418 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
418 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
# ssh troubleshooting
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In this document:
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* basic ssh troubleshooting
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* passphrases versus passwords
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* ssh-agent problems
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* basic ssh troubleshooting for the main admin
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* basic ssh troubleshooting for a normal user
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* details
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* files on the server
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* files on client
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* why two keys on client
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* more complex ssh setups
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* two gitolite servers to manage?
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* giving shell access to gitolite users
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----
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This document should help you troubleshoot ssh-related problems in accessing
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gitolite *after* the install has completed successfully.
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In addition, I **strongly** recommend reading [this document][glb] -- it's a
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very detailed look at how gitolite uses ssh's features on the server side.
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Most people don't know ssh as well as they *think* they do; even if you don't
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have any problems right now, it's worth skimming over.
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In addition to both these documents, there's now a program called
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`sshkeys-lint` that you can run on your client. Run it without arguments to
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get help on how to run it and what inputs it needs.
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Please also note that ssh problems don't always look like ssh problems. One
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common example: when the remote says the repo you're trying to access "does
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not appear to be a git repository", and yet you are sure it exists, you
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haven't mis-spelled it, etc. Another example is being able to access
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repositories using the full unix path (typically like
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`git@server:repositories/reponame.git`, assuming default `$REPO_BASE` setting,
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instead of specifying only the part below `$REPO_BASE`, i.e.,
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`git@server:reponame.git`).
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[Both these errors indicate that you managed to bypass gitolite completely and
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are using your shell access -- instead of running via
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`/some/path/gl-auth-command <your_username>` it is just going to bash and
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working from there!]
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<a name="basic"></a>
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### basic ssh troubleshooting
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[glb]: http://sitaramc.github.com/0-installing/9-gitolite-basics.html#IMPORTANT_overview_of_ssh
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I assume the gitolite server is called "server" and the user hosting all the
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gitolite repos is "git". I will also be using "sitaram" as the *gitolite
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username* of the admin.
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Unless specifically mentioned, all these commands are run on the user's or
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admin's workstation, not on the server.
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#### passphrases versus passwords
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When you create an ssh keypair, you have the option of protecting it with a
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passphrase. When you subsequently use that keypair to access a remote host,
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your *local* ssh client needs to unlock the corresponding private key, and ssh
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will probably ask for the passphrase you set when you created the keypair.
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Do not confuse or mistake this prompt (`Enter passphrase for key
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'/home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa':`) for a password prompt from the remote server!
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You have two choices to avoid this prompt every time you try to access the
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remote. The first is to create keypairs *without* a passphrase (just hit
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enter when prompted for one). **Be sure to add a passphrase later, once
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everything is working, using `ssh-keygen -p`**.
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The second is to use `ssh-agent` (or `keychain`, which in turn uses
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`ssh-agent`) or something like that to manage your keys. Other than the next
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section, further discussion of this is out of scope of this document.
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#### ssh-agent problems
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1. Run `ssh-add -l`. If this responds with either "The agent has no
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identities." or "Could not open a connection to your authentication
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agent.", skip this section.
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2. However, if it lists some keys, like this:
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2048 fc:c1:48:1e:06:31:97:a4:8b:fc:37:b2:76:14:c7:53 /home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa (RSA)
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2048 d2:e0:7f:fa:1a:89:22:41:bb:06:d9:ff:a7:27:36:5c /home/sitaram/.ssh/sitaram (RSA)
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then run `ls ~/.ssh` and make sure that all the keypairs you have there
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are represented in the `ssh-add -l` output.
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3. If you find any keypairs in `~/.ssh` that are not represented in the
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`ssh-add -l` output, add them. For instance, if `ssh-add -l` showed me
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only the `id_rsa` key, but I also had a `sitaram` (and `sitaram.pub`)
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keypair, I'd run `ssh-add ~/.ssh/sitaram` to add it.
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This is because ssh-agent has a quirk: if `ssh-add -l` shows *any* keys at
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all, ssh will only use those keys. Even if you explicitly specify an unlisted
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key using `ssh -i` or an `identityfile` directive in the config file, it won't
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use it.
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#### basic ssh troubleshooting for the main admin
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You're the "main admin" if you're trying to access gitolite from the same
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workstation and user account where you ran the "easy install" command. You
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should have two keypairs in your `~/.ssh` directory. The pair called `id_rsa`
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(and `id_rsa.pub`) was probably the first one you created, and you used this
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to get passwordless (pubkey based) access to the server (which was a
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pre-requisite for running the easy install command).
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The second keypair has the same name as the last argument in the easy install
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command you ran (in my case, `sitaram` and `sitaram.pub`). It was probably
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created by the easy install script, and is the key used for gitolite access.
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In addition, you should have a "gitolite" paragraph in your `~/.ssh/config`,
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looking something like this:
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host gitolite
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user git
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hostname server
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identityfile ~/.ssh/sitaram
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If any of these are not true, you did something funky in your install; email
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me or hop onto #git and hope for the best ;-)
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Otherwise, run these checks:
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1. `ssh git@server` should get you a command line.
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If it asks you for a password, then your `id_rsa` keypair changed after
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you ran the easy install, or someone fiddled with the
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`~/.ssh/authorized_keys` file on the server.
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If it prints [gitolite version and access info][myrights], you managed to
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overwrite the `id_rsa` keypair with the `sitaram` keypair, or something
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equally weird.
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2. `ssh gitolite info` should print some [gitolite version and access
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info][myrights]. If you get the output of the GNU info command instead,
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you probably reused your `id_rsa` keypair as your `sitaram` keypair, or
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overwrote the `sitaram` keypair with the `id_rsa` keypair.
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There are many ways to fix this, depending on where and what the damage is.
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The most generic way (and therefore time-taking) is to re-install gitolite
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from scratch:
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* make a backup of your gitolite-admin repo clone somewhere (basically your
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"keydir/*.pub" and your "conf/gitolite.conf"). If necessary get these
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files from the server's `~/.gitolite` directory.
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* log on to the server somehow (using some other account, using a password,
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su-ing in, etc) and delete `~/.ssh/authorized_keys`. Rename or move aside
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`~/.gitolite` so that also looks like it is missing.
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* back on your workstation, make sure you have 2 keypairs (`id_rsa` and
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`sitaram`, along with corresponding `.pub` files). Create them if needed.
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Also make sure they are *different* and not a copy of each other :-)
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* install gitolite normally:
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* run `ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa git@server` to get passwordless
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access to the server. (Mac users may have to do this step manually)
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* make sure `ssh git@server pwd` prints the `$HOME` of `git@server`
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**without** asking for a password. Do not proceed till this works.
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* run easy install again, (in my case: `cd gitolite-source;
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src/gl-easy-install -q git server sitaram`)
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* go to your gitolite-admin repo clone, and copy `conf/gitolite.conf` and
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`keydir/*.pub` from your backup to this directory
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* copy (be sure to overwrite!) `~/.ssh/sitaram.pub` also to keydir
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* now `git add keydir; git commit; git push -f`
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That's a long sequence but it should work.
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#### basic ssh troubleshooting for a normal user
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For a normal user, life is much simpler. They should have only one pubkey,
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which was previously sent to the gitolite admin to add into the admin repo's
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`keydir` as "user.pub", and then "user" given permissions to some repo.
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`ssh git@server info` should get you [gitolite version and access
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info][myrights]. If it asks you for a password, your pubkey was not sent to
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the server properly. Check with your admin.
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[myrights]: http://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite/blob/pu/doc/3-faq-tips-etc.mkd#myrights
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If it gets you the GNU info command output, you have shell access. This means
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you had command line access to the server *before* you were added as a
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gitolite user. If you send that same key to your gitolite admin to include in
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the admin repo, it won't work. For reasons why, see below.
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<a name="details"></a>
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### details
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Here's how it all hangs together.
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#### files on the server
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* the authkeys file; this contains one line containing the pubkey of each
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user who is permitted to login without a password.
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Pubkey lines that give shell access look like this:
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ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC[snip]uPjrUiAUew== /home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa
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On a typical server there will be only one or two of these lines.
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Note that the last bit (`/home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa`) is purely a *comment*
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field and can be anything. Also, the actual lines are much longer, about
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400 characters; I snipped 'em in the middle, as you can see.
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In contrast, pubkey lines that give access to git repos hosted by gitolite
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look like this:
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command="[some path]src/gl-auth-command sitaram",[some restrictions] ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC[snip]s18OnB42oQ== sitaram@sita-lt
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You will have many more of these lines -- one for every pubkey file in
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`keydir/` of your gitolite-admin repo, with the corresponding username in
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place of "sitaram" in the example above.
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The "command=" at the beginning ensures that when someone with the
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corresponding private key logs in, they don't get a shell. Instead, the
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`gl-auth-command` program is run, and (in this example) is given the
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argument `sitaram`. This is how gitolite is invoked, (and is told the
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user logging in is "sitaram").
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#### files on client
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* default keypair; used to get shell access to servers. You would have
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copied this pubkey to the gitolite server in order to log in without a
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password. (On Linux systems you may have used `ssh-copy-id` to do that).
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You would have done this *before* you ran the easy install script, because
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otherwise easy install won't run!
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~/.ssh/id_rsa
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~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
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* gitolite keypair; the "sitaram" in this is the 3rd argument to the
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`src/gl-easy-install` command you ran; the easy install script does the
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rest
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~/.ssh/sitaram
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~/.ssh/sitaram.pub
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* config file; this file has an entry for gitolite access:
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~/.ssh/config
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To understand why we need that, let's step back a bit. Normally, you
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might expect to access gitolite repos like this:
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ssh://git@server/reponame.git
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But this won't work, because this ends up using the *default* keypair
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(normally), which gives you a command line. Which means it won't invoke
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the `gl-auth-command` program at all, and so none of gitolite's access
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control will work.
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<a name="altkey"></a>
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You need to force ssh to use the *other* keypair when performing a git
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operation. With normal ssh, that would be
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ssh -i ~/.ssh/sitaram git@server
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but git does not support putting an alternate keypair in the URL.
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Luckily, ssh has a very convenient way of capturing all the connection
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information (username, hostname, port number (if it's not the default 22),
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and keypair to be used) in one "paragraph" of `~/.ssh/config`. This is
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what the para looks like for us (the easy install script puts it there the
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first time):
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host gitolite
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user git
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hostname server
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identityfile ~/.ssh/sitaram
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(The "gitolite" can be anything you want of course; it's like a group name
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for all the stuff below it). This ensures that typing
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ssh gitolite
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is equivalent to
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ssh -i ~/.ssh/sitaram git@server
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and therefore this:
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git clone gitolite:reponame.git
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now works as expected, invoking the special keypair instead of the default
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one.
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<a name="twokeys"></a>
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#### why two keys on client
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Why do I (the admin) need two **different** keypairs?
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There are two types of access the admin will make to the server: a normal
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login, to get a shell prompt, and gitolite access (clone/fetch/push etc). The
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first access needs an authkeys line *without* any "command=" restrictions,
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while the second requires a line *with* such a restriction.
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And we can't use the same key for both because there is no way to disambiguate
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them; the ssh server will always (*always*) pick the first one in sequence
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when the key is offered by the ssh client.
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So the next question is usually "I have other ways to get a shell on that
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account, so why do I need a key for shell access at all?"
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The answer to this is that the "easy install" script, being written for the
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most general case, needs shell access via ssh to do its stuff.
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If you really, really, want to get rid of the extra key, here's a transcript
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that should have enough info to get you going (but it helps to know ssh well):
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* on "sitaram" user, on my workstation
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cd ~/.ssh
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cp id_rsa sitaram
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cp id_rsa.pub sitaram.pub
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cd ~/gitolite-clone
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src/gl-easy-install -q git my.git.server sitaram
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that last command produces something like the following:
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you are upgrading from (unknown) to v0.80-6-gdde8c4e
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setting up keypair...
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...reusing /home/sitaram/.ssh/sitaram.pub...
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creating gitolite para in ~/.ssh/config...
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finding/creating gitolite rc...
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installing/upgrading...
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Pseudo-terminal will not be allocated because stdin is not a terminal.
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[master (root-commit) e717a89] start
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2 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
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create mode 100644 conf/gitolite.conf
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create mode 100644 keydir/sitaram.pub
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cloning gitolite-admin repo...
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Initialized empty Git repository in /home/sitaram/gitolite-admin/.git/
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fatal: 'gitolite-admin.git' does not appear to be a git repository
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fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
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notice that the final step (the clone of the newly created gitolite-admin
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repo) failed, as expected
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* now log on to the git hosting account (`git@my.git.server` in this
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example), edit `~/.ssh/authorized_keys`, and delete the line with the
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first occurrence of your key (this should be *before* the `# gitolite
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start` line)
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* now go back to your workstation and
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git clone git@my.git.server:gitolite-admin
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That should do it.
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<a name="complex"></a>
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### more complex ssh setups
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What do you need to know in order to create more complex ssh setups (for
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instance if you have *two* gitolite servers you are administering)?
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#### two gitolite servers to manage?
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* they can have the same key; no harm there (example, sitaram.pub)
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* instead of just one ssh/config para, you now have two (assuming that the
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remote user on both machines is called "git"):
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host gitolite
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user git
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hostname server
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identityfile ~/.ssh/sitaram
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host gitolite2
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user git
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hostname server2
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identityfile ~/.ssh/sitaram
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* now access one server's repos as `gitolite:reponame.git` and the other
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server's repos as `gitolite2:reponame.git`.
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<a name="shell"></a>
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### giving shell access to gitolite users
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We've managed (thanks to an idea from Jesse Keating) to make it possible for a
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single key to allow both gitolite access *and* shell access.
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This is done by:
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* (**on the server**) listing all such users in a variable called
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`$SHELL_USERS` in the `~/.gitolite.rc` file. For example:
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$SHELL_USERS = "alice bob";
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(Note the syntax: a space separated list of users in one string variable).
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* (**on your client**) make at least a dummy change to your clone of the
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gitolite-admin repo and push it.
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**IMPORTANT UPGRADE NOTE**: a previous implementation of this feature worked
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by adding people to a special group (`@SHELL`) in the *config* file. This
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meant that anyone with gitolite-admin repo write access could add himself to
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the `@SHELL` group and push, thus obtaining shell.
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This is not a problem for most setups, but if someone wants to separate these
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two privileges (the right to push the admin repo and the right to get a shell)
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then it does pose a problem. Since the "rc" file can only be edited by
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someone who already has shell access, we now use that instead, even though
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this forces a change in the syntax.
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To migrate from the old scheme to the new one, add a new variable
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`$SHELL_USERS` to `~/.gitolite.rc` on the server with the appropriate names in
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it. **It is best to do this directly on the server *before* upgrading to this
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version.** (After the upgrade is done and tested you can remove the `@SHELL`
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lines from the gitolite config file).
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