What are SSH keys
Prerequisites
Supported SSH key types
See if you have an existing SSH key pair
Generate an SSH key pair
Generate an SSH key pair for a FIDO2 hardware security key
Generate an SSH key pair with a password manager
Add an SSH key to your GitLab account
Verify that you can connect
Use different keys for different repositories
View your account’s SSH keys
Use different accounts on a single GitLab instance
Configure two-factor authentication (2FA)
Use EGit on Eclipse
Use SSH on Microsoft Windows
Overriding SSH settings on the GitLab server
Troubleshooting
Use SSH keys to communicate with GitLab
Git is a distributed version control system, which means you can work locally,
then share or
push
your changes to a server. In this case, the server you push to is GitLab.
GitLab uses the SSH protocol to securely communicate with Git.
When you use SSH keys to authenticate to the GitLab remote server,
you don’t need to supply your username and password each time.
SSH uses two keys, a public key and a private key.
You cannot expose data by uploading your public key. When you need to copy or upload your SSH public key, make sure you do not accidentally copy or upload your private key instead.
You can use your private key to
sign commits
,
which makes your use of GitLab and your data even more secure.
This signature then can be verified by anyone using your public key.
For details, see
Asymmetric cryptography, also known as public-key cryptography
.
Prerequisites
To use SSH to communicate with GitLab, you need:
To view the version of SSH installed on your system, run
ssh -V
.
To communicate with GitLab, you can use the following SSH key types:
Administrators can
restrict which keys are permitted and their minimum lengths
.
ED25519 SSH keys
The book
Practical Cryptography With Go
suggests that
ED25519
keys are more secure and performant than RSA keys.
OpenSSH 6.5 introduced ED25519 SSH keys in 2014, and they should be available on most
operating systems.
ED25519_SK SSH keys
Introduced
in GitLab 14.8.
To use ED25519_SK SSH keys on GitLab, your local client and GitLab server
must have
OpenSSH 8.2
or later installed.
ECDSA_SK SSH keys
Introduced
in GitLab 14.8.
To use ECDSA_SK SSH keys on GitLab, your local client and GitLab server
must have
OpenSSH 8.2
or later installed.
RSA SSH keys
Available documentation suggests ED25519 is more secure than RSA.
If you use an RSA key, the US National Institute of Science and Technology in
Publication 800-57 Part 3 (PDF)
recommends a key size of at least 2048 bits. The default key size depends on your version of
ssh-keygen
.
Review the
man
page for your installed
ssh-keygen
command for details.
See if you have an existing SSH key pair
Before you create a key pair, see if a key pair already exists.
-
Go to your home directory.
-
Go to the
.ssh/
subdirectory. If the
.ssh/
subdirectory doesn’t exist,
you are either not in the home directory, or you haven’t used
ssh
before.
In the latter case, you need to
generate an SSH key pair
.
-
See if a file with one of the following formats exists:
|
Algorithm
|
Public key
|
Private key
|
|
ED25519 (preferred)
|
id_ed25519.pub
|
id_ed25519
|
|
ED25519_SK
|
id_ed25519_sk.pub
|
id_ed25519_sk
|
|
ECDSA_SK
|
id_ecdsa_sk.pub
|
id_ecdsa_sk
|
|
RSA (at least 2048-bit key size)
|
id_rsa.pub
|
id_rsa
|
|
DSA (deprecated)
|
id_dsa.pub
|
id_dsa
|
|
ECDSA
|
id_ecdsa.pub
|
id_ecdsa
|
Generate an SSH key pair
If you do not have an existing SSH key pair, generate a new one:
-
Open a terminal.
-
Run
ssh-keygen -t
followed by the key type and an optional comment.
This comment is included in the
.pub
file that’s created.
You may want to use an email address for the comment.
For example, for ED25519:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C "<comment>"
For 2048-bit RSA:
-
Specify a
passphrase
:
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
A confirmation is displayed, including information about where your files are stored.
A public and private key are generated.
Add the public SSH key to your GitLab account
and keep the private key secure.
If you did not save your SSH key pair in the default directory,
configure your SSH client to point to the directory where the private key is stored.
Open a terminal and run this command:
eval $(ssh-agent -s)
ssh-add <directory to private SSH key>
Save these settings in the ~/.ssh/config file. For example:
# GitLab.com
Host gitlab.com
PreferredAuthentications publickey
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/gitlab_com_rsa
# Private GitLab instance
Host gitlab.company.com
PreferredAuthentications publickey
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/example_com_rsa
For more information on these settings, see the
man ssh_config
page in the SSH configuration manual.
Public SSH keys must be unique to GitLab because they bind to your account.
Your SSH key is the only identifier you have when you push code with SSH.
It must uniquely map to a single user.
Update your SSH key passphrase
You can update the passphrase for your SSH key:
Open a terminal and run this command:
ssh-keygen -p -f /path/to/ssh_key
At the prompts, enter the passphrase and then press Enter.
If your version of OpenSSH is between 6.5 and 7.8, you can save your private
RSA SSH keys in a more secure OpenSSH format by opening a terminal and running
this command:
Alternatively, you can generate a new RSA key with the more secure encryption format with
the following command:
To generate ED25519_SK or ECDSA_SK SSH keys, you must use OpenSSH 8.2 or later:
-
Insert a hardware security key into your computer.
-
Open a terminal.
-
Run
ssh-keygen -t
followed by the key type and an optional comment.
This comment is included in the
.pub
file that’s created.
You may want to use an email address for the comment.
For example, for ED25519_SK:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519-sk -C "<comment>"
For ECDSA_SK:
ssh-keygen -t ecdsa-sk -C "<comment>"
If your security key supports FIDO2 resident keys, you can enable this when
creating your SSH key:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519-sk -O resident -C "<comment>"
-O resident
indicates that the key should be stored on the FIDO authenticator itself.
Resident key is easier to import to a new computer because it can be loaded directly
from the security key by
ssh-add -K
or
ssh-keygen -K
.
-
Press
Enter
. Output similar to the following is displayed:
Generating public/private ed25519-sk key pair.
You may need to touch your authenticator to authorize key generation.
Touch the button on the hardware security key.
-
Accept the suggested filename and directory:
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/user/.ssh/id_ed25519_sk):
Specify a passphrase:
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
A confirmation is displayed, including information about where your files are stored.
A public and private key are generated.
Add the public SSH key to your GitLab account
.
Generate an SSH key pair with a password manager
You can use
1Password
and the
1Password browser extension
to either:
-
Automatically generate a new SSH key.
-
Use an existing SSH in your 1Password vault to authenticate with GitLab.
-
Sign in to GitLab.
-
On the top bar, in the upper-right corner, select your avatar.
-
Select
Edit profile
.
-
On the left sidebar, select
SSH Keys
.
-
Select
Key
, and you should see the 1Password helper appear.
-
Select the 1Password icon and unlock 1Password.
-
You can then select
Create SSH Key
or select an existing SSH key to fill in the public key.
-
In the
Title
box, type a description, like
Work Laptop
or
Home Workstation
.
-
Optional. Select the
Usage type
of the key. It can be used either for
Authentication
or
Signing
or both.
Authentication & Signing
is the default value.
-
Optional. Update
Expiration date
to modify the default expiration date.
-
Select
Add key
.
For more information about using 1Password with SSH keys, see the
1Password documentation
.
Add an SSH key to your GitLab account
To use SSH with GitLab, copy your public key to your GitLab account:
Copy the contents of your public key file. You can do this manually or use a script.
For example, to copy an ED25519 key to the clipboard:
macOS
tr -d '\n' < ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub | pbcopy
Linux
(requires the
xclip
package)
xclip -sel clip < ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub
Git Bash on Windows
cat ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub | clip
Replace
id_ed25519.pub
with your filename. For example, use
id_rsa.pub
for RSA.
-
Sign in to GitLab.
-
On the top bar, in the upper-right corner, select your avatar.
-
Select
Edit profile
.
-
On the left sidebar, select
SSH Keys
.
-
In the
Key
box, paste the contents of your public key.
If you manually copied the key, make sure you copy the entire key,
which starts with
ssh-rsa
,
ssh-dss
,
ecdsa-sha2-nistp256
,
ecdsa-sha2-nistp384
,
ecdsa-sha2-nistp521
,
ssh-ed25519
,
sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com
, or
sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com
, and may end with a comment.
-
In the
Title
box, type a description, like
Work Laptop
or
Home Workstation
.
-
Optional. Select the
Usage type
of the key. It can be used either for
Authentication
or
Signing
or both.
Authentication & Signing
is the default value.
-
Optional. Update
Expiration date
to modify the default expiration date.
-
GitLab 13.12 and earlier, the expiration date is informational only. It doesn’t prevent
you from using the key. Administrators can view expiration dates and use them for
guidance when
deleting keys
.
-
GitLab checks all SSH keys at 02:00 AM UTC every day. It emails an expiration notice for all SSH keys that expire on the current date. (
Introduced
in GitLab 13.11.)
-
GitLab checks all SSH keys at 01:00 AM UTC every day. It emails an expiration notice for all SSH keys that are scheduled to expire seven days from now. (
Introduced
in GitLab 13.11.)
-
Select
Add key
.
Verify that you can connect
Verify that your SSH key was added correctly.
The following commands use the example hostname
gitlab.example.com
. Replace this example hostname with your GitLab instance’s hostname, for example,
git@gitlab.com
.
-
To ensure you’re connecting to the correct server, check the server’s SSH host keys fingerprint. For:
-
GitLab.com, see the
SSH host keys fingerprints
documentation.
-
GitLab.com or another GitLab instance, see
gitlab.example.com/help/instance_configuration#ssh-host-keys-fingerprints
where
gitlab.example.com
is
gitlab.com
(for
GitLab.com) or the address of the GitLab instance.
-
Open a terminal and run this command, replacing
gitlab.example.com
with your
GitLab instance URL:
ssh -T git@gitlab.example.com
If this is the first time you connect, you should verify the
authenticity of the GitLab host. If you see a message like:
The authenticity of host 'gitlab.example.com (35.231.145.151)' can't be established.
ECDSA key fingerprint is SHA256:HbW3g8zUjNSksFbqTiUWPWg2Bq1x8xdGUrliXFzSnUw.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added 'gitlab.example.com' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.
Type yes and press Enter.
-
Run the
ssh -T git@gitlab.example.com
command again. You should receive a
Welcome to GitLab,
@username
!
message.
If the welcome message doesn’t appear, you can troubleshoot by running
ssh
in verbose mode:
ssh -Tvvv git@gitlab.example.com
Use different keys for different repositories
You can use a different key for each repository.
Open a terminal and run this command:
This command does not use the SSH Agent and requires Git 2.10 or later. For more information
on
ssh
command options, see the
man
pages for both
ssh
and
ssh_config
.