On Sun, Feb 10, 2013 at 01:25:38PM -0800, Jonathan Nieder wrote: > Ethan Reesor wrote: > > > I have a git user set up on my server. It's prompt is set to > > git-prompt and it's git-shell-commands is empty. > [...] > > How do I make the git user work like github where, upon attempting to > > get a prompt, the connection is closed? > > I assume you mean that the user's login shell is git-shell. > > You can disable interactive logins by removing the > ~/git-shell-commands/ directory. Unfortunately that doesn't let you > customize the message. Perhaps it would make sense to teach shell.c > to look for a > > [shell] > greeting = 'Hi %(username)! You've successfully authenticated, but I do not provide interactive shell access.' > > setting in git's config file. What do you think? I think something like that makes sense. To my knowledge there is no way with stock git to customize git-shell's output (at GitHub, that message comes from our front-end routing process before you even hit git-shell on our backend machines). The "username" in our version of the message comes from a database mapping public keys to GitHub users, not the Unix username. But I suspect sites running stock Git would be happy enough to have %(username) map to the actual Unix username. -Peff -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html