解决:fatal: authentication failed for https

最近使用微软的 VSTS

www.visualstudio.com

代码托管后,在linux 环境拉取代码总是验证不成功。

解决办法:

Use Git Credential Managers to Authenticate to VSTS

VSTS | TFS 2018 | TFS 2017 | TFS 2015 | VS 2017 | VS 2015

Git Credential Managers simplify authentication with your VSTS/TFS Git repos. Credential Managers let you use the same credentials that you use for the VSTS/TFS web portal and support multi-factor authentication through Microsoft Account (MSA) or Azure Active Directory (AAD). In addition to supporting multi-factor authentication with VSTS, the credential managers also provide support two-factor authentication with GitHub repositories.

VSTS provides IDE support for MSA and AAD authentication through Team Explorer in Visual StudioIntelliJ and Android Studio with the VSTS Plugin for IntelliJ, and Eclipse (with the Team Explorer Everywhere plug-in). If your environment doesn't have an integration available, configure your IDE with a Personal Access Token or SSH to connect with your to your repos.

Install the Git Credential Manager

Windows

Download and run the latest Git for Windows installer, which includes the Git Credential Manager for Windows. Make sure to leave the Git Credential Manager installation option enabled when prompted.

Select Enable Git Credential Manager during Git for Windows install

macOS and Linux

Review the system and software requirements before installing the credential manager.

On macOS and Linux, there are several install options that use native package managers to install the credential manager. After installing the package for your platform, run the following command to configure Git to use the credential manager :

> git-credential-manager install

Using the Git Credential Manager

When you connect to a VSTS Git repository from your Git client for the first time, the credential manager prompts for your Microsoft Account or Azure Active Directory credentials. If your account has multi-factor authentication enabled, you are prompted to go through that experience as well.

Git Credential Manager prompting during Git pull

Once authenticated, the credential manager creates and caches a personal access token for future connections to the repo. Git commands that connect to this account won't prompt for user credentials until the token expires or is revoked through VSTS/TFS.

Getting help

You can open up and report issues with the Git Credential Manager for Windows on the project GitHub. Frequently Asked Questions for the Git Credential Manager for Windows are available in the online readme.

Manual installation steps for the Windows Git Credential Manager and the macOS and Linux Git Credential Manager are available. Use these steps to install the credential manager if the recommended steps above are not suitable for your environment.

Learn more

In addition to providing full source code, we've also documented how the credential manager integrates with Git. Refer to the MSDN blog posts on the macOS and Linux Git Credential Managerand the Windows Credential Manager. There is also an article on the project GitHub with information on the low-level internals of the Git Credential Manager for Windows.

反馈

/Git-Credential-Manager-for-Mac-and-Linux

Installation Instructions

This document explains how to obtain the Git Credential Manager for Mac and Linux (GCM4ML) and how to configure Git to use the GCM4ML as its credential helper.

System Requirements

Great care was taken to avoid using any features of Java that would impact compatibility with Java 6. If you find a compatibility issue, please report it and provide as many details about your platform as necessary to reproduce the problem.

  1. Mac OS X version 10.9.5 and up OR a recent GNU/Linux distribution.
  2. Java 6 and up.
  3. Git version 1.9 and up.

How to install

On Mac OS X, installing via Homebrew is highly recommended. On Linux, it is recommended to use Linuxbrew or an RPM-based package manager if you can.

If you can't use any of the package managers, you can also download git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar somewhere safe and stable, such as ~/git-credential-manager/, and then follow the instructions for automatic or manual configuration.

Installing on Mac using Homebrew or on Linux using Linuxbrew (recommended)

  1. Update the Homebrew/Linuxbrew formulae to make sure you have the latest versions:

    brew update
    
  2. Install the GCM4ML formula:

    brew install git-credential-manager
    
  3. Run the GCM4ML in install mode, which will check its requirements and then update the "global" Git configuration file (the one in your home folder):

    git-credential-manager install
    

Installing on Linux using RPM (recommended)

  1. Download git-credential-manager-2.0.3-1.noarch.rpm and copy the file somewhere locally.

  2. Download the PGP key used to sign the RPM.

  3. Import the signing key into RPM's database:

    sudo rpm --import RPM-GPG-KEY.txt
    
  4. Verify the GCM4ML RPM:

    rpm --checksig --verbose git-credential-manager-2.0.3-1.noarch.rpm
    

    ...you should see a line (among those there) that is equal to the following:

    V4 RSA/SHA256 Signature, key ID ba34dbc2: OK
    
  5. Install the RPM:

    sudo rpm --install git-credential-manager-2.0.3-1.noarch.rpm
    
  6. Run the GCM4ML in install mode, which will check its requirements and then update the "global" Git configuration file (the one in your home folder):

    git-credential-manager install
    

Installing on Mac or Linux without a package manager

Download git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar somewhere safe and stable, such as ~/git-credential-manager/

Automatic configuration (recommended)

  1. Run the GCM4ML in install mode, which will check its requirements and then update the "global" Git configuration file (the one in your home folder):

    java -jar /home/example/git-credential-manager/git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar install
    

Manual configuration

  1. Configure the credential.helper setting to launch Java with the absolute path to the JAR (make sure you surround the whole value with 'single quotes'):

    git config --global credential.helper '!java -Ddebug=false -Djava.net.useSystemProxies=true -jar /home/example/git-credential-manager/git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar'
    

How to enable alternate credential storage

On Linux, the GCM4ML stores credentials in the GNOME Keyring. If GNOME Keyring is unavailable for your Linux distribution, or you are running the GCM4ML via a secure shell (SSH) session, a Git setting can be used to opt into storing credentials unencrypted in a file under your home directory where presumably only you and root have read access.

To enable fallback storage of credentials in this file, run this Git configuration command:

git config --global credential.canFallBackToInsecureStore true

With this setting, the GCM4ML will fallback to storing your credentials in this file:

~/.VSTeamServicesAuthPlugin/insecureStore.xml

How to enable (or disable) debug mode

Debug mode will turn on tracing and assertions, producing a lot of output to stderr. Only turn this on temporarily, when trying to isolate a defect.

Automatic configuration (recommended)

  1. Run the GCM4ML in install mode with the debug property set to true (or false to disable):

    java -Ddebug=true -jar /home/example/git-credential-manager/git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar install
    

Manual configuration

  1. Retrieve the value of the credential.helper configuration:

    git config --global --get credential.helper git-credential-manager
    

    ...it should look like this:

    !java -Ddebug=false -Djava.net.useSystemProxies=true -jar /home/example/git-credential-manager/git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar
    
  2. Set a new value for the credential.helper configuration (essentially repeating the manual configuration installation step, being careful with quoting and spaces), changing the value of the debug property to true (or false to disable).

How to configure the proxy server

If your network does not allow a direct connection to remote hosts, you can configure the GCM4ML to perform requests through a web proxy.

Automatic configuration (recommended)

If you are running Gnome 2.x or greater, you can configure the proxy settings using the GUI and the GCM4ML will use those settings thanks to a JVM feature that's activated by setting the java.net.useSystemProxies system property to true (this is now done automatically when running the GCM4ML in install mode).

Manual configuration

If it's not possible to use the automatic proxy server configuration, you must set the appropriate networking properties. Aside from SOCKS proxy servers, which can have their credentials specified through specific properties, authenticated proxy servers are currently not supported.

  1. Retrieve the value of the credential.helper configuration:

    git config --global --get credential.helper git-credential-manager
    

    ...it should look like this:

    !java -Ddebug=false -Djava.net.useSystemProxies=true -jar /home/example/git-credential-manager/git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar
    
  2. Set a new value for the credential.helper configuration (essentially repeating the manual configuration installation step, being careful with quoting and spaces), adding the appropriate properties. For example, if you have a proxy server that can do HTTP and HTTPS, running on the host 192.168.0.117, listening on port 8123, then you would run the following (notice there's a pair of properties for http and one for https).

    git config --global credential.helper '!java -Ddebug=false -Dhttp.proxyHost=192.168.0.117 -Dhttp.proxyPort=8123 -Dhttps.proxyHost=192.168.0.117 -Dhttps.proxyPort=8123 -jar /home/example/git-credential-manager/git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar'
    

How to remove or uninstall

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Uninstall from Mac using Homebrew or Linux using Linuxbrew

  1. Run the GCM4ML in uninstall mode, which will update the "global" Git configuration file (the one in your home folder):

    git-credential-manager uninstall
    
  2. Uninstall the git-credential-manager package with Homebrew/Linuxbrew:

    brew uninstall git-credential-manager
    
  3. Archive the insecureStore.xml file from the git-credential-manager sub-folder under your HOME folder.

Uninstall from Linux using RPM

  1. Run the GCM4ML in uninstall mode, which will update the "global" Git configuration file (the one in your home folder):

    git-credential-manager uninstall
    
  2. Uninstall the git-credential-manager package with RPM:

    sudo rpm --erase git-credential-manager-2.0.3-1.noarch
    
  3. Archive the insecureStore.xml file from the git-credential-manager sub-folder under your HOME folder.

Automatic configuration removal (recommended)

  1. Retrieve the value of the credential.helper configuration:

    git config --global --get credential.helper git-credential-manager
    
  2. Run the GCM4ML in uninstall mode, which will update the "global" Git configuration file (the one in your home folder):

    java -jar /home/example/git-credential-manager/git-credential-manager-2.0.3.jar uninstall
    
  3. The value retrieved in step 1 contained the path to the JAR. You can go delete that JAR.

  4. Archive the insecureStore.xml file from the git-credential-manager sub-folder under your HOME folder.

Manual configuration removal

  1. Retrieve the value of the credential.helper configuration:

    git config --global --get credential.helper git-credential-manager
    
  2. Delete the value of the credential.helper configuration:

    git config --global --unset credential.helper git-credential-manager
    
  3. The value retrieved in step 1 contained the path to the JAR. You can go delete that JAR.

  4. Archive the insecureStore.xml file from the git-credential-manager sub-folder under your HOME folder.

原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/micro-chen/p/9171687.html