115

I'm new to Github and Generating SSH Keys look a neccessity. And was informed by my boss about this, so I need to comply.

I successfully created SSH Key but when I'm going to add it to the ssh-agent

this is what happens

What seems to be the problem?

enter image description here

0

7 Answers 7

224

It seems you need to run ssh-agent before using it:

eval `ssh-agent -s`

That question was answered in this topic: Could not open a connection to your authentication agent

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7 Comments

Thanks! what worked for me is exec ssh-agent bash then eval ssh-agent -s then ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Still doesn't work for me. After following these steps nor the 'Could not open a connection' steps (git bash on windows).
@hikki I don't understand why all this mumbo jumbo is needed, but your approach finally worked for me. Thanks!
My case on FreeBSD v10: Kritana solution did not work, but @leipz solution did. Thanks you.
It is worth noting that eval `ssh-agent -s` are the right apostrophes. Using eval 'ssh-agent -s' or eval "ssh-agent -s" will not work.
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53

I checked all the solutions on this post and the post that @kenorb referenced above, and I did not find any solution that worked for me.

I am using Git 1.9.5 Preview on Windows 7 with the following configuration: - Run Git from the Windows Command Prompt - Checkout Windows-style, commit Unix-style line endings

I used the 'Git Bash' console for everything... And all was well until I tried to install the SSH keys. GitHub's documentation says to do the following (don't run these commands until you finish reading the post):

Ensure ssh-agent is enabled:

If you are using Git Bash, turn on ssh-agent:
# start the ssh-agent in the background
ssh-agent -s
# Agent pid 59566
If you are using another terminal prompt, such as msysgit, turn on ssh-agent:
# start the ssh-agent in the background
eval $(ssh-agent -s)
# Agent pid 59566

Now of course I missed the fact that you were supposed to do one or the other. So, I ran these commands multiple times because the later ssh-add command was failing, so I returned to this step, and continued to retry over and over.

This results in 1 Windows 'ssh-agent' process being created every single time you run these commands (notice the new PID every time you enter those commands?)

So, Ctrl+Alt+Del and hit End Process to stop each 'ssh-agent.exe' process.

Now that all the messed up stuff from the failed attempts is cleaned up, I will tell you how to get it working...

In 'Git Bash':

Start the 'ssh-agent.exe' process

eval $(ssh-agent -s)

And install the SSH keys

ssh-add "C:\Users\MyName\.ssh\id_rsa"

* Adjust the path above with your username, and make sure that the location of the* /.ssh directory is in the correct place. I think you choose this location during the Git installation? Maybe not...

The part I was doing wrong before I figured this out was I was not using quotes around the 'ssh-add' location. The above is how it needs to be entered on Windows.

12 Comments

I am not sure about using "C:\Path\To" in Git-Bash under windows. I remember a while back I received errors when using typical windows paths. You can also use ssh-add /c/Users/YourName/.ssh/id_rsa. - I thank you for this answer though. Following the Git docs resulted in many ssh agents running. After killing them, and using the alternate eval method, this worked perfect.
I didn't realize that there was another way to specify a path in Windows. Good to know. You are welcome, just hope it saves everyone the headache I endured.
Ctrl+Alt+Del and hit End Process to stop each 'ssh-agent.exe' step was all what I needed!
@Isengo this worked permanently for me. I am unsure why it wouldn't for you. Maybe something is preventing the SSH Agent from running after you restart your machine?
this needs to be moved to best answer
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23

On Windows, you can use Run with one of the below commands.

For 32-Bit:

"C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\cmd\start-ssh-agent.cmd"

For-64 Bit:

"C:\Program Files\Git\cmd\start-ssh-agent.cmd"

3 Comments

Needs to be wrapped with double quotes.
I tried almost EVERYTHING that was suggested. Nothing worked besides this one. I guess every person can have a different problem with the same msgs.
Or start OpenSSH Authentication Agent in Services then run ssh-agent ssh-add "C:\Users\<username>\.ssh\id_rsa"
17

Situation: MVS2017 App - Using 'Git Bash' on Windows 10 - Trying to connect to a BitBucket repository.

To be clear, when you install Git for Windows (https://git-scm.com/download/win), it comes with an utility called Git Bash.

enter image description here

So, I am in 'Git Bash', as follows:

Mike@DUBLIN MINGW64 ~/source/repos/DoubleIrish (master)
$ git remote add origin [email protected]:Guiness/DoubleIrish.git
$ git remote -v
origin  [email protected]:Guiness/DoubleIrish.git (fetch)
origin  [email protected]:Guiness/DoubleIrish.git (push)
Mike@DUBLIN MINGW64 ~/source/repos/DoubleIrish (master)
$ git push -u origin master
[...]
[email protected]: Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.

Is the private key set up?

$ ssh -V
OpenSSH_7.7p1, OpenSSL 1.0.2p  14 Aug 2018
$ ls -a ~/.ssh
./  ../  known_hosts

I can see that, at this point, my private key file (id_rsa) is missing. So I add it: (note: generating a pair of private-public keys is out of scope of my reply, but I can say that in Linux, you can use ssh-keygen for that.)

$ ls -a ~/.ssh
./  ../  id_rsa  known_hosts

OK, let's proceed:

$ ssh-agent
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-KhQwFLAgWGYC/agent.18320; export SSH_AUTH_SOCK;
SSH_AGENT_PID=17996; export SSH_AGENT_PID;
echo Agent pid 17996;

$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Could not open a connection to your authentication agent.

To solve this, I run:

$ ssh-agent bash

And then, again:

$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Identity added: /c/Users/Mike.CORP/.ssh/id_rsa (/c/Users/Mike.CORP/.ssh/id_rsa)

It worked for me. Hope this helps

Comments

3

I was struggling with the problem as well.

After I typed $ eval 'ssh-agent -s' followed by $ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa

I got the same complain: "Could not open a connection to your authentication agent". Then I realize there are two different kind of quotation on my computer's keyboard. So I tried the one at the same position as "~": $ eval ssh-agent -s $ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa

And bang it worked.

1 Comment

I can't believe I struggle to find this for a whole day. Thanks, mate.
3

I would like to improve on the accepted answer

Downsides of using .bashrc with eval ssh-agent -s:

  1. Every git-bash will have it's own ssh-agent.exe process
  2. SSH key should be manually added every time you open git-bash

Here is my .bashrc that will eradicate above downsides

Put this .bashrc into your home directory (Windows 10: C:\Users\[username]\.bashrc) and it will be executed every time a new git-bash is opened and ssh-add will be working as a first class citizen

Read #comments to understand how it works

# Env vars used
# SSH_AUTH_SOCK - ssh-agent socket, should be set for ssh-add or git to be able to connect
# SSH_AGENT_PID - ssh-agent process id, should be set in order to check that it is running
# SSH_AGENT_ENV - env file path to share variable between instances of git-bash
SSH_AGENT_ENV=~/ssh-agent.env
# import env file and supress error message if it does not exist
. $SSH_AGENT_ENV 2> /dev/null

# if we know that ssh-agent was launched before ($SSH_AGENT_PID is set) and process with that pid is running 
if [ -n "$SSH_AGENT_PID" ] && ps -p $SSH_AGENT_PID > /dev/null 
then
  # we don't need to do anything, ssh-add and git will properly connect since we've imported env variables required
  echo "Connected to ssh-agent"
else   
  # start ssh-agent and save required vars for sharing in $SSH_AGENT_ENV file
  eval $(ssh-agent) > /dev/null
  echo export SSH_AUTH_SOCK=\"$SSH_AUTH_SOCK\" > $SSH_AGENT_ENV
  echo export SSH_AGENT_PID=$SSH_AGENT_PID >> $SSH_AGENT_ENV
  echo "Started ssh-agent"
fi

Also this script uses a little trick to ensure that provided environment variables are shared between git-bash instances by saving them into an .env file.

Comments

-2

above solution doesn't work for me for unknown reason. below is my workaround which was worked successfully.

1) DO NOT generate a new ssh key by using command ssh-keygen -t rsa -C"[email protected]", you can delete existing SSH keys.

2) but use Git GUI, -> "Help" -> "Show ssh key" -> "Generate key", the key will saved to ssh automatically and no need to use ssh-add anymore.

1 Comment

your advise is conflicting the OP question with irrelevant topics ... how you generate the ssh key pair is orthogonal to the issue at hand

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