1033

I'm working with several repositories, but lately I was just working in our internal one and all was great.

Today I had to commit and push code into other one, but I'm having some troubles.

$ git push appharbor master
error: The requested URL returned error: 403 while accessing https://[email protected]/mitivo.git/info/refs?service=git-receive-pack
fatal: HTTP request failed

There is nothing I can do, that would bring the password entry again.

How can I reset the credentials on my system so Git will ask me for the password of that repository?

I have tried:

  • git config --global --unset core.askpass

in order to unset the password

  • git config credential.helper 'cache --timeout=1'

in order to avoid credentials cache...

Nothing seems to work; does anyone have a better idea?

9
  • Do you have a ~/.netrc file? Commented Mar 13, 2013 at 9:29
  • 4
    @robinst it's a windows machine, and I can't find that file, not even from Git Bash... Commented Mar 13, 2013 at 10:30
  • @balexandre for a Windows machine, I prefer using the new (git 1.8.3) credential helper netrc, which would store multiple credential in an encrypted file. It is better than entering your password each time for each session, since the cache only "caches" the password for a certain time. See a full example here. Commented Aug 22, 2013 at 13:18
  • I don't have .netrc. I do have a file in ~ (C:\Users\Myself) named .git-credentials, but erasing it didn't work, I'm still logged into Git Shell. Also, the Control Panel Credential Manager doesn't seem to be storing anything. Local and global Git config files seems ok. I inherited my workstation from an employee that left, so it could be that he set-up some unorthodox credential caching mechanism that I have no clue how to turn off. I hope this behavior IS NOT the default of Git Windows. On Mac credential caching is the default but at least it shows up in Keychain Access. Commented Nov 18, 2015 at 11:00
  • 2
    people concerned about security may want to ensure this rm ~/.git-credentials afterwards. Being prompted for a password doesn't mean that they are not stored. Commented Jun 18, 2018 at 13:15

44 Answers 44

1355

If this problem comes on a Windows machine, do the following.

  • Go to Credential Manager

    • in Czech, it is called: Správce pověření
    • in Dutch, it is called: Referentiebeheer
    • in French, it is called: Gestionnaire d'identification
    • in German, it is called: Anmeldeinformationsverwaltung
    • in Italian, it is called: Gestione credenziali
    • in Norwegian, it is called: Legitimasjonsbehandling
    • in Polish, it is called: Menedżer poświadczeń
    • in Portuguese, it is called: Gerenciador de Credenciais
    • in Russian, it is called: Диспетчер учётных данных
    • in Spanish, it is called: Administrador de credenciales

    Go to Credential Manager

  • Go to Windows Credentials

  • Delete the entries under Generic Credentials

    Go to Windows Credentials and Delete the entries under Generic Credentials

  • Try connecting again. This time, it should prompt you for the correct username and password.

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

14 Comments

This is only relevant if your credential.helper=manager. To test this type git config --list. If it's set to store then credentials are not stored in the credentials store but are stored un-encrypted.
I only had to delete the credential named git:https://github.com and I was prompted to enter my username/pass the next time I cloned a repo using PyCharm. I had more than one github account and the wrong one was cached.
If someone is searching this on a german localized machine, it is "Anmeldeinformationsverwaltung" on path Systemsteuerung\Alle Systemsteuerungselemente\Anmeldeinformationsverwaltung.
Alternatively you can change the user/pass in the Credential Manager. That worked for me too
If you're unable to get to credential manager via Windows you can run this from the command prompt to access it: rundll32.exe keymgr.dll,KRShowKeyMgr
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787

The Git credential cache runs a daemon process which caches your credentials in memory and hands them out on demand. So killing your git-credential-cache--daemon process throws all these away and results in re-prompting you for your password if you continue to use this as the cache.helper option.

You could also disable use of the Git credential cache using git config --global --unset credential.helper. Then reset this, and you would continue to have the cached credentials available for other repositories (if any). You may also need to do git config --system --unset credential.helper if this has been set in the system configuration file (for example, Git for Windows 2).

On Windows you might be better off using the manager helper (git config --global credential.helper manager). This stores your credentials in the Windows credential store which has a Control Panel interface where you can delete or edit your stored credentials. With this store, your details are secured by your Windows login and can persist over multiple sessions. The manager helper included in Git for Windows 2.x has replaced the earlier wincred helper that was added in Git for Windows 1.8.1.1. A similar helper called winstore is also available online and was used with GitExtensions as it offers a more GUI driven interface. The manager helper offers the same GUI interface as winstore.

Extract from the Windows 10 support page detailing the Windows credential manager:

To open Credential Manager, type "credential manager" in the search box on the taskbar and select Credential Manager Control panel.

And then select Windows Credentials to edit (=remove or modify) the stored git credentials for a given URL.

14 Comments

I found the Windows Credential control panel at Control Panel\User Accounts\Credential Manager under Windows 7
Doesn't killing the process leave any traces somewhere, so that the password could be still accessed? According to git manual they are stored in "plain text".
Under windows 8.1 the "Windows Credentials" was under Generic Credentials and git:gitlab.com or your git server of choice.
Under Windows 8/10 the detailed User Account Settings are located under the "classic" Controll Panel, not the "Settings" App (modern UI). Just to avoid confusion.
in windows 10 Go to Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Credential Manager . There could be a Generic Credential for GitHub. You can update the user name and password there.
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219

Retype:

$ git config credential.helper store

And then you will be prompted to enter your credentials again.

WARNING

Using this helper will store your passwords unencrypted on disk

Source: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-credential-store

5 Comments

this command not asking to enter my credentials again, this command is doing nothing
@ShirishHerwade try git pull, then you'll see prompt screen
@jkokorian To undo this command delete the relevant lines from .git/config.
@zenadix if you don't want to do that manually, you can use git config --unset credential.helper
The command given in this solution does not ask for a new password. It seems to do nothing
183

I faced the same issue as the OP. It was taking my old Git credentials stored somewhere on the system and I wanted to use Git with my new credentials, so I ran the command

$ git config --system --list

It showed

credential.helper=manager

Whenever I performed git push it was taking my old username which I set long back, and I wanted to use new a GitHub account to push changes. I later found that my old GitHub account credentials was stored under Control PanelUser AccountsCredential ManagerManage Windows Credentials.

Manage Windows Credentials

I just removed these credentials and when I performed git push it asked me for my GitHub credentials, and it worked like a charm.

7 Comments

Good illustration of the recent of the recent Git Credential Manager (github.com/Microsoft/Git-Credential-Manager-for-Windows) which works by storing credentials (github.com/Microsoft/Git-Credential-Manager-for-Windows/issues/…) +1
@VonC It took me a day to find out this as i wasn't aware of this mechanism of storing credentials.
This is probably the better answer than the "accepted" one, which to me implies nuking all credentials. Definitely helped me.
Git Credential Manager Core is the more recent and default credential manager. In recent versions of Git git config --global --list should now return credential.helper=manager-core and not credential.helper=manager
The attached image is very helpful thanks for adding it!
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67

Try using the below command.

git credential-manager

Here you can get various options to manage your credentials (check the below screen).

Enter image description here

Or you can even directly try this command:

git credential-manager uninstall

This will start prompting for passwords again on each server interaction request.

9 Comments

Why am I getting - git: 'credential-manager' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.
Not sure, why isn't it working for you, but even in latest git version, it's available. Please refer this link for more info - git-scm.com/book/gr/v2/Git-Tools-Credential-Storage
Got removal failed. U_U Press any key to continue... fatal: InvalidOperationException encountered. Cannot read keys when either application does not have a console or when console input has been redirected from a file. Try Console.Read. (with the nice U_U emoji out of nowhere :))
The only solution that worked for me on Windows with GitBash.
maybe an aside, but i installed git via choco, and this [uninstall] method was good for me for pulling a repo on a deployed computer without storing credentials
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59

I found something that worked for me. When I wrote my comment to the OP I had failed to check the system config file:

git config --system -l

shows a

credential.helper=!github --credentials

line. I unset it with

git config --system --unset credential.helper

and now the credentials are forgotten.

3 Comments

Ankur, you may need to run the suggested command in similar ways from 2-3 times if you have gotten a couple credential helpers configured. git config --global --unset credential.helper and maybe just git config --unset credential.helper in your repository if you had somehow set it explicitly there.
thanks for the solution. Just a detail : in my case I had to launch the command prompt as an administrator
only this helped on mac
46

This error appears when you are using multiple Git accounts on the same machine.

If you are using macOS then you can remove the saved credentials of github.com.

Please follow below steps to remove the github.com credentials.

  1. Open Keychain Access
  2. Find github
  3. Select the github.com and Right click on it
  4. Delete "github.com"
  5. Try again to Push or Pull to git and it will ask for the credentials.
  6. Enter valid credentials for repository account.
  7. Done

    enter image description here

2 Comments

Finally a solution that was for Mac and worked perfectly
This doesn't work for me on Mac. I had several github passwords saved and deleted them all and I still don't get asked for credentials. I've tried everything I've seen and nothing works. I have 2 credentials saved and I can't delete them. Any help?
40
git config --list

will show credential.helper = manager (this is on a windows machine)

To disable this cached username/password for your current local git folder, simply enter

git config credential.helper ""

This way, git will prompt for password every time, ignoring what's saved inside "manager".

6 Comments

I have the error below, git: 'credential-' is not a git command. See 'git --help'., but for security I am upvoting this answer because it is the only one that made me be prompted for a new password. I am wondering, however, if this is not just masking the problem (is the password really removed?)
Nope: rm -rf ~/.git-credentials did. Note that it can vary (git help credential-store)
sorry, this really doesn't work. it will ask for the password once more and store it again. would remove my upvote if allowed.
git config --unset credential.helper clears the entry. This answer just sets it to empty string and produces the error that @ribamar described in comments.
Thank you so much it worked for me, Really appreciate that, upvote for you
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38

You have to update it in your Credential Manager.

Go to Control Panel > User Accounts > Credential Manager > Windows Credentials. You will see Git credentials in the list (e.g. git:https://). Click on it, update the password, and execute git pull/push command from your Git bash and it won't throw any more error messages.

2 Comments

works for me in Windows 10, and no need to restart my IDE
Thanks! I had trouble removing some incorrect Git credentials because I was in a locked-down University computer without admin privileges. This solution worked.
37

In my case, Git is using Windows to store credentials.

All you have to do is remove the stored credentials stored in your Windows account:

Windows credentials menu

2 Comments

How does this differ from this answer? or this one?
apparently this has descriptive images :-D
27

In Windows 2003 Server with "wincred"*, none of the other answers helped me. I had to use cmdkey.

  • cmdkey /list lists all stored credentials.
  • cmdkey /delete:Target deletes the credential with "Target" name.

cmdkey /list; cmdkey /delete:Target

(* By "wincred" I mean git config --global credential.helper wincred)

2 Comments

Yes, cmdkey is the command-line counterpart to the Windows Credentials described in the chosen answer.
Here's the cmdkey help for reference.
23

If you want git to forget old saved credentials and re-enter username and password, you can do that using below command:

git credential-cache exit

After running above command, if you try to push anything it will provide option to enter username and password.

5 Comments

This is the best solution!
git: 'credential-cache' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.
@SerdarSamancıoğlu Use git help -a and you will see information about credential-cache in Low level commands / Internal helpers.
@amitshree actually that wasn't a comment, I just copied the error I got after trying git command.
@SerdarSamancıoğlu got it. Are you able to see that command when you run git help -a ?
22

Using latest version of git for Windows on Windows 10 Professional and I had a similar issue whereby I have two different GitHub accounts and also a Bitbucket account so things got a bit confusing for VS2017, git extensions and git bash.

I first checked how git was handling my credentials with this command (run git bash with elevated commands or you get errors):

git config --list

I found the entry Credential Manager so I clicked on the START button > typed Credential Manager to and left-clicked on the credential manager yellow safe icon which launched the app. I then clicked on the Windows Credentials tabs and found the entry for my current git account which happened to be Bit-bucket so I deleted this account.

But this didn't do the trick so the next step was to unset the credentials and I did this from the repository directory on my laptop that contains the GitHub project I am trying to push to the remote. I typed the following command:

git config --system --unset credential.helper

Then I did a git push and I was prompted for a GitHub username which I entered (the correct one I needed) and then the associated password and everything got pushed correctly.

I am not sure how much of an issue this is going forward most people probably work off the one repository but I have to work across several and using different providers so may encounter this issue again.

1 Comment

I was facing repository not found error even when repository existed. GIT was not asking for credentials. I ran this command: git config --system --unset credential.helper and it asked for credentials and my issue was resolved.
20

In case Git Credential Manager for Windows is used (which current versions usually do):

git credential-manager clear

This was added mid-2016. To check if credential manager is used:

git config --global credential.helper
→ manager

1 Comment

This works as well if the credential helper is manager-core.
18

Got same error when doing a 'git pull' and this is how I fixed it.

  1. Change repo to HTTPS
  2. Run command git config --system --unset credential.helper
  3. Run command git config --system --add credential.helper manager
  4. Test command git pull
  5. Enter credentials in the login window that pops up.
  6. Git pull completed successfully.

3 Comments

--system? What about --global? What about no scope? What does the setting scope mean?
Not working for me, still doesn't ask for credentials while doing a clone.
git config --system --unset credential.helper outputs C:/Program Files/Git/etc/gitconfig: Permission denied.
17
  1. Go to C:\Users\<current-user>
  2. check for .git-credentials file
  3. Delete content or modify as per your requirement
  4. Restart your terminal

1 Comment

after 2 hrs of searching and hair pulling I replaced the token in .git-credentials file and it worked. thanks @Dinesh
16

If your credentials are stored in the credential helper (generally the case), the portable way to remove a password persisted for a specific host is to call git credential reject:

  • in one line:

    $ echo "url=https://appharbor.com" | git credential reject
    
  • or interactively:

    $ git credential reject
    protocol=https
    host=gitlab.com
    [email protected]
    • ↵ is the Enter symbol, just hit Enter key twice at the end of input, don't copy/paste it
    • The username doesn't seem recognized by wincred, so avoid to filter by username on Windows

After that, to enter your new password, type git fetch.

https://git-scm.com/docs/git-credential

Comments

14

Need to login with respective github username and password

To Clear the username and password in windows

Control Panel\User Accounts\Credential Manager

Edit the windows Credential

Remove the existing user and now go to command prompt write the push command it shows a github pop-up to enter the username/email and password .

Now we able to push the code after switching the user.

Comments

12

In my case, I couldn't find the credentials saved in the Windows Credential Manager (Windows 7).

I was able to reset my credentials by executing

git config --global credential.helper wincred

It was honestly a hail Mary to see if it would wipe out my credentials and it actually worked.

1 Comment

This worked for me; I did NOT have an entry in the Credential Manager to delete.
12

Remove this line from your .gitconfig file located in the Windows' currently logged-in user folder:

[credential]
helper = !\"C:/Program Files (x86)/GitExtensions/GitCredentialWinStore/git-credential-winstore.exe\"

This worked for me and now when I push to remote it asks for my password again.

Comments

12

No answer given worked for me. But here is what worked for me in the end:

rm -rf ~/.git-credentials

That will remove any credentials! When you use a new git command, you will be asked for a password!

2 Comments

This question has a Windows tag. Your solutiom might work for Linux, but not Windows.
This works for macOS Ventura.
10

On Windows, at least, git remote show [remote-name] will work, e.g.

git remote show origin

4 Comments

Not sure why the downvote. It does work. I get stuck with everything else.
...and I just used it again today, successfully. Every time I change my password at work I need to do this.
Worked a charm for me.
Same here. You don't even have to be in a repository directory
10

This approach worked for me and should be agnostic of OS. It's a little heavy-handed, but was quick and allowed me to reenter credentials.

Simply find the remote alias for which you wish to reenter credentials.

$ git remote -v 
origin  https://bitbucket.org/org/~username/your-project.git (fetch)
origin  https://bitbucket.org/org/~username/your-project.git (push)

Copy the project path (https://bitbucket.org/org/~username/your-project.git)

Then remove the remote

$ git remote remove origin

Then add it back

$ git remote add origin https://bitbucket.org/org/~username/your-project.git

2 Comments

This will work if you added your password and name to the origin. For ex, https://name:[email protected]/repo-url. Then you should remove the origin and add again.
same can be done with just editing local repository (for example, git config -e and chaning url to origin. meddling with removing origin is overkill.
9

For macOS users :

This error appears when you are using multiple Git accounts on the same machine.

Please follow below steps to remove the github.com credentials.

  1. Go to Finder
  2. Go to Applications
  3. Go to Utilities Folder
  4. Open Keychain Access
  5. Select the github.com and Right click on it

Delete "github.com"

Try again to Push or Pull to git and it will ask for the credentials. Enter valid credentials for repository account. Done, now upvote the answer.

Comments

7

You can remove the line credential.helper=!github --credentials from the following file C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\etc\gitconfig in order to remove the credentials for git

Comments

7

Building from @patthoyts's high-voted answer:

His answer uses but doesn't explain local vs. global vs. system configs. The official git documentation for them is here and worth reading.

For example, I'm on Linux, and don't use a system config, so I never use a --system flag, but do commonly need to differentiate between --local and --global configs.

My use case is I've got two Github crendentials; one for work, and one for play.

Here's how I would handle the problem:

$ cd work
# do and commit work
$ git push origin develop
# Possibly prompted for credentials if I haven't configured my remotes to automate that. 
# We're assuming that now I've stored my "work" credentials with git's credential helper.

$ cd ~/play 
# do and commit play
$ git push origin develop                                                                   
remote: Permission to whilei/specs.git denied to whilei.                
fatal: unable to access 'https://github.com/workname/specs.git/': The requested URL returned error: 403

# So here's where it goes down:
$ git config --list | grep cred
credential.helper=store # One of these is for _local_
credential.helper=store # And one is for _global_

$ git config --global --unset credential.helper
$ git config --list | grep cred
credential.helper=store # My _local_ config still specifies 'store'
$ git config --unset credential.helper
$ git push origin develop
Username for 'https://github.com': whilei
Password for 'https://[email protected]':
Counting objects: 3, done.
Delta compression using up to 12 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
Writing objects: 100% (3/3), 1.10 KiB | 1.10 MiB/s, done.
Total 3 (delta 1), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote: Resolving deltas: 100% (1/1), completed with 1 local object.
To https://github.com/whilei/specs.git
   b2ca528..f64f065  master -> master

# Now let's turn credential-helping back on:
$ git config --global credential.helper "store"
$ git config credential.helper "store"
$ git config --list | grep cred
credential.helper=store # Put it back the way it was.
credential.helper=store

It's also worth noting that there are ways to avoid this problem altogether, for example, you can use ~/.ssh/config's with associated SSH keys for Github (one for work, one for play) and correspondingly custom-named remote hosts to solve authentication contextualizing too.

Comments

5

What finally fixed this for me was to use GitHub desktop, go to repository settings, and remove user:pass@ from the repository url. Then, I attempted a push from the command line and was prompted for login credentials. After I put those in everything went back to normal. Both Visual Studio and command line are working, and of course, GitHub desktop.

GitHub Desktop->Repository->Repository Settings->Remote tab

Change Primary Remote Repository (origin) from:

https://pork@[email protected]/MyProject/MyProject.git

To:

https://github.com/MyProject/MyProject.git

Click "Save"

Credentials will be cleared.

2 Comments

Resetting the origin to the same one from the command line on Windows has solved my issue. I'm using GitLab so I couldn't use GitHub Desktop for this.
this is really the solution. you use different accounts on different repositories, store credentials locally to repository and no global unsets works for this. here is UI solution, but same can be done with git config -e and changing or deleting credentials from origin url
5

Update Actually useHttpPath is a git configuration, which should work for all GCMs. Corrected.

Summary of The Original Question

  • working with git on Windows
  • working on multiple repositories on GitHub
  • wrong credentials used for another GitHub repository

Although the title says "Remove credentials", the description leads me to the assumption that you may have multiple accounts on GitHub, e.g. for job-related vs. private projects. (At least that issue made me find this topic.) If so read on, otherwise, ignore the answer, but it may come in handy at some time.

Reason

Git Credential Managers (short GCM) like Microsoft's GCM for Windows store credentials per host by default. This can be verified by checking the Windows Credential Manager (see other answers on how to access it on English, French, and German Windows versions). So working with multiple accounts on the same host (here github.com) is not possible by default.

In October 2020 GCM for Windows got deprecated and superseded by GCM Core. The information here still applies to the new GCM and it should even use the credentials stored by GCM for Windows.

Solution

Configure git to include the full path to the repository as additional information for each credential entry. Also documented on GCM for Windows.
I personally prefer to include the HTTP(S) [repository] path to be able to use a separate account for each and every repository.

For all possible hosts:

git config --global credential.useHttpPath true

For github.com only:

git config --global credential.github.com.useHttpPath true

Have a look at the GCM and git docs and maybe you want to specify something different.

Comments

5

Kindly run following command -

git config --global credential.helper cache

and then run any git command like git pull it will ask for username and password. Enter the details and if you want to store your git credentials, run following command -

git config --global credential.helper store

Comments

4

For Windows 10, go to below path,

Control Panel\User Accounts\Credential Manager

There will be 2 tabs at this location,

  1. Web credentials and 2. Windows credentials.

Click on Windows credentials tab and here you can see your stored github credentials, under "Generic credentials" heading.

You can remove those from here and try and re-clone - it will ask for username/password now as we have just removed the stored credential from the Windows 10 systems

Comments

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