Using SSH keys to secure Git operations

Bitbucket Data Center and Server provides a simple way for users and other systems to connect securely to Bitbucket repositories, using SSH keys, in order to perform Git operations. You can:

  • add a personal SSH key to your user account to easily authenticate when performing read operations from your local machine. A Bitbucket user can add any number of keys to their account. Read more at SSH user keys for personal use.
  • add an SSH access key to a Bitbucket project or repository to allow other systems, such as build servers like Atlassian's Bamboo, to authenticate for either read-only (pull, clone) or read-write (push, merge) operations, without the need to store user credentials. Read more at SSH access keys for system use.

Before you can use SSH keys to secure a connection with Bitbucket the following must have already been done:

Note that:

  • You can use the same SSH system access key for multiple repositories or projects.
  • A Bitbucket user can add any number of keys to their account.
  • Keys used for personal user accounts can't be re-used as a project or repository access key, and keys used as a project or repository access key can't be re-used for user accounts.
  • Bitbucket supports DSA, ECDSA, RSA2, and Ed25519 key types – RSA1 is not supported. 
Last modified on Dec 22, 2022

Was this helpful?

Yes
No
Provide feedback about this article
Powered by Confluence and Scroll Viewport.