Hi, Dario,

Thanks for the suggestion, but no, it's in .ssh, and works fine for other
uses of the public/private pair, e.g. logging into remote machines.  It's
just the Git repo that it doesn't seem to work for.

Maybe one of the maintainers could pass along the key's fingerprint so I
can match it against the key I (thought I) submitted.

Thanks,

 - Gord


>
>Message: 4
>Date: Wed, 23 Aug 2017 02:00:05 +0000
>From: Dario Strbenac <dstr7...@uni.sydney.edu.au>
>To: "bioc-devel@r-project.org" <bioc-devel@r-project.org>
>Subject: Re: [Bioc-devel] git and public keys
>Message-ID:
>       
> <dm5pr01mb32591c4d1e351ef85d438191cd...@dm5pr01mb3259.prod.exchangelabs.c
>om>
>       
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
>Good day,
>
>Is the private key in a location other than the default SSH key folders?
>If so, use the ssh-add command to have the SSH agent know about it.
>
>--------------------------------------
>Dario Strbenac
>University of Sydney
>Camperdown NSW 2050
>Australia
>
>
>------------------------------

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