Is there a way to configure my identity from inside Git-Gui, instead of Git-CMD? - git-gui

Is there a way to configure my identity from inside Git-Gui, instead of having to go through Git-CMD?
I know how to do it through CMD, as it literally tells you. I'm just wondering if I need to use the CMD.
When I tried to merge something with the GUI for the first time, it's asking me to run:
git config --global user.email johndoe#example.com
git config --global user.name "John Doe"

Yes, at least on version 0.21 you can do it by opening a git repository folder then going to Edit->Option, then edit your user name and email address in the GUI.

Related

How to fix multiple values error in git while configuring the name?

$ git config --global user.name "Amritjyot Singh"
warning: user.name has multiple values
error: cannot overwrite multiple values with a single value
Use a regexp, --add or --replace-all to change user.name.
How to use regexp to fix this problem?
I tried git config --global user.name "Amritjyot Singh"
Expected to configure my name in git bash but this error was shown
For some reason, you have multiple user.name configuration keys. Remove them all with:
git config --global --unset-all user.name
Then set it again:
git config --global user.name "Your Name"
To see where different values for a config parameter are defined :
$ git config --show-origin --get-all user.name
# sample output:
file:/home/wwhite/.gitconfig Walter White
file:.git/config Heisenberg
If you see several values coming from one single file:
file:/home/jack/.gitconfig Jack
file:/home/jack/.gitconfig Tyler Durden
you can either
edit the mentioned configuration file with a regular text editor, and delete the erroneous value,
or use :
git config [correct scope] --replace-all user.name "My Name"
where [correct scope] will probably be --global (if source is in $HOME/.gitconfig) or --local (<- same as empty string, if source is .git/config).
Run git config --global -e to edit the global config file. According to the warning and error messages, there are multiple values like this
[user]
name = foo
Find all of them, keep one and remove the others.

Personal Access Token not working on Linux

I am using Git on Linux.
I followed this to create a Personal Access Token but forgot to save it.
Therefore, when I was asked to enter the "password" again, I deleted the old PAT and created a new PAT. For some reason, the new token is rejected and I get
fatal: Authentication failed for 'https://github.com/username/***.git/'
When I look at the tokens page on github, this token says it was never used. What might be the issue here?
The issue might be with your current credential helper.
Type git config credential.helper to see which one is used.
Type:
printf "protocol=https\nhost=github.com"|git-credential-xxx erase
(Replace xxx by the credential helper name from the first command output)
That will clear out the cached credentials for https://github.com.
Then try again a git push, and see if it asks you for your credentials: enter your new PAT as password.
If you don't have a credential helper, I suggest installing microsoft/Git-Credential-Manager-Core (there is a Linux package).
Add a credential store, and you are set.
After discussion:
there was no credential helper
this is a personnal account (not a technical service one, used by multiple users)
the issue was with pasting the token
I would therefore use a store credential caching:
git config --global credential.helper 'store --file /home/<user>/.my-credentials
Then:
git ls-remote https://github.com/<user>/<repo>
That will trigger the prompt for your username and token.
Edit /home/<user>/.my-credentials and make sure the right token is in it.
Alternatively,
git config --global credential.helper 'store --file /home/<user>/.my-credentials'
and then:
git ls-remote https://<user>:<token>#github.com/<user>/<repo>
has worked.
I had to delete my token and create a new one and it worked for me

'Git: gpg failed to sign the data' in visual studio code

After a fresh Linux install I'm trying to set up my environment and I keep getting the Git: gpg failed to sign the data error upon committing changes locally. I'm using Visual Studio Code, proprietary, not opensource version.
.gitconfig:
[user]
name = djweaver-dev
email = djweaver#djweaver.dev
signingkey = 37A0xxxx...
[core]
excludesfile = /home/dweaver/.gitignore_global
[commit]
gpgSign = true
yikes. furthermore I can't find a way to copy the output log nor can I find where that log is so here is a pic:
Steps I have taken so far:
generated new key (RSA 4096) in gnugp
added signing key to global .gitconfig
set "git.enableCommitSigning": true in Visual Studio Code settings
cloned my repo from github
Typically when I commits in the past I would get a dialog box requesting GPG authentication upon commit. I do not get this now, just the error dialog.
UPDATE: Okay now I'm really confused. I restarted vscode (not the first time I've done this in this process) and voilà, it works. Only thing I can think of is maybe I biffed the directory somehow? Either way, it works now.
UPDATE: Oddly, I'm back to this same issue almost a month later after a fresh arch install. I've tried everything that I've been able to find on this site, and nothing works.
I've tried adding export GPG_TTY=$(tty) to .bash_profile, and also .bashrc
Git log:
Looking for git in: git
Using git 2.26.2 from git
> git rev-parse --show-toplevel
> git rev-parse --git-dir
Open repository: /home/dw/dev/website
> git status -z -u
> git symbolic-ref --short HEAD
> git rev-parse master
> git rev-parse --symbolic-full-name master#{u}
> git rev-list --left-right master...refs/remotes/origin/master
> git for-each-ref --format %(refname) %(objectname) --sort -committerdate
> git remote --verbose
Failed to watch ref '/home/dw/dev/website/.git/refs/remotes/origin/master', is most likely packed.
Error: ENOENT: no such file or directory, watch '/home/dw/dev/website/.git/refs/remotes/origin/master'
at FSWatcher.start (internal/fs/watchers.js:165:26)
at Object.watch (fs.js:1270:11)
at Object.t.watch (/usr/lib/code/extensions/git/dist/main.js:1:604919)
at T.updateTransientWatchers (/usr/lib/code/extensions/git/dist/main.js:1:83965)
at e.fire (/usr/lib/code/out/vs/workbench/services/extensions/node/extensionHostProcess.js:46:87)
at e.updateModelState (/usr/lib/code/extensions/git/dist/main.js:1:103179)
> git config --get commit.template
> git check-ignore -v -z --stdin
> git check-ignore -v -z --stdin
> git commit --quiet --allow-empty-message --file - -S
error: gpg failed to sign the data
fatal: failed to write commit object
> git config --get-all user.name
> git config --get-all user.email
Same config as last time, user.name and user.email both match each key I've been trying it with... user.signingkey matches. Not sure where else to go with this one, as I've tried it across newly initialized local repos as well as repos that I've pulled from github both with official MS vscode (AUR) and OSS version, in the vscode terminal emulator as well as gnome terminal with same results so it has to be either a git thing or a gnugp thing.
What I have noticed is that after committing without signing, it will work immediately after: I get prompted for my key passphrase the first time, then it works on subsequent commits until a seemingly random number of minutes later, it just doesn't work anymore and the process has to be repeated.
There were a few macos users posting about having a stalled gpg-agent running in the background and it fixed it for them, however, I am seeing:
[dw#dwLinux website]$ gpg-agent
gpg-agent[2870]: gpg-agent running and available
Whats interesting also is that by doing echo "test" | gpg --clearsign I get the same results: it works for a short period of time, then I can't sign anymore.
UPDATE
Okay so day number 2 of trying to fix this. To rule out the gpg-agent theory as described here I followed the instructions on how to reload gpg-agent using the $ gpg-connect-agent reloadagent /bye command demonstrated on the Arch Linux Wiki
This had no effect
So being that I can reproduce this problem across vscode official, oss code, and vscodium, as well as bash, I thought maybe this was a permissions related issue, as so many problems with linux typically are. I added my user to all kinds of groups, including root, and this also had no effect so I think I can safely rule out the following:
VS Code
GnuGP
gpg-agent
Linux permissions
So my next focus was the config files themselves, but as has been stated before the credentials match the key in .gitconfig and my .bash_profile has been correctly configured with export GPG_TTY=$(tty).
An interesting note on this from the official GnuPG docs shows a syntax discrepency between their way, and the way you are instructed to append this to .bash_profile on the GitHub docs here
From GnuPG: "The far most common reason for this is that the environment variable GPG_TTY has not been set correctly. Make sure that it has been set to a real tty device and not just to ‘/dev/tty’; i.e. ‘GPG_TTY=tty’ is plainly wrong; what you want is ‘GPG_TTY=tty’ — note the back ticks. Also make sure that this environment variable gets exported, that is you should follow up the setting with an ‘export GPG_TTY’"
As I understood $(whatever) in bash was to execute a command, but for safe measure I've appended .bash_profile using both ways and neither solved the issue.
One last thing
In this post the user talks about gpg-agent authentication not being available when daemonized and gpg access is being initiated by another application (such as an IDE like VSCode), which explains how I could temporarily sign commits after committing a random file or doing echo "test" | gpg --clearsign and being authenticated... but alas like most other 'solutions' to this topic, they reveal that all they had to do in the end was add export GPG_TTY=$(tty) to their .bash_profile, which I have already tried.
Where to go from here?
I still can't explain why it worked on my previous install, and frankly, not a whole lot has changed afaik. I typically do fresh installs often and keep a pretty minimal arch linux build with lts kernel each time w/base-devel and nodejs/python/git/vscode/firefox/discord is pretty much my entire workflow. I'm all out of ideas.
first make sure to add
export GPG_TTY=$(tty)
in your .bashrc
Apparently VSCode doesn't ask for the passphrase and that's why it gives an error.
I don't know the reason.
My personal solution do a console commit first or run the following line
echo "test" | gpg --clearsign
Edit
In order to avoid typing the passphrase on every commit, you can make GPG remember it for 8 hours or until the next reboot:
mkdir -p ~/.gnupg
echo "default-cache-ttl 28800" >> ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf
GitHub Guide
Maybe git cannot find gpg? That was my problem with working with VSCode and using Remote-Containers to create development containers. Try running this in the Terminal within VSCode (in the container)
git config --global --unset gpg.program
git config --global --add gpg.program /usr/bin/gpg
or wherever your gpg is located. You can find out by typing
which gpg
If that works then you can put it in your Dockerfile for your development container.
I had the same issue a few days ago while using VS Code with WSL. The problem is that VS Code doesn't load the .profile file (and all the environment variables in it) correctly (try to run this command but it doesn't get the correct result: echo $GPG_TTY). Fortunately, setting the "-l" option for shell args in VS Code preferences worked for me. This ensures that the .profile (or .zprofile) file is successfully loaded.
I added these lines to settings.json:
"terminal.integrated.shellArgs.linux": [
"-l"
]
Make sure to add export GPG_TTY=$(tty) in your .profile file and restart your terminal and VS Code.
Update: Since VSCode is deprecating the shellArgs oprion, use
the following snippet as an alternative.
"terminal.integrated.profiles.linux": {
"bash": {
"path": "bash",
"args": ["-l"],
"icon": "terminal-bash"
},
"zsh": {
"path": "zsh",
"args": ["-l"],
},
"fish": {
"path": "fish",
"args": ["-l"],
},
"tmux": {
"path": "tmux",
"args": ["-l"],
"icon": "terminal-tmux"
},
"pwsh": {
"path": "pwsh",
"args": ["-l"],
"icon": "terminal-powershell"
}
},
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.linux": "bash"
-l option is added to all terminal profiles above,
delete unused profiles and set your default profile at your wish.
I have same issue, and I have resolved it.
Background
macOS
GPG Suite to generate GPG key
pinentry-mac
How I solve this problem
I saw this answer, and followed it.
Get keys
gpg2 --list-keys
Result
/Users/xxuser/.gnupg/pubring.kbx
---------------------------------
pub dsa2048 2010-08-19 [SC] [expires: 2024-05-11]
85E38F69046BSDFB07B76D78F0500D026C4
uid [ unknown] GPGTools Team <team#gpgtools.org>
uid [ unknown] [jpeg image of size 6329]
sub rsa4096 2014-04-08 [S] [expires: 2024-05-11]
sub rsa4096 2020-05-11 [E] [expires: 2024-05-11]
pub rsa4096 2020-05-04 [SC] [expires: 2024-05-03]
B97E9964ACAD1928300D37CC8A9E3745558E41AF
uid [ unknown] GPGTools Support <support#gpgtools.org>
sub rsa4096 2020-05-04 [E] [expires: 2024-05-03]
pub rsa4096 2021-07-29 [SC] [expires: 2025-07-29]
926E268C01892E8A2FCCD2A101CEB6267272A9A5
uid [ultimate] xxuser <x#xxgolo.com>
sub rsa4096 2021-07-29 [E] [expires: 2025-07-29]
Since x#xxgolo.com is the email that I create secret for, 926E268C01892E8A2FCCD2A101CEB6267272A9A5 is the key code I need.
Let git user this key.
git config --global user.signingkey 926E268C01892E8A2FCCD2A101CEB6267272A9A5
Now it should work.
git commit -S -m "This is a signed commit"
note If you need it to work with Github, you need to add your public GPG key to Github, following this Guide.
Make sure echo "test" | gpg --clearsign runs successfully first before trying the below.
Very helpful to check what git commit is doing under the hood. Run the following commit with GIT_TRACE=1 as follow
GIT_TRACE=1 git commit -S -m "MESSAGE"
This will show what user name, email and key does git uses when committing.
In my case, I found that git was picking up the wrong user's and key details for signing the commit. I mainly intended to use the local config of the repo rather than the global and adding the following to the local git config (located at "REPO_PATH/.git/config") got signing the commit to work both in Terminal and VSCode
[user]
name = USER NAME
email = USER EMAIL
signingKey = SIGNING KEY
It can also be set with the following:
git config --local user.name "USER NAME"
git config --local user.email "USER EMAIL"
git config --local user.signingkey "USIGNING KEY"
I'm not sure if this is too late, but... I did find an immediate solution.
To see what user.name and user.email you have, run:
git config -l
You may notice two entries for user.name. You may have made the same mistake as me! I put my actual name in there instead of GitHub username, and there ended up being two entries of user.name! I just changed the global user.name back to my github username, like so...
git config --global user.name "ghusername"
Next, git commit, and it should work:
git commit -m "<YOUR MESSAGE>"
Let me know if this works for you, I want to know if it's the same problem.

unsure how to connect rstudio with gitlab?

I'm trying to set up RStudio with gitlab. I have never used gitlab before, so i'm following set up instructions found online.
I created my gitlab account and project without any issues. I then followed the instructions found here for connecting RStudio with gitlab:
https://www.enricodata.com/post/setup-gitlab-with-rstudio/
The instructions say:
"In Rstudio go to Terminal and paste the following:
git config - - global user.email “YOUR EMAIL”
git config - - global user.name “YOUR NAME”
git config remote.origin.url git#gitlab.com:Allerious/code project.git"
When i execute the first two lines of code it outputs this in the console:
I'm unsure if this means it has done what it's supposed to have done.
Note: I did change “YOUR EMAIL” and “YOUR NAME” when running the code.
When i execute the third line of code it outputs this:
I'm thinking i should be changing the directory path to something else, but i'm unsure how to do this and what it should be changed to.
Here's another screen shot:
Maybe i should be changing the directory to one of these?

Does user.name in Git need to match my GitHub username?

I am installing Git on an Ubuntu system. I need to set user.name. I already have a GitHub account. If my full name is John Doe, and I've set up my GitHub account with the username "Jon-D", do I need to use that name for the Git user.name or can I (should I) use my full name?
No, your user.name does not matter.
However your user.email should match one of the addresses in your GitHub settings.
git config --global user.email "YOUR EMAIL"
You can also keep your email private

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