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I have created a repository in BitBucket and have cloned it using SSH. When attempting to push my changes to BitBucket, I receive the following error:

Unauthorized

fatal: Could not read from remote repository.

I have created an SSH key using ssh-keygen and have copied the resulting public key to BitBucket. I have downloaded SourceTree to see if a bit of tooling might help, but it has the same problem.

I've been trying to fix this for hours now and don't want to waste any more time on it. Surprising, I couldn't find anyone with a similar issue or even the same error messages when searching on Google.

Please help! I am running on Mac OS X and have tried deleting GitHub credentials from Keychain Access but this hasn't solved the issue. Does anyone know what I might be doing wrong?

Update

I have used exactly the same client-side configuration with GitHub, and ran into no issues, so I'm suspecting it's some configuration on BitBucket that I'm missing.

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4 Answers 4

159

Just had the same issue and solved it.

My issue was that I added the generated public ssh key to the repo itself through the 'settings' of that repo.

The solution was to delete the ssh key from the repo itself. Click on your account. Add the ssh key through 'settings' of your account.

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  • After deleting the ssh key from the repository, BitBucket complains with this message and doesn't allow me to add the same key to my profile/bitbucket settings: "Someone has already added that key as an access key to a repository." Nov 2, 2019 at 19:50
  • 1
    those settings are hidden under the account profile icon > Personal Settings then Security > SSH keys
    – jobwat
    Jun 13, 2021 at 21:51
  • So what's the purpose of the repo specific SSH keys then?
    – Kyle
    Jun 18 at 6:41
  • Location: Click on Settings Icon (top-right) > Personal Bitbucket settings > SSH keys
    – rommyarb
    Jun 23 at 6:58
  • solved my issue!
    – cem çetin
    Nov 18 at 22:39
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Problem: Your public ssh key is added in REPO -> Settings -> Access keys

It only gives READ-Only Access as stated there

Use access keys to gain read-only access to this repository. Learn more about using SSH keys.

Solution: Add public ssh key in

Your profile -> bitbucket settings -> SSH-Keys

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  • 9
    Oh man! I don't know whether to hug you or to punch myself. Hey @serlingpa make this the accepted answer!
    – Frazer
    Sep 25, 2019 at 21:25
  • 1
    use ssh -T [email protected] to test your key. In my case, after I remove all repo using same key with my personal profile ssh keys, problem resolved.
    – Orange
    Jul 14, 2021 at 9:07
  • Why is this answer not being accepted?
    – Rex Bengil
    Jan 4 at 8:16
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I had the same issue and I have slightly different solution:

  1. Created new RSA key pair via ssh-keygen -t rsa use password for it if you want
  2. Then added the SSH Key to the ssh-agent with ssh-add ~/.ssh/<your_private_rsa_key>
  3. Add this rsa key to your bitbucket account Bitbucket -> Your Profile -> SSH Keys
  4. I logged in to the bitbucket with ssh -T [email protected]

These steps resolved the problem for me.

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You might check to see if you cloned the repository using HTTPS or SSH. Assuming you're using SSH, you could try explicitely setting up your ssh client configuration in ~/.ssh/config and define the host/private key to use:

Host <bitbucket host>
  IdentityFile <path to ssh private key>
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