostName github.com
  IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_work
  User git

Then ssh will use the specified identity file when doing git commands under the given work path.

3
  • Found out later that you can also set the properties ControlMaster auto and ControlPersist yes, so that you do not need to retype the password every time. Found the info in this article
    – cristobal
    May 3, 2019 at 6:41
  • ControlPath Specify the path to the control socket used for connection sharing as described in the ControlMaster section above or the string ''none'' to disable connection sharing. In the path, '%l' will be substituted by the local host name, '%h' will be substituted by the target host name, '%p' the port, and '%r' by the remote login username. It is recommended that any ControlPath used for opportunistic connection sharing include at least %h, %p, and %r. This ensures that shared connections are uniquely identified. Sep 3, 2021 at 9:00
  • actually this sounds like an unintentional side effect of the proper use of ControlPath
    – airtonix
    Feb 25, 2022 at 3:32
9

Why don't you just add location of identity key to git config file for a particular repo like this:

cd .git

vi config

[core]
    sshCommand = ssh -i <IDENTITY_KEY_LOCATION> -o IdentitiesOnly=yes

That's all you need.

2
  • Is this in the repo? How do you then clone it in the first place? How does it work when others clone it, or I use a different machine?
    – crobar
    Mar 16, 2023 at 11:51
  • GIT_SSH_COMMAND="ssh -i <IDENTITY_KEY_LOCATION> -o IdentitiesOnly=yes" git clone … and then this answer.
    – Hannes
    Apr 21, 2023 at 22:40
5

In Windows with Git Bash you can use the following to add a repository

ssh-agent bash -c 'ssh-add "key-address"; git remote add origin "rep-address"'

for example:

ssh-agent bash -c 'ssh-add /d/test/PrivateKey.ppk; git remote add origin [email protected]:test/test.git'

Which private key is in drive D, folder test of computer. Also if you want to clone a repository, you can change git remote add origin with git clone.

After enter this to Git Bash, it will ask you for passphrase!

Be Aware that openssh private key and putty private key are different!

If you have created your keys with puttygen, you must convert your private key to openssh!

1
  • noone should be using putty in 2022. windows provides proper ssh support now.
    – airtonix
    Feb 25, 2022 at 3:26
5

Most of the answers given here do not explain the details for the most basic usage.

After you have setup a server (in this case a linux server) in the cloud, you connect to it using ssh from the terminal.

From your computer, add the private key dyson-ubuntu-vm.pem which is given to you by your cloud services provider such as Azure, AWS etc to your .ssh configuration on your local machine like this:

Copy the .pem file to the /home/ssenyonjo/.ssh folder, then open /home/ssenyonjo/.ssh/config file and add the following entry:

Host 20.85.213.44
  HostName 20.85.213.44
  User Dyson
  IdentityFile /home/ssenyonjo/.ssh/dyson-ubuntu-vm.pem
  IdentitiesOnly yes

Now from your terminal, access the cloud linux server like so:

ssh [email protected]

When that works, create a git project on the cloud server like so:

Dyson@dyson-ubuntu-vm:~/projects$ git init --bare s2

Now come back to your local machine and clone that empty repository like so:

ssenyonjo@ssenyonjo-pc:~/Projects/mastering-git$ git clone ssh://[email protected]/home/Dyson/projects/s2

If you see an error that looks something like: fatal: Could not read from remote repository, It means you're accessing the wrong folder. Ensure you have outlined the right path from the root to the created repository.

If you dont want to setup a config file but want to access the ssh server that requires a key, you can use below command:

GIT_SSH_COMMAND='ssh -i ~/Projects/aws/keys/aws_ubuntu.pem'  git clone ssh://[email protected]/home/ubuntu/projects/mastering-git/rand 

You can export the command to continue using it for other tasks like git push and git pull

export GIT_SSH_COMMAND='ssh -i ~/Projects/aws/keys/aws_ubuntu.pem'

See: https://stackoverflow.com/a/29754018/10030693

4

The problem with this method is, at least when running by bash.exe on Windows, that it will create a new process every time which will remain dormant.

ssh-agent bash -c 'ssh-add /somewhere/yourkey; git clone [email protected]:user/project.git'

If you want want to use that for syncig repo on schedule then you need to add "&& ssh-agent -k" at the end.

Something like:

ssh-agent bash -c 'ssh-add C:/Users/user/.ssh/your_key; git -C "C:\Path\to\your\repo" pull && ssh-agent -k' 

ssh-agent -k will kill the process when it's done.

0
4

To have GIT_SSH_COMMAND environment variable work under Windows(CMD) instead of:

set GIT_SSH_COMMAND="ssh -i private_key_file"

Use:

set "GIT_SSH_COMMAND=ssh -i private_key_file"

The quote has to be like

set "variable=value" 

Some backgorund: https://stackoverflow.com/a/34402887/10671021

0
4

Also, as a simple "workaround", if you don't really need it that often:

Remove all ssh identities from the currently running ssh agent (not physically).

ssh-add -D

Re-add the one you need to work with to your currently running ssh-agent

ssh-add ~/.ssh/MyProperProfile

Do the gits

Optionally - revert by adding other identities (or all of 'em).

2
  • NOTE: The command will delete all your keys!!! @Der Zinger Please Note this in your post with a Bold text! Feb 1, 2023 at 4:44
  • I don't really get what this "warning" should be about sir. This command (ssh-add -D) quote: Removes all identities from the agent.. It does not delete anything from anywhere. The actual keys are still physically there, exactly where they where before that command, and can be easily re-added with the next command I've listed. The only thing this command do - makes sure that ssh-agent (and everything that relies on it, like git) does not "know" about your keys.
    – Der Zinger
    Feb 7, 2023 at 6:50
3

This is an extension to @VonC's answer. Please read it first.

Use case is I need to use both personal and work GitHub accounts using SSH. I want to use work SSH key as default as my projects will internally have other work repos as dependency. So cloning them should work seamlessly.

Steps I followed are:

  • Generate default SSH key and add it to work git account.

  • Generate personal SSH key in a separate file and add it to personal git account.

  • Add the following function code in your .bashrc or .zshrc file and source it.

     gclone() { 
         # Clone the repo-url using personal ssh-key
         git -c core.sshCommand="ssh -i path_to_personal_key" clone "$1" &&
    
         # Extract repo name from URL using "awk" and switch to that folder using "cd" 
         cd $(awk '{ sub(/.*\//, ""); sub(/\.git.*/, ""); print }' <<< "$1") &&
    
         # Set personal ssh-key as default for this repo 
         git config core.sshCommand "ssh -i path_to_personal_key";
     }
    
  • Use gclone command to clone repos using personal SSH key and set the repo to use that key as default.

  • Use normal git clone command to clone repos with default(work) SSH key.

3

Clone in one command

git -c core.sshCommand='ssh -i /path/to/key/' clone [email protected]:your_repository.git /path/target/clone --branch git_branch_name

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