Signed Git commits in VS Code

Andreas - Sep 27 '19 - - Dev Community

The time had come to fix something that had been bugging me for a long time: Still making unsigned Git commits from VS Code.

TL;DR: Add "git.enableCommitSigning": true to settings.json of VS Code* after configuring your singing key ID and upload your public GPG key to your Git server.


I am a fan of green badges. Wherever possible, I’m trying to achieve them. I love when my browser shows the little green lock for websites served over HTTPS or when my taskbar shows the little green lock for an active VPN connection. Green badges indicate confidence and security. They give me the positive feeling, that the trustworthiness of someone or something was proved and certified. In times, where the Twitter account of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey was hacked by simply duplicating his phones SIM card, it surely would be a good idea, to verify a tweet with more than just the senders phone number and reward a secure verification with a corresponding badge. So I try to provide as many green badges as possible for visitors, users and contributors of my work.

For most of my projects I use VS Code on Windows for creating and GitHub for publishing my code. The built-in Git integration in VS Code turned out to be extremely useful and fast for frequent Git commands. And now I wanted VS Code to sign my commits without additional effort or being interrupted to switch to the terminal.

Git supports signed commits for quite a while now (January 2012) and signed tags even longer. This means, Git provides the possibility to verify that commits are actually from a trusted source using the GNU Privacy Guard (GPG). GitHub marks signed commits with a green “verified” badge.

This is how it worked for me in VS Code on Windows:

Set up GPG

First you have to install GPG, if you don’t already have it. You can verify your installation (i.e. with Windows Power Shell) like this:

$ gpg --version
gpg (GnuPG) 2.2.17
libgcrypt 1.8.4
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

If your system doesn't know them yet, you have to import your public and private keys (I assume you have them stored in files called public.key and private.key). If you don’t have a key pair, you can generate a new one. In that case, you can skip the import and directly jump to Set up Git. It's also possible to use your Keybase GPG key, if you have one (Stephen Rees-Carter wrote a nice article about it).

gpg --import public.key
gpg --import private.key
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Note: when importing the private key, a GUI window appears that asks for the corresponding passphrase you set when creating your key pair.

Set up Git

Now you can tell Git your signing key ID. It’s a 16-digit alphanumeric string that can be found with gpg --list-signatures (look for lines starting with “sig”).

git config --global user.signingkey 26A64778F76A7911
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

If you want, you can tell Git to sign commits per default (since Git 2.0), so you don’t always have to add the -s flag in the command line:

git config --global commit.gpgsign true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Note, that I use the --global flag here to apply these settings to all my local repositories. Of course you can apply these settings only to the current repository without it.

Set up GitHub

Now you have to give GitHub (or whatever Git server you’re using) your public key. You can print it with gpg --armor --export or get-content -path public.key (or open it with your favorite text editor) and copy it to your clipboard. Now go to GitHub, click on the top right menu, go to Settings > SSH and GPG keys > New GPG key and paste your key — it should look like this:

-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
...a lot of characters...
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

If everything worked correctly, you should see your GPG key like this:
New GPG key entry on GitHub (example)

New GPG key entry on GitHub (example)

Set up VS Code

Finally you have to tell VS Code to append the -s flag to the git commit command, to use signed committing now. Open the settings, search for “gpg” and check the box “Enables commit signing with GPG”.

Alternatively you can add this line to your settings.json :

"git.enableCommitSigning": true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

And that’s it! Now you can commit your changes in VS Codes Git integration and sign your work.

Note that you will be prompted for the passphrase of your private key at first.

Your commits now look like this in a GitHub repository under “commits”:
Green badge indicating that this commit was signed with a verified signature

Green badge indicating that this commit was signed with a verified signature

This badge also appears under “releases”, if the last commit of this release was signed:
Verified release on GitHub

Verified release on GitHub

Error: secret key not available

Well, would have been too easy if it worked at first try… unfortunately I had to deal with the following weird error message, that appeared always when I tried to commit using the -s flag:

$ git commit -am "a message" -s
gpg: skipped "26A64778F76A7911": secret key not available
gpg: signing failed: secret key not available
error: gpg failed to sign the data
fatal: failed to write commit object
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

After some research, I found, that I had to tell Git the path to the GPG executable (for whatever reason) using the git config pgp.program setting:

git config --global gpg.program "C:\Program Files (x86)\gnupg\bin\gpg.exe"
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Note that the path may be a different one on your system.

After this, everything worked like a charm! Feel free to leave a comment, if you are facing other issues or you’d like to make me feel guilty because you already sign your commits for years :)


Edited: 2nd July 2021 (added TL;DR paragraph)
Originally published: 18th September 2019 on Medium

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Terabox Video Player