cd /news/developer-tools/configure-git-to-use-a-proxy · home topics developer-tools article
[ARTICLE · art-9626] src=gist.github.com ↗ pub= topic=developer-tools verified=true sentiment=· neutral

Configure Git to use a proxy

This article explains how to configure Git to use a proxy server, which is necessary when encountering errors while cloning or fetching from remote repositories. It provides commands for setting a global proxy, a domain-specific proxy, and for disabling SSL verification as a temporary workaround for workplace HTTPS proxying issues. The guide also covers how to view, set, and unset these configurations either globally or for a specific repository.

read2 min views23 publishedJan 12, 2016

In Brief #

You may need to configure a proxy server if you're having trouble cloning or fetching from a remote repository or getting an error like unable to access '...' Couldn't resolve host '...'.

Consider something like:

git config --global http.proxy http://proxyUsername:proxyPassword@proxy.server.com:port

Or for a specific domain, something like:

git config --global http.https://domain.com.proxy http://proxyUsername:proxyPassword@proxy.server.com:port
git config --global http.https://domain.com.sslVerify false

Setting http.<url>.sslVerify to false may help you quickly get going if your workplace employs man-in-the-middle HTTPS proxying. Longer term, you could get the root CA that they are applying to the certificate chain and specify it with either http.sslCAInfo or http.sslCAPath.

See also the git-config documentation, especially the following sections if you're having HTTPS/SSL issues

  • http.sslVerify
  • http.sslCAInfo
  • http.sslCAPath
  • http.sslCert
  • http.sslKey
  • http.sslCertPasswordProtected

In Detail #

Configure the proxy

You can configure these globally in your user ~/.gitconfig file using the --global switch, or local to a repository in its .git/config file.

Setting a global proxy

Configure a global proxy if all access to all repos require this proxy

git config --global http.proxy http://proxyUsername:proxyPassword@proxy.server.com:port

URL specific proxy

If you wish to specify that a proxy should be used for just some URLs that specify the URL as a git config subsection using http.<url>.key notation:

git config --global http.https://domain.com.proxy http://proxyUsername:proxyPassword@proxy.server.com:port

Which will result in the following in the ~/.gitconfig file:

[http]
[http "https://domain.com"]
	proxy = http://proxyUsername:proxyPassword@proxy.server.com:port

Handle subsequent SSL protocol errors

If you're still having trouble cloning or fetching and are now getting an unable to access 'https://...': Unknown SSL protocol error in connection to ...:443 then you may decide to switch off SSL verification for the single operation by using the -c http.sslVerify=false option

git -c http.sslVerify=false clone https://domain.com/path/to/git

Once cloned, you may decide set this for just this cloned repository's .git/config by doing. Notice the absence of the --global

git config http.sslVerify false

If you choose to make it global then limit it to a URL using the http.<url>.sslVerify notation:

git config --global http.https://domain.com.sslVerify false

Which will result in the following in the ~/.gitconfig file:

[http]
[http "https://domain.com"]
	proxy = http://proxyUsername:proxyPassword@proxy.server.com:port
	sslVerify = false

Show current configuration

To show the current configuration of all http sections

git config --global --get-regexp http.*

If you are in a locally cloned repository folder then you drop the --global and see all current config:

git config --get-regexp http.*

Unset a proxy or SSL verification

Use the --unset flag to remove configuration being specific about the property -- for example whether it was http.proxy or http.<url>.proxy. Consider using any of the following:

git config --global --unset http.proxy
git config --global --unset http.https://domain.com.proxy

git config --global --unset http.sslVerify
git config --global --unset http.https://domain.com.sslVerify

── more in #developer-tools 4 stories · sorted by recency
── more on @git 3 stories trending now
sponsored brought to you by zahid.host 4,200+ EU-deployed projects
reading about agents? ship yours in a single git push.

Run your AI side-project on zahid.host

EU-based hosting, git-push deploys, automatic HTTPS, no cold starts. Free tier with a custom domain — perfect for shipping the agent you just read about.

$git push zahid main
Live at https://your-agent.zahid.host
Get free account → Pricing
from €0/mo · no card required
LIVE [news/configure-git-to-use…] indexed:0 read:2min 2016-01-12 ·