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putty-source/windows/winplink.c

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/*
* PLink - a Windows command-line (stdin/stdout) variant of PuTTY.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#define PUTTY_DO_GLOBALS /* actually _define_ globals */
#include "putty.h"
#include "storage.h"
#include "tree234.h"
#include "winsecur.h"
#define WM_AGENT_CALLBACK (WM_APP + 4)
struct agent_callback {
void (*callback)(void *, void *, int);
void *callback_ctx;
void *data;
int len;
};
New abstraction 'Seat', to pass to backends. This is a new vtable-based abstraction which is passed to a backend in place of Frontend, and it implements only the subset of the Frontend functions needed by a backend. (Many other Frontend functions still exist, notably the wide range of things called by terminal.c providing platform-independent operations on the GUI terminal window.) The purpose of making it a vtable is that this opens up the possibility of creating a backend as an internal implementation detail of some other activity, by providing just that one backend with a custom Seat that implements the methods differently. For example, this refactoring should make it feasible to directly implement an SSH proxy type, aka the 'jump host' feature supported by OpenSSH, aka 'open a secondary SSH session in MAINCHAN_DIRECT_TCP mode, and then expose the main channel of that as the Socket for the primary connection'. (Which of course you can already do by spawning 'plink -nc' as a separate proxy process, but this would permit it in the _same_ process without anything getting confused.) I've centralised a full set of stub methods in misc.c for the new abstraction, which allows me to get rid of several annoying stubs in the previous code. Also, while I'm here, I've moved a lot of duplicated modalfatalbox() type functions from application main program files into wincons.c / uxcons.c, which I think saves duplication overall. (A minor visible effect is that the prefixes on those console-based fatal error messages will now be more consistent between applications.)
2018-10-11 18:58:42 +00:00
void cmdline_error(const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list ap;
New abstraction 'Seat', to pass to backends. This is a new vtable-based abstraction which is passed to a backend in place of Frontend, and it implements only the subset of the Frontend functions needed by a backend. (Many other Frontend functions still exist, notably the wide range of things called by terminal.c providing platform-independent operations on the GUI terminal window.) The purpose of making it a vtable is that this opens up the possibility of creating a backend as an internal implementation detail of some other activity, by providing just that one backend with a custom Seat that implements the methods differently. For example, this refactoring should make it feasible to directly implement an SSH proxy type, aka the 'jump host' feature supported by OpenSSH, aka 'open a secondary SSH session in MAINCHAN_DIRECT_TCP mode, and then expose the main channel of that as the Socket for the primary connection'. (Which of course you can already do by spawning 'plink -nc' as a separate proxy process, but this would permit it in the _same_ process without anything getting confused.) I've centralised a full set of stub methods in misc.c for the new abstraction, which allows me to get rid of several annoying stubs in the previous code. Also, while I'm here, I've moved a lot of duplicated modalfatalbox() type functions from application main program files into wincons.c / uxcons.c, which I think saves duplication overall. (A minor visible effect is that the prefixes on those console-based fatal error messages will now be more consistent between applications.)
2018-10-11 18:58:42 +00:00
va_start(ap, fmt);
console_print_error_msg_fmt_v("plink", fmt, ap);
va_end(ap);
exit(1);
}
HANDLE inhandle, outhandle, errhandle;
struct handle *stdin_handle, *stdout_handle, *stderr_handle;
Plink: default to sanitising non-tty console output. If Plink's standard output and/or standard error points at a Windows console or a Unix tty device, and if Plink was not configured to request a remote pty (and hence to send a terminal-type string), then we apply the new control-character stripping facility. The idea is to be a mild defence against malicious remote processes sending confusing escape sequences through the standard error channel when Plink is being used as a transport for something like git: it's OK to have actual sensible error messages come back from the server, but when you run a git command, you didn't really intend to give the remote server the implicit licence to write _all over_ your local terminal display. At the same time, in that scenario, the standard _output_ of Plink is left completely alone, on the grounds that git will be expecting it to be 8-bit clean. (And Plink can tell that because it's redirected away from the console.) For interactive login sessions using Plink, this behaviour is disabled, on the grounds that once you've sent a terminal-type string it's assumed that you were _expecting_ the server to use it to know what escape sequences to send to you. So it should be transparent for all the use cases I've so far thought of. But in case it's not, there's a family of new command-line options like -no-sanitise-stdout and -sanitise-stderr that you can use to forcibly override the autodetection of whether to do it. This all applies the same way to both Unix and Windows Plink.
2019-02-20 07:03:57 +00:00
handle_sink stdout_hs, stderr_hs;
StripCtrlChars *stdout_scc, *stderr_scc;
BinarySink *stdout_bs, *stderr_bs;
DWORD orig_console_mode;
static Backend *backend;
Conf *conf;
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
static void plink_echoedit_update(Seat *seat, bool echo, bool edit)
{
/* Update stdin read mode to reflect changes in line discipline. */
DWORD mode;
mode = ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT;
if (echo)
mode = mode | ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT;
else
mode = mode & ~ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT;
if (edit)
mode = mode | ENABLE_LINE_INPUT;
else
mode = mode & ~ENABLE_LINE_INPUT;
SetConsoleMode(inhandle, mode);
}
static size_t plink_output(
Seat *seat, bool is_stderr, const void *data, size_t len)
{
Plink: default to sanitising non-tty console output. If Plink's standard output and/or standard error points at a Windows console or a Unix tty device, and if Plink was not configured to request a remote pty (and hence to send a terminal-type string), then we apply the new control-character stripping facility. The idea is to be a mild defence against malicious remote processes sending confusing escape sequences through the standard error channel when Plink is being used as a transport for something like git: it's OK to have actual sensible error messages come back from the server, but when you run a git command, you didn't really intend to give the remote server the implicit licence to write _all over_ your local terminal display. At the same time, in that scenario, the standard _output_ of Plink is left completely alone, on the grounds that git will be expecting it to be 8-bit clean. (And Plink can tell that because it's redirected away from the console.) For interactive login sessions using Plink, this behaviour is disabled, on the grounds that once you've sent a terminal-type string it's assumed that you were _expecting_ the server to use it to know what escape sequences to send to you. So it should be transparent for all the use cases I've so far thought of. But in case it's not, there's a family of new command-line options like -no-sanitise-stdout and -sanitise-stderr that you can use to forcibly override the autodetection of whether to do it. This all applies the same way to both Unix and Windows Plink.
2019-02-20 07:03:57 +00:00
BinarySink *bs = is_stderr ? stderr_bs : stdout_bs;
put_data(bs, data, len);
return handle_backlog(stdout_handle) + handle_backlog(stderr_handle);
}
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
static bool plink_eof(Seat *seat)
{
handle_write_eof(stdout_handle);
return false; /* do not respond to incoming EOF with outgoing */
}
New abstraction 'Seat', to pass to backends. This is a new vtable-based abstraction which is passed to a backend in place of Frontend, and it implements only the subset of the Frontend functions needed by a backend. (Many other Frontend functions still exist, notably the wide range of things called by terminal.c providing platform-independent operations on the GUI terminal window.) The purpose of making it a vtable is that this opens up the possibility of creating a backend as an internal implementation detail of some other activity, by providing just that one backend with a custom Seat that implements the methods differently. For example, this refactoring should make it feasible to directly implement an SSH proxy type, aka the 'jump host' feature supported by OpenSSH, aka 'open a secondary SSH session in MAINCHAN_DIRECT_TCP mode, and then expose the main channel of that as the Socket for the primary connection'. (Which of course you can already do by spawning 'plink -nc' as a separate proxy process, but this would permit it in the _same_ process without anything getting confused.) I've centralised a full set of stub methods in misc.c for the new abstraction, which allows me to get rid of several annoying stubs in the previous code. Also, while I'm here, I've moved a lot of duplicated modalfatalbox() type functions from application main program files into wincons.c / uxcons.c, which I think saves duplication overall. (A minor visible effect is that the prefixes on those console-based fatal error messages will now be more consistent between applications.)
2018-10-11 18:58:42 +00:00
static int plink_get_userpass_input(Seat *seat, prompts_t *p, bufchain *input)
{
int ret;
ret = cmdline_get_passwd_input(p);
if (ret == -1)
ret = console_get_userpass_input(p);
return ret;
}
New abstraction 'Seat', to pass to backends. This is a new vtable-based abstraction which is passed to a backend in place of Frontend, and it implements only the subset of the Frontend functions needed by a backend. (Many other Frontend functions still exist, notably the wide range of things called by terminal.c providing platform-independent operations on the GUI terminal window.) The purpose of making it a vtable is that this opens up the possibility of creating a backend as an internal implementation detail of some other activity, by providing just that one backend with a custom Seat that implements the methods differently. For example, this refactoring should make it feasible to directly implement an SSH proxy type, aka the 'jump host' feature supported by OpenSSH, aka 'open a secondary SSH session in MAINCHAN_DIRECT_TCP mode, and then expose the main channel of that as the Socket for the primary connection'. (Which of course you can already do by spawning 'plink -nc' as a separate proxy process, but this would permit it in the _same_ process without anything getting confused.) I've centralised a full set of stub methods in misc.c for the new abstraction, which allows me to get rid of several annoying stubs in the previous code. Also, while I'm here, I've moved a lot of duplicated modalfatalbox() type functions from application main program files into wincons.c / uxcons.c, which I think saves duplication overall. (A minor visible effect is that the prefixes on those console-based fatal error messages will now be more consistent between applications.)
2018-10-11 18:58:42 +00:00
static const SeatVtable plink_seat_vt = {
plink_output,
plink_eof,
plink_get_userpass_input,
nullseat_notify_remote_exit,
console_connection_fatal,
nullseat_update_specials_menu,
nullseat_get_ttymode,
nullseat_set_busy_status,
console_verify_ssh_host_key,
console_confirm_weak_crypto_primitive,
console_confirm_weak_cached_hostkey,
nullseat_is_never_utf8,
plink_echoedit_update,
nullseat_get_x_display,
nullseat_get_windowid,
nullseat_get_window_pixel_size,
console_stripctrl_new,
console_set_trust_status,
New abstraction 'Seat', to pass to backends. This is a new vtable-based abstraction which is passed to a backend in place of Frontend, and it implements only the subset of the Frontend functions needed by a backend. (Many other Frontend functions still exist, notably the wide range of things called by terminal.c providing platform-independent operations on the GUI terminal window.) The purpose of making it a vtable is that this opens up the possibility of creating a backend as an internal implementation detail of some other activity, by providing just that one backend with a custom Seat that implements the methods differently. For example, this refactoring should make it feasible to directly implement an SSH proxy type, aka the 'jump host' feature supported by OpenSSH, aka 'open a secondary SSH session in MAINCHAN_DIRECT_TCP mode, and then expose the main channel of that as the Socket for the primary connection'. (Which of course you can already do by spawning 'plink -nc' as a separate proxy process, but this would permit it in the _same_ process without anything getting confused.) I've centralised a full set of stub methods in misc.c for the new abstraction, which allows me to get rid of several annoying stubs in the previous code. Also, while I'm here, I've moved a lot of duplicated modalfatalbox() type functions from application main program files into wincons.c / uxcons.c, which I think saves duplication overall. (A minor visible effect is that the prefixes on those console-based fatal error messages will now be more consistent between applications.)
2018-10-11 18:58:42 +00:00
};
static Seat plink_seat[1] = {{ &plink_seat_vt }};
static DWORD main_thread_id;
void agent_schedule_callback(void (*callback)(void *, void *, int),
void *callback_ctx, void *data, int len)
{
struct agent_callback *c = snew(struct agent_callback);
c->callback = callback;
c->callback_ctx = callback_ctx;
c->data = data;
c->len = len;
PostThreadMessage(main_thread_id, WM_AGENT_CALLBACK, 0, (LPARAM)c);
}
/*
* Short description of parameters.
*/
static void usage(void)
{
printf("Plink: command-line connection utility\n");
printf("%s\n", ver);
printf("Usage: plink [options] [user@]host [command]\n");
printf(" (\"host\" can also be a PuTTY saved session name)\n");
printf("Options:\n");
printf(" -V print version information and exit\n");
printf(" -pgpfp print PGP key fingerprints and exit\n");
printf(" -v show verbose messages\n");
printf(" -load sessname Load settings from saved session\n");
printf(" -ssh -telnet -rlogin -raw -serial\n");
printf(" force use of a particular protocol\n");
printf(" -P port connect to specified port\n");
printf(" -l user connect with specified username\n");
printf(" -batch disable all interactive prompts\n");
printf(" -proxycmd command\n");
printf(" use 'command' as local proxy\n");
printf(" -sercfg configuration-string (e.g. 19200,8,n,1,X)\n");
printf(" Specify the serial configuration (serial only)\n");
printf("The following options only apply to SSH connections:\n");
printf(" -pw passw login with specified password\n");
printf(" -D [listen-IP:]listen-port\n");
printf(" Dynamic SOCKS-based port forwarding\n");
printf(" -L [listen-IP:]listen-port:host:port\n");
printf(" Forward local port to remote address\n");
printf(" -R [listen-IP:]listen-port:host:port\n");
printf(" Forward remote port to local address\n");
printf(" -X -x enable / disable X11 forwarding\n");
printf(" -A -a enable / disable agent forwarding\n");
printf(" -t -T enable / disable pty allocation\n");
printf(" -1 -2 force use of particular protocol version\n");
printf(" -4 -6 force use of IPv4 or IPv6\n");
printf(" -C enable compression\n");
printf(" -i key private key file for user authentication\n");
printf(" -noagent disable use of Pageant\n");
printf(" -agent enable use of Pageant\n");
printf(" -noshare disable use of connection sharing\n");
printf(" -share enable use of connection sharing\n");
printf(" -hostkey aa:bb:cc:...\n");
printf(" manually specify a host key (may be repeated)\n");
Plink: default to sanitising non-tty console output. If Plink's standard output and/or standard error points at a Windows console or a Unix tty device, and if Plink was not configured to request a remote pty (and hence to send a terminal-type string), then we apply the new control-character stripping facility. The idea is to be a mild defence against malicious remote processes sending confusing escape sequences through the standard error channel when Plink is being used as a transport for something like git: it's OK to have actual sensible error messages come back from the server, but when you run a git command, you didn't really intend to give the remote server the implicit licence to write _all over_ your local terminal display. At the same time, in that scenario, the standard _output_ of Plink is left completely alone, on the grounds that git will be expecting it to be 8-bit clean. (And Plink can tell that because it's redirected away from the console.) For interactive login sessions using Plink, this behaviour is disabled, on the grounds that once you've sent a terminal-type string it's assumed that you were _expecting_ the server to use it to know what escape sequences to send to you. So it should be transparent for all the use cases I've so far thought of. But in case it's not, there's a family of new command-line options like -no-sanitise-stdout and -sanitise-stderr that you can use to forcibly override the autodetection of whether to do it. This all applies the same way to both Unix and Windows Plink.
2019-02-20 07:03:57 +00:00
printf(" -sanitise-stderr, -sanitise-stdout, "
"-no-sanitise-stderr, -no-sanitise-stdout\n");
printf(" do/don't strip control chars from standard "
"output/error\n");
printf(" -no-antispoof omit anti-spoofing prompt after "
"authentication\n");
printf(" -m file read remote command(s) from file\n");
printf(" -s remote command is an SSH subsystem (SSH-2 only)\n");
printf(" -N don't start a shell/command (SSH-2 only)\n");
printf(" -nc host:port\n");
printf(" open tunnel in place of session (SSH-2 only)\n");
printf(" -sshlog file\n");
printf(" -sshrawlog file\n");
printf(" log protocol details to a file\n");
printf(" -shareexists\n");
printf(" test whether a connection-sharing upstream exists\n");
exit(1);
}
static void version(void)
{
char *buildinfo_text = buildinfo("\n");
printf("plink: %s\n%s\n", ver, buildinfo_text);
sfree(buildinfo_text);
exit(0);
}
size_t stdin_gotdata(struct handle *h, const void *data, size_t len, int err)
{
if (err) {
char buf[4096];
FormatMessage(FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM, NULL, err, 0,
buf, lenof(buf), NULL);
buf[lenof(buf)-1] = '\0';
if (buf[strlen(buf)-1] == '\n')
buf[strlen(buf)-1] = '\0';
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to read from standard input: %s\n", buf);
cleanup_exit(0);
}
noise_ultralight(NOISE_SOURCE_IOLEN, len);
if (backend_connected(backend)) {
if (len > 0) {
return backend_send(backend, data, len);
} else {
backend_special(backend, SS_EOF, 0);
return 0;
}
} else
return 0;
}
void stdouterr_sent(struct handle *h, size_t new_backlog, int err)
{
if (err) {
char buf[4096];
FormatMessage(FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM, NULL, err, 0,
buf, lenof(buf), NULL);
buf[lenof(buf)-1] = '\0';
if (buf[strlen(buf)-1] == '\n')
buf[strlen(buf)-1] = '\0';
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to write to standard %s: %s\n",
(h == stdout_handle ? "output" : "error"), buf);
cleanup_exit(0);
}
if (backend_connected(backend)) {
backend_unthrottle(backend, (handle_backlog(stdout_handle) +
handle_backlog(stderr_handle)));
}
}
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
const bool share_can_be_downstream = true;
const bool share_can_be_upstream = true;
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
bool sending;
SOCKET *sklist;
size_t skcount, sksize;
int exitcode;
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
bool errors;
bool use_subsystem = false;
bool just_test_share_exists = false;
Plink: default to sanitising non-tty console output. If Plink's standard output and/or standard error points at a Windows console or a Unix tty device, and if Plink was not configured to request a remote pty (and hence to send a terminal-type string), then we apply the new control-character stripping facility. The idea is to be a mild defence against malicious remote processes sending confusing escape sequences through the standard error channel when Plink is being used as a transport for something like git: it's OK to have actual sensible error messages come back from the server, but when you run a git command, you didn't really intend to give the remote server the implicit licence to write _all over_ your local terminal display. At the same time, in that scenario, the standard _output_ of Plink is left completely alone, on the grounds that git will be expecting it to be 8-bit clean. (And Plink can tell that because it's redirected away from the console.) For interactive login sessions using Plink, this behaviour is disabled, on the grounds that once you've sent a terminal-type string it's assumed that you were _expecting_ the server to use it to know what escape sequences to send to you. So it should be transparent for all the use cases I've so far thought of. But in case it's not, there's a family of new command-line options like -no-sanitise-stdout and -sanitise-stderr that you can use to forcibly override the autodetection of whether to do it. This all applies the same way to both Unix and Windows Plink.
2019-02-20 07:03:57 +00:00
enum TriState sanitise_stdout = AUTO, sanitise_stderr = AUTO;
unsigned long now, next, then;
const struct BackendVtable *vt;
dll_hijacking_protection();
sklist = NULL;
skcount = sksize = 0;
/*
* Initialise port and protocol to sensible defaults. (These
* will be overridden by more or less anything.)
*/
default_protocol = PROT_SSH;
default_port = 22;
Remove FLAG_STDERR completely. Originally, it controlled whether ssh.c should send terminal messages (such as login and password prompts) to terminal.c or to stderr. But we've had the from_backend() abstraction for ages now, which even has an existing flag to indicate that the data is stderr rather than stdout data; applications which set FLAG_STDERR are precisely those that link against uxcons or wincons, so from_backend will do the expected thing anyway with data sent to it with that flag set. So there's no reason ssh.c can't just unconditionally pass everything through that, and remove the special case. FLAG_STDERR was also used by winproxy and uxproxy to decide whether to capture standard error from a local proxy command, or whether to let the proxy command send its diagnostics directly to the usual standard error. On reflection, I think it's better to unconditionally capture the proxy's stderr, for three reasons. Firstly, it means proxy diagnostics are prefixed with 'proxy:' so that you can tell them apart from any other stderr spew (which used to be particularly confusing if both the main application and the proxy command were instances of Plink); secondly, proxy diagnostics are now reliably copied to packet log files along with all the other Event Log entries, even by command-line tools; and thirdly, this means the option to suppress proxy command diagnostics after the main session starts will actually _work_ in the command-line tools, which it previously couldn't. A more minor structure change is that copying of Event Log messages to stderr in verbose mode is now done by wincons/uxcons, instead of centrally in logging.c (since logging.c can now no longer check FLAG_STDERR to decide whether to do it). The total amount of code to do this is considerably smaller than the defensive-sounding comment in logevent.c explaining why I did it the other way instead :-)
2018-09-21 15:15:49 +00:00
flags = 0;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
cmdline_tooltype |=
(TOOLTYPE_HOST_ARG |
TOOLTYPE_HOST_ARG_CAN_BE_SESSION |
TOOLTYPE_HOST_ARG_PROTOCOL_PREFIX |
TOOLTYPE_HOST_ARG_FROM_LAUNCHABLE_LOAD);
/*
* Process the command line.
*/
Post-release destabilisation! Completely remove the struct type 'Config' in putty.h, which stores all PuTTY's settings and includes an arbitrary length limit on every single one of those settings which is stored in string form. In place of it is 'Conf', an opaque data type everywhere outside the new file conf.c, which stores a list of (key, value) pairs in which every key contains an integer identifying a configuration setting, and for some of those integers the key also contains extra parts (so that, for instance, CONF_environmt is a string-to-string mapping). Everywhere that a Config was previously used, a Conf is now; everywhere there was a Config structure copy, conf_copy() is called; every lookup, adjustment, load and save operation on a Config has been rewritten; and there's a mechanism for serialising a Conf into a binary blob and back for use with Duplicate Session. User-visible effects of this change _should_ be minimal, though I don't doubt I've introduced one or two bugs here and there which will eventually be found. The _intended_ visible effects of this change are that all arbitrary limits on configuration strings and lists (e.g. limit on number of port forwardings) should now disappear; that list boxes in the configuration will now be displayed in a sorted order rather than the arbitrary order in which they were added to the list (since the underlying data structure is now a sorted tree234 rather than an ad-hoc comma-separated string); and one more specific change, which is that local and dynamic port forwardings on the same port number are now mutually exclusive in the configuration (putting 'D' in the key rather than the value was a mistake in the first place). One other reorganisation as a result of this is that I've moved all the dialog.c standard handlers (dlg_stdeditbox_handler and friends) out into config.c, because I can't really justify calling them generic any more. When they took a pointer to an arbitrary structure type and the offset of a field within that structure, they were independent of whether that structure was a Config or something completely different, but now they really do expect to talk to a Conf, which can _only_ be used for PuTTY configuration, so I've renamed them all things like conf_editbox_handler and moved them out of the nominally independent dialog-box management module into the PuTTY-specific config.c. [originally from svn r9214]
2011-07-14 18:52:21 +00:00
conf = conf_new();
do_defaults(NULL, conf);
loaded_session = false;
Post-release destabilisation! Completely remove the struct type 'Config' in putty.h, which stores all PuTTY's settings and includes an arbitrary length limit on every single one of those settings which is stored in string form. In place of it is 'Conf', an opaque data type everywhere outside the new file conf.c, which stores a list of (key, value) pairs in which every key contains an integer identifying a configuration setting, and for some of those integers the key also contains extra parts (so that, for instance, CONF_environmt is a string-to-string mapping). Everywhere that a Config was previously used, a Conf is now; everywhere there was a Config structure copy, conf_copy() is called; every lookup, adjustment, load and save operation on a Config has been rewritten; and there's a mechanism for serialising a Conf into a binary blob and back for use with Duplicate Session. User-visible effects of this change _should_ be minimal, though I don't doubt I've introduced one or two bugs here and there which will eventually be found. The _intended_ visible effects of this change are that all arbitrary limits on configuration strings and lists (e.g. limit on number of port forwardings) should now disappear; that list boxes in the configuration will now be displayed in a sorted order rather than the arbitrary order in which they were added to the list (since the underlying data structure is now a sorted tree234 rather than an ad-hoc comma-separated string); and one more specific change, which is that local and dynamic port forwardings on the same port number are now mutually exclusive in the configuration (putting 'D' in the key rather than the value was a mistake in the first place). One other reorganisation as a result of this is that I've moved all the dialog.c standard handlers (dlg_stdeditbox_handler and friends) out into config.c, because I can't really justify calling them generic any more. When they took a pointer to an arbitrary structure type and the offset of a field within that structure, they were independent of whether that structure was a Config or something completely different, but now they really do expect to talk to a Conf, which can _only_ be used for PuTTY configuration, so I've renamed them all things like conf_editbox_handler and moved them out of the nominally independent dialog-box management module into the PuTTY-specific config.c. [originally from svn r9214]
2011-07-14 18:52:21 +00:00
default_protocol = conf_get_int(conf, CONF_protocol);
default_port = conf_get_int(conf, CONF_port);
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
errors = false;
{
/*
* Override the default protocol if PLINK_PROTOCOL is set.
*/
char *p = getenv("PLINK_PROTOCOL");
if (p) {
const struct BackendVtable *vt = backend_vt_from_name(p);
if (vt) {
default_protocol = vt->protocol;
default_port = vt->default_port;
conf_set_int(conf, CONF_protocol, default_protocol);
conf_set_int(conf, CONF_port, default_port);
}
}
}
while (--argc) {
char *p = *++argv;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
int ret = cmdline_process_param(p, (argc > 1 ? argv[1] : NULL),
1, conf);
if (ret == -2) {
fprintf(stderr,
"plink: option \"%s\" requires an argument\n", p);
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
errors = true;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
} else if (ret == 2) {
--argc, ++argv;
} else if (ret == 1) {
continue;
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-batch")) {
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
console_batch_mode = true;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-s")) {
/* Save status to write to conf later. */
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
use_subsystem = true;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-V") || !strcmp(p, "--version")) {
version();
} else if (!strcmp(p, "--help")) {
usage();
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-pgpfp")) {
pgp_fingerprints();
exit(1);
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-shareexists")) {
just_test_share_exists = true;
Plink: default to sanitising non-tty console output. If Plink's standard output and/or standard error points at a Windows console or a Unix tty device, and if Plink was not configured to request a remote pty (and hence to send a terminal-type string), then we apply the new control-character stripping facility. The idea is to be a mild defence against malicious remote processes sending confusing escape sequences through the standard error channel when Plink is being used as a transport for something like git: it's OK to have actual sensible error messages come back from the server, but when you run a git command, you didn't really intend to give the remote server the implicit licence to write _all over_ your local terminal display. At the same time, in that scenario, the standard _output_ of Plink is left completely alone, on the grounds that git will be expecting it to be 8-bit clean. (And Plink can tell that because it's redirected away from the console.) For interactive login sessions using Plink, this behaviour is disabled, on the grounds that once you've sent a terminal-type string it's assumed that you were _expecting_ the server to use it to know what escape sequences to send to you. So it should be transparent for all the use cases I've so far thought of. But in case it's not, there's a family of new command-line options like -no-sanitise-stdout and -sanitise-stderr that you can use to forcibly override the autodetection of whether to do it. This all applies the same way to both Unix and Windows Plink.
2019-02-20 07:03:57 +00:00
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-sanitise-stdout") ||
!strcmp(p, "-sanitize-stdout")) {
sanitise_stdout = FORCE_ON;
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-no-sanitise-stdout") ||
!strcmp(p, "-no-sanitize-stdout")) {
sanitise_stdout = FORCE_OFF;
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-sanitise-stderr") ||
!strcmp(p, "-sanitize-stderr")) {
sanitise_stderr = FORCE_ON;
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-no-sanitise-stderr") ||
!strcmp(p, "-no-sanitize-stderr")) {
sanitise_stderr = FORCE_OFF;
} else if (!strcmp(p, "-no-antispoof")) {
console_antispoof_prompt = false;
} else if (*p != '-') {
strbuf *cmdbuf = strbuf_new();
while (argc > 0) {
if (cmdbuf->len > 0)
put_byte(cmdbuf, ' '); /* add space separator */
put_datapl(cmdbuf, ptrlen_from_asciz(p));
if (--argc > 0)
p = *++argv;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
}
conf_set_str(conf, CONF_remote_cmd, cmdbuf->s);
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
conf_set_str(conf, CONF_remote_cmd2, "");
conf_set_bool(conf, CONF_nopty, true); /* command => no tty */
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
strbuf_free(cmdbuf);
break; /* done with cmdline */
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
} else {
fprintf(stderr, "plink: unknown option \"%s\"\n", p);
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'. My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as _almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine, no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1. PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it. But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99 bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing 'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables are now spelled 'true' or 'false'. I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years! To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean; I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code have been converted wherever I found them. In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in _most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value, or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and 'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer: - the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1 and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean - the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero' - the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in the wildcard. - the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use -1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_ key can treat them as boolean) - term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h, but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we don't support. In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above, tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or bad and the 1 positive or good: - the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of 0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate piece of work. - the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1 represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive' or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int. ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the function and its call sites agree that it's a bool. In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd' (the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them. Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
errors = true;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
}
}
if (errors)
return 1;
Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling. This is another piece of long-overdue refactoring similar to the recent commit e3796cb77. But where that one dealt with normalisation of stuff already stored _in_ a Conf by whatever means (including, in particular, handling a user typing 'username@host.name' into the Hostname box of the GUI session dialog box), this one deals with handling argv entries and putting them into the Conf. This isn't exactly a pure no-functional-change-at-all refactoring. On the other hand, it isn't a full-on cleanup that completely rationalises all the user-visible behaviour as well as the code structure. It's somewhere in between: I've preserved all the behaviour quirks that I could imagine a reason for having intended, but taken the opportunity to _not_ faithfully replicate anything I thought was clearly just a bug. So, for example, the following inconsistency is carefully preserved: the command 'plink -load session nextword' treats 'nextword' as a host name if the loaded session hasn't provided a hostname already, and otherwise treats 'nextword' as the remote command to execute on the already-specified remote host, but the same combination of arguments to GUI PuTTY will _always_ treat 'nextword' as a hostname, overriding a hostname (if any) in the saved session. That makes some sense to me because of the different shapes of the overall command lines. On the other hand, there are two behaviour changes I know of as a result of this commit: a third argument to GUI PuTTY (after a hostname and port) now provokes an error message instead of being silently ignored, and in Plink, if you combine a -P option (specifying a port number) with the historical comma-separated protocol selection prefix on the hostname argument (which I'd completely forgotten even existed until this piece of work), then the -P will now override the selected protocol's default port number, whereas previously the default port would win. For example, 'plink -P 12345 telnet,hostname' will now connect via Telnet to port 12345 instead of to port 23. There may be scope for removing or rethinking some of the command- line syntax quirks in the wake of this change. If we do decide to do anything like that, then hopefully having it all in one place will make it easier to remove or change things consistently across the tools.
2017-12-07 19:59:43 +00:00
if (!cmdline_host_ok(conf)) {
usage();
}
prepare_session(conf);
/*
* Perform command-line overrides on session configuration.
*/
Post-release destabilisation! Completely remove the struct type 'Config' in putty.h, which stores all PuTTY's settings and includes an arbitrary length limit on every single one of those settings which is stored in string form. In place of it is 'Conf', an opaque data type everywhere outside the new file conf.c, which stores a list of (key, value) pairs in which every key contains an integer identifying a configuration setting, and for some of those integers the key also contains extra parts (so that, for instance, CONF_environmt is a string-to-string mapping). Everywhere that a Config was previously used, a Conf is now; everywhere there was a Config structure copy, conf_copy() is called; every lookup, adjustment, load and save operation on a Config has been rewritten; and there's a mechanism for serialising a Conf into a binary blob and back for use with Duplicate Session. User-visible effects of this change _should_ be minimal, though I don't doubt I've introduced one or two bugs here and there which will eventually be found. The _intended_ visible effects of this change are that all arbitrary limits on configuration strings and lists (e.g. limit on number of port forwardings) should now disappear; that list boxes in the configuration will now be displayed in a sorted order rather than the arbitrary order in which they were added to the list (since the underlying data structure is now a sorted tree234 rather than an ad-hoc comma-separated string); and one more specific change, which is that local and dynamic port forwardings on the same port number are now mutually exclusive in the configuration (putting 'D' in the key rather than the value was a mistake in the first place). One other reorganisation as a result of this is that I've moved all the dialog.c standard handlers (dlg_stdeditbox_handler and friends) out into config.c, because I can't really justify calling them generic any more. When they took a pointer to an arbitrary structure type and the offset of a field within that structure, they were independent of whether that structure was a Config or something completely different, but now they really do expect to talk to a Conf, which can _only_ be used for PuTTY configuration, so I've renamed them all things like conf_editbox_handler and moved them out of the nominally independent dialog-box management module into the PuTTY-specific config.c. [originally from svn r9214]
2011-07-14 18:52:21 +00:00
cmdline_run_saved(conf);
/*
* Apply subsystem status.
*/
if (use_subsystem)
conf_set_bool(conf, CONF_ssh_subsys, true);
Post-release destabilisation! Completely remove the struct type 'Config' in putty.h, which stores all PuTTY's settings and includes an arbitrary length limit on every single one of those settings which is stored in string form. In place of it is 'Conf', an opaque data type everywhere outside the new file conf.c, which stores a list of (key, value) pairs in which every key contains an integer identifying a configuration setting, and for some of those integers the key also contains extra parts (so that, for instance, CONF_environmt is a string-to-string mapping). Everywhere that a Config was previously used, a Conf is now; everywhere there was a Config structure copy, conf_copy() is called; every lookup, adjustment, load and save operation on a Config has been rewritten; and there's a mechanism for serialising a Conf into a binary blob and back for use with Duplicate Session. User-visible effects of this change _should_ be minimal, though I don't doubt I've introduced one or two bugs here and there which will eventually be found. The _intended_ visible effects of this change are that all arbitrary limits on configuration strings and lists (e.g. limit on number of port forwardings) should now disappear; that list boxes in the configuration will now be displayed in a sorted order rather than the arbitrary order in which they were added to the list (since the underlying data structure is now a sorted tree234 rather than an ad-hoc comma-separated string); and one more specific change, which is that local and dynamic port forwardings on the same port number are now mutually exclusive in the configuration (putting 'D' in the key rather than the value was a mistake in the first place). One other reorganisation as a result of this is that I've moved all the dialog.c standard handlers (dlg_stdeditbox_handler and friends) out into config.c, because I can't really justify calling them generic any more. When they took a pointer to an arbitrary structure type and the offset of a field within that structure, they were independent of whether that structure was a Config or something completely different, but now they really do expect to talk to a Conf, which can _only_ be used for PuTTY configuration, so I've renamed them all things like conf_editbox_handler and moved them out of the nominally independent dialog-box management module into the PuTTY-specific config.c. [originally from svn r9214]
2011-07-14 18:52:21 +00:00
if (!*conf_get_str(conf, CONF_remote_cmd) &&
!*conf_get_str(conf, CONF_remote_cmd2) &&
!*conf_get_str(conf, CONF_ssh_nc_host))
flags |= FLAG_INTERACTIVE;
/*
* Select protocol. This is farmed out into a table in a
* separate file to enable an ssh-free variant.
*/
vt = backend_vt_from_proto(conf_get_int(conf, CONF_protocol));
if (vt == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr,
"Internal fault: Unsupported protocol found\n");
return 1;
}
sk_init();
if (p_WSAEventSelect == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "Plink requires WinSock 2\n");
return 1;
}
/*
* Plink doesn't provide any way to add forwardings after the
* connection is set up, so if there are none now, we can safely set
* the "simple" flag.
*/
if (conf_get_int(conf, CONF_protocol) == PROT_SSH &&
!conf_get_bool(conf, CONF_x11_forward) &&
!conf_get_bool(conf, CONF_agentfwd) &&
!conf_get_str_nthstrkey(conf, CONF_portfwd, 0))
conf_set_bool(conf, CONF_ssh_simple, true);
Refactor the LogContext type. LogContext is now the owner of the logevent() function that back ends and so forth are constantly calling. Previously, logevent was owned by the Frontend, which would store the message into its list for the GUI Event Log dialog (or print it to standard error, or whatever) and then pass it _back_ to LogContext to write to the currently open log file. Now it's the other way round: LogContext gets the message from the back end first, writes it to its log file if it feels so inclined, and communicates it back to the front end. This means that lots of parts of the back end system no longer need to have a pointer to a full-on Frontend; the only thing they needed it for was logging, so now they just have a LogContext (which many of them had to have anyway, e.g. for logging SSH packets or session traffic). LogContext itself also doesn't get a full Frontend pointer any more: it now talks back to the front end via a little vtable of its own called LogPolicy, which contains the method that passes Event Log entries through, the old askappend() function that decides whether to truncate a pre-existing log file, and an emergency function for printing an especially prominent message if the log file can't be created. One minor nice effect of this is that console and GUI apps can implement that last function subtly differently, so that Unix console apps can write it with a plain \n instead of the \r\n (harmless but inelegant) that the old centralised implementation generated. One other consequence of this is that the LogContext has to be provided to backend_init() so that it's available to backends from the instant of creation, rather than being provided via a separate API call a couple of function calls later, because backends have typically started doing things that need logging (like making network connections) before the call to backend_provide_logctx. Fortunately, there's no case in the whole code base where we don't already have logctx by the time we make a backend (so I don't actually remember why I ever delayed providing one). So that shortens the backend API by one function, which is always nice. While I'm tidying up, I've also moved the printf-style logeventf() and the handy logevent_and_free() into logging.c, instead of having copies of them scattered around other places. This has also let me remove some stub functions from a couple of outlying applications like Pageant. Finally, I've removed the pointless "_tag" at the end of LogContext's official struct name.
2018-10-10 18:26:18 +00:00
logctx = log_init(default_logpolicy, conf);
if (just_test_share_exists) {
if (!vt->test_for_upstream) {
fprintf(stderr, "Connection sharing not supported for connection "
"type '%s'\n", vt->name);
return 1;
}
if (vt->test_for_upstream(conf_get_str(conf, CONF_host),
conf_get_int(conf, CONF_port), conf))
return 0;
else
return 1;
}
if (restricted_acl) {
Refactor the LogContext type. LogContext is now the owner of the logevent() function that back ends and so forth are constantly calling. Previously, logevent was owned by the Frontend, which would store the message into its list for the GUI Event Log dialog (or print it to standard error, or whatever) and then pass it _back_ to LogContext to write to the currently open log file. Now it's the other way round: LogContext gets the message from the back end first, writes it to its log file if it feels so inclined, and communicates it back to the front end. This means that lots of parts of the back end system no longer need to have a pointer to a full-on Frontend; the only thing they needed it for was logging, so now they just have a LogContext (which many of them had to have anyway, e.g. for logging SSH packets or session traffic). LogContext itself also doesn't get a full Frontend pointer any more: it now talks back to the front end via a little vtable of its own called LogPolicy, which contains the method that passes Event Log entries through, the old askappend() function that decides whether to truncate a pre-existing log file, and an emergency function for printing an especially prominent message if the log file can't be created. One minor nice effect of this is that console and GUI apps can implement that last function subtly differently, so that Unix console apps can write it with a plain \n instead of the \r\n (harmless but inelegant) that the old centralised implementation generated. One other consequence of this is that the LogContext has to be provided to backend_init() so that it's available to backends from the instant of creation, rather than being provided via a separate API call a couple of function calls later, because backends have typically started doing things that need logging (like making network connections) before the call to backend_provide_logctx. Fortunately, there's no case in the whole code base where we don't already have logctx by the time we make a backend (so I don't actually remember why I ever delayed providing one). So that shortens the backend API by one function, which is always nice. While I'm tidying up, I've also moved the printf-style logeventf() and the handy logevent_and_free() into logging.c, instead of having copies of them scattered around other places. This has also let me remove some stub functions from a couple of outlying applications like Pageant. Finally, I've removed the pointless "_tag" at the end of LogContext's official struct name.
2018-10-10 18:26:18 +00:00
lp_eventlog(default_logpolicy, "Running with restricted process ACL");
}
inhandle = GetStdHandle(STD_INPUT_HANDLE);
outhandle = GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE);
errhandle = GetStdHandle(STD_ERROR_HANDLE);
/*
* Turn off ECHO and LINE input modes. We don't care if this
* call fails, because we know we aren't necessarily running in
* a console.
*/
GetConsoleMode(inhandle, &orig_console_mode);
SetConsoleMode(inhandle, ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT);
/*
* Pass the output handles to the handle-handling subsystem.
* (The input one we leave until we're through the
* authentication process.)
*/
stdout_handle = handle_output_new(outhandle, stdouterr_sent, NULL, 0);
stderr_handle = handle_output_new(errhandle, stdouterr_sent, NULL, 0);
Plink: default to sanitising non-tty console output. If Plink's standard output and/or standard error points at a Windows console or a Unix tty device, and if Plink was not configured to request a remote pty (and hence to send a terminal-type string), then we apply the new control-character stripping facility. The idea is to be a mild defence against malicious remote processes sending confusing escape sequences through the standard error channel when Plink is being used as a transport for something like git: it's OK to have actual sensible error messages come back from the server, but when you run a git command, you didn't really intend to give the remote server the implicit licence to write _all over_ your local terminal display. At the same time, in that scenario, the standard _output_ of Plink is left completely alone, on the grounds that git will be expecting it to be 8-bit clean. (And Plink can tell that because it's redirected away from the console.) For interactive login sessions using Plink, this behaviour is disabled, on the grounds that once you've sent a terminal-type string it's assumed that you were _expecting_ the server to use it to know what escape sequences to send to you. So it should be transparent for all the use cases I've so far thought of. But in case it's not, there's a family of new command-line options like -no-sanitise-stdout and -sanitise-stderr that you can use to forcibly override the autodetection of whether to do it. This all applies the same way to both Unix and Windows Plink.
2019-02-20 07:03:57 +00:00
handle_sink_init(&stdout_hs, stdout_handle);
handle_sink_init(&stderr_hs, stderr_handle);
stdout_bs = BinarySink_UPCAST(&stdout_hs);
stderr_bs = BinarySink_UPCAST(&stderr_hs);
/*
* Decide whether to sanitise control sequences out of standard
* output and standard error.
*
* If we weren't given a command-line override, we do this if (a)
* the fd in question is pointing at a console, and (b) we aren't
* trying to allocate a terminal as part of the session.
*
* (Rationale: the risk of control sequences is that they cause
* confusion when sent to a local console, so if there isn't one,
* no problem. Also, if we allocate a remote terminal, then we
* sent a terminal type, i.e. we told it what kind of escape
* sequences we _like_, i.e. we were expecting to receive some.)
*/
if (sanitise_stdout == FORCE_ON ||
(sanitise_stdout == AUTO && is_console_handle(outhandle) &&
conf_get_bool(conf, CONF_nopty))) {
stdout_scc = stripctrl_new(stdout_bs, true, L'\0');
stdout_bs = BinarySink_UPCAST(stdout_scc);
}
if (sanitise_stderr == FORCE_ON ||
(sanitise_stderr == AUTO && is_console_handle(errhandle) &&
conf_get_bool(conf, CONF_nopty))) {
stderr_scc = stripctrl_new(stderr_bs, true, L'\0');
stderr_bs = BinarySink_UPCAST(stderr_scc);
}
/*
* Start up the connection.
*/
winselcli_setup(); /* ensure event object exists */
{
const char *error;
char *realhost;
/* nodelay is only useful if stdin is a character device (console) */
bool nodelay = conf_get_bool(conf, CONF_tcp_nodelay) &&
(GetFileType(GetStdHandle(STD_INPUT_HANDLE)) == FILE_TYPE_CHAR);
error = backend_init(vt, plink_seat, &backend, logctx, conf,
conf_get_str(conf, CONF_host),
conf_get_int(conf, CONF_port),
&realhost, nodelay,
conf_get_bool(conf, CONF_tcp_keepalives));
if (error) {
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to open connection:\n%s", error);
return 1;
}
sfree(realhost);
}
main_thread_id = GetCurrentThreadId();
sending = false;
now = GETTICKCOUNT();
while (1) {
int nhandles;
HANDLE *handles;
int n;
DWORD ticks;
if (!sending && backend_sendok(backend)) {
stdin_handle = handle_input_new(inhandle, stdin_gotdata, NULL,
0);
sending = true;
}
if (toplevel_callback_pending()) {
ticks = 0;
next = now;
} else if (run_timers(now, &next)) {
then = now;
now = GETTICKCOUNT();
if (now - then > next - then)
ticks = 0;
else
ticks = next - now;
} else {
ticks = INFINITE;
/* no need to initialise next here because we can never
* get WAIT_TIMEOUT */
}
handles = handle_get_events(&nhandles);
handles = sresize(handles, nhandles+1, HANDLE);
handles[nhandles] = winselcli_event;
n = MsgWaitForMultipleObjects(nhandles+1, handles, false, ticks,
QS_POSTMESSAGE);
if ((unsigned)(n - WAIT_OBJECT_0) < (unsigned)nhandles) {
handle_got_event(handles[n - WAIT_OBJECT_0]);
} else if (n == WAIT_OBJECT_0 + nhandles) {
WSANETWORKEVENTS things;
SOCKET socket;
int i, socketstate;
/*
* We must not call select_result() for any socket
* until we have finished enumerating within the tree.
* This is because select_result() may close the socket
* and modify the tree.
*/
/* Count the active sockets. */
i = 0;
for (socket = first_socket(&socketstate);
socket != INVALID_SOCKET;
socket = next_socket(&socketstate)) i++;
/* Expand the buffer if necessary. */
sgrowarray(sklist, sksize, i);
/* Retrieve the sockets into sklist. */
skcount = 0;
for (socket = first_socket(&socketstate);
socket != INVALID_SOCKET;
socket = next_socket(&socketstate)) {
sklist[skcount++] = socket;
}
/* Now we're done enumerating; go through the list. */
for (i = 0; i < skcount; i++) {
WPARAM wp;
socket = sklist[i];
wp = (WPARAM) socket;
if (!p_WSAEnumNetworkEvents(socket, NULL, &things)) {
static const struct { int bit, mask; } eventtypes[] = {
{FD_CONNECT_BIT, FD_CONNECT},
{FD_READ_BIT, FD_READ},
{FD_CLOSE_BIT, FD_CLOSE},
{FD_OOB_BIT, FD_OOB},
{FD_WRITE_BIT, FD_WRITE},
{FD_ACCEPT_BIT, FD_ACCEPT},
};
int e;
noise_ultralight(NOISE_SOURCE_IOID, socket);
for (e = 0; e < lenof(eventtypes); e++)
if (things.lNetworkEvents & eventtypes[e].mask) {
LPARAM lp;
int err = things.iErrorCode[eventtypes[e].bit];
lp = WSAMAKESELECTREPLY(eventtypes[e].mask, err);
select_result(wp, lp);
}
}
}
} else if (n == WAIT_OBJECT_0 + nhandles + 1) {
MSG msg;
while (PeekMessage(&msg, INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE,
WM_AGENT_CALLBACK, WM_AGENT_CALLBACK,
PM_REMOVE)) {
struct agent_callback *c = (struct agent_callback *)msg.lParam;
c->callback(c->callback_ctx, c->data, c->len);
sfree(c);
}
}
run_toplevel_callbacks();
if (n == WAIT_TIMEOUT) {
now = next;
} else {
now = GETTICKCOUNT();
}
sfree(handles);
if (sending)
handle_unthrottle(stdin_handle, backend_sendbuffer(backend));
if (!backend_connected(backend) &&
handle_backlog(stdout_handle) + handle_backlog(stderr_handle) == 0)
break; /* we closed the connection */
}
exitcode = backend_exitcode(backend);
if (exitcode < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Remote process exit code unavailable\n");
exitcode = 1; /* this is an error condition */
}
cleanup_exit(exitcode);
return 0; /* placate compiler warning */
}