--- title: Using SSH over the HTTPS port intro: 'Sometimes, firewalls refuse to allow SSH connections entirely. If using [HTTPS cloning with credential caching](/github/using-git/caching-your-github-credentials-in-git) is not an option, you can attempt to clone using an SSH connection made over the HTTPS port. Most firewall rules should allow this, but proxy servers may interfere.' redirect_from: - /articles/using-ssh-over-the-https-port versions: free-pro-team: '*' --- {% tip %} **GitHub Enterprise users**: Accessing GitHub Enterprise via SSH over the HTTPS port is currently not supported. {% endtip %} To test if SSH over the HTTPS port is possible, run this SSH command: ```shell $ ssh -T -p 443 git@ssh.github.com > Hi username! You've successfully authenticated, but GitHub does not > provide shell access. ``` If that worked, great! If not, you may need to [follow our troubleshooting guide](/articles/error-permission-denied-publickey). ### Enabling SSH connections over HTTPS If you are able to SSH into `git@ssh.{% data variables.command_line.backticks %}` over port 443, you can override your SSH settings to force any connection to {% data variables.product.product_location %} to run though that server and port. To set this in your ssh config, edit the file at `~/.ssh/config`, and add this section: ``` Host {% data variables.command_line.codeblock %} Hostname ssh.{% data variables.command_line.codeblock %} Port 443 ``` You can test that this works by connecting once more to {% data variables.product.product_location %}: ```shell $ ssh -T git@{% data variables.command_line.codeblock %} > Hi username! You've successfully authenticated, but GitHub does not > provide shell access. ```