Keychain Working but Still must enter passphrase on first decrypt - ssh

I am using keychain to store ssh and gpg keys. When I login and start up a terminal, I get prompted for both the ssh and gpg passphrases, then keychain reports that it has found the existing agents and keys:
keychain 2.7.1 ~ http://www.funtoo.org
No other ssh-agent(s) than keychain's 2740 found running
No other gpg-agent(s) than keychain's 3301 found running
Found existing ssh-agent: 2740
Found existing gpg-agent: 3301
Known ssh key: /home/ded/.ssh/id_rsa
Known gpg key: C0A9F2F0
But if I try to decrypt a gpg file, say
$ gpg -d ~/.authinfo.gpg
I am prompted again for the gpg passphrase, but only the first time. Decrypting again, even from a new terminal works fine. This means that emacs gnus, for example, fails to connect unless I first do an manual decrypt. Very annoying.
I would like to enter the passphrases once when I login.
Here is what I have in my zshrc (also bashrc) to start-up keychain:
if [[ $- == *i* ]]; then
eval `keychain --eval id_rsa C0A9F2F0 --inherit any-once --stop others --nogui`
GPG_TTY=$(tty)
export GPG_TTY
else
# In a non-interactive script, eval keychain, but don't try to
# prompt for passphrase
eval `keychain --eval id_rsa C0A9F2F0 7BBA874D --inherit any-once --stop others --quiet --noask`
fi
Here is my ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf
pinentry-program /usr/bin/pinentry-curses
# Time to live for gpg keys set
# 864000 is 10 days; max set to 100 days
max-cache-ttl 8640000
default-cache-ttl 864000
max-cache-ttl-ssh 8640000
# Use gpg-agent to serve SSH keys as well
# enable-ssh-support
# default-cache-ttl-ssh 864000
log-file /home/ded/gpg-agent.log
debug 4
Any ideas?

Related

git-secret: gpg: [don't know]: partial length invalid for packet type 20 in the gitlab ci job

I have a trouble with git secret in the gitlab ci jobs.
What I done:
init, add users, add files, hide them using git secret
create a job where I want to reveal files:
git secret:
stage: init
before_script:
- sh -c "echo 'deb https://gitsecret.jfrog.io/artifactory/git-secret-deb git-secret main' >> /etc/apt/sources.list"
- wget -qO - 'https://gitsecret.jfrog.io/artifactory/api/gpg/key/public' | apt-key add -
- apt-get update && apt-get install -y git-secret
script:
- echo $GPG_PRIVATE_KEY | tr ',' '\n' > ./pkey.gpg
- export GPG_TTY=$(tty)
- gpg --batch --import ./pkey.gpg
- git secret reveal -p ${GPG_PASSPHRASE}
Result logs:
...
$ gpg --batch --import ./pkey.gpg
gpg: directory '/root/.gnupg' created
gpg: keybox '/root/.gnupg/pubring.kbx' created
gpg: /root/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg: trustdb created
gpg: key SOMEKEY: public key "Email Name <ci#email.com>" imported
gpg: key SOMEKEY: secret key imported
gpg: Total number processed: 1
gpg: imported: 1
gpg: secret keys read: 1
gpg: secret keys imported: 1
$ git secret reveal -p ${GPG_PASSPHRASE}
gpg: [don't know]: partial length invalid for packet type 20
git-secret: abort: problem decrypting file with gpg: exit code 2: /path/to/decrypted/file
I don't understand where the problem. What mean packet type 20? And length of what?
Locally it revealed fine. Command git secret whoknows shows that email on the ci env can decrypt. Passphrase checked and passed to the job.
For me, the problem was the GnuPG versions being different between the encryption machine (v2.3) and the decryption side (v2.2).
After I downgraded it to v2.2 (due to v2.3 not yet being available on Debian), the problem went away.
This is a common problem with the format of the keys.
Since you're using GitLab CI, you should get advantage of the File type in the CI/CD Variables instead of storing the value of the GPG Key as a Variable type.
First of all, forget about generating the armor in one line with the piped | tr '\n' ',' and get the proper multiline armor.
Second, add it to your GitLab CI Variables with type "File", add an empty line at the end and then delete it (this seems stupid but will save you headaches, since it seems to be a problem when copying directly from the shell to the textbox in GitLab).
Third, import directly the file in your keychain:
gpg --batch --import $GPG_PRIVATE_KEY

"Enter PIN for Authenticator" for command ssh-add -K

I am running into an issue in adding my .pem key to my ssh-agent. I have set up my Linux Ubuntu 20.04 system with Yubikey and it has worked great. Have not had any problems using my Yubikeys. Love the added security; however, when I run this specific command ssh-add -K I get this message Enter PIN for authenticator:. I typed in my pin number from my authenticator for GitHub and even pressed on my YubiKey but nothing processed through. Can anyone help me on this? I would greatly appreciate it.
In the Apple version -K stores the password in your keychain, so you don't have to type it every time. In the non-Apple version -K "Loads resident keys from a FIDO authenticator".
So, Instead of writing
$ ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/private_key
write this :
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/private_key
Replace private_key as your key
e.g. $ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa

Duplicity is arguing BackendException: ssh connection to my server:22 failed: not a valid OPENSSH private key file

Thanks to maybeg, I've managed to backup my data from home to an external server. (An amazon one)
As i don't want to backup company datas to Amazon, i tried with an internal backup server.
I then used this command. (I have my own key)
docker run -d --name volumerize
-v /MyFolder/Keys/:/MyFolder/Keys/
-v jenkins_volume:/source:ro
-v backup_volume:/backup
-e 'VOLUMERIZE_SOURCE=/source'
-e "VOLUMERIZE_TARGET=scp://myuser#mybackupserver/home/myuser/"
-e 'VOLUMERIZE_DUPLICITY_OPTIONS=--ssh-options "-i /MyFolder/Keys/myuserkey"'
-e 'PASSPHRASE="mypassphrase"' blacklabelops/volumerize
When using duplicity backup command, inside or outside the container, i have the following error
/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/paramiko/ecdsakey.py:200: DeprecationWarning: signer and verifier have been deprecated. Please use sign and verify instead.
signature, ec.ECDSA(self.ecdsa_curve.hash_object())
BackendException: ssh connection to myuser#mybackupserver:22 failed: not a valid OPENSSH private key file
Strangely, inside or outside the volumerize container, the following is running properly.
ssh -i /MyFolder/Keys/myuserkey myuser#mybackupserver
key_load_public: invalid format
Enter passphrase for key '/MyFolder/Keys/myuser':
[myuser#mybackupserver ~]$
Editing backup file for example is giving me the following :
#!/bin/bash
set -o errexit
source /etc/volumerize/stopContainers
duplicity $# --allow-source-mismatch --archive-dir=/volumerize-cache --ssh-options "-i /MyFolder/Keys/myuserkey" /source scp://myuser#mybackupserver/home/myuser/
source /etc/volumerize/startContainers
I've tried to check env variables inside the container, please find below what i have : (Note that passphrase has been added as env variable as found here)
HOSTNAME=b68f0e1a2d45
TERM=xterm
BLACKLABELOPS_HOME=/var/blacklabelops
GOOGLE_DRIVE_CREDENTIAL_FILE=/credentials/googledrive.cred
VOLUMERIZE_HOME=/etc/volumerize
VOLUMERIZE_SOURCE=/source
DOCKERIZE_VERSION=v0.5.0
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/etc/volumerize
VOLUMERIZE_TARGET=scp://myuser#mybackupserver/home/myuser/
PWD=/etc/volumerize
VOLUMERIZE_DUPLICITY_OPTIONS=--ssh-options "-i /MyFolder/Keys/myuserkey"
VOLUMERIZE_CACHE=/volumerize-cache
GPG_TTY=/dev/console
SHLVL=1
HOME=/root
no_proxy=*.local, 169.254/16
GOOGLE_DRIVE_SETTINGS=/credentials/cred.file
PASSPHRASE="mypassphrase"
_=/usr/bin/env
Can someone point me in the right direction ?
Regards,
pierre
Edit1 :
I tried to compare both private key file (Amazon and Company) using
openssl rsa -in yourkey.pem -check and both says
RSA key ok
writing RSA key
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
....
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
Edit2 :
1 . Had a look without any success at duplicity-backendexception
For information, Paramiko version is 2.2.1
Connection is successful using the following python script.
import paramiko
import StringIO
f = open('/MyFolder/Keys/myuserkey','r')
s = f.read()
keyfile = StringIO.StringIO(s)
mykey = paramiko.RSAKey.from_private_key(keyfile,password='mypassphrase')
ssh = paramiko.SSHClient()
ssh.set_missing_host_key_policy(paramiko.AutoAddPolicy())
ssh.connect('mybackupserver',username='mouser',pkey=mykey)
stdin, stdout, stderr = ssh.exec_command('uptime')
stdout.readlines()
[u' 12:35:27 up 3 days, 1:42, 0 users, load average: 1.59, 3.10, 3.00\n']
try the pexpect+scp:// backend (more on available ssh backends can be found in the duplicity manpage http://duplicity.nongnu.org/duplicity.1.html ).
it uses the command line ssh binaries. maybe the error is different or more detailed there?
the error on
ssh -i /MyFolder/Keys/myuserkey myuser#mybackupserver
key_load_public: invalid format
does not seem normal. try to provide the public key in the proper format or not at all.
..ede/duply.net

cygwin's ssh-add returns "Could not open a connection to your authentication agent." [duplicate]

I am running into this error of:
$ git push heroku master
Warning: Permanently added the RSA host key for IP address '50.19.85.132' to the list of known hosts.
! Your key with fingerprint b7:fd:15:25:02:8e:5f:06:4f:1c:af:f3:f0:c3:c2:65 is not authorized to access bitstarter.
I tried to add the keys and I get this error below:
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
Could not open a connection to your authentication agent.
Did You Start ssh-agent?
You might need to start ssh-agent before you run the ssh-add command:
eval `ssh-agent -s`
ssh-add
Note that this will start the agent for msysgit Bash on Windows. If you're using a different shell or operating system, you might need to use a variant of the command, such as those listed in the other answers.
See the following answers:
ssh-add complains: Could not open a connection to your authentication agent
Git push requires username and password (contains detailed instructions on how to use ssh-agent)
How to run (git/ssh) authentication agent?.
Could not open a connection to your authentication agent
To automatically start ssh-agent and allow a single instance to work in multiple console windows, see Start ssh-agent on login.
Why do we need to use eval instead of just ssh-agent?
SSH needs two things in order to use ssh-agent: an ssh-agent instance running in the background, and an environment variable set that tells SSH which socket it should use to connect to the agent (SSH_AUTH_SOCK IIRC). If you just run ssh-agent then the agent will start, but SSH will have no idea where to find it.
from this comment.
Public vs Private Keys
Also, whenever I use ssh-add, I always add private keys to it. The file ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub looks like a public key, I'm not sure if that will work. Do you have a ~/.ssh/id_rsa file? If you open it in a text editor, does it say it's a private key?
I tried the other solutions to no avail. I made more research and found that the following command worked. I am using Windows 7 and Git Bash.
eval $(ssh-agent)
More information in: https://coderwall.com/p/rdi_wq (web archive version)
The following command worked for me. I am using CentOS.
exec ssh-agent bash
Could not open a connection to your authentication agent
To resolve this error:
bash:
$ eval `ssh-agent -s`
tcsh:
$ eval `ssh-agent -c`
Then use ssh-add as you normally would.
Hot Tip:
I was always forgetting what to type for the above ssh-agent commands, so I created an alias in my .bashrc file like this:
alias ssh-agent-cyg='eval `ssh-agent -s`'
Now instead of using ssh-agent, I can use ssh-agent-cyg
E.g.
$ ssh-agent-cyg
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-n16KsxjuTMiM/agent.32394; export SSH_AUTH_SOCK;
SSH_AGENT_PID=32395; export SSH_AGENT_PID;
echo Agent pid 32395;
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/my_pk
Original Source of fix:
http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2011-10/msg00313.html
MsysGit or Cygwin
If you're using Msysgit or Cygwin you can find a good tutorial at SSH-Agent in msysgit and cygwin and bash:
Add a file called .bashrc to your home folder.
Open the file and paste in:
#!/bin/bash
eval `ssh-agent -s`
ssh-add
This assumes that your key is in the conventional ~/.ssh/id_rsa location. If it isn't, include a full path after the ssh-add command.
Add to or create file ~/.ssh/config with the contents
ForwardAgent yes
In the original tutorial the ForwardAgent param is Yes, but it's a typo. Use all lowercase or you'll get errors.
Restart Msysgit. It will ask you to enter your passphrase once, and that's it (until you end the session, or your ssh-agent is killed.)
Mac/OS X
If you don't want to start a new ssh-agent every time you open a terminal, check out Keychain. I'm on a Mac now, so I used the tutorial ssh-agent with zsh & keychain on Mac OS X to set it up, but I'm sure a Google search will have plenty of info for Windows.
Update: A better solution on Mac is to add your key to the Mac OS Keychain:
ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Simple as that.
Run
ssh-agent bash
ssh-add
To get more details you can search
ssh-agent
or run
man ssh-agent
ssh-add and ssh (assuming you are using the openssh implementations) require an environment variable to know how to talk to the ssh agent. If you started the agent in a different command prompt window to the one you're using now, or if you started it incorrectly, neither ssh-add nor ssh will see that environment variable set (because the environment variable is set locally to the command prompt it's set in).
You don't say which version of ssh you're using, but if you're using cygwin's, you can use this recipe from SSH Agent on Cygwin:
# Add to your Bash config file
SSHAGENT=/usr/bin/ssh-agent
SSHAGENTARGS="-s"
if [ -z "$SSH_AUTH_SOCK" -a -x "$SSHAGENT" ]; then
eval `$SSHAGENT $SSHAGENTARGS`
trap "kill $SSH_AGENT_PID" 0
fi
This will start an agent automatically for each new command prompt window that you open (which is suboptimal if you open multiple command prompts in one session, but at least it should work).
I faced the same problem for Linux, and here is what I did:
Basically, the command ssh-agent starts the agent, but it doesn't really set the environment variables for it to run. It just outputs those variables to the shell.
You need to:
eval `ssh-agent`
and then do ssh-add. See Could not open a connection to your authentication agent.
Instead of using ssh-agent -s, I used eval `ssh-agent -s` to solve this issue.
Here is what I performed step by step (step 2 onwards on Git Bash):
Cleaned up my .ssh folder at C:\user\<username>\.ssh\
Generated a new SSH key:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "xyz#abc.com"
Check if any process id(ssh agent) is already running.
ps aux | grep ssh
(Optional) If found any in step 3, kill those
kill <pids>
Started the SSH agent
$ eval `ssh-agent -s`
Added SSH key generated in step 2 to the SSH agent
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Try to do the following steps:
Open Git Bash and run: cd ~/.ssh
Try to run agent: eval $(ssh-agent)
Right now, you can run the following command: ssh-add -l
In Windows 10 I tried all answers listed here, but none of them seemed to work. In fact, they give a clue. To solve a problem, simply you need three commands. The idea of this problem is that ssh-add needs the SSH_AUTH_SOCK and SSH_AGENT_PID environment variables to be set with the current ssh-agent sock file path and pid number.
ssh-agent -s > temp.txt
This will save the output of ssh-agent in a file. The text file content will be something like this:
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-kjmxRb2764/agent.2764; export SSH_AUTH_SOCK;
SSH_AGENT_PID=3044; export SSH_AGENT_PID;
echo Agent pid 3044;
Copy something like "/tmp/ssh-kjmxRb2764/agent.2764" from the text file and run the following command directly in the console:
set SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-kjmxRb2764/agent.2764
Copy something like "3044" from the text file and run the following command directly in the console:
set SSH_AGENT_PID=3044
Now when environment variables (SSH_AUTH_SOCK and SSH_AGENT_PID) are set for the current console session, run your ssh-add command and it will not fail again to connect to ssh agent.
One thing I came across was that eval did not work for me using Cygwin, what worked for me was ssh-agent ssh-add id_rsa.
After that I came across an issue that my private key was too open, the solution I managed to find for that (from here):
chgrp Users id_rsa
as well as
chmod 600 id_rsa
finally I was able to use:
ssh-agent ssh-add id_rsa
For Windows users, I found cmd eval `ssh-agent -s` didn't work, but using Git Bash worked a treat:
eval `ssh-agent -s`; ssh-add KEY_LOCATION
And making sure the Windows service "OpenSSH Key Management" wasn't disabled.
To amplify on n3o's answer for Windows 7...
My problem was indeed that some required environment variables weren't set, and n3o is correct that ssh-agent tells you how to set those environment variables, but doesn't actually set them.
Since Windows doesn't let you do "eval," here's what to do instead:
Redirect the output of ssh-agent to a batch file with
ssh-agent > temp.bat
Now use a text editor such as Notepad to edit temp.bat. For each of the first two lines:
Insert the word "set" and a space at the beginning of the line.
Delete the first semicolon and everything that follows.
Now delete the third line. Your temp.bat should look something like this:
set SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-EorQv10636/agent.10636
set SSH_AGENT_PID=8608
Run temp.bat. This will set the environment variables that are needed for ssh-add to work.
I just got this working. Open your ~/.ssh/config file.
Append the following-
Host github.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/github_rsa
The page that gave me the hint Set up SSH for Git
said that the single space indentation is important... though I had a configuration in here from Heroku that did not have that space and works properly.
If you follow these instructions, your problem would be solved.
If you’re on a Mac or Linux machine, type:
eval "$(ssh-agent -s)"
If you’re on a Windows machine, type:
ssh-agent -s
I had the same problem on Ubuntu and the other solutions didn't help me.
I finally realized what my problem was. I had created my SSH keys in the /root/.ssh folder, so even when I ran ssh-add as root, it couldn't do its work and kept saying:
Could not open a connection to your authentication agent.
I created my SSH public and private keys in /home/myUsername/ folder and I used
ssh-agent /bin/sh
Then I ran
ssh-add /home/myUsername/.ssh/id_rsa
And problem was solved this way.
Note: For accessing your repository in Git, add your Git password when you are creating SSH keys with ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "your Git email here".
Let me offer another solution. If you have just installed Git 1.8.2.2 or thereabouts, and you want to enable SSH, follow the well-writen directions.
Everything through to Step 5.6 where you might encounter a slight snag. If an SSH agent is already be running you could get the following error message when you restart bash
Could not open a connection to your authentication agent
If you do, use the following command to see if more than one ssh-agent process is running
ps aux | grep ssh
If you see more than one ssh-agent service, you will need to kill all of these processes. Use the kill command as follows (the PID will be unique on your computer)
kill <PID>
Example:
kill 1074
After you have removed all of the ssh-agent processes, run the px aux | grep ssh command again to be sure they are gone, then restart Bash.
Voila, you should now get something like this:
Initializing new SSH agent...
succeeded
Enter passphrase for /c/Users/username/.ssh/id_rsa:
Now you can continue on Step 5.7 and beyond.
This will run the SSH agent and authenticate only the first time you need it, not every time you open your Bash terminal. It can be used for any program using SSH in general, including ssh itself and scp. Just add this to /etc/profile.d/ssh-helper.sh:
ssh-auth() {
# Start the SSH agent only if not running
[[ -z $(ps | grep ssh-agent) ]] && echo $(ssh-agent) > /tmp/ssh-agent-data.sh
# Identify the running SSH agent
[[ -z $SSH_AGENT_PID ]] && source /tmp/ssh-agent-data.sh > /dev/null
# Authenticate (change key path or make a symlink if needed)
[[ -z $(ssh-add -l | grep "/home/$(whoami)/.ssh/id_rsa") ]] && ssh-add
}
# You can repeat this for other commands using SSH
git() { ssh-auth; command git "$#"; }
Note: this is an answer to this question, which has been merged with this one.
That question was for Windows 7, meaning my answer was for Cygwin/MSYS/MSYS2. This one seems for some Unix, where I wouldn't expect the SSH agent needing to be managed like this.
The basic solution to run ssh-agent is answered in many answers. However runing ssh-agent many times (per each opened terminal or per remote login) will create a many copies ot ssh-agent running in memory. The scripts which is suggested to avoid that problem is long and need to write and/or copy separated file or need to write too many strings in ~/.profile or ~/.schrc. Let me suggest simple two string solution:
For sh, bash, etc:
# ~/.profile
if ! pgrep -q -U `whoami` -x 'ssh-agent'; then ssh-agent -s > ~/.ssh-agent.sh; fi
. ~/.ssh-agent.sh
For csh, tcsh, etc:
# ~/.schrc
sh -c 'if ! pgrep -q -U `whoami` -x 'ssh-agent'; then ssh-agent -c > ~/.ssh-agent.tcsh; fi'
eval `cat ~/.ssh-agent.tcsh`
What is here:
search the process ssh-agent by name and by current user
create appropriate shell script file by calling ssh-agent and run ssh-agent itself if no current user ssh-agent process found
evaluate created shell script which configure appropriate environment
It is not necessary to protect created shell script ~/.ssh-agent.tcsh or ~/.ssh-agent.sh from another users access because: at-first communication with ssh-agent is processed through protected socket which is not accessible to another users, and at-second another users can found ssh-agent socket simple by enumeration files in /tmp/ directory. As far as about access to ssh-agent process it is the same things.
In Windows 10, using the Command Prompt terminal, the following works for me:
ssh-agent cmd
ssh-add
You should then be asked for a passphrase after this:
Enter passphrase for /c/Users/username/.ssh/id_rsa:
Try the following:
ssh-agent sh -c 'ssh-add && git push heroku master'
Use parameter -A when you connect to server, example:
ssh -A root#myhost
from man page :
-A Enables forwarding of the authentication agent connection.
This can also be specified on a per-host basis in a configuration file.
Agent forwarding should be enabled with caution. Users with the ability to bypass file permissions on the remote host (for the agent's
UNIX-domain socket) can access the local agent through the forwarded
connection. An attacker cannot obtain key material from the agent,
however they can perform operations on the keys that enable them to
authenticate using the identities loaded into the agent.
I had this problem, when I started ssh-agent, when it was already running. It seems that the multiple instances conflict with each other.
To see if ssh-agent is already running, check the value of the SSH_AGENT_SOCK environment variable with:
echo $SSH_AGENT_SOCK
If it is set, then the agent is presumably running.
To check if you have more than one ssh-agent running, you can review:
ps -ef | grep ssh
Of course, then you should kill any additional instances that you created.
Read user456814's answer for explanations. Here I only try to automate the fix.
If you using a Cygwin terminal with Bash, add the following to the $HOME/.bashrc file. This only starts ssh-agent once in the first Bash terminal and adds the keys to ssh-agent. (I am not sure if this is required on Linux.)
###########################
# start ssh-agent for
# ssh authentication with github.com
###########################
SSH_AUTH_SOCK_FILE=/tmp/SSH_AUTH_SOCK.sh
if [ ! -e $SSH_AUTH_SOCK_FILE ]; then
# need to find SSH_AUTH_SOCK again.
# restarting is an easy option
pkill ssh-agent
fi
# check if already running
SSH_AGENT_PID=`pgrep ssh-agent`
if [ "x$SSH_AGENT_PID" == "x" ]; then
# echo "not running. starting"
eval $(ssh-agent -s) > /dev/null
rm -f $SSH_AUTH_SOCK_FILE
echo "export SSH_AUTH_SOCK=$SSH_AUTH_SOCK" > $SSH_AUTH_SOCK_FILE
ssh-add $HOME/.ssh/github.com_id_rsa 2>&1 > /dev/null
#else
# echo "already running"
fi
source $SSH_AUTH_SOCK_FILE
Don’t forget to add your correct keys in the "ssh-add" command.
I had a similar problem when I was trying to get this to work on Windows to connect to the stash via SSH.
Here is the solution that worked for me.
Turns out I was running the Pageant ssh agent on my Windows box - I would check what you are running. I suspect it is Pageant as it comes as default with PuTTY and WinSCP.
The ssh-add does not work from command line with this type of agent
You need to add the private key via the Pageant UI window which you can get by double-clicking the Pageant icon in the taskbar (once it is started).
Before you add the key to Pageant you need to convert it to PPK format. Full instructions are available here How to convert SSH key to ppk format
That is it. Once I uploaded my key to stash I was able to use Sourcetree to create a local repository and clone the remote.
For Bash built into Windows 10, I added this to file .bash_profile:
if [ -z $SSH_AUTH_SOCK ]; then
if [ -r ~/.ssh/env ]; then
source ~/.ssh/env
if [ `ps -p $SSH_AGENT_PID | wc -l` = 1 ]; then
rm ~/.ssh/env
unset SSH_AUTH_SOCK
fi
fi
fi
if [ -z $SSH_AUTH_SOCK ]; then
ssh-agent -s | sed 's/^echo/#echo/'> ~/.ssh/env
chmod 600 ~/.ssh/env
source ~/.ssh/env > /dev/null 2>&1
fi
Using Git Bash on Windows 8.1 E, my resolution was as follows:
eval $(ssh-agent) > /dev/null
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
I resolved the error by force stopping (killed) git processes (ssh agent), then uninstalling Git, and then installing Git again.
This worked for me.
In the CMD window, type the following command:
cd path-to-Git/bin # (for example,cd C:\Program Files\Git\bin)
bash
exec ssh-agent bash
ssh-add path/to/.ssh/id_rsa

How to make ssh-add read passphrase from a file?

I am trying to add a key to ssh-agent and want ssh-add to read the password from the key file I'm using. How is this possible?
How do I automate this process from the shell script?
Depending on your distribution and on the version of ssh-add you may be able or not to use the -p option of ssh-add that reads the passphrase from stdin in this way:
cat passfile | ssh-add -p keyfile
If this is not working you can use Expect, a Unix tool to make interactive applications non-interactive. You'll have to install it from your package manager.
I have written a tool for you in expect. Just copy the content in a file named ssh-add-pass and set executable permissions on it (chmod +x ssh-add-pass). You can also copy it to /usr/bin or /usr/local/bin to be accessible from the $PATH search.
#!/bin/bash
if [ $# -ne 2 ] ; then
echo "Usage: ssh-add-pass keyfile passfile"
exit 1
fi
eval $(ssh-agent)
pass=$(cat $2)
expect << EOF
spawn ssh-add $1
expect "Enter passphrase"
send "$pass\r"
expect eof
EOF
The usage is simply: ssh-add-pass keyfile passfile
Similar to the answer by kenorb, but doesn't save the secret in a file:
$ SSH_ASKPASS=/path/to/ssh_give_pass.sh ssh-add $KEYFILE <<< "$KEYPASS"
where ssh_give_pass.sh is:
#!/bin/bash
# Parameter $1 passed to the script is the prompt text
# READ Secret from STDIN and echo it
read SECRET
echo $SECRET
If you have you secret in a $KEYPASSFILE, read it into a variable first with
KEYPASS=`cat $KEYPASSFILE`
Also make sure that ssh_give_pass.sh is not editable by unauthorized users - it will be easy to log all secrets passed through the script.
Here is some workaround for systems not supporting -p:
$ PASS="my_passphrase"
$ install -vm700 <(echo "echo $PASS") "$PWD/ps.sh"
$ cat id_rsa | SSH_ASKPASS="$PWD/ps.sh" ssh-add - && rm -v "$PWD/ps.sh"
where ps.sh is basically your script printing your passphrase. See: man ssh-add.
To make it more secure (to not keep it in the same file), use mktemp to generate a random private file, make it executable (chmod) and make sure it prints the passphrase to standard output once executed.
On my Ubuntu system, none of the answers worked:
ssh-add did not support the -p option.
ssh-add ignored SSH_ASKPASS, insisting on prompting for the passphrase on the controlling terminal.
I wanted to avoid installing additional packages, especially expect.
What worked in my case was:
password_source | SSH_ASKPASS=/bin/cat setsid -w ssh-add keyfile
password_source isn't really a program: it just represents whatever feeds the passphrase to ssh-add. In my case, it is a program that executes setsid and writes the passphrase to its stdin. If you keep your passphrase in a file, you are responsible for making the simple modifications: I will not enable you to hurt yourself.
setsid was already installed, and detaches the controlling terminal so that ssh-add will not try to use it to prompt for the passphrase. -w causes setsid to wait for ssh-add to exit and make its return code available. /bin/cat has the same effect as the script Ray Shannon provided, but uses a standard tool instead of replicating its functionality with a script.
With this minimal changes worked for me this bash script of #enrico.basis
#!/bin/bash
if [ $# -ne 2 ] ; then
echo "Usage: ssh-add-pass passfile keyfile"
exit 1
fi
eval 'ssh-agent -s'
passwordToFileSSH=$1
pathFileSSH=$2
expect << EOF
spawn ssh-add $pathFileSSH
expect "Enter passphrase"
send "$passwordToFileSSH\r"
expect eof
EOF
The best way is to generate a key without a passphrase