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GIT-CREDENTIAL(1)		  Git Manual		     GIT-CREDENTIAL(1)

NAME
       git-credential -	Retrieve and store user	credentials

SYNOPSIS
       'git credential'	(fill|approve|reject|capability)

DESCRIPTION
       Git has an internal interface for storing and retrieving	credentials
       from system-specific helpers, as	well as	prompting the user for
       usernames and passwords.	The git-credential command exposes this
       interface to scripts which may want to retrieve,	store, or prompt for
       credentials in the same manner as Git. The design of this scriptable
       interface models	the internal C API; see	credential.h for more
       background on the concepts.

       git-credential takes an "action"	option on the command-line (one	of
       fill, approve, or reject) and reads a credential	description on stdin
       (see INPUT/OUTPUT FORMAT).

       If the action is	fill, git-credential will attempt to add "username"
       and "password" attributes to the	description by reading config files,
       by contacting any configured credential helpers,	or by prompting	the
       user. The username and password attributes of the credential
       description are then printed to stdout together with the	attributes
       already provided.

       If the action is	approve, git-credential	will send the description to
       any configured credential helpers, which	may store the credential for
       later use.

       If the action is	reject,	git-credential will send the description to
       any configured credential helpers, which	may erase any stored
       credentials matching the	description.

       If the action is	capability, git-credential will	announce any
       capabilities it supports	to standard output.

       If the action is	approve	or reject, no output should be emitted.

TYPICAL	USE OF GIT CREDENTIAL
       An application using git-credential will	typically use git credential
       following these steps:

	1. Generate a credential description based on the context.

	   For example,	if we want a password for https://example.com/foo.git,
	   we might generate the following credential description (don't
	   forget the blank line at the	end; it	tells git credential that the
	   application finished	feeding	all the	information it has):

	       protocol=https
	       host=example.com
	       path=foo.git

	2. Ask git-credential to give us a username and	password for this
	   description.	This is	done by	running	git credential fill, feeding
	   the description from	step (1) to its	standard input.	The complete
	   credential description (including the credential per	se, i.e. the
	   login and password) will be produced	on standard output, like:

	       protocol=https
	       host=example.com
	       username=bob
	       password=secr3t

	   In most cases, this means the attributes given in the input will be
	   repeated in the output, but Git may also modify the credential
	   description,	for example by removing	the path attribute when	the
	   protocol is HTTP(s) and credential.useHttpPath is false.

	   If the git credential knew about the	password, this step may	not
	   have	involved the user actually typing this password	(the user may
	   have	typed a	password to unlock the keychain	instead, or no user
	   interaction was done	if the keychain	was already unlocked) before
	   it returned password=secr3t.

	3. Use the credential (e.g., access the	URL with the username and
	   password from step (2)), and	see if it's accepted.

	4. Report on the success or failure of the password. If	the credential
	   allowed the operation to complete successfully, then	it can be
	   marked with an "approve" action to tell git credential to reuse it
	   in its next invocation. If the credential was rejected during the
	   operation, use the "reject" action so that git credential will ask
	   for a new password in its next invocation. In either	case, git
	   credential should be	fed with the credential	description obtained
	   from	step (2) (which	also contains the fields provided in step
	   (1)).

INPUT/OUTPUT FORMAT
       git credential reads and/or writes (depending on	the action used)
       credential information in its standard input/output. This information
       can correspond either to	keys for which git credential will obtain the
       login information (e.g. host, protocol, path), or to the	actual
       credential data to be obtained (username/password).

       The credential is split into a set of named attributes, with one
       attribute per line. Each	attribute is specified by a key-value pair,
       separated by an = (equals) sign,	followed by a newline.

       The key may contain any bytes except =, newline,	or NUL.	The value may
       contain any bytes except	newline	or NUL.	A line,	including the trailing
       newline,	may not	exceed 65535 bytes in order to allow implementations
       to parse	efficiently.

       Attributes with keys that end with C-style array	brackets [] can	have
       multiple	values.	Each instance of a multi-valued	attribute forms	an
       ordered list of values -	the order of the repeated attributes defines
       the order of the	values.	An empty multi-valued attribute	(key[]=\n)
       acts to clear any previous entries and reset the	list.

       In all cases, all bytes are treated as-is (i.e.,	there is no quoting,
       and one cannot transmit a value with newline or NUL in it). The list of
       attributes is terminated	by a blank line	or end-of-file.

       Git understands the following attributes:

       protocol
	   The protocol	over which the credential will be used (e.g., https).

       host
	   The remote hostname for a network credential. This includes the
	   port	number if one was specified (e.g., "example.com:8088").

       path
	   The path with which the credential will be used. E.g., for
	   accessing a remote https repository,	this will be the repository's
	   path	on the server.

       username
	   The credential's username, if we already have one (e.g., from a
	   URL,	the configuration, the user, or	from a previously run helper).

       password
	   The credential's password, if we are	asking it to be	stored.

       password_expiry_utc
	   Generated passwords such as an OAuth	access token may have an
	   expiry date.	When reading credentials from helpers, git credential
	   fill	ignores	expired	passwords. Represented as Unix time UTC,
	   seconds since 1970.

       oauth_refresh_token
	   An OAuth refresh token may accompany	a password that	is an OAuth
	   access token. Helpers must treat this attribute as confidential
	   like	the password attribute.	Git itself has no special behaviour
	   for this attribute.

       url
	   When	this special attribute is read by git credential, the value is
	   parsed as a URL and treated as if its constituent parts were	read
	   (e.g., url=https://example.com would	behave as if protocol=https
	   and host=example.com	had been provided). This can help callers
	   avoid parsing URLs themselves.

	   Note	that specifying	a protocol is mandatory	and if the URL doesn't
	   specify a hostname (e.g., "cert:///path/to/file") the credential
	   will	contain	a hostname attribute whose value is an empty string.

	   Components which are	missing	from the URL (e.g., there is no
	   username in the example above) will be left unset.

       authtype
	   This	indicates that the authentication scheme in question should be
	   used. Common	values for HTTP	and HTTPS include basic, bearer, and
	   digest, although the	latter is insecure and should not be used. If
	   credential is used, this may	be set to an arbitrary string suitable
	   for the protocol in question	(usually HTTP).

	   This	value should not be sent unless	the appropriate	capability
	   (see	below) is provided on input.

       credential
	   The pre-encoded credential, suitable	for the	protocol in question
	   (usually HTTP). If this key is sent,	authtype is mandatory, and
	   username and	password are not used. For HTTP, Git concatenates the
	   authtype value and this value with a	single space to	determine the
	   Authorization header.

	   This	value should not be sent unless	the appropriate	capability
	   (see	below) is provided on input.

       ephemeral
	   This	boolean	value indicates, if true, that the value in the
	   credential field should not be saved	by the credential helper
	   because its usefulness is limited in	time. For example, an HTTP
	   Digest credential value is computed using a nonce and reusing it
	   will	not result in successful authentication. This may also be used
	   for situations with short duration (e.g., 24-hour) credentials. The
	   default value is false.

	   The credential helper will still be invoked with store or erase so
	   that	it can determine whether the operation was successful.

	   This	value should not be sent unless	the appropriate	capability
	   (see	below) is provided on input.

       state[]
	   This	value provides an opaque state that will be passed back	to
	   this	helper if it is	called again. Each different credential	helper
	   may specify this once. The value should include a prefix unique to
	   the credential helper and should ignore values that don't match its
	   prefix.

	   This	value should not be sent unless	the appropriate	capability
	   (see	below) is provided on input.

       continue
	   This	is a boolean value, which, if enabled, indicates that this
	   authentication is a non-final part of a multistage authentication
	   step. This is common	in protocols such as NTLM and Kerberos,	where
	   two rounds of client	authentication are required, and setting this
	   flag	allows the credential helper to	implement the multistage
	   authentication step.	This flag should only be sent if a further
	   stage is required; that is, if another round	of authentication is
	   expected.

	   This	value should not be sent unless	the appropriate	capability
	   (see	below) is provided on input. This attribute is one-way from a
	   credential helper to	pass information to Git	(or other programs
	   invoking git	credential).

       wwwauth[]
	   When	an HTTP	response is received by	Git that includes one or more
	   WWW-Authenticate authentication headers, these will be passed by
	   Git to credential helpers.

	   Each	WWW-Authenticate header	value is passed	as a multi-valued
	   attribute wwwauth[],	where the order	of the attributes is the same
	   as they appear in the HTTP response.	This attribute is one-way from
	   Git to pass additional information to credential helpers.

       capability[]
	   This	signals	that Git, or the helper, as appropriate, supports the
	   capability in question. This	can be used to provide better, more
	   specific data as part of the	protocol. A capability[] directive
	   must	precede	any value depending on it and these directives should
	   be the first	item announced in the protocol.

	   There are two currently supported capabilities. The first is
	   authtype, which indicates that the authtype,	credential, and
	   ephemeral values are	understood. The	second is state, which
	   indicates that the state[] and continue values are understood.

	   It is not obligatory	to use the additional features just because
	   the capability is supported,	but they should	not be provided
	   without the capability.

       Unrecognised attributes and capabilities	are silently discarded.

CAPABILITY INPUT/OUTPUT	FORMAT
       For git credential capability, the format is slightly different.	First,
       a version 0 announcement	is made	to indicate the	current	version	of the
       protocol, and then each capability is announced with a line like
       capability authtype. Credential helpers may also	implement this format,
       again with the capability argument. Additional lines may	be added in
       the future; callers should ignore lines which they don't	understand.

       Because this is a new part of the credential helper protocol, older
       versions	of Git,	as well	as some	credential helpers, may	not support
       it. If a	non-zero exit status is	received, or if	the first line doesn't
       start with the word version and a space,	callers	should assume that no
       capabilities are	supported.

       The intention of	this format is to differentiate	it from	the credential
       output in an unambiguous	way. It	is possible to use very	simple
       credential helpers (e.g., inline	shell scripts) which always produce
       identical output. Using a distinct format allows	users to continue to
       use this	syntax without having to worry about correctly implementing
       capability advertisements or accidentally confusing callers querying
       for capabilities.

GIT
       Part of the git(1) suite

Git 2.49.0			  2025-03-14		     GIT-CREDENTIAL(1)

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