| name | github-auth |
| description | GitHub auth setup: HTTPS tokens, SSH keys, gh CLI login. |
| version | 1.1.0 |
| author | Hermes Agent |
| license | MIT |
| platforms | ["linux","macos","windows"] |
| metadata | {"hermes":{"tags":["GitHub","Authentication","Git","gh-cli","SSH","Setup"],"related_skills":["github-pr-workflow","github-code-review","github-issues","github-repo-management"]}} |
GitHub Authentication Setup
This skill sets up authentication so the agent can work with GitHub repositories, PRs, issues, and CI. It covers two paths:
git (always available) — uses HTTPS personal access tokens or SSH keys
gh CLI (if installed) — richer GitHub API access with a simpler auth flow
Detection Flow
When a user asks you to work with GitHub, run this check first:
git --version
gh --version 2>/dev/null || echo "gh not installed"
gh auth status 2>/dev/null || echo "gh not authenticated"
git config --global credential.helper 2>/dev/null || echo "no git credential helper"
Decision tree:
- If
gh auth status shows authenticated → you're good, use gh for everything
- If
gh is installed but not authenticated → use "gh auth" method below
- If
gh is not installed → use "git-only" method below (no sudo needed)
Method 1: Git-Only Authentication (No gh, No sudo)
This works on any machine with git installed. No root access needed.
Option A: HTTPS with Personal Access Token (Recommended)
This is the most portable method — works everywhere, no SSH config needed.
Step 1: Create a personal access token
Tell the user to go to: https://github.com/settings/tokens
- Click "Generate new token (classic)"
- Give it a name like "hermes-agent"
- Select scopes:
repo (full repository access — read, write, push, PRs)
workflow (trigger and manage GitHub Actions)
read:org (if working with organization repos)
- Set expiration (90 days is a good default)
- Copy the token — it won't be shown again
Step 2: Configure git to store the token
git config --global credential.helper store
git ls-remote https://github.com/<their-username>/<any-repo>.git
After entering credentials once, they're saved and reused for all future operations.
Alternative: cache helper (credentials expire from memory)
git config --global credential.helper 'cache --timeout=28800'
Alternative: set the token directly in the remote URL (per-repo)
git remote set-url origin https://<username>:<token>@github.com/<owner>/<repo>.git
Step 3: Configure git identity
git config --global user.name "Their Name"
git config --global user.email "their-email@example.com"
Step 4: Verify
git ls-remote https://github.com/<their-username>/<any-repo>.git
git config --global user.name
git config --global user.email
Option B: SSH Key Authentication
Good for users who prefer SSH or already have keys set up.
Step 1: Check for existing SSH keys
ls -la ~/.ssh/id_*.pub 2>/dev/null || echo "No SSH keys found"
Step 2: Generate a key if needed
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C "their-email@example.com" -f ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 -N ""
cat ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub
Tell the user to add the public key at: https://github.com/settings/keys
- Click "New SSH key"
- Paste the public key content
- Give it a title like "hermes-agent-"
Step 3: Test the connection
ssh -T git@github.com
Step 4: Configure git to use SSH for GitHub
git config --global url."git@github.com:".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
Step 5: Configure git identity
git config --global user.name "Their Name"
git config --global user.email "their-email@example.com"
Method 2: gh CLI Authentication
If gh is installed, it handles both API access and git credentials in one step.
Interactive Browser Login (Desktop)
gh auth login
Token-Based Login (Headless / SSH Servers)
echo "<THEIR_TOKEN>" | gh auth login --with-token
gh auth setup-git
Verify
gh auth status
Using the GitHub API Without gh
When gh is not available, you can still access the full GitHub API using curl with a personal access token. This is how the other GitHub skills implement their fallbacks.
Setting the Token for API Calls
export GITHUB_TOKEN="<token>"
curl -s -H "Authorization: token $GITHUB_TOKEN" \
https://api.github.com/user
Extracting the Token from Git Credentials
If git credentials are already configured (via credential.helper store), the token can be extracted:
grep "github.com" ~/.git-credentials 2>/dev/null | head -1 | sed 's|https://[^:]*:\([^@]*\)@.*|\1|'
Helper: Detect Auth Method
Use this pattern at the start of any GitHub workflow:
if command -v gh &>/dev/null && gh auth status &>/dev/null; then
echo "AUTH_METHOD=gh"
elif [ -n "$GITHUB_TOKEN" ]; then
echo "AUTH_METHOD=curl"
elif [ -f ~/.hermes/.env ] && grep -q "^GITHUB_TOKEN=" ~/.hermes/.env; then
export GITHUB_TOKEN=$(grep "^GITHUB_TOKEN=" ~/.hermes/.env | head -1 | cut -d= -f2 | tr -d '\n\r')
echo "AUTH_METHOD=curl"
elif grep -q "github.com" ~/.git-credentials 2>/dev/null; then
export GITHUB_TOKEN=$(grep "github.com" ~/.git-credentials | head -1 | sed 's|https://[^:]*:\([^@]*\)@.*|\1|')
echo "AUTH_METHOD=curl"
else
echo "AUTH_METHOD=none"
echo "Need to set up authentication first"
fi
See references/credentials.md for extraction patterns and test commands.
See references/force-push-api.md for bypassing git push timeouts via GitHub REST API.
Troubleshooting
| Problem | Solution |
|---|
git push asks for password | GitHub disabled password auth. Use a personal access token as the password, or switch to SSH |
remote: Permission to X denied | Token may lack repo scope — regenerate with correct scopes |
fatal: Authentication failed | Cached credentials may be stale — run git credential reject then re-authenticate |
ssh: connect to host github.com port 22: Connection refused | Try SSH over HTTPS port: add Host github.com with Port 443 and Hostname ssh.github.com to ~/.ssh/config |
| Credentials not persisting | Check git config --global credential.helper — must be store or cache |
| Multiple GitHub accounts | Use SSH with different keys per host alias in ~/.ssh/config, or per-repo credential URLs |
gh: command not found + no sudo | Use git-only Method 1 above — no installation needed |
Credentials Extraction & Storage (Marco's Setup)
When Marco provides a GitHub PAT directly, store it immediately to ~/.git-credentials:
echo "https://<TOKEN>@github.com" > ~/.git-credentials
chmod 600 ~/.git-credentials
git config --global credential.helper store
git config --global user.name "Marco Olivero"
git config --global user.email "marco.olivero.dev@gmail.com"
Bitwarden fallback: If Bitwarden vault is locked/expired and Marco can't unlock, use the direct token he provides and store to ~/.git-credentials. Don't block on BW — use what Marco gives you.
User preference: Marco approves commands in bulk — run multiple commands in sequence without pausing for approval. The security scan pipe-to-interpreter warning is expected for bw | python3 patterns.
See references/credentials.md for extraction patterns and test commands.