原文地址:https://confluence.atlassian.com/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=270827678
Up until this point, you have been using the secure hypertext transfer protocol (HTTPS) to communicate between your local system and Bitbucket. When you use HTTPS, you need to authenticate (supply a username and password) each time you take an action that communicates with the Bitbucket server. You can specify the username in the DVCS configuration file; you don't want to store your password there though where anyone can see it. So, this means you must manually type a password when you use HTTPS with your local repository. Who wants to do that? This page shows you how to use secure shell (SSH) to communicate with the Bitbucket server and avoid having to manually type a password.
Finally, setting up an SSH identity can be prone to error. Allow yourself some time, perhaps as much as an hour depending on your experience, to complete this page. If you run into issues, check out Troubleshoot SSH Issues for extra information that may help you along. You can even skip this whole page and continue to use HTTPS if you want.
Step 1. Read a quick overview of SSH concepts
To use SSH with Bitbucket, you create an SSH identity. An identity consists of a private and a public key which together are a key pair. The private key resides on your local computer and the public you upload to your Bitbucket account. Once you upload a public key to your account, you can use SSH to connect with repositories you own and repositories owned by others, provided those other owners give your account permissions. By setting up SSH between your local system and the Bitbucket server, your system uses the key pair to automate authentication; you won't need to enter your password each time you interact with your Bitbucket repository.
There are a few important concepts you need when working with SSH identities and Bitbucket
- You cannot reuse an identity's public key across accounts. If you have multiple Bitbucket accounts, you must create multiple identities and upload their corresponding public keys to each individual account.
- You can associate multiple identities with a Bitbucket account. You would create multiple identities for the same account if, for example, you access a repository from a work computer and a home computer. You might create multiple identities if you wanted to execute DVCS actions on a repository with a script – the script would use a public key with an empty passphrase allowing it to run without human intervention.
-
RSA (R. Rivest, A. Shamir, L. Adleman are the originators) and digital signature algorithm (DSA) are key encryption algorithms. Bitbucket supports both types of algorithms. You should create identities using whichever encryption method is most comfortable and available to you.
Step 2. Ensure you have an SSH client installed
To use SSH, you need an SSH client on your local system. If you know you have a client installed, skip this section. Otherwise do the following:
- Open a terminal on your local system.
-
Enter the following command to identify which version of SSH you have installed.
If SSH is installed, you see something similar to the following:myhost:~ manthony$ ssh -v OpenSSH_5.6p1, OpenSSL 0.9.8r 8 Feb 2011 usage: ssh [-1246AaCfgKkMNnqsTtVvXxYy] [-b bind_address] [-c cipher_spec] [-D [bind_address:]port] [-e escape_char] [-F configfile] [-I pkcs11] [-i identity_file] [-L [bind_address:]port:host:hostport] [-l login_name] [-m mac_spec] [-O ctl_cmd] [-o option] [-p port] [-R [bind_address:]port:host:hostport] [-S ctl_path] [-W host:port] [-w local_tun[:remote_tun]] [user@]hostname [command]
- If you have
ssh
installed, go to the next step.
If you don't havessh
installed, install it now. -
List the contents of your
~/.ssh
directory.
If you don't have an .ssh directory, don't worry, you'll create it the Step 3 section. If you have a.ssh
directory or you may see something like this:myhost:~ manthony$ ls -a ~/.ssh known_hosts
If you have defined a default identity, you'll see the two
id_*
files:myhost:~ manthony$ ls -a ~/.ssh . .. id_rsa id_rsa.pub known_hosts
In this case, the default identity used RSA encryption (
id_rsa.pub
). If you want to use an existing default identity for your Bitbucket account, skip the next section and go to enable SSH compression for mercurial.
Step 3. Set up your default identity
By default, the system adds keys for all identities to the /Users/yourname/.ssh
directory on Mac OSX, or /home/yourname/.ssh
on Linux. This procedure creates a default identity. If you have a default identity and you want to use it for Bitbucket, skip this step and go to step 4. If you have an existing default identity but you forgot the passphrase, you can also use this procedure to overwrite your default identity and create a fresh one.
Use the following procedure to create a new default identity.
- Open a terminal in your local system.
- Enter
ssh-keygen
at the command line.
The command prompts you for a file to save the key in. If the.ssh
directory doesn't exist, the system creates one for you. - Accept the default location.
-
Enter and re-enter a passphrase when prompted.
Unless you need a key for a process such as script, you should always provide a passphrase. The command creates your default identity with its public and private keys. The whole interaction will look similar to the following:myhost:~ manthony$ ssh-keygen Generating public/private rsa key pair. Enter file in which to save the key (/Users/manthony/.ssh/id_rsa): Created directory '/Users/manthony/.ssh'. Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): Enter same passphrase again: Your identification has been saved in /Users/manthony/.ssh/id_rsa. Your public key has been saved in /Users/manthony/.ssh/id_rsa.pub. The key fingerprint is: 4c:80:61:2c:00:3f:9d:dc:08:41:2e:c0:cf:b9:17:69 manthony@myhost.local The key's randomart image is: +--[ RSA 2048]----+ |*o+ooo. | |.+.=o+ . | |. *.* o . | | . = E o | | o . S | | . . | | . | | | | | +-----------------+
-
List the contents of
~/.ssh
to view the key files.ls -a ~/.ssh
Step 4. Start the ssh-agent and load your keys
If you are running OSX 10.6.8 or later you can skip this step. The OSX 10.6.8 system asks for your connection parameters the first time you try to establish a SSH connection. Then, it automatically starts the ssh-agent
for you. If you don't have OSX 10.6.8 or are running another Linux operating system, do the following:
Open a terminal window and enter the ps -e | grep [s]sh-agent
command to see if the agent is running:
myhost:~ manthony$ ps -e | grep [s]sh-agent 9060 ?? 0:00.28 /usr/bin/ssh-agent -l
If the agent isn't running, start it manually with the following command:
myhost:~ manthony$ ssh-agent /bin/bash
Load your new identity into the ssh-agent
management program using the ssh-add
command.
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa Enter passphrase for /Users/manthony/.ssh/id_rsa: Identity added: /Users/manthony/.ssh/id_rsa (/Users/manthony/.ssh/id_rsa) myhost:~ manthony$
Use the ssh-add
command to list the keys that the agent is managing.
$ ssh-add -l 2048 7a:9c:b2:9c:8e:4e:f4:af:de:70:77:b9:52:fd:44:97 /Users/manthony/.ssh/id_rsa (RSA)
Step 5. Enable SSH compression for Mercurial
When sending or retrieving data using SSH, Git does compression for you. Mercurial does not automatically do compression. You should enable SSH compression as it can speed up things drastically, in some cases. To enable compression for Mercurial, do the following:
- Open a terminal window.
- Edit the Mercurial global configuration file (
~/.hgrc
). -
Add the following line to the UI section:
ssh = ssh -C
When you are done the file should look similar to the following:
[ui] # Name data to appear in commits username = Mary Anthony <manthony@atlassian.com> ssh = ssh -C
- Save and close the file.
Step 6. Install the public key on your Bitbucket account
- Open a browser and log into Bitbucket.
- Choose avatar > Manage Account from the application menu.
The system displays the Account settings page. - Click SSH keys.
The SSH Keys page displays. It shows a list of any existing keys. Then, below that, a dialog for labeling and entering a new key. -
Back in your terminal window, copy the contents of your public key file.
For example, in Linux you cancat
the contents.cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
In Mac OSX the following command copies the output to the clipboard:
pbcopy < ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
-
Back in your browser, enter a Label for your new key, for example,
Default public key
. - Paste the copied public key into the SSH Key field:
- Press Add key.
The system adds the key to your account. Bitbucket sends you an email to confirm addition of the key.
Step 7. Change your repo from HTTPS to the SSH protocol
The URL you use for a repo depends on which protocol you are using, HTTPS or SSH. The Bitbucket repository Overview page has a quick way for you to see these URLS for your bb101repo
repo. On the repo's Overview page look for the Clone button.
Experiment for a moment, clicking back and forth between the SSH and the HTTPS protocol links to see how the URLs differ. The table below shows the format for each DVCS based on protocol.
|
SSH URL format
|
HTTPS URL format
|
---|---|---|
Mercurial | ssh://hg@bitbucket.org/ |
|
Git |
or
|
|
In the SSH format, the accountname
appears after git@bitbucket.org
or hg@bitbucket.org
. In HTTPS format, the accountname
beforegit@bitbucket.org
or hg@bitbucket.org
.
Make the change
Go to a terminal on your local system and navigate to your bb101repo-pratice
repo. Then, do the following for Git and Mercurial:
Git users do this:
-
View your current repo configuration.
You should see something similar to the following:myhost:bb101repo-practice manthony$ cat .git/config [core] repositoryformatversion = 0 filemode = true bare = false logallrefupdates = true ignorecase = true [remote "origin"] fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* url = https://newuserme@bitbucket.org/newuserme/bb101repo.git [branch "master"] remote = origin merge = refs/heads/master
As you can see, the
url
is using the HTTPS protocol. There are a number of ways to change this value, the easiest way is just to edit the repo's configuration file. - Edit the
~/repos/bb101repo-pratice/.git/config
file with your favorite editor. -
Change the
url
value to use the SSH format for that repo.
When you are done you should see something similar to the following:[remote "origin"] fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* url = git@bitbucket.org:newuserme/bb101repo.git
Mercurial users do this:
-
View your
myquotefork
repo configuration.
You should see something similar to the following:myhost:.hg manthony$ cat hgrc [paths] default = https://bitbucket.org/newuserme/myquotefork
- Edit the
~/repos/myquotefork/.hg/
hgrc file with your favorite editor. -
Change the
default
value to use the SSH format for that repo.
When you are done you should see something similar to the following:[paths] default = ssh://hg@bitbucket.org/newuserme/myquotefork
- Save and close the configuration file.
Step 8. Make a change under the new protocol
- Edit the
README
file in yourbb101repo-practice
repo. -
Add a new line to the file, for example:
Welcome to My First Repo ------------------------------- This repo is a practice repo I am using to learn bitbucket. You can access this repo with SSH or with HTTPS.
- Save and close the file.
-
Add and then commit your change to your local repo.
git add README git commit -m "making a change under the SSH protocol"
-
Push your changes.
The system warns you that it is adding the Bitbucket host to the list of known hosts.myhost:bb101repo-practice manthony$ git push Warning: Permanently added the RSA host key for IP address '207.223.240.182' to the list of known hosts. Counting objects: 5, done. Delta compression using up to 4 threads. Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done. Writing objects: 100% (3/3), 314 bytes, done. Total 3 (delta 1), reused 0 (delta 0) remote: bb/acl: newuserme is allowed. accepted payload. To git@bitbucket.org:newuserme/bb101repo.git d3bb337..f0b152f master -> master
- Open the repo Overview in Bitbucket to view your commit.
You are done!
You've completed this tutorial for Bitbucket. At this point, you should have a good beginners knowledge of what you can do in Bitbucket (You should also make sure you have checked https://tutorials.bitbucket.org to see your pull request changes incorporated.) If you are a Mac user, you might want to see SourceTree a Free Git and Mercurial GUI (Mac OSX). Windows users can try Sourcetree Git GUI on Windows.
The rest of the documentation has more topics and information that can help you make the most of Bitbucket. Please let us know what you thought of this tutorial by logging an issue or by sending an email. Of course, you can always contribute by commenting on or editing a page directly.