The visual studio stopped sending my commits to the bitbucket and this error appears
Error encountered while cloning the remote repository: Git faile
I just solved this same issue for myself in Visual Studio 2019.
In Tools -> Nuget Package Manager -> Package Manager Console
This command will update the GitForWindows version (as well as the Git Credentials manager) for you.
Install-Package GitForWindows -Version 2.23.0
Reference: https://www.nuget.org/packages/GitForWindows/
I just experienced it this instant. so what i did is i tried to login to bitbucket, surpisingly it says "I cant login to using username please use email". then i did login using my email,then dig my bitbucket settings and found out that i can generate a password..
In addition to Ecd's answer (can't comment yet), when your password contains '@' sign (or any symbols used in url), you need to escape that character as it will result to 'Could not resolve host' by url encoding. %40 for the case of '@' sign.
I have added my password to remote URL. (Team Explorer > Repository Settings > Remotes) https://username:password@bitbucket.org/username/myproject.git. After that my problem has solved.
I had the same issue, I found an answer that worked for me here: https://github.com/github/VisualStudio/issues/949
Below are the steps mentioned to fix: It seems that the bundled Git-Credential-Manager-for-Windows/ in VIsual Studio 2017 is not the latest release. Downloading the latest release and putting it on top of the files in Visual Studio 2017 worked for me.
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Enterprise\Common7\IDE\CommonExtensions\Microsoft\TeamFoundation\Team Explorer\Git\mingw32\libexec\
(or wherever your 'missing' git-askpass.exe
resides).After chatting with Chad Boles (who maintains Team Explorer in Visual Studio), we worked out another option. This is preferred over overwriting the files in the Visual Studio installation as this may break future updates and can cause hard to debug issues in the future.
The trick is, until Visual Studio actually ships with Git credential Manager for Windows 1.18.4 or newer (it should after Visual Studio 2019 preview 4.0 or newer), to configure the specific installation location of the Git credential manager in your Git Global Config:
Update your global git config to point to a specific implementation of the Git credential Manager:
c:\>git config --global --edit
Update the [credential]
section to read:
[credential]
helper = C:\\\\Program\\ Files\\\\Git\\\\mingw64\\\\libexec\\\\git-core\\\\git-credential-manager.exe
Ensure the path points to where the latest Git Credential Manager can be found on your system. Mind all of the escapes needed to make paths work in the global git config.
Another option is to install the latest version of Git for Windows (which already ships with the Git credential Manager for Windows 1.18.4) and perform the initial clone and authentication from the command line. This will store the credentials in the Windows Credential Store, after which Visual Studio will happily pick them up.