On 27.06.2022 21:09, Marcos Alano wrote:
Hello fellows!
I'm able to sign commits using SSH keypair, but the keypair must be
located in a file. If I try to use a SSH keypair in a security key
(like an YubiKey) I get an error. I used this commands to do the test:
```
ssh-keygen -t ed25519-sk -f ~/.ssh/id_ed25519_sk
git config --global gpg.format ssh
git config --global user.signingkey "$(cat ~/.ssh/id_ed25519_sk.pub)"
Did you try just putting the public keys path into user.signingkey?
Literal keys would need to be prefixed with `key::`
git config --global user.signingkey ~/.ssh/id_ed25519_sk.pub
should be just fine.
Also, the private key needs to be available in your ssh agent. If in doubt
you can check with a `ssh-add -L`.
git commit -S --allow-empty --message="Testing"
```
Bnd I get this error:
```
error: Couldn't load public key sk-ssh-ed25519@xxxxxxxxxxx <my key
id>: No such file or directory?
fatal: failed to write commit object
```
I did the same thing with a plain ed25519 keypair and worked.
Am I doing anything wrong or security keys aren't supported yet?
Thank you for any help,
--
Marcos Alano