I have a Bitbucket account for my 9-5 job and I also have a personal Bitbucket account. My goal is to be able to use both on the same computer. I have installed the latest git on a Windows 7 pc.
So currently everything with my companies Bitbucket account works fine, I can pull/push with no problems. I created a new ssh key using ssh-keygen and assigned a new name in my case "tech". But I am having issues on how to tell a local repo to use the new ssh key I created. I am assuming everytime I try to connect it uses the first ssh key.
I get the error:
$ git push conq: repository access denied. fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
I found some advice on the internet but it seems to relate to a linux/git setup, for example I can't find the "config" file on windows.
This blog post describes a straightforward way to add multiple ssh keys to a single computer and use one ssh key per a bitbucket account. It is much clearer than the official bitbucket documentation. To summarize:
First, make sure you have a default account setup through a tutorial like this one on Github.
For the second account:
Create a new ssh key: ssh-keygen -f ~/.ssh/
(On Windows you can copy the ssh key using ssh-keygen -f ~/.ssh/<your account name> -c "<your email>" | clip
or on Linux you can follow these instructions.)
Add the following to your ~/.ssh/config file. The first sets the default key for bitbucket.org. The second sets your second key to an alias bitbucket-account2 for bitbucket.org: Host bitbucket.org
Hostname bitbucket.org
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Host bitbucket-account2
Hostname bitbucket.org
PreferredAuthentications publickey
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/
That's it!
You may get this error if you haven't added the key to the key manager (ssh-agent). To do this:
ssh-add ~/.ssh/tech
By the way, if you have multiple Bitbucket accounts, you'll need a unique key for each account. You can't reuse keys.
As stated, you only need to generate your pubkey once - since you're already setup with BitBucket, where is your id_rsa
(or whatever you named yours) file? On our Windows installs, it's under the user's home directory in the hidden folder .ssh
. You should be able to create a config
file there.
You should generate public/private key pair only once. Then all hosts which have your public key do allow connections from you if you provide the private key.
You can add your company email in your personal bitbucket account, In bitbucket account manage page:
https://i.stack.imgur.com/VC7PV.png
You can login your personal email account, and access both personal projects and company projects in single bitbucket account, which is using only one ssh private key.
my@googmail.com is already in use by another user.
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