Git 2.34 brings support for signing commits with SSH key and having a SSH-compatible smartcard, I have to try this. It likely getting more common in the future doesn't hurt either and I have pgp-alt-wot which does about the same for PGP.
- GitHub, Giteas and GitLabs expose user public keys (without useful names) when
you append a
.keys
after their profile page - Good ideas are made to be copied, so maybe there will be more repositories like this 😉
I don't mean this to be used directly, only to be took inspiration from. See the first link in further reading.
mkdir -p ~/src/codeberg.org/Aminda
cd ~/src/codeberg.org/Aminda
git clone https://codeberg.org/Aminda/ssh-allowed_signers.git
git config --global gpg.ssh.allowedSignersFile ~/src/codeberg.org/Aminda/ssh-allowed_signers/allowed_signers
Git commands, such as git verify-commit --raw HEAD
or
git log --show-signature
, should now recognised commits signed with keys I
have allowed. In the last command it's fine to remove --global
to only affect
the single repository you are on (while I haven't tested this), should that
repository be something only I am signing in or something I need to verify
otherwise enough to list it here.
On the last command, git config
turns it into absolute path, while manually
edited .gitconfig
can literally have the above. I wonder if the command would
understand --
before the file, but not enough to actually try it 😃
- https://codeberg.org/AMinda/ssh-allowed_signers
- https://gitea.blesmrt.net/mikaela/ssh-allowed_signers
- https://github.com/mikaela/ssh-allowed_signers
- https://gitlab.com/mikaela/ssh-allowed_signers
- https://git.com.de/mikaela/ssh-allowed_signers & http://gitea.qzzf2qcfbhievvs5nzkccuwddroipy62qjocqtmgcgh75vd6w57m7yad.onion/Mikaela/ssh-allowed_signers
- Caleb Hearth: Signing Git Commits with Your SSH Key (web.archive.org) inspired me to try this
- Andrew Ayer: It's Now Possible To Sign Arbitrary Data With Your SSH Keys instructs on signing and verifying files outside of git
- 🥇
Gitea v1.16.0 brought support for SSH signed commits on 2022-01-30.
(tag)
- Their Git hosting comparison also includes SSH Signed Commits.
- The first release of Forĝejo was 1.18, so it had support since the beginning 🎉.
- 🥈 GitHub started supporting SSH signed commits on 2022-08-23.
- 🥉 GitLab 15.7 started supporting SSH signatures on 2022-12-22.