I'm trying to connect jenkins on a github repo.
When I specify the Repo URL jenkins return the following error message:
Failed to connect to repository: Command "git ls-remote -h git@github.com:adolfosrs/jenkins-test.git HEAD" returned status code 128: stdout: stderr: Host key verification failed. fatal: Could not read from remote repository. Please make sure you have the correct access rights and the repository exists.
When using the HTTPS:// Url jenkins returns:
Failed to connect to repository: Failed to connect to https://github.com/adolfosrs/jenkins-test.git (status = 407)
I could successfully clone the repo at the same machine where jenkins is running and I also run the git ls-remote -h git@github.com:adolfosrs/jenkins-test.git HEAD
command. So I have the right SSH at github.
The problem was that somehow I created the ssh files with the root user. So the files owner was root.
The solution was just change the ownership to the jenkins user.
chown jenkins id_rsa.pub
chown jenkins id_rsa
I had the exact same problem. The way I solved it on Mac is this:
This is a very tricky issue - even if you're familiar with how things are working in https with certificates (OTOH if you see my workaround, it seems very logical :)
If you want to connect to a GIT repository via http(s) from shell, you would make sure to have the public certificate stored (as file) on your machine. Then you would add that certificate to your GIT configuration
git config [--global] http.sslCAInfo "certificate"
(replace "certificate" with the complete path/name of the PEM file :)
For shell usage you would as well eg supply a '.netrc' provding your credentials for the http-server login. Having done that, you shall be able to do a 'git clone https://...' without any interactive provisioning of credentials.
However, for the Jenkins-service it's a bit different ... Here, the jenkins process needs to be aware of the server certificate - and it doesn't use the shell settings (in the meaning of the global git configuration file '.gitconfig') :P
What I needed to do is to add another parameter to the startup options of Jenkins.
... -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore="keystore" ...
(replace "keystore" with the complete path/name like explained below :)
Now copy the keystore file of your webserver holding the certificate to some path (I know this is a dirty hack and not exactly secure :) and refer to it with the '-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=' parameter.
Now the Jenkins service will accept the certificate from the webserver providing the repository via https. Configure the GIT repository URL like
Thus what I describe is to be seen as a workaround ... until a properly working credentials helper plugin is provided. IMHO this plugin (in its current version 1.9.4) is buggy.
I could never get the credentials-helper to work from Jenkins no matter what I tried :( At best I got to see some errors about the not accessible temporary credential helper file, etc. You can see lots of bugs reported about it in the Jenkins JIRA, but no fix.
So if somebody got it to work okay, please share the knowledge ...
PS: Using the Jenkins plugins in the following versions:
Credentials plugin 1.9.4, GIT client plugin 1.6.1, Jenkins GIT plugin 2.0.1
I faced a similar issue when I tried to connect jenkins in my Windows server with my private GIT repo. Following is the error returned in the source code management section of Jenkins job
Failed to connect to repository : Command "git.exe ls-remote -h ssh://git@my_server/repo.git HEAD" returned status code 128: stdout: stderr: Load key "C:\\Windows\\TEMP\\ssh4813927591749610777.key": invalid format git@my_server: Permission denied (publickey). fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
Please make sure you have the correct access rights and the repository exists.
This error is thrown because jenkins is not able to pick the private ssh key from its user directory. I solved this in the following manner
In the jenkins job, fill up the following info under Source Code Management
Repositories
Repository URL: ssh://git@my_server/repo.git
Credentials: -none-
In my setup jenkins is running under local system account, so the user directory is C:\\Windows\\System32\\config\\systemprofile
(This is the important thing in this setup that is not very obvious).
Now create ssh private and public keys using ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "key label"
via git bash
shell. The ssh private and public keys go under .ssh directory of your logged in user directory. Just copy the .ssh folder and paste it under C:\\Windows\\System32\\config\\systemprofile
Add your public key to your GIT server account. Run the jenkins job and now you should be able to connect to the GIT account via ssh from jenkins.
在我们的例子中, git
必须安装在 Jenkins 服务器上。
Check with below settings. That always work for me.
Jenkins Configuration :
1) Check whether git executable is appropriately specified
2) Provide SSH repository link git@blahblah
3) Under credentials >> Select Username and Authentication key (go to your server, Generate SSH keys ssh-keygen... Copy keys to JENKINS_HOME/,ssh) You should be able to connect to your GIT repository from Jenkins
On Ubuntu, placed your id_rsa
and id_rsa.pub
files in /var/lib/jenkins/.ssh
Make Jenkins own them sudo chown -R jenkins /var/lib/jenkins/.ssh/
Make sure that Jenkins key is added as deploy key with RW access in GitHub (or similar) - use the id_rsa.pub
key for this.
Now everything should jive with the SCM Sync Plugin.
Jenkins runs as another user, not as your ordinary login. So, do as this to solve the ssh problem:
su jenkins
(you may first have to do sudo passwd jenkins
to be able to set the password for jenkins. I couldn't find the default...)ssh-keygen
id_rsa.pub
) to your github account (or wherever)known_hosts
which is neccessary to do. Now you can remove the cloned repo again if you wish.Let me add here that one very minor issue that could generate this type of error is the missing .git
extension in the repository URL. Ensure you enter the fully qualified URL ending with .git
. I use bitbucket so what I do do is do click 'clone' and the fully qualified URL is automatically generated for me. There is a similar approach with github.
In my case, I edited the known_hosts file with root user. So it changed the file ownership to root and jenkins user started throwing "git@github.com:xxxxxx/xxxx.git HEAD" returned status code 128: stdout: stderr: Host key verification failed" error while cloning git image. Reverting the ownership resolved the issue.
Make sure that the RSA host key and the IP of the bitbucket server is added to the 'known hosts' file. The contents should look like
bitbucket.org,xx.xx.xx.xx ssh-rsa host_key
Remember to change ownership to Jenkins for all the files in /var/lib/jenkins/.ssh/
Not mentionned here so far, but this can come also from stash. We encountered the same issue, the root cause for our problem was that the stash instance we use for jenkins did crash. Restarting stash solved it in our case.
In my case I resolved this issue by
login
and password
)My environment was Jenkins installed in the Windows. The UI question was why the warning was placed before the tool to resolve it.
I resolved the same issue in the below steps:
If you are using dockerized Jenkins and github, then follow the steps below.
docker exec -it your-container-id bash
ssh-keygen
hit enter till the prompt is done.cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
For jenkins communication over SSH:
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