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I want to use a push and pull automatically in Git Extensions, Sourcetree or any other Git GUI without entering my username and password in a prompt, every time.

So how can I save my credentials in Git?

5

34 Answers 34

4318

Attention: This method saves the credentials in plaintext on your PC's disk. Everyone on your computer can access it, e.g. malicious NPM modules.

Run

git config --global credential.helper store

then

git pull

provide a username and password and those details will then be remembered later. The credentials are stored in a file on the disk, with the disk permissions of "just user readable/writable" but still in plaintext.

If you want to change the password later

git pull

Will fail, because the password is incorrect, git then removes the offending user+password from the ~/.git-credentials file, so now re-run

git pull

to provide a new password so it works as earlier.

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  • 28
    for Debian/Ubuntu use libsecret stackoverflow.com/questions/36585496/…
    – rofrol
    Oct 2, 2017 at 14:29
  • 216
    Note that this will store your username and password in a plain text file at ~/.git-credentials. Anyone can open it and read it.
    – RoboAlex
    Sep 24, 2018 at 4:13
  • 15
    and use this if you want to forget : git config --global credential.helper forget
    – jacktrade
    Oct 23, 2019 at 10:22
  • 46
    I think it's worth pointing out that one may want to skip the --global to only store the password for one repository (when pulling and pushing) but not for any other repository (which might be on a different hoster, with different credentials that one might not want to store for whatever reasons)
    – pseyfert
    Nov 26, 2019 at 10:04
  • 66
    @RoboAlex's comment is popular but the protections on ~/.git-credentials are no different than a private key like ~/.ssh/id_rsa. So if you don't have a password on your private key then ~/git-credentials is no worse than ssh keys
    – Jason S
    Mar 19, 2021 at 13:05
663

You can use the git config to enable credentials storage in Git.

git config --global credential.helper store

When running this command, the first time you pull or push from the remote repository, you'll get asked about the username and password.

Afterwards, for consequent communications with the remote repository you don't have to provide the username and password.

The storage format is a .git-credentials file, stored in plaintext.

Also, you can use other helpers for the git config credential.helper, namely memory cache:

git config credential.helper 'cache --timeout=<timeout>'

which takes an optional timeout parameter, determining for how long the credentials will be kept in memory. Using the helper, the credentials will never touch the disk and will be erased after the specified timeout. The default value is 900 seconds (15 minutes).


Warning: If you use this method, your Git account passwords will be saved in plaintext format, in the global .gitconfig file, e.g in Linux it will be /home/[username]/.gitconfig.

If this is undesirable to you, use an ssh key for your accounts instead.

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  • 3
    Wish you showed the .gitconfig file - the first command has been overwritten by the second :(
    – Adam
    Mar 8, 2017 at 13:24
  • 16
    For git config credential.helper cache the passwords will not be saved to a file, only stored in memory. See: git-scm.com/docs/git-credential-cache
    – S.A.
    Jul 20, 2019 at 6:11
  • 2
    Does not work. Gives fatal: Authentication failed. Doesnt even ask for password. Oct 1, 2019 at 18:41
  • 14
    Just as an addendum - your private ssh-key will also be stored in plaintext in a user-accessible location, so in essence the same attack surface in both cases.
    – Falco
    Jan 7, 2020 at 11:48
  • 2
    Unless you put a password on your private ssh key, it is also stored in plain text, no more securely than ~/.git-credentials, by default in ~/.ssh/id_rsa. So the advice to use an ssh key as more secure, would need to specify a password-protected private key. In which case you'd have to type that password each time, defeating the original purpose, unless you cache it with ssh-agent
    – Jason S
    Mar 19, 2021 at 13:12
483

Recommended and secure method: SSH

Generate a key following these steps: more details

$ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "[email protected]"

set a passphrase that protects the key and store it locally

Copy the contents of the id_rsa.pub file to your clipboard for next step

$ clip < ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub

Go to github.comSettingsSSH and GPG keysNew SSH Key. Paste they key and save it

If the private key is saved as id_rsa in the ~/.ssh/ directory, we add it for authentication as such:

ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/id_rsa

A more secure method: Caching

We can use git-credential-cache to cache our username and password for a time period. Simply enter the following in your CLI (terminal or command prompt):

git config --global credential.helper cache

You can also set the timeout period (in seconds) as such:

git config --global credential.helper 'cache --timeout=3600'
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  • 41
    This did not work for me, git clone still asks for the username and password
    – Oliver
    Dec 20, 2018 at 5:09
  • 16
    i do not recommend storing your password like this because "git config --global -l" would reveal your password on the console
    – CCC
    Dec 26, 2018 at 8:02
  • 3
    This is not working for me. It is strange that it should work for anyone, since in gitconfig's specification there is no room for "password" Nov 28, 2019 at 18:12
  • 8
    If you use the SSH method, you'll need to start using SSH URLs instead of git URLs - stackoverflow.com/questions/14762034/…
    – yndolok
    Feb 24, 2021 at 3:32
  • 26
    "An even less secure method". Have to disagree. Does anyone here realise your passwordless private ssh key (the whole point of the question is to avoid typing your password) is stored in plain text (by default in ~/.ssh/id_rsa, no more securely than ~/.git-credentials ? Also the credential.helper store method does not put the password / token in .gitconfig Also due to quirks of sites like GitHub you get more fine-grained control over permissions on a Personal Access Token than an SSH public key. So for that specific case I'd say PAT with credential helper is "more secure"
    – Jason S
    Mar 19, 2021 at 13:21
186
+300

Turn on the credential helper so that Git will save your password in memory for some time:

In Terminal, enter the following:

# Set Git to use the credential memory cache
git config --global credential.helper cache

By default, Git will cache your password for 15 minutes.

To change the default password cache timeout, enter the following:

# Set the cache to timeout after 1 hour (setting is in seconds)
git config --global credential.helper 'cache --timeout=3600'

From GitHub Help.

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  • 8
    you're the only one who suggested the global version which is IMPORTANT, cause it got ruined for me every time I re-cloned the repo
    – xeruf
    Jan 24, 2018 at 21:56
  • 6
    How to set the timeout to infinity? I never want to enter my password again.
    – Avamander
    Apr 4, 2018 at 19:33
  • 9
    @Avamander just replace the cache part with store. So, the full command will be: git config --global credential.helper store. Note that this will store Your password in a open-text file (without any encryption, so to say).
    – Aleksandar
    Apr 20, 2018 at 6:40
  • 3
    @Casper That doesn't work with more than one account, the password isn't fetched from the store based on the e-mail like it should, instead the first one in the list is taken.
    – Avamander
    Apr 21, 2018 at 9:53
  • 2
    @Avamander hm.. is that supposed to be like that or it might be a bug? What is the maximum value for the --timeout parameter?
    – Aleksandar
    Apr 21, 2018 at 12:50
125

You can edit the ~/.gitconfig file to store your credentials:

nano ~/.gitconfig

Which should already have

[user]
        email = [email protected]
        user = gitUSER

You should add the following at the bottom of this file.

[credential]
        helper = store

The reason I recommend this option is because it is global and if at any point you need to remove the option you know where to go and change it.

Only use this option in you personal computer.

Then when you pull | clone| enter you Git password, in general, the password will be saved in ~/.git-credentials in the format

https://gituser:[email protected]

Where DOMAIN.XXX could be github.com, bitbucket.org, or others

See the documentation.

Restart your terminal.

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  • 3
    Don't forget to restart git bash window. Only when I did that, it worked for me.
    – sofs1
    Jan 15, 2019 at 22:33
  • The other alternative not recommended would be to leave the [credential] and the git-credentials and store the password direct in the .gitconfig. Either manually or with git config ..
    – Timo
    Nov 16, 2020 at 10:59
  • Restarting means exec bash
    – Timo
    Nov 16, 2020 at 12:04
  • Honest question, why is sudo needed for a user-specific file?
    – Petross404
    Sep 9, 2021 at 17:45
110

After going over dozens of Stack Overflow posts, blogs, etc., I tried out every method, and this is what I came up with. It covers everything.

The vanilla DevOps Git credentials & private packages cheat sheet

These are all the ways and tools by which you can securely authenticate Git to clone a repository without an interactive password prompt.

  • SSH public keys
    • SSH_ASKPASS
  • API access tokens
    • GIT_ASKPASS
    • .gitconfig insteadOf
    • .gitconfig [credential]
    • .git-credentials
    • .netrc
  • Private packages (for free)
  • Node.js / npm package.json
  • Python / pip / eggs requirements.txt
  • Ruby gems Gemfile
  • Go go.mod

The Silver Bullet

Want Just Works™? This is the magic silver bullet.

Get your access token (see the section in the cheat sheet if you need the GitHub or Gitea instructions for that) and set it in an environment variable (both for local development and deployment):

MY_GIT_TOKEN=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

For GitHub, copy and run these lines verbatim:

git config --global url."https://api:[email protected]/".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
git config --global url."https://ssh:[email protected]/".insteadOf "ssh://[email protected]/"
git config --global url."https://git:[email protected]/".insteadOf "[email protected]:"

Congratulations. Now any automated tool cloning Git repositories won't be obstructed by a password prompt, whether using HTTPS or either style of an SSH URL.

Not using GitHub?

For other platforms (Gitea, GitHub, and Bitbucket), just change the URL. Don't change the usernames (although arbitrary, they're needed for distinct configuration entries).

Compatibility

This works locally in macOS, Linux, Windows (in Bash), Docker, CircleCI, Heroku, Akkeris, etc.

More information

See the ".gitconfig insteadOf" section of the cheat sheet.

Security

See the "Security" section of the cheat sheet.

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    What I was after was git config --global credential."https://somegithost.com".username MyUserName, which is in your cheatsheet, but not anywhere else in this answer thread. That particular solution doesn't answer the OP's question, but it answered mine, so thanks!
    – Kevin E
    Feb 14, 2020 at 4:14
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    Finally: documentation on non-interactive global usage of an API access token for pipelines without Jenkins credentials helpers or Vault. Dec 10, 2020 at 16:12
  • 1
    Not only does this not work, but now I can't commit to Git at all :-(
    – robcarver
    Sep 20, 2021 at 8:49
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    @MaxN It's the same. You just have one set of config options per service - so rather than only 3 for github, you'd also have 3 for gitea and 3 for gitlab, and 3 for bitbucket, etc.
    – coolaj86
    Jan 2, 2022 at 4:10
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    OMG, it just works! I've been chasing this issue for 6 hours and then I see this post... In my case I'm configuring an automated installation of Python libraries directly from GitHub in an AWS Lambda Docker image. -- Thanks @coolaj86, you're a life saver.
    – Marin
    Jan 25, 2022 at 1:38
90

I think it's safer to cache credentials, instead of storing it forever:

git config --global credential.helper 'cache --timeout=10800'

Now you can enter your username and password (git pull or ...), and keep using Git for the next three hours.

It is nice and safe.

The unit for timeout is seconds (three hours in this example).

0
71

For global settings, open the terminal (from anywhere), run the following:

  git config --global user.name "your username"
  git config --global user.password "your password"

By that, any local Git repository that you have on your machine will use that information.

You can individually configure for each repository by doing:

  • open the terminal at the repository folder.

  • run the following:

      git config user.name "your username"
      git config user.password "your password"
    

It affects only that folder (because your configuration is local).

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  • 19
    Isn't it dangerous having such credentials in a simple config file viewable by anyone?
    – bool3max
    May 5, 2019 at 15:28
  • 2
    your question should be for another topic. Here we discus about how to config name and password for git global and locally. May 6, 2019 at 7:30
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    I'd just like to add that asking about possible security issues of an answer has a place here as it directly influences its quality and potentially thousands of users implementing it. May 11, 2019 at 16:51
  • 3
    doesn't work for me , added --local tag but again nothing happens
    – PayamB.
    Dec 4, 2019 at 11:58
  • I think @bool3max question is a fair one. No-one really answered though. git config --global is still only accessible to the user, at ~/.gitconfig, so in that sense it is probably no worse than a private ssh key (with no password protection) in your home directory, or things like ~/.aws/config for aws cli. If you used --system for git config it would be available to all users on your computer, so better not do that, and no need to, although it would still be limited to the other users on your computer.
    – Jason S
    Mar 18, 2021 at 0:21
65

Just put your credentials in the URL like this:

https://Username`**:**`Password`**@**`github.com/myRepoDir/myRepo.git`

You may store it like this:

git remote add myrepo https://Userna...

...example to use it:

git push myrepo master`

Now that is to List the URL aliases:

git remote -v

...and that the command to delete one of them:

git remote rm myrepo
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  • 9
    You can also leave your password out of the URL so Git will ask for your password, but not your username.
    – kangaroo
    Jul 19, 2018 at 0:02
  • 1
    It's much easy and secure to use SSH instead of HTTP. So, you could keep your Git password secret and only use your SSH-Key. Information about SSH on Git: help.github.com/en/enterprise/2.16/user/… [email protected]:Username/myRepo.git
    – Loich
    Jan 6, 2020 at 14:32
  • 2
    Having your password in the url will save it to your terminal's history so this way isn't very secure. Feb 19, 2020 at 22:03
  • 1
    Note that a Wiki can currently only be cloned through https, not ssh, so a solution like this can be useful there. Note also that you can use an oauth-token, which is marginally more secure that your GitHub password.
    – AstroFloyd
    May 20, 2020 at 15:22
  • Worked with windows credential manager, was prompted by windows for the password!
    – JGlass
    Feb 7, 2022 at 14:47
63

You can use git-credential-store to store your passwords unencrypted on the disk, protected only by the permissions of the file system.

Example

git config credential.helper store
git push http://example.com/repo.git

Username: <type your username>
Password: <type your password>

[Several days later]

git push http://example.com/repo.git

[Your credentials are used automatically]

You can check the credentials stored in the file ~/.git-credentials.

For more information, visit git-credential-store - Helper to store credentials on disk.

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48

Store username and password in .git-credentials

.git-credentials is where your username and password (access token) is stored when you run git config --global credential.helper store, which is what other answers suggest, and then type in your username and password or access token:

https://${username}:${password_or_access_token}@github.com

So, in order to save the username and password (access token):

git config --global credential.helper store
echo "https://${username}:${password_or_access_token}@github.com" > ~/.git-credentials

Replace ${username} with your username, ${password_or_access_token} with your password (not recommended) or your access token.

NOTE that you must provide access token if you enabled 2FA on GitHub.

Using access token is recommended.

This is very useful for a GitHub robot, e.g. to solve Chain automated builds in the same Docker Hub repository by having rules for different branch and then trigger it by pushing to it in the post_push hook in Docker Hub.

An example of this can be seen here on Stack Overflow.

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  • 2
    Thanks, you're a life savior! We can also set https://${access_token}:${access_token}@github.com Nov 14, 2019 at 15:09
  • 2
    @LucasMendesMotaDaFonseca access token can be used as username???
    – JiaHao Xu
    Nov 24, 2019 at 3:48
  • 1
    From all the different solutions, this is the one that worked for me. thank you!
    – Valera
    Feb 22, 2023 at 22:00
  • 1
    @MichaelN Hmmm so it doesn't work with https:// prefix on your system? Which git and os are you using?
    – JiaHao Xu
    Apr 11, 2023 at 4:04
  • 1
    @MichaelN I've clarified the instruction and now it should be clear on how to save the password and username.
    – JiaHao Xu
    Apr 17, 2023 at 10:48
38

Apart from editing the ~/.gitconfig file, that you can do if you call from the command line:

git config --local --edit

or

git config --global --edit

enter image description here Editing git config file in default text editor

You can also use the command line to edit the git config file directly (without the editor)

git config --local user.name 'your username'
git config --local user.password 'your password'

or

git config --global user.name 'your username'
git config --global user.password 'your password'

Note to always use single quotes. Your username and password may use some characters that would break your password if you use double quotes.

--local or --global means configuration parameters are saved for the project or for the OS user.

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  • Check also this one that explains even more.
    – prosti
    Jul 5, 2019 at 8:14
  • Are you sure single quotes will work on Windows, other than inside WSL?
    – Yitz
    Aug 2, 2020 at 11:44
  • I usually do things from Windows PowerShell and this single quote worked on Windows (no WSL).
    – prosti
    Aug 2, 2020 at 12:39
  • What is "the os user"? Do you mean by "the OS user"? (OS = operating system). If so, what does that mean? Or something else? Can you rephrase? Sep 8, 2021 at 15:56
  • The first sentence is close to incomprehensible. Can you rephrase, please? (But without "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today.) Sep 8, 2021 at 15:57
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As of 2021, there is a secure user-friendly cross-platform solution for HTTPS remotes. No more typing passwords! No more SSH keys! No more personal access tokens!

Install Git Credential Manager developed by GitHub (downloads). It supports passwordless in-browser OAuth authentication to GitHub, BitBucket, Azure and GitLab. This means you can enable two-factor authentication on GitHub and the other platforms, greatly improving the security of your accounts.

When you push, you are offered a choice of authentication methods:

> git push
Select an authentication method for 'https://github.com/':
  1. Web browser (default)
  2. Device code
  3. Personal access token
option (enter for default): 1
info: please complete authentication in your browser...

On Linux, a tiny bit of setup is required. The following caches credentials in memory for 20 hours, so you have to authenticate at most once per day.

git-credential-manager-core configure
git config --global credential.credentialStore cache
git config --global credential.cacheoptions "--timeout 72000"

Power users familiar with gnome-keyring or KWallet may prefer to change the credential store to libsecret.

Cosmetic configuration (docs):

  1. Prefer choosing authentication method at terminal rather than in GUI (fewer clicks)
  2. Always use browser method rather than be asked every time (even fewer keypresses)
git config --global credential.guiPrompt false
git config --global credential.gitHubAuthModes browser
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26

You will be more secure if you use SSH authentication than username/password authentication.

If you are using a Mac, SSH client authentication is integrated into the macOS keychain. Once you have created an SSH key, type into your terminal:

ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/id_rsa

This will add the SSH private key to the macOS keychain. The Git client will use SSH when it connects to the remote server. As long as you have registered your ssh public key with the server, you will be fine.

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  • 1
    should be k not K?
    – dez93_2000
    Apr 28, 2018 at 15:23
  • 3
    I don't think this work for https-based repositories.
    – zakmck
    May 19, 2018 at 13:49
  • 6
    This answer seems to confuse passwords (HTTPS repos) with SSH private keys. May 23, 2018 at 4:51
  • 2
    Yes, my recommended solution is for SSH, not HTTPS. Hence, the command "ssh-add". For HTTPS it would be the solution mentioned above "git credential-osxkeychain" (on Mac).
    – Birol Efe
    Jul 20, 2018 at 10:25
  • 2
    I disagree. You can't be more secure by giving access to the host an SSH access. Using HTTP authentication, someone who steal the credentials would only have access to GitHub/GitLab. Also token are designed to have a limited life. Oct 1, 2018 at 20:50
24

Just use

git config --global credential.helper store

And do the git pull. It will ask for a username and password. From now on it will not provide any prompt for username and password. It will store the details.

1
21

To save your user name and user password into github account just run these command in sequence.

git config --global user.name "userName"
git config --global user.email "[email protected]"
git config --global user.password "userPassword"
git config --global credential.helper store
git config --list --show-origin

Then generate a key using below command:

ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "[email protected]"

Note: Copy the file location where id_rsa file gets created Then go to that file location -->open gitbash or command prompt --> Run a command - cat id_rsa.pub

SSH key will be dispayed, copy this SSH key and paste it in your gihub/gitlab account

14

In that case, you need git credential helper to tell Git to remember your GitHub password and username by using following command line:

git config --global credential.helper wincred

And if you are using a repository using an SSH key then you need the SSH key to authenticate.

2
14

None of the previous answers worked for me. I kept getting the following every time I wanted to fetch or pull:

Enter passphrase for key '/Users/myusername/.ssh/id_rsa':


For Macs

I was able to stop it from asking my passphrase by:

  1. Open config by running: vi ~/.ssh/config
  2. Added the following: UseKeychain yes
  3. Saved and quit: Press Esc, and then enter :wq!

For Windows

I was able to get it to work using the information in this Stack Exchange post: How to avoid being asked passphrase each time I push to Bitbucket

1
  • 2
    that's because you are using SSH protocol (other answers use HTTPS).
    – mariusm
    Dec 2, 2019 at 8:13
14

Check official Git documentation:

If you use the SSH transport for connecting to remotes, it’s possible for you to have a key without a passphrase, which allows you to securely transfer data without typing in your username and password. However, this isn’t possible with the HTTP protocols – every connection needs a username and password. This gets even harder for systems with two-factor authentication, where the token you use for a password is randomly generated and unpronounceable.

Fortunately, Git has a credentials system that can help with this. Git has a few options provided in the box:

  • The default is not to cache at all. Every connection will prompt you for your username and password.

  • The “cache” mode keeps credentials in memory for a certain period of time. None of the passwords are ever stored on disk, and they are purged from the cache after 15 minutes.

  • The “store” mode saves the credentials to a plain-text file on disk, and they never expire. This means that until you change your password for the Git host, you won’t ever have to type in your credentials again. The downside of this approach is that your passwords are stored in cleartext in a plain file in your home directory.

  • If you’re using a Mac, Git comes with an “osxkeychain” mode, which caches credentials in the secure keychain that’s attached to your system account. This method stores the credentials on disk, and they never expire, but they’re encrypted with the same system that stores HTTPS certificates and Safari auto-fills.

  • If you’re using Windows, you can install a helper called “Git Credential Manager for Windows.” This is similar to the “osxkeychain” helper described above, but uses the Windows Credential Store to control sensitive information. It can be found at https://github.com/Microsoft/Git-Credential-Manager-for-Windows.

You can choose one of these methods by setting a Git configuration value:

git config --global credential.helper cache

git config --global credential.helper store

From 7.14 Git Tools - Credential Storage

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If security is not a concern for the git client, edit the url this way:

git remote set-url origin https://${access_token}@github.com/${someone}/${somerepo}.git

Same in the git clone case:

git clone https://${access_token}@github.com/${someone}/${somerepo}.git

I personally do not favor git config with global domain, since that would be a mess in a multiple-accounts case.

access_token is what you could generate in Settings / Developer settings / Personal access tokens. Remember to grant it with repo scope.

1
  • 2
    If security were not a concern, there would not be a need for a credential helper. Apr 10, 2023 at 18:15
12

Save the username and password globally:

git config --global user.name "fname lname"
git config --global user.email "[email protected]"
git config --global user.password "secret"

Get a specific setting,

git config --global --get user.name
git config --global --get user.email
git config --global --get user.password

Getting all Git settings:

git config --list --show-origin
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  • 3
    I have done all the settings globally, username, email, and password, still when I push the code on GitHub, It asks for the username and password every time Sep 25, 2021 at 10:59
  • Yes, there are multiple places git settings are saved. Maybe in project .git folder some project settings are defaulted and take precedence.
    – mrigendra
    Oct 9, 2021 at 11:25
11

After reading the answers in full and experimenting with most of the answers to this question, I eventually found the procedure that works for me. I want to share it in case someone has to deal with a complex use case, but still do not want to go through all the answers and the gitcredentials, gitcredentials-store etc. man pages, as I did.

Find below the procedure I suggest IF you (like me) have to deal with several repositories from several providers (GitLab, GitHub, Bitbucket, etc.) using several different username / password combinations. If you instead have only a single account to work with, then you might be better off employing the git config --global credential.helper store or git config --global user.name "your username" etc. solutions that have been very well explained in previous answers.

My solution:

  1. Unset global credentials helper, in case some former experimentation gets in the way :)

    git config --global --unset credentials.helper
    
  2. Move to the root directory of your repo and disable the local credential helper (if needed)

    cd /path/to/my/repo
    git config --unset credential.helper`
    
  3. Create a file to store your repo's credentials into

    git config credential.helper 'store --file ~/.git_repo_credentials'
    

    Note: this command creates a new file named ".git_repo_credentials" into your home directory, to which Git stores your credentials. If you do not specify a file name, Git uses the default ".git_credentials". In this case simply issuing the following command will do:

    git config credential.helper store
    
  4. set your username

    git config credential.*.username my_user_name
    

    Note: using "*" is usually ok if your repositories are from the same provider (e.g. GitLab). If instead your repositories are hosted by different providers then I suggest to explicitly set the link to the provider for every repository, like in the following example (for GitLab):

    git config credential.https://gitlab.com.username my_user_name
    

At this point, if you issue a command requiring your credentials (e.g. git pull), you will be asked for the password corresponding to "my_user_name". This is only required once because git stores the credentials to ".git_repo_credentials" and automatically uses the same data at subsequent accesses.

3
  • just to note, here when using * I got: "warning: url has no scheme: * fatal: credential url cannot be parsed: *" . So I had to specify "credential.github.com.username".
    – Tonsic
    Nov 21, 2021 at 18:37
  • (stackoverflow comment replaced the https://github... with github... in my last comment)
    – Tonsic
    Nov 21, 2021 at 18:49
  • The best flexible option to work with several git providers from a single computer.Thanks. If anyone is looking for this behaviour using ssh keys, check your ~/.ssh/config file and add custom ssh key to be used each git server provider Aug 11, 2023 at 9:04
10

From the comment by rofrol, on Linux Ubuntu, from this answer, here's how to do it on Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get install libsecret-1-0 libsecret-1-dev
cd /usr/share/doc/git/contrib/credential/libsecret
sudo make
git config --global credential.helper /usr/share/doc/git/contrib/credential/libsecret/git-credential-libsecret

Some other distributions provide the binary, so you don't have to build it.

In OS X, it typically comes "built" with a default module added of "osxkeychain", so you get it for free. Both the OS X built-in one and the homebrew variety have it present by default.

9

For Windows users, look at the .gitconfig file and check what has been configured for the credential helper. If you have the following...

[credential "helperselector"] selected = wincred

you'll find the credentials in the Windows Credential Manager.

Enter image description here

There you can edit the credential.

Note: Wincred has been deprecated, see...

https://github.com/Microsoft/Git-Credential-Manager-for-Windows#notice-this-project-is-no-longer-being-maintained-warning

So alternatively you may want to reconfigure Git to use the built-in Git credential manager...

git config --global credential.helper manager
5
  • I am having an issue with the manager-core helper, where my credentials disappear every day - Any clue on how to solve this?
    – Jonathan
    Dec 22, 2020 at 17:26
  • The edit was the answer I was looking for, THANKS! Jan 19, 2021 at 12:48
  • @Jonathan The Credential manager bundled with Git for Windows changed a few times recently so the easiest option is to just download the newest Git for Windows and install over the top and select the credential manager in the installer. The credential manager is a separate utility, which you can see it on GitHub at github.com/microsoft/Git-Credential-Manager-Core, but better to just let the Git for Windows installer, install it, so you know you have version compatibility
    – Jason S
    Mar 19, 2021 at 13:46
  • The link is broken (404). Sep 8, 2021 at 16:59
  • This was the only command that worked for me in Windows, however after running it I had to do a 'git fetch' and 'git pull origin main' to get the Windows creds window to pop up. Seems to be cached since 👍
    – heyjon
    Aug 26, 2022 at 22:52
8

If you are using the Git Credential Manager on Windows...

git config -l should show:

credential.helper=manager

However, if you are not getting prompted for a credential then follow these steps:

  1. Open Control Panel from the Start menu
  2. Select User Accounts
  3. Select Manage your credentials in the left hand menu
  4. Delete any credentials related to Git or GitHub

Also ensure you have not set HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, NO_PROXY environmental variables if you have proxy and your Git server is on the internal network.

You can also test Git fetch/push/pull using git-gui which links to credential manager binaries in C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\Programs\Git\mingw64\libexec\git-core

0
6

The GitHub recommendations have now changed, and the best method is also the simplest. Details here

  1. Install Github official cli. E.g. for mac: brew install gh.
  2. type gh auth login in your terminal, then follow the prompts.
0
4

Two-factor authentication has changed how users authenticate to websites, but Git still assumes users can type a password from memory.

Introducing git-credential-oauth: a Git credential helper that securely authenticates to GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket and other forges using OAuth.

No more passwords! No more personal access tokens! No more SSH keys!

The first time you push, the helper will open a browser window to authenticate. Subsequent pushes within the cache timeout require no interaction.

Install from https://github.com/hickford/git-credential-oauth/releases/

Configure with:

git config --global --unset-all credential.helper
git config --global --add credential.helper "cache --timeout 7200" # two hours
git config --global --add credential.helper oauth
3
  • 1
    Very nice: a good alternative to GCM on Linux indeed.
    – VonC
    Nov 13, 2022 at 0:33
  • git: 'credential-oauth' is not a git command. See 'git --help'. Feb 7, 2023 at 1:03
  • @DollarAkshay make sure the git-credential-oauth binary is in the PATH, and that it is executable Feb 7, 2023 at 6:48
3
git config --global user.name "your username"
git config --global user.password "your password"

Check

git config --list
2
  • 2
    Please note that this answer states that this is an insecure way of doing this.
    – Eric Aya
    Jun 14, 2021 at 8:34
  • What is the secure way Please share secure way some hint Eric Aya Nov 6, 2021 at 18:18
3

For Windows users, this way will work:

Note: If you have enabled two-factor authentication for GitHub, disable it for a while

  • Step 1

    Go to Control PanelUser AccountsCredential ManagerWindows Credentials

  • Step 2

    Go to the Generic Credentials section → Add a generic credential

    Enter image description here

  • Step 3 - Fill in the fields

    Internet or network address: git.https://github.com

    User name: your GitHub username

    Password: your GitHub username

    Enter image description here

    And now click on OK. This will save the password and the username of your GitHub account to your local machine

3

On macOS, you can use the system keychain for security. I believe this is the most secure method for websites like Overleaf, which only offers https access (unless you link a github repository of yours).

The following git command activates this functionality.

$ git config --global credential.helper osxkeychain

(Additionally, as I write in the Edit below, make sure you disable other credential helpers so that git won't save your password, e.g., in plain text.) Then, you clone the git repository:

$ git clone https://git.overleaf.com/blahblah

This asks the password. Enter it, and you can see it in macOS' built-in KeyChain Access app.

In this case, you can find the entry for the URL with the name git.overleaf.com, which matches the git URL.

For better security, you can require all apps to ask for your permission. You can remove git from the "Always allow access by these applications" so that even git will not be able to get the password without your permission.

Keychain Access config

Note:
However, I noticed that some apps can still somehow git pull without my permission. This is weird because, in this case, Overleaf's git repository only offers https access. (I.e. there's no loophole through SSH.) If I change my password, I can temporarily block these apps from doing pull, but after I re-register my new password, these apps can do the pull again... Even if I check "Ask for Keychain password". Might be a misconfiguration or even a bug in macOS (Ventura).

I've opened a Q&A on this in AskDifferent: https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/459108/keychain-access-loophole-for-git-https

Edit:
I found the problem. Git still had the configuration to store the credential written down in the global settings (~/.git-config). So, you need to make sure you have the settings correct for different resolutions. This includes per-project, global (git config edit --system) and system (git config edit --system) should have the [credential] set to helper = osxkeychain only.

After you edit the settings, check ~/.git-credentials and see there's no password stored unintentionally (in plain text).

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