On September 10, 2018 4:09 AM, Sergei Haller wrote: > my problem is basically the following: my git server (https) requires > authentication using a clent x509 certificate. > > And I have multiple x509 certificates that match the server. > > when I access the https server using a browser, the browser asks which > certificate to use and everything is fine. > > When I try to access the git server from the command line (git pull or similar), > the git will pick one of the available certificates (randomly or alphabetically) > and try to access the server with that client certificate. Ending in the > situation that git picks the wrong certificate. > > I can workaround by deleting all client certificates from the windows > certificate store except the "correct" one => then git command line will pick > the correct certificate (the only one available) and everything works as > expected. > > Workaround is a workaround, I need to use all of the certificates repeatedly > for different repos and different other aplications (non-git), so I've been > deliting and reinstalling the certificates all the time in the last weeks... > > How can I tell git cmd (per config option??) to use a particular client > certificate for authenticating to the https server (I could provide fingerprint > or serial number or sth like that) > > current environment: windows 10 and git version 2.18.0.windows.1 > > Would be absolutely acceptable if git would ask interactively which client > certificate to use (in case its not configurable) > > (I asked this question here before: > https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51952568/multiple-git-accounts- > https-client-certificates-config > ) Would you consider using SSH to authenticate? You can control which private key you use based on your ~/.ssh/config entries, which are case sensitive. You can choose the SSH key to use by playing with the case of the host name, like: github.com Github.com gitHub.com even if your user is "git" in all cases above. It is a bit hacky but it is part of the SSH spec and is supported by git and EGit (as of 5.x). Cheers, Randall -- Randall S. Becker Managing Director, Nexbridge Inc. LinkedIn.com/in/randallbecker +1.416.984.9826