I created the private repo examplesite/myprivaterepo using the Github UI from my browser.
Then I went to my go directory (on the desktop) and cloned it:
$ cd $GOPATH
$ go get github.com/examplesite/myprivaterepo
So far so good. Created the file scheduler.go, added to repo, and pushed.
$ vim scheduler.go
$ git add scheduler.go
$ git commit
$ git push
Everythng's OK. But when I went to a clean laptop and tried to clone the repo, I got an error:
# Now on laptop, which doesn't yet know about the repo
$ cd $GOPATH
$ go get github.com/examplesite/myprivaterepo
# At this point it should ask for my user ID and password ,right? But it doesn't.
# Instead, this error occurs:
cd .; git clone https://github.com/examplesite/myprivaterepo /Users/tom/go/src/github.com/examplesite/myprivaterepo
Cloning into '/Users/tom/go/src/github.com/examplesite/myprivaterepo'...
fatal: could not read Username for 'https://github.com': terminal prompts disabled
package github.com/examplesite/myprivaterepo: exit status 128
Why is my laptop hating on my own repo and how can I get it to accept its fate? Thanks.
CodePudding user response:
I found this extremely helpful, and it solved my problem. This command will allow your 2FA to do its thing (and save you the trouble of entering your username and password):
For Github:
git config --global --add url."[email protected]:".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
For Gitlab:
git config --global --add url."[email protected]:".insteadOf "https://gitlab.com/"
Source: http://albertech.blogspot.com/2016/11/fix-git-error-could-not-read-username.html
If you're not using 2FA, you can still use SSH and this will work.
Resulting .gitconfig
will be like:
[url "[email protected]:"]
insteadOf = https://github.com/
CodePudding user response:
go get disables the "terminal prompt" by default. This can be changed by setting an environment variable of git:
env GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT=1 go get github.com/examplesite/myprivaterepo
CodePudding user response:
It complains because it needs to use ssh
instead of https
but your git is still configured with https. so basically as others mentioned previously you need to either enable prompts or to configure git to use ssh
instead of https
. a simple way to do this by running the following:
git config --global --add url."[email protected]:".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
or if you already use ssh
with git
in your machine, you can safely edit ~/.gitconfig
and add the following line at the very bottom
Note: This covers all SVC, source version control, that depends on what you exactly use, github, gitlab, bitbucket)
# Enforce SSH
[url "ssh://[email protected]/"]
insteadOf = https://github.com/
[url "ssh://[email protected]/"]
insteadOf = https://gitlab.com/
[url "ssh://[email protected]/"]
insteadOf = https://bitbucket.org/
If you want to keep password pompts disabled, you need to cache password. For more information on how to cache your github password on mac, windows or linux, please visit this page.
For more information on how to add ssh to your github account, please visit this page.
Also, more importantly, if this is a private repository for a company or for your self, you may need to skip using proxy or checksum database for such repos to avoid exposing them publicly.
To do this, you need to set GOPRIVATE
environment variable that controls which modules the go command considers to be private (not available publicly) and should therefore NOT use the proxy or checksum database.
The variable is a comma-separated list of patterns (same syntax of Go's path.Match
) of module path prefixes. For example,
export GOPRIVATE=*.corp.example.com,github.com/mycompany/*
Or
go env -w GOPRIVATE=github.com/mycompany/*
- For more information on how to solve private packages/modules checksum validation issues, please read this article.
- For more information about go 13 modules and new enhancements, please check out Go 1.13 Modules Release notes.
One last thing not to forget to mention, you can still configure go get
to authenticate and fetch over https
, all you need to do is to add the following line to $HOME/.netrc
machine github.com login USERNAME password APIKEY
- For GitHub accounts, the password can be a personal access tokens.
- For more information on how to do this, please check Go FAQ page.
I hope this helps the community and saves others' time to solve described issues quickly. please feel free to leave a comment in case you want more support or help.
CodePudding user response:
1st -- go get
will refuse to authenticate on the command line. So you need to cache the credentials in git. Because I use osx I can use osxkeychain credential helper.
2nd For me, I have 2FA enabled and thus could not use my password to auth. Instead I had to generate a personal access token to use in place of the password.
- setup osxkeychain credential helper https://help.github.com/articles/caching-your-github-password-in-git/
- If using TFA instead of using your password, generate a personal access token with repo scope https://github.com/settings/tokens
- git clone a private repo just to make it cache the password
git clone https://github.com/user/private_repo
and used your github.com username for username and the generated personal access token for password. Removed the just cloned repo and retest to ensure creds were cached --
git clone https://github.com/user/private_repo
and this time wasnt asked for creds.- go get will work with any repos that the personal access token can access. You may have to repeat the steps with other accounts / tokens as permissions vary.
CodePudding user response:
From go 1.13 onwards, if you had already configured your terminal with the git credentials and yet facing this issue, then you could try setting the GOPRIVATE
environment variable. Setting this environment variable solved this issue for me.
export GOPRIVATE=github.com/{organizationName/userName of the package}/*
CodePudding user response:
If you just want go get
to work real fast, and move along with your work...
Just export GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT=1
$ export GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT=1
$ go get [whatever]
It will now prompt you for a user/pass for the rest of your shell session. Put this in your .profile
or setup git
as above for a more permanent solution.
CodePudding user response:
Add this is your bash_profile:
export GOPRIVATE=github.com/your-organization/*
Then run:
git config --global --add url."[email protected]:".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
CodePudding user response:
While there are a lot of answers around using SSH authentication for GitHub, the question pertains to the correct usage for go modules. To this end, Luna Lovegood provides the right answer here.
To reiterate, by default Go tries to use a public repository to download packages. We need to specify that it authenticate using SSH for private repos. And to do this, the following can be used:
go env -w GOPRIVATE=github.com/{your-username}/{your-lib}
.
.
go mod vendor # this will now work for your private lib
Glob patterns also work, so if you have multiple private repositories, you can add
go env -w GOPRIVATE=github.com/{your-username}/*
Edit: Correct wording.
CodePudding user response:
If you configure your gitconfig with this option, you will later have a problem cloning other repos of GitHub
git config --global --add url. "[email protected]". Instead, "https://github.com/"
Instead, I recommend that you use this option
echo "export GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT=1" >> ~/.bashrc || ~/.zshrc
and do not forget to generate an access token from your private repository. When prompted to enter your password, just paste the access token. Happy clone :)
CodePudding user response:
I tried adding this command
export GOPRIVATE=github.com/{private_reponame}/*
and it worked for me
CodePudding user response:
I had the same problem on windows "error: failed to execute prompt script (exit code 1) fatal: could not read Username for 'https://github.com': No error" trying to login to github through the login dialog. When I canceled the dialog git asked me for login and password in the command line and it worked fine.
CodePudding user response:
I faced this error terminal prompts disabled
after changing my credentials, Carthage failed to update the dependencies and show this error on terminal.
I just did the simple following steps and it's started working...
- Remove old credentials from
keychain access
- Tried to clone the same repo in different location.
- It asked for credentials (username password) to set.
- And then Carthage update worked as before.
CodePudding user response:
Another option is to add the credentials as part of the URL.
To access a repository on GitLab, for example, I use this format for the URL:
https://<user>:<access-token>@<gitlab-server>/<path-to-repo>.git