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Former Member
4 years agoSign your Git commits with 1Password
Do you know for sure who is committing code to your repository? Unless your team signs their code commits, the answer is probably no, because anyone can spoof a Git committer name with just a few ter...
Former Member
4 years agoThank you for sharing the blog post and quick start video. I was able to get the "Verified" badge on Github setup fairly quickly 😃.
Getting the git signature showing locally was more challenging though and not straight forward on Windows. In the documentation on https://developer.1password.com/docs/ssh/git-commit-signing/#step-2-register-your-public-key it was not immediately obvious to me that you had to setup both GitHub and Locally. It would be cool if the 1password app could automatically configure the global allowed_signers similar to .gitconfig. Additionally on Windows users need to https://github.com/PowerShell/Win32-OpenSSH/wiki/Install-Win32-OpenSSH-Using-MSI otherwise they'll see an https://superuser.com/a/1701320. Lastly the interstitial before the Windows Hello prompt does not look very good and is a bit annoying, it seems much smoother on macOS