Updated Setting up a Git server on Windows using Git for Windows and Win32_OpenSSH (markdown)

Yanbing 2017-09-27 13:07:20 -07:00
parent f8ee444f4e
commit 9dfa242fa2

@ -10,12 +10,9 @@
```
1. Restart sshd so the changes to the `Path` environment variable can take effect.
1. Create Windows users for all Git users.
1. Create a central Git repositories
* Go to where you want to create a central repo, `git clone --bare <source dir>` A directory with name `<source dir>.git` will be created. In it will be the .git contents of your source dir repo. for example:
1. Create a central Git repository. Go to where you want to create a central repo, `git clone --bare <source dir>`. A directory with name `<source dir>.git` will be created. In it will be the .git contents of your source dir repo. for example:
```
git clone --bare c:\git\newrepo.git
```
`git clone --bare c:\git\newrepo.git`
1. If you already have user private and public keys, copy the public key to C:\Users\{user}\.ssh\ and rename it to authorized_keys
## On Client
1. Set environment variable for git to use Win32_OpenSSH
@ -26,13 +23,13 @@
`ssh-add.exe <user priviate key>`
1. To check out a repository:
**Note that `git clone username@domain@servermachine:C:/test/myrepo.git` does not work due to [known issue](https://github.com/PowerShell/Win32-OpenSSH/issues/895). Work around it by following steps:
**Note that `git clone user@domain@servermachine:C:/test/myrepo.git` does not work due to [known issue](https://github.com/PowerShell/Win32-OpenSSH/issues/895). Work around it by following steps:
# initialize a local repo folder
git init mylocalrepo
cd mylocalrepo
# add the remote repro
git remote add origin username@domain@servermachine:C:/test/myrepo.git
git remote add origin user@domain@servermachine:C:/test/myrepo.git
# work around the known issue by launching powershell to run the git commands
git config --local remote.origin.uploadpack "powershell git-upload-pack"
git config --local remote.origin.receivepack "powershell git-receive-pack"