9.7 KiB
ssh troubleshooting
Ssh has always been the biggest troublespot in all this. While gitolite makes it as easy as possible, you might still run into trouble sometimes.
In this document:
- ssh sanity checks
- explanation
- files on the server
- files on client
- why two keys on client
- more complex ssh setups
- two gitolite servers to manage?
- further reading
But before we get to all that, let's clarify that all this is applicable only to the gitolite admin. He's the only one who needs both a shell and gitolite access, so he has two pubkeys in play.
Normal users have only one pubkey, since they are only allowed to access gitolite itself. They do not need to worry about any of this stuff, and their repo urls are very simple, like:
git@my.git.server:reponame.git
.
ssh sanity checks
There are two quick sanity checks you can run:
- running
ssh gitolite
should get you a list of repos you have rights to access, as described here
- conversely,
ssh git@server
should get you a command line
If one or both of these does not work as expected, do this:
-
first, check that your
~/.ssh
has two public keys, like below:$ ls -al ~/.ssh/*.pub -rw-r--r-- 1 sitaram sitaram 409 2008-04-21 17:42 /home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa.pub -rw-r--r-- 1 sitaram sitaram 409 2009-10-15 16:25 /home/sitaram/.ssh/sitaram.pub
If it doesn't you have either lost your keys or you're on the wrong machine. As long as you have password access to the server you can alweys recover; just pretend you're installing from scratch and start over.
-
next, try running
ssh-add -l
. On my desktop the output looks like this:2048 63:ea:ab:10:d2:4f:88:f4:85:cb:d3:7d:3a:83:37:9a /home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa (RSA) 2048 d7:23:89:12:5f:22:4f:ad:54:7d:7e:f8:f5:2a:e9:13 /home/sitaram/.ssh/sitaram (RSA)
If you get only one line (typically the top one), you should ssh-add the other one, using (in my case)
ssh-add ~/.ssh/sitaram
.If you get no output, add both of them and check
ssh-add -l
again.If this error keeps happening please consider installing keychain or something similar, or add these commands to your bash startup scripts.
- Finally, make sure your
~/.ssh/config
has the requiredhost gitolite
para (see below for more on this).
Once these sanity checks have passed, things should be fine. However, if you
still have problems, make sure that the "origin" URL in any clones looks like
gitolite:reponame.git
, not git@server:reponame.git
.
explanation
Here's how it all hangs together.
files on the server
-
the authkeys file; this contains one line containing the pubkey of each user who is permitted to login without a password.
Pubkey lines that give shell access look like this:
ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC[snip]uPjrUiAUew== /home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa
On a typical server there will be only one or two of these lines.
Note that the last bit (
/home/sitaram/.ssh/id_rsa
) is purely a comment field and can be anything. Also, the actual lines are much longer, about 400 characters; I snipped 'em in the middle, as you can see.In contrast, pubkey lines that give access to git repos hosted by gitolite looks like this:
command="[some path]src/gl-auth-command sitaram",[some restrictions] ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC[snip]s18OnB42oQ== sitaram@sita-lt
You will have many more of these lines -- one for every pubkey file in
keydir/
of your gitolite-admin repo, with the corresponding username in place of "sitaram" in the example above.The "command=" at the beginning ensures that when someone with the corresponding private key logs in, they don't get a shell. Instead, the
gl-auth-command
program is run, and (in this example) is given the argumentsitaram
. This is how gitolite is invoked, (and is told the user logging in is "sitaram").
files on client
-
default keypair; used to get shell access to servers. You would have copied this pubkey to the gitolite server in order to log in without a password. (On Linux systems you may have used
ssh-copy-id
to do that). You would have done this before you ran the easy install script, because otherwise easy install won't run!~/.ssh/id_rsa ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
-
gitolite keypair; the "sitaram" in this is the 3rd argument to the
src/gl-easy-install
command you ran; the easy install script does the rest~/.ssh/sitaram ~/.ssh/sitaram.pub
-
config file; this file has an entry for gitolite access:
~/.ssh/config
To understand why we need that, let's step back a bit. Normally, you might expect to access gitolite repos like this:
ssh://git@server/reponame.git
But this won't work, because this ends up using the default keypair (normally), which gives you a command line. Which means it won't invoke the
gl-auth-command
program at all, and so none of gitolite's access control will work.You need to force ssh to use the other keypair when performing a git operation. With normal ssh, that would be
ssh -i ~/.ssh/sitaram git@server
but git does not support putting an alternate keypair in the URL.
Luckily, ssh has a very convenient way of capturing all the mundane information (username, hostname, port number (if it's not the default 22), and keypair to be used) in one "paragraph". This is what the para looks like for us (the easy install script puts it there the first time):
host gitolite user git hostname server identityfile ~/.ssh/sitaram
(The "gitolite" can be anything you want of course; it's like a group name for all the stuff below it). This ensures that typing
ssh gitolite
is equivalent to
ssh -i ~/.ssh/sitaram git@server
and therefore this:
git clone gitolite:reponame.git
now works as expected, invoking the special keypair instead of the default one.
why two keys on client
Why do I (the admin) need two different keypairs?
There are two types of access the admin will make to the server: a normal login, to get a shell prompt, and gitolite access (clone/fetch/push etc). The first access needs an authkeys line without any "command=" restrictions, while the second requires a line with such a restriction.
And we can't use the same key for both because there is no way to disambiguate them; the ssh server will always (always) pick the first one in sequence when the key is offered by the ssh client.
So the next question is usually "I have other ways to get a shell on that account, so why do I need a key for shell access at all?"
The answer to this is that the "easy install" script, being written for the most general case, needs shell access via ssh to do its stuff.
If you really, really, want to get rid of the extra key, here's a transcript that should have enough info to get you going (but it helps to know ssh well):
-
on "sitaram" user, on my workstation
cd ~/.ssh cp id_rsa sitaram cp id_rsa.pub sitaram.pub cd ~/gitolite-clone src/gl-easy-install -q git my.git.server sitaram
that last command produces something like the following:
you are upgrading from (unknown) to v0.80-6-gdde8c4e setting up keypair... ...reusing /home/sitaram/.ssh/sitaram.pub... creating gitolite para in ~/.ssh/config... finding/creating gitolite rc... installing/upgrading... Pseudo-terminal will not be allocated because stdin is not a terminal. [master (root-commit) e717a89] start 2 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) create mode 100644 conf/gitolite.conf create mode 100644 keydir/sitaram.pub cloning gitolite-admin repo... Initialized empty Git repository in /home/sitaram/gitolite-admin/.git/ fatal: 'gitolite-admin.git' does not appear to be a git repository fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
notice that the final step (the clone of the newly created gitolite-admin repo) failed, as expected
-
now log on to the git hosting account (
git@my.git.server
in this example), edit~/.ssh/authorized_keys
, and delete the line with the first occurrence of your key (this should be before the# gitolite start
line) -
now go back to your workstation and
git clone git@my.git.server:gitolite-admin
That should do it.
more complex ssh setups
What do you need to know in order to create more complex ssh setups (for instance if you have two gitolite servers you are administering)?
two gitolite servers to manage?
-
they can have the same key; no harm there (example, sitaram.pub)
-
instead of just one ssh/config para, you now have two (assuming that the remote user on both machines is called "git"):
host gitolite user git hostname server identityfile ~/.ssh/sitaram host gitolite2 user git hostname server2 identityfile ~/.ssh/sitaram
-
now access one server's repos as
gitolite:reponame.git
and the other server's repos asgitolite2:reponame.git
.
further reading
While this focused mostly on the client side ssh, you may also want to read this for a much more detailed explanation of the ssh magic on the server side.