GitHub, SSH & OS X Keychain Access - github

Setting up GitHub, and Im using SSH to connect. Following along hereto get all SSH set up. All is working well until i try to push an existing repository from the command line.
No problems with the following
git remote add origin git#github.com:<username>/first_app.git
But when I execut the following
git push -u origin master
things stop working.
My Keychain access dialog window pops up and wants the id_rsa password. Isn't this the passphrase I made up when i was following the steps on GitHub's how-to setup SSH? I think it is, but Keychain won't take the passphrase (I'm using this interchangeably with the word password).
I get: Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
Can someone please help me connect the last piece of this puzzle so I can connect to GitHub via SSH? Thanks

Related

Github SSH is connected but fails when cloning a repository into Digital ocean droplet

I'm setting up a laravel website with a Digital Ocean droplet.
This process is so difficult and frustrating, I'm losing logic sense...
I'm connected with an ssh key that is connected with github, because I tried this code to test my connection:
ssh -T git#github.com
with this as response:
> Hi (My name)! You've successfully authenticated, but GitHub does not
> provide shell access.
So it is connected.
However, when I want to clone my repository into my online droplet. I get the error:
git#github.com: Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
Please make sure you have the correct access rights
and the repository exists.
So I have no idea how to fix this..
My ssh key inside my digital ocean settings is the same as in my github ssh settings.
Any ideas how to fix this?
I've found the solution myself!
So what was the problem?
I was using the ssh key from my localhost as an access key for cloning private github repositories. That is why I couldn't clone into an online service because that online service has it's own specific ssh key. So inside my server, I generated an ssh-key and registered that one on github. When I tried cloning me repo inside my droplet
everything worked as it should do.

yet again problems with ssh key... but this time on github

So, I have my pubkeys on github.
Somehow from one of my devices I can't push commits..
> git pull --tags origin main
git#github.com: Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
Please make sure you have the correct access rights
and the repository exists.
of course I checked the ssh keys on my github page, thinking that maybe I forgot to put this specific device key in it.
but when I try to add it it tells me the key is already there.
Then I tried to connect through ssh to my github account and of course it works.
Hi mosfetti! You've successfully authenticated, but GitHub does not provide shell access.
What should I do?
Thanks
(Windows 10)
apparently something was rong with origin url..
still don't know why..
solved by adding the origin again
git remote set-url origin https://github.com/myuser/myrepo

GitHub ssh keys - ssh test works but using git clone returns permission denied

I've been working on this for a few hours now and I've read everywhere but am officially stumped.
I'm trying to set up ssh keys for a dev-environment to interact with github. I've followed the guide on github and have made the keys and when I test them using the git#github.com it works but when I use git clone git#github.com:username/repo I get
Cloning into 'reponame'...
git#github.com: Permission denied (publickey). fatal: Could not read from remote repository. Please make sure you have the correct access rights and the repository exists.
I've tried adding it to ssh-add and that works, ssh-agent is running and has access. I've looked at the environment variable and set it to ssh among a few other things. I don't know what else to try. Let me know what logs I can post to help.
My thoughts are maybe the git command isn't using the identities or the right ssh client but other than the environment variables I'm not sure what else to change.
Thanks for the help in advance.

How to clone github private repository in cpanel (shared host without terminal or ssh)?

I have a shared host and they don't give me ssh or terminal for it.
I've tried to clone my private repos from git by Git™ Version Control so I am using ssh link because they need permission. I don't know how to make ssh key on cpanel so I can make it from my mac and upload to cpanel and also add to Github.
But when running, they give me error: Permission denied (publickey). fatal: Could not read from remote repository. Please make sure you have the correct access rights and the repository exists..
I'm a beginner for using Git & StackOverflow, so please let me know if there's anything wrong with the question I've asked. Thanks!
Tried Url with password
Cloning a private Github repo and
having a response "The clone URL cannot include a password."
This is different than what worked for the OP (hopefully they put their solution in an answer here).
I was able to solve this problem by installing an external SSH client (like PuTTY for Windows) and then SSH into my website using its IP address. Then I followed these steps from cPanel to connect the private repository.

GitHub: invalid username or password

I have a project hosted on GitHub. I fail when trying to push my modifications on the master. I always get the following error message
Password for 'https://git#github.com':
remote: Invalid username or password.
fatal: Authentication failed for 'https://git#github.com/eurydyce/MDANSE.git/'
However, setting my ssh key to github seems ok. Indeed, when I do a ssh -T git#github.com I get
Hi eurydyce! You've successfully authenticated, but GitHub does not provide shell access.
Which seems to indicate that everything is OK from that side (eurydyce being my github username). I strictly followed the instructions given on github and the recommendations of many stack discussion but no way. Would you have any idea of what I may have done wrong?
After enabling Two Factor Authentication (2FA), you may see something like this when attempting to use git clone, git fetch, git pull or git push:
$ git push origin master
Username for 'https://github.com': your_user_name
Password for 'https://your_user_name#github.com':
remote: Invalid username or password.
fatal: Authentication failed for 'https://github.com/your_user_name/repo_name.git/'
Why this is happening
From the GitHub Help documentation:
After 2FA is enabled you will need to enter a personal access token instead of a 2FA code and your GitHub password.
...
For example, when you access a repository using Git on the command line using commands like git clone, git fetch, git pull or git push with HTTPS URLs, you must provide your GitHub username and your personal access token when prompted for a username and password. The command line prompt won't specify that you should enter your personal access token when it asks for your password.
How to fix it
Generate a Personal Access Token. (Detailed guide on Creating a personal access token for the command line.)
Copy the Personal Access Token.
Re-attempt the command you were trying and use Personal Access Token in the place of your password.
Related question:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/21374369/101662
https://git#github.com/eurydyce/MDANSE.git is not an ssh url, it is an https one (which would require your GitHub account name, instead of 'git').
Try to use ssh://git#github.com:eurydyce/MDANSE.git or just git#github.com:eurydyce/MDANSE.git
git remote set-url origin git#github.com:eurydyce/MDANSE.git
The OP Pellegrini Eric adds:
That's what I did in my ~/.gitconfig file that contains currently the following entries [remote "origin"] url=git#github.com:eurydyce/MDANSE.git
This should not be in your global config (the one in ~/).
You could check git config -l in your repo: that url should be declared in the local config: <yourrepo>/.git/config.
So make sure you are in the repo path when doing the git remote set-url command.
As noted in Oliver's answer, an HTTPS URL would not use username/password if two-factor authentication (2FA) is activated.
In that case, the password should be a PAT (personal access token) as seen in "Using a token on the command line".
That applies only for HTTPS URLS, SSH is not affected by this limitation.
Solution steps for Windows users:
Control Panel
Credential Manager
Click Windows Credentials
In Generic Credential section ,there would be git url, update username and password
Restart Git Bash and try for clone
Note:
If you didn't find git url in Generic Credential section then follow below answer
https://stackoverflow.com/a/55858690/7372432
If like me you just updated your password and ran git push to run into this issue, then there's a super easy fix.
For Mac users only. You need to delete your OSX Keychain access entries for GitHub. You can do it via terminal by running the following commands.
Deleting your credentials via the command line
Through the command line, you can use the credential helper directly to erase the keychain entry.
To do this, type the following command:
git credential-osxkeychain erase
host=github.com
protocol=https
# [Now Press Return]
If it's successful, nothing will print out. To test that it works, try and clone a repository from GitHub or run your previous action again like in my case git push. If you are prompted for a password, the keychain entry was deleted.
When using the https:// URL to connect to your remote repository, then Git will not use SSH as authentication but will instead try a basic authentication over HTTPS. Usually, you would just use the URL without a username, e.g. https://github.com/username/repository.git, and Git would then prompt you to enter both a username (your GitHub username) and your password.
If you use https://something#github.com/username/repository.git, then you have preset the username Git will use for authentication: something. Since you used https://git#github.com, Git will try to log in using the git username for which your password of course doesn’t work. So you will have to use your username instead.
The alternative is actually to use SSH for authentication. That way you will avoid having to type your password all the time; and since it already seems to work, that’s what you should be using.
To do that, you need to change your remote URL though, so Git knows that it needs to connect via SSH. The format is then this: git#github.com:username/repository. To update your URL use this command:
git remote set-url origin git#github.com:username/repository
Instead of git pull also try git pull origin master
I changed password, and the first command gave error:
$ git pull
remote: Invalid username or password.
fatal: Authentication failed for ...
After git pull origin master, it asked for password and seemed to update itself
2FA is enabled and getting error remote: Invalid username or password.
fatal: Authentication failed for
If you set 2FA is enabled in GitHub you will need to enter a personal access token instead of a 2FA code and your GitHub password.
How to fix it
https://github.com/settings/tokens generated token
Copy the Personal Access Token
Now enter Personal Access Token in the place of your password during git operation
just try to push it to your branch again. This will ask your username and password again, so you can feed in the changed password. So that your new password will be stored again in the cache.
This is the answer.
Set the github token:
https://github.com/settings/tokens
And then:
git remote set-url origin https://[token]#github.com/your_repository
I am getting this while cloning app from bitbucket:
Cloning into 'YourAppName'...
Password for 'https://youruser id':
remote: Invalid username or password
I solved it. Here you need to create password for your userid
Click on Your profile and settings
Then Create app password choose your name password will generated ,paste that password to terminal
That problem happens sometimes due to wrong password. Please check if you are linked with AD password (Active Directory Password) and you recently changed you AD password but still trying git command with old password or not.
Update old AD password
Control Panel > Credential Manager > Windows Credential > change github password with my new AD password
I have got the success using the following commands.
git config --unset-all credential.helper
git config --global --unset-all credential.helper
git config --system --unset-all credential.helper
Try and let me know if these are working for you.
No need to rely on Generating a Personal Access Token and then trying and use Personal Access Token in the place of your password.
Quick fix is to set your remote URL to point to ssh not https.
Do this git remote set-url origin git#github.com:username/repository
I did:
$git pull origin master
Then it asked for the [Username] & [Password] and it seems to be working fine now.
If you have just enabled 2FA :
Modify hidden config file in ./git hidden folder as follow :
[remote "origin"]
url = https://username:PUT_YOUR_2FA_TOKEN_HERE#github.com/project/project.git
Try this:
# git remote set-url origin git#github.com:username/repository
Run Below command, and after than on every push and pull it will ask you to enter the username and password.
git config credential.helper ""
now when you pull/push you will be asked for git credentials. weather you are running through command prompt or Intellij Git.
Disabling 2 factor authentication at github worked for me.
I see that there is a deleted answer that says this, with the deletion reason as "does not answer the question". If it works, then I think it answers the question...
You might be getting this error because you have updated your password. So on Terminal first make sure you clear your GitHub credentials from the keychain and then push your changes to your repo, terminal will ask for your username and password.
In case you get this error message in this situation:
using github for entreprise
using credential.helper=wincred in git config
using your windows credentials which you changed recently
Then look at this answer:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/39608906/521257
Windows stores credentials in a credentials manager, clear it or update it.
Control panel
Credential manager
Look for options webcredentials and windows credentials
in either one you will find github credentials fix it with correct credentials
open new instance of git bash you should be able to perform your git commands.
This worked for me, I was able to pull and push into my remote repo.
I had the same issue. And I solved it by changing the remote branch's path from https://github.com/YourName/RepoName to git#github.com:YourName/RepoName.git in the repo's settings of the client app.
I'm constantly running into this problem.
Make sure you set git --config user.name "" and not your real name, which I've done a few times..
I just disable the Two-factor authentication and try again. It works for me.
Since you probably want to keep 2FA enabled for your account, you can set up a ssh key and that way you won't need to type your Github credentials every time you want to push work to Github.
You can find all the ssh setup steps in the documentation. First, make sure you don't currently have any ssh keys (id_rsa.pub, etc.) with $ ls -al ~/.ssh
I fixed my issue by installing GitHub CLI and running gh auth login
See:
https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/getting-started-with-git/caching-your-github-credentials-in-git#github-cli
I had the same issue
$ git clone https://github.com/sample-url.git
Cloning into 'Project'...
remote: Invalid username or password.
fatal: Authentication failed for 'https://github.com/sample-url.git/'
I just git init first and then git clone <clone-url>
git init
git clone https://github.com/your-clone-Url
It worked for me.
There is a issue on Windows using cmd-Greetings
There is a issue on Windows using cmd-Greetings who will not let you clone private repositories. Remove that cmd-greeting described in this documentation (keyword Command Processor):
Known-Issues
I can confirm that other clients like SourceTree, GitKraken, Tower and TortoiseGit affected to this issue too.
There are many reasons why this might happen. In my case, none of the solutions worked. In particular, git pull origin master did not ask me for my username and password.
I was on Windows with a github password recently changed. I was using the credential manager to manage my password. Here is what worked for me:
Confirm you are using the credential manager for git:
git config --list
…
credential.helper=manager
Run a new command prompt as administrator
List all stored credential with cmdkey /list from C:\WINDOWS\system32>
Remove the github target with cmdkey /delete:<target name>. In my case, the target name was github.<companyname>.com
Open a new prompt and run a git command. You should get a popup asking for your usernmame and password. After providing the new credentials, it won't ask you for it again.
When I faced this issue all I did to resolve it was to Generate new token from my github dashboard and paste the following code in my terminal
$ git remote set-url origin https://your-github-username:your-github-token#github.com/your-github-username/your-github-repo.git