If you are already using credential caching, please make sure that your computer has the correct credentials cached. Tip: If you don't want to enter your credentials every time you interact with the remote repository, you can turn on credential caching. When prompted for a username and password, make sure you use an account that has access to the repository. For more information, see " About authentication with SAML single sign-on" and " Authorizing a personal access token for use with SAML single sign-on." Check your permissions If you are accessing an organization that uses SAML SSO, you must also authorize your personal access token to access the organization before you authenticate.
For more information, see " Creating a personal access token." To access GitHub, you must authenticate with a personal access token instead of your password. You can find the URL of the local repository by opening the command line andĪlternatively, you can change the URL through our The repository you're trying to fetch must exist on, and the URL is case-sensitive.
You can always download the latest version on the Git website. There's no minimum Git version necessary to interact with GitHub, but we've found version 1.7.10 to be a comfortable stable version that's available on many platforms. > update-server-info on the server? Check your Git version > fatal: HTTP request failed > Error: user/ repo.git/info/refs not found: did you run git
> fatal: HTTP request failed > Error: The requested URL returned error: 403 while accessing > user/ repo.git/info/refs?service=git-receive-pack Here's an example of an HTTPS error you might receive: > error: The requested URL returned error: 401 while accessing These errors usually indicate you have an old version of Git, or you don't have access to the repository.
There are a few common errors when using HTTPS with Git.