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Git with SSH on Windows

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-24 01:35 出处:网络
I\'ve went through the excellent guide provided by Tim Davis which is about configuring Git to work with SSH under Windows in order to produce a Git Server in order to have a main place for my DVCS.

I've went through the excellent guide provided by Tim Davis which is about configuring Git to work with SSH under Windows in order to produce a Git Server in order to have a main place for my DVCS.

I am in the process of creating 开发者_JAVA百科a clone for my project. I’ve went through all the steps till this point, but I keep getting this from TortoiseGit:

git.exe clone -v “ssh://Administrator@127.0.0.1:22/SSH/Home/administrator/myapp.git” “E:\GitTest\myapp”

bash: Administrator@127.0.0.1: command not found
Initialized empty Git repository in E:/GitTest/myapp/.git/
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
Success

and nothing gets cloned.

BTW: The TortoisePLink comes up just before this message appears and asks me: “login as:” ( I thought that this info is given in the command, i.e: Administrator@blahblah.

My home variable is set to the correct place: From a Git Bash shell:

echo $HOME
/c/SSH/home/Administrator

I’ve also tried using Putty’s plink instead of TortoisePLink (in both Git’s and TortoiseGit’s installation). This time the error was narrowed down to:

git.exe clone -v “ssh://Administrator@127.0.0.1:22/c:/SSH/Home/administrator/myapp.git” “E:\GitTest\myapp”

Initialized empty Git repository in E:/GitTest/myapp/.git/
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly


I fought with this problem for a few hours before stumbling on the obvious answer. The problem I had was I was using different ssh implementations between when I generated my keys and when I used git.

I used ssh-keygen from the command prompt to generate my keys and but when I tried "git clone ssh://..." I got the same results as you, a prompt for the password and the message "fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly".

Determine which ssh windows is using by executing the Windows "where" command.

C:\where ssh
C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin\ssh.exe

The second line tells you which exact program will be executed.

Next you need to determine which ssh that git is using. Find this by:

C:\set GIT_SSH
GIT_SSH=C:\Program Files\TortoiseSVN\bin\TortoisePlink.exe

And now you see the problem.

To correct this simply execute:

C:\set GIT_SSH=C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin\ssh.exe

To check if changes are applied:

C:\set GIT_SSH
GIT_SSH=C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin\ssh.exe

Now git will be able to use the keys that you generated earlier.

This fix is so far only for the current window. To fix it completely you need to change your environment variable.

  1. Open Windows explorer
  2. Right-click Computer and select Properties
  3. Click Advanced System Settings link on the left
  4. Click the Environment Variables... button
  5. In the system variables section select the GIT_SSH variable and press the Edit... button
  6. Update the variable value.
  7. Press OK to close all windows

Now any future command windows you open will have the correct settings.

Hope this helps.


Since this keeps coming up in search results for making git and github work with SSH on Windows (and because I didn't need anything from the guides above), I'm adding the following, simple solution.

(Microsoft says they are working on adding SSH to Visual Studio, and GitHub for Windows still doesn't support SSH...)

1. I installed "git for Windows" (which includes ssh and a bash shell)

https://git-scm.com/download/win

2. From the included bash shell (which, for me, was installed at: C:\Program Files\Git\git-bash.exe)

cd to the root level of where you want your repo saved (something like: C:\code\github\), and

Type:

eval $(ssh-agent -s) && ssh-add "C:\Users\YOURNAMEHERE\.ssh\github_rsa"

3. Type: (the SSH link from the repo)

git clone git@github.com:RepoName/Project.git


you are using a smart quote instead of " here:

git.exe clone -v “ssh://
                ^^^ 

Make sure you use the plain-old-double-quote.


I've found my ssh.exe in C:/Program Files/Git/usr/bin directory.


If Git for windows is installed, run Git Bash shell:

  bash

You can run ssh from within Bash shell (Bash is aware of the path of ssh)

To know the exact path of ssh, run "where" command in Bash shell:

  $ where ssh

you get:

  c:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\ssh.exe


I was trying to solve my issue with some of the answers above and for some reason it didn't work. I did switch to use the git extensions and this are the steps I did follow.

  1. I went to Tools -> Settings -> SSH -> Other ssh client
  2. Set this value to C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\ssh.exe
  3. Apply

I guess that this steps are just the same explained above. The only difference is that I used the Git Extensions User Interface instead of the terminal. Hope this help.


When I typed where ssh it showed me multipe ssh.exe

user@pc MINGW64 /c/dev/
$ where ssh
C:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Programs\Git\usr\bin\ssh.exe
C:\Windows\System32\OpenSSH\ssh.exe

Deleting / moving these exe helped:

# copy from
# C:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Programs\Git\usr\bin
# to something like
# C:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Programs\Git\usr\bin\backup-ssh
ssh-agent.exe
ssh.exe
ssh-add.exe

This solved the issue for me.

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