Thanks Tim for that introduction to using ssh-agent as a wrapper for a
shell command. I had never seen that technique. Very nice!
Mark Waite
On Thu, Feb 8, 2018 at 1:29 PM Timothy Rice
wrote:
> Oops, sorry I didn't notice Mark's response before replying :D
>
> ~
Oops, sorry I didn't notice Mark's response before replying :D
~ Tim
> If you clone over ssh (ssh://username@hostname/repopath or user@hostname:
> repopath), then you can use a passphrase protected private key for that ssh
> connection. With a passphrase protected private key, only those who
Hi Maciej,
If I understand correctly what you are asking, I think you should be able
to use ssh-agent to store your personal ssh authentication in your own
shell, without that agent interfering with anyone else's.
A fact perhaps not widely known is that if you prefix any command with
On Thu, Feb 8, 2018 at 3:11 AM Maciej Ł wrote:
> Hi! How can I cache GIT credentials in scope of a terminal session? My use
> case is the following. Me and other developers share a single account on a
> remote Linux machine. In a home directory we share a GIT project with
>
Hi! How can I cache GIT credentials in scope of a terminal session? My use
case is the following. Me and other developers share a single account on a
remote Linux machine. In a home directory we share a GIT project with
application-specific configuration files. Sometimes we need to pull/push