Skip to main content
  1. About
  2. Stack Internal
The 2026 Annual Developer Survey is live— take the Survey today!

Return to Revisions

11 of 15
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
user avatar
user avatar

Update April 2013, git 1.8.3:

You now can use an encrypted .netrc (with gpg).

A new read-only credential helper (in contrib/) to interact with the .netrc/.authinfo files has been added.

That script would allow you to use gpg-encrypted netrc files, avoiding the issue of having your credentials stored in a plain text file.

Files with the .gpg extension will be decrypted by GPG before parsing.
Multiple -f arguments are OK. They are processed in order, and the first matching entry found is returned via the credential helper protocol.

When no -f option is given, .authinfo.gpg, .netrc.gpg, .authinfo, and .netrc files in your home directory are used in this order.

To enable this credential helper:

git config credential.helper '$shortname -f AUTHFILE1 -f AUTHFILE2'

(Note that Git will prepend "git-credential-" to the helper name and look for it in the path.)

# and if you want lots of debugging info:
git config credential.helper '$shortname -f AUTHFILE -d'
#or to see the files opened and data found:
git config credential.helper '$shortname -f AUTHFILE -v'

See a full example at "Is there a way to skip password typing when using https:// github"


Update late 2012, With git version 1.7.9+: This answer from Mark Longair details the credential cache mechanism which allows you to not store your password in plain text as shown below.


(Original answer)

You must define:

  • environment variable %HOME%
  • put a _netrc file in %HOME%

If you are using Windows 7

run the cmd type this:

setx HOME %USERPROFILE%

and the %HOME% will be set to 'C:\Users\"username"'

then go to it and make a file called '_netrc'

Note: for Windows, you need a '_netrc' file, not a '.netrc'.

Its content is quite standard (Replace the with your values):

machine <hostname1>
login <login1>
password <password1>
machine <hostname2>
login <login2>
password <password2>

Luke mentions in the comments:

Using the latest version of msysgit on Windows 7, I did not need to set the HOME environment variable. The _netrc file alone did the trick.

This is indeed what I mentioned in "Trying to "install" github, .ssh dir not there":
git-cmd.bat included in msysgit does set the %HOME% environment variable:

@if not exist "%HOME%" @set HOME=%HOMEDRIVE%%HOMEPATH%
@if not exist "%HOME%" @set HOME=%USERPROFILE%

爱国者 believes in the comments that "it seems that it won't work for http protocol"

However, I answered that netrc is used by curl, and works for http protocol, as shown in this example (look for 'netrc' in the page): . Also used with http protocol here: "_netrc/.netrc alternative to cURL".


A common trap with with netrc support on Windows is that git will bypass using it if an origin https url specifies a user name.

For example, if your .git/config file contains:

[remote "origin"]
 fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
 url = https://[email protected]/p/my-project/

Git will not resolve your credentials via _netrc, to fix this remove your username, like so:

[remote "origin"]
 fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
 url = https://code.google.com/p/my-project/
VonC
  • reputation score 1372765
  • 570 gold badges
  • 4812 silver badges
  • 5779 bronze badges

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /