Important note: The most common problems when setting up Git on Windows are related to SSH keys. Git uses SSH keys to securely access your repositories, and in Windows SSH keys are often searched on the wrong path when you try to use Git. If you use an older version of msysGit, you may encounter a step called “Choosing the SSH executables”.
ON windows if you have git for windows installed, run git-gui. Then click Help then click Show Ssh Key, then click Generate Key. While you're at it, then copy to the clipboard, and then go to your Gitlab account page and add the SSH key to your Gitlab account's ssh settings.
Mar 25, 2010 Now you need to generate a public SSH key to authenticate yourself. If you installed TortoiseGit, you should have Puttygen installed too. Open it and generate a private and a public key. Save the public key and the private key with the same filename, the only difference is that the private key should have a.ppk file extension. The.pub file is your public key, and the other file is the corresponding private key. If you don’t have these files (or you don’t even have a.ssh directory), you can create them by running a program called ssh-keygen, which is provided with the SSH package on Linux/macOS systems and comes with Git for Windows.
Hi there! This post will be pretty straightforward and will cover Windows, Mac, and Linux, so if you don’t know how to do it already, read on.
Windows
Just follow these 5 steps:
Go to this address, and download Git for Windows, after the download install it with default settings
Open Git Bash that you just installed (Start->All Programs->Git->Git Bash)
Type in the following: ssh-keygen -t rsa (when prompted, enter password, key name can stay the same)
Open file your_home_directory/.ssh/id_rsa.pub with your favorite text editor, and copy contents to your Git repository’s keys field (GitHub, beanstalk, or any other repository provider), under your account.
Be sure that you don’t copy any whitespace while copying public key’s content (id_rsa.pub)
Note: your_home_directory is either C:Usersyour_username (on Windows Vista / 7 / 8 / 10), or C:Documents and Settingsyour_username (on Windows XP)
Mac
Follow these 5 steps:
Start the terminal
Navigate to your home directory by typing: cd ~/
Execute the following command: ssh-keygen -t rsa (when prompted, enter password, key name can stay the same)
Open the file you’ve just created ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub with your favorite text editor, and copy contents to your Git repository’s keys field (GitHub, beanstalk, or any other repository provider), under your account.
Be sure that you don’t copy any whitespace while copying public key’s content (id_rsa.pub)
Linux (Ubuntu)
Follow these 5 steps:
Open console
cd ~
ssh-keygen -t rsa (when prompted, enter password, key name can stay the same)
open file /home/your_username/.ssh/id_rsa.pub with your favorite text editor, and copy contents to your Git repository’s keys field (GitHub, beanstalk, or any other repository provider), under your account.
Be sure that you don’t copy any whitespace while copying public key’s content (id_rsa.pub)
Additional info
When you create private/public SSH keys on your machine (that’s what you did in the above steps), it’s not enough. You need to give your public key to the repository in order to pair the Git server with your local machine (that’d be steps 4. Generating key for s3 bucket for program access. and 5. above).
Most of the popular repositories will give you web interface access to the application, and here’s how it looks like on Github: After this step, you’re ready to start using Git. https://ameblo.jp/manasiti1983/entry-12632449129.html.
Conclusion
I hope this wasn’t too complicated to follow, and also I hope it was helpful to someone! Linux generate ssh key script.