- Create a folder at the root of your user home folder
(Example:
C:/Users/uname/
) called.ssh
. - Create the following files if they do not already
exist (paths begin from the root of your user home
folder):
.ssh/config
.bash_profile
.bashrc
Follow the steps in the section named "Generating a new SSH Key" found in the following documentation from GitHub: Generating a new SSH key and adding it to the ssh-agent
Add the following text to .ssh/config
(.ssh
should be found
in the root of your user home folder):
Host github.com
Hostname github.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
First, ensure that following lines are added to .bash_profile
,
which should be found in your root user home folder:
test -f ~/.profile && . ~/.profile
test -f ~/.bashrc && . ~/.bashrc
Now, add the following text to .bashrc
, which should be found
in your root user home folder:
# Start SSH Agent
#----------------------------
SSH_ENV="$HOME/.ssh/environment"
function run_ssh_env {
. "${SSH_ENV}" > /dev/null
}
function start_ssh_agent {
echo "Initializing new SSH agent..."
ssh-agent | sed 's/^echo/#echo/' > "${SSH_ENV}"
echo "succeeded"
chmod 600 "${SSH_ENV}"
run_ssh_env;
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_ed25519;
}
if [ -f "${SSH_ENV}" ]; then
run_ssh_env;
ps -ef | grep ${SSH_AGENT_PID} | grep ssh-agent$ > /dev/null || {
start_ssh_agent;
}
else
start_ssh_agent;
fi
Wow! First of all, thank you! I am astonished as to why none of this presented anywhere on GitHub? I spent a couple of hours looking for the missing steps, All they say is paste your public key here with no mention of how GitHub is supposed to find the private key on Windows, where it should be stored, what else is required, etc.
Thank you again Brandon