In Git, how can I add a remote origin server when my host uses a different SSH port?
git remote add origin ssh://user@host/srv/git/example
You can just do this:
git remote add origin ssh://user@host:1234/srv/git/example
1234
is the ssh port being used
git remote add origin user@host:1234/srv/git/example
Commented
Aug 12, 2013 at 8:06
You need to edit your ~/.ssh/config file. Add something like the following:
Host example.com
Port 1234
A quick google search shows a few different resources that explain it in more detail than me.
PasswordAuthentication no
as well.
Commented
Jan 8, 2014 at 1:33
Rather than using the ssh://
protocol prefix, you can continue using the conventional URL form for accessing git over SSH, with one small change. As a reminder, the conventional URL is:
git@host:path/to/repo.git
To specify an alternative port, put brackets around the user@host
part, including the port:
[git@host:port]:path/to/repo.git
But if the port change is merely temporary, you can tell git to use a different SSH command instead of changing your repository’s remote URL:
export GIT_SSH_COMMAND='ssh -p port'
git clone git@host:path/to/repo.git # for instance
git remote add
, I had to wrap the URL in double quotes to have this syntax work. Like so: git remote add gitea "[git@host:port]:path/to/repo.git"
Commented
Jan 18, 2021 at 5:42
h:path/to/repo.git
exists then the glob [git@host:port]:path/to/repo.git
will match it. It's an unlikely name, so usually the glob won't match and the string will expand with no change.
Commented
Dec 8, 2023 at 21:16
Best answer doesn't work for me. I needed ssh://
from the beggining.
# does not work
git remote set-url origin [email protected]:10000/aaa/bbbb/ccc.git
# work
git remote set-url origin ssh://[email protected]:10000/aaa/bbbb/ccc.git
For those of you editing the ./.git/config
[remote "external"]
url = ssh://[email protected]:11720/aaa/bbb/ccc
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/external/*
for gitlab, example ssh port is 2224, therefore:
git remote add ssh://[email protected]:2224/your_group/your_project.git
Had a similar issue trying to connect to my git server
( have a gitea server in a docker container with ssh-port configured to 2022
, instead of standard 22, here as an example my-git-server.lan
).
$ ssh-keygen -q -N '' -b 4096 -f ~/.ssh/mykeyfile
(this will create two files: public-key mykeyfile.pub
and private-key mykeyfile
without any extension)
$ cat ~/.ssh/mykeyfile.pub
$ nano ~/.ssh/config
Host my-git-server.lan
HostName my-git-server.lan
User git
Port 2022
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/mykeyfile
(notice that the username is always git
, regardless of your actual username on your git-server)
$ ssh -T [email protected]
Hi there, username! You've successfully authenticated with the key named /Users/username/.ssh/mykeyfile.pub
.. use -v "verbose mode" to analyse any errors:
$ ssh -Tvvv [email protected]
(again, notice that the username is always git
)
ssh://[email protected]:2022/alex/myproject.git
for your local git repository (again, notice the user git and the port 2022), .. check remote configuration$ cd your/local/git/repository/folder
$ git remote add my-git-server ssh://[email protected]:2022/alex/myproject.git
$ git remote -v
( here you also see that on my git-server my actual user is alex and repository is myproject )
Done! You can now work with your git-server .. fetch/commit/push etc.
( this is a copy of my post on serverfault.com )
Update: as rightly noted in the comments - you do not necessarily need to specify port 2022 in the remote-url, since it is already configured in ~/.ssh/config
file as PORT 2022
.
~/.ssh/config
and it automatically will use the port specified there
Just have a look at how to set up your ~/.ssh/config file correctly.
You can specify different settings for different hosts easily.
To solve your problem you would set
Host github.com
Port 22
Host *
Port 1234
Have a look at the ssh_config manual page, it explains everything you need to know on the first few pages.
1.git remote add ${shortname} ${url}
2.git remote remove shortname (is remove a remote)
3.git remote -v (is to see your current remote list)
4.git push remote branch
5.git remote rename A B (rename A to B)
6.git remote show shortname (show remote info)
All this works for me.