I hope my answer does not come too late as i just learned this my self.
Generating a ssh key
You can generate n+1 ssh keys with ssh-keygen command. Make sure you do this in the server!
➜ ~ cd ~/.ssh
➜ .ssh ssh-keygen
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/user/.ssh/id_rsa): repo1
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in repo1.
Your public key has been saved in repo1.pub.
The key fingerprint is:
SHA256:EPc79FoaidfN0/PAsjSAZdomex2J1b/4zUR6Oj7IV2o user@laptop
The key's randomart image is:
+---[RSA 2048]----+
| . . o .. |
| o B o .. |
| . + B o . |
| . * B = .o|
| S B O B+o|
| o B =.+*|
| o....Bo|
| o E.o|
| +.o |
+----[SHA256]-----+
After using the ssh-keygen command you will be prompted for the filename and passphrase. You need a key for each private repository you're going to use as composer dependency. In this example the repo1 is the filename.
Make sure you leave the passphrase and confirmation empty.
Configuring the ssh to pick up the correct key
In servers ~/.ssh/config file you can assign an alias for each GitHub repository. Otherwise composer tries to use the default id_rsa.
Host repo1
HostName github.com
User git
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/repo1
IdentitiesOnly yes
Host repo2
HostName github.com
User git
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/repo2
IdentitiesOnly yes
Configuring Composer
In projects composer.json file you need to add the repositories you want as dependencies:
"repositories": [
{
"type": "vcs",
"url": "repo1:YourAccount/repo1.git"
},
{
"type": "vcs",
"url": "repo2:YourAccount/repo2.git"
}
],
repo1 and repo2 are the aliases you created in ~/ssh/config file. The full GitHub ssh url for repo1 would be:
git@github.com:YourAccount/repo1.git
And now you should be set for good. You can now require your dependencies:
composer require youraccount/repo1 -n
composer require youraccount/repo2 -n
NB! When using GitHub repositories as composer dependencies you always need to add -n to each composer command.