Before testing your SSH connection, you should have already:
You'll need to authenticate this action using your password, which is the SSH key passphrase you created earlier. See "Working with SSH key passphrases."
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Open TerminalTerminalGit Bash.
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Enter the following:
Shell ssh -T git@HOSTNAME # Attempts to ssh to GitHub Enterprise Server
ssh -T git@HOSTNAME # Attempts to ssh to GitHub Enterprise Server
You may see a warning like this:
> The authenticity of host 'HOSTNAME (IP ADDRESS)' can't be established. > ED25519 key fingerprint is SHA256:+DiY3wvvV6TuJJhbpZisF/zLDA0zPMSvHdkr4UvCOqU. > Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)?
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Verify that the fingerprint in the message you see matches your enterprise's public key fingerprint. If it does, then type
yes
:> Hi USERNAME! You've successfully authenticated, but GitHub does not > provide shell access.
You may see this error message:
... Agent admitted failure to sign using the key. debug1: No more authentication methods to try. Permission denied (publickey).
This is a known problem with certain Linux distributions. For more information, see "Error: Agent admitted failure to sign."
Note: The remote command should exit with code 1.
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Verify that the resulting message contains your username. If you receive a "permission denied" message, see "Error: Permission denied (publickey)."