Let's say alice
is a github.com user, with 2 or more private repositories repoN
.
For this example we'll work with just two repositories named repo1
and repo2
https://github.com/alice/repo1
https://github.com/alice/repo2
You need to be to pull from these repositories without entering a passwords probably on a server, or on multiple servers.
You want to perform git pull origin master
for example, and you want this to happen without asking for a password.
You don't like dealing with ssh-agent, you have discovered (or you're discovering now) about ~/.ssh/config
a file that let's your ssh client know what private key to use depending on Hostname and username, with a simple configuration entry that looks like this:
Host github.com
HostName github.com
User git
IdentityFile /home/alice/.ssh/alice_github.id_rsa
IdentitiesOnly yes
So you went ahead and created your (alice_github.id_rsa, alice_github.id_rsa.pub)
keypair, you then also went to your repository's .git/config
file and you modified the url of your remote origin
to be something like this:
[remote "origin"]
url = "ssh://[email protected]/alice/repo1.git"
And finally you went to the repository Settings > Deploy keys
section and added the contents of alice_github.id_rsa.pub
At this point you could do your git pull origin master
without entering a password without issue.
So your instinct will be to grab that key and add it to repo2
's Deploy keys, but github.com will error out and tell you that the key is already being used.
Now you go and generate another key (using ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "[email protected]"
without passwords of course), and so that this doesn't become a mess, you will now name your keys like this:
repo1
keypair:(repo1.alice_github.id_rsa, repo1.alice_github.id_rsa.pub)
repo2
keypair:(repo2.alice_github.id_rsa, repo2.alice_github.id_rsa.pub)
You will now put the new public key on repo2
's Deploy keys configuration at github.com, but now you have an ssh problem to deal with.
Your .ssh/config
file points to github.com
and it doesn't know which key to use when it's time to do the pull.
So I found a trick with github.com. You can tell your ssh client that each repository lives in a different github.com subdomain, in these cases, they will be repo1.github.com
and repo2.github.com
So first thing is editing the .git/config
files on your repo clones, so they look like this instead:
For repo1
[remote "origin"]
url = "ssh://[email protected]/alice/repo1.git"
For repo2
[remote "origin"]
url = "ssh://[email protected]/alice/repo2.git"
And then, on your .ssh/config
file, now you will be able to enter a configuration for each subdomain :)
Host repo1.github.com
HostName github.com
User git
IdentityFile /home/alice/.ssh/repo1.alice_github.id_rsa
IdentitiesOnly yes
Host repo2.github.com
HostName github.com
User git
IdentityFile /home/alice/.ssh/repo2.alice_github.id_rsa
IdentitiesOnly yes
Now you are able to git pull origin master
without entering any passwords from both repositories.
If you created the ssh keys before cloning your repository, then you can clone them as:
git clone [email protected]:username/repo1.git
git clone [email protected]:username/repo2.git
If you have multiple machines, you could copy the keys to each of the machines and reuse them, but I'd advise doing the leg work to generate 1 key per machine and repo. You will have a lot more keys to handle, but you will be less vulnerable if one gets compromised.