jacekpoz
7bde656c9f
so first when I wanted to configure ssh to use the correct keys by default I found some guide that used IdentitiesOnly yes so I used it too without even knowing what it does then later when I wanted to nix my ssh config I noticed that it's set to true and didn't know what it does so I read the manpage I wrote the description of the `indentitiesOnly` option of my wrapper module based on that but I didn't really understand what it actually does well, as you can see in the commit history, a day or two ago (forgot) I started using an ssh key to sign my commits and to make things even more convenient I moved all of my private ssh keys to my keepassxc database as attachments I tested it on my main laptop and everything worked fine but on that laptop all the keys were still in ~/.ssh as I didn't just want to immediately delete them and risk losing any well that's what hid this bug - on the main laptop when pushing, it just used the keys in ~/.ssh, which I don't have on this laptop (the one I take to classes) because, well, I did this not to have to copy both the keepassxc database and ~/.ssh between machines - I only copied the keepassxc database as it had all the keys in it well turns out with the config before this commit, it would only try to use keys in ~/.ssh which aren't - and won't - be here so it failed this option makes it actually use keys supplied by ssh-agent, which keepassxc acts as and is the only way to get them in the current setup |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
chmura | ||
del | ||
hape | ||
niks | ||
default.nix |