GitPython and SSH Keys?

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生来不讨喜
生来不讨喜 2020-12-14 02:23

How can I use GitPython along with specific SSH Keys?

The documentation isn\'t very thorough on that subject. The only thing I\'ve tried so far is Repo(path)

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  • 2020-12-14 02:41

    Following worked for me on gitpython==2.1.1

    import os
    from git import Repo
    from git import Git
    
    git_ssh_identity_file = os.path.expanduser('~/.ssh/id_rsa')
    git_ssh_cmd = 'ssh -i %s' % git_ssh_identity_file
    
    with Git().custom_environment(GIT_SSH_COMMAND=git_ssh_cmd):
         Repo.clone_from('git@....', '/path', branch='my-branch')
    
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  • 2020-12-14 02:58

    Please note that all of the following will only work in GitPython v0.3.6 or newer.

    You can use the GIT_SSH environment variable to provide an executable to git which will call ssh in its place. That way, you can use any kind of ssh key whenever git tries to connect.

    This works either per call using a context manager ...

    ssh_executable = os.path.join(rw_dir, 'my_ssh_executable.sh')
    with repo.git.custom_environment(GIT_SSH=ssh_executable):
        repo.remotes.origin.fetch()
    

    ... or more persistently using the set_environment(...) method of the Git object of your repository:

    old_env = repo.git.update_environment(GIT_SSH=ssh_executable)
    # If needed, restore the old environment later
    repo.git.update_environment(**old_env)
    

    As you can set any amount of environment variables, you can use some to pass information along to your ssh-script to help it pick the desired ssh key for you.

    More information about the becoming of this feature (new in GitPython v0.3.6) you will find in the respective issue.

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  • 2020-12-14 03:00

    I'm on GitPython==3.0.5 and the below worked for me.

    from git import Repo
    from git import Git    
    git_ssh_identity_file = os.path.join(os.getcwd(),'ssh_key.key')
    git_ssh_cmd = 'ssh -i %s' % git_ssh_identity_file
    Repo.clone_from(repo_url, os.path.join(os.getcwd(), repo_name),env=dict(GIT_SSH_COMMAND=git_ssh_cmd))
    

    Using repo.git.custom_environment to set the GIT_SSH_COMMAND won't work for the clone_from function. Reference: https://github.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/issues/339

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  • 2020-12-14 03:06

    In case of a clone_from in GitPython, the answer by Vijay doesn't work. It sets the git ssh command in a new Git() instance but then instantiates a separate Repo call. What does work is using the env argument of clone_from, as I learned from here:

    Repo.clone_from(url, repo_dir, env={"GIT_SSH_COMMAND": 'ssh -i /PATH/TO/KEY'})
    
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  • 2020-12-14 03:06

    I've found this to make things a bit more like the way git works in the shell by itself.

    import os
    from git import Git, Repo
    
    global_git = Git()
    global_git.update_environment(
        **{ k: os.environ[k] for k in os.environ if k.startswith('SSH') }
    )
    

    It basically is copying the SSH environment variables to GitPython's "shadow" environment. It then uses the common SSH-AGENT authentication mechanisms so you don't have to worry about specifying exactly which key it is.

    For a quicker alternative which carries probably a lot of cruft with it, but it works too:

    import os
    from git import Git
    
    global_git = Git()
    global_git.update_environment(**os.environ)
    

    That mirrors your entire environment, more like the way a subshell works in bash.

    Either way, any future call to create a repo or clone picks up the 'adjusted' environment and does the standard git authentication.

    No shim scripts necessary.

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