to a Unix-domain socket. This typically works fine when PuTTY is run on the
same machine as the X server, but it's broken multi-hop X forwarding through
OpenSSH; when OpenSSH creates a proxy X server "localhost:10", it only listens
on TCP, not on a Unix-domain socket.
Instead, when deciding on the details of the display, we actively probe to see
if there's a Unix-domain socket we can use instead, and only use it if it's
there, falling back to the specified IP "localhost" if not.
Independently, when looking for local auth details in Xauthority for a
"localhost" TCP display, we prefer a matching Unix-domain entry, but will fall
back to an IP "localhost" entry (which would be unusual, but we don't trust a
Windows X server not to do it) -- this is a generalisation of the special case
added in r2538 (but removed in r8305, as the automatic upgrade masked the need
for it).
(This is now done in platform-independent code, so a side-effect is that
get_hostname() is now part of the networking abstraction on all platforms.)
[originally from svn r8462]
[r2538 == fda9983243]
[r8305 == ca6fc3a4da]
This could cause Unix PuTTY to segfault when X forwarding over an SSH session
through a proxy.
(sk_getaddr() wouldn't cope either -- in that case, add an assertion to make it
more obvious; I don't think it should ever happen.)
[originally from svn r8391]
sk_hostname_is_local(), to catch the case where we're doing something like X11
forwarding over SSH through a proxy, and we've thus disabled local lookup of
hostnames.
(I think this is what's behind the report in
<e9a86996-5dc2-4428-9b0c-c65693ca6351@m32g2000hsf.googlegroups.com>
in comp.security.ssh, although I'd like to know more of the circumstances.)
[originally from svn r8385]
strings more rigorously, and then we look up the local X authority
data in .Xauthority _ourself_ rather than delegating to an external
xauth program. This is (negligibly) more efficient on Unix, assuming
I haven't got it wrong in some subtle way, but its major benefit is
that we can now support X authority lookups on Windows as well
provided the user points us at an appropriate X authority file in
the standard format. A new Windows-specific config option has been
added for this purpose.
[originally from svn r8305]
"curraddr", and turn "family" into a macro-derived property of the
other fields. The idea is that this renders SockAddrs immutable once
created, which should open up the possibility of duplicating and
reusing one without having to redo the actual DNS lookup.
I _hope_ I haven't broken anything. The new code architecture
contains several rather dubious-looking operations (namely the
arbitrary choice of the first returned address in functions like
sk_getaddr and sk_address_is_local - what if, for instance, a DNS
lookup returned a local and a non-local address?), but I think they
were functionally just as dubious beforehand and all this change has
done is to make them more obviously so to a reader.
[originally from svn r8293]
(rather than IPv4 or IPv6-only; this is the default), try to open up listening
sockets on both address families, rather than (unhelpfully) just IPv6. (And
don't open one if the other can't be bound, in a nod to CVE-2008-1483.)
Based on a patch from Ben A L Jemmett.
[originally from svn r8150]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
addressing X displays. Update PuTTY's display-name-to-Unix-socket-
path translation code to cope with it, thus causing X forwarding to
start working again on Leopard.
[originally from svn r8020]
problems using Unix PuTTY port forwarding. Sockets we create by
connect() are immediately set into nonblocking mode by fcntl, but
sockets we create by accept() were not. This trivial fix should help.
[originally from svn r7864]
PuTTY causes the child process to inherit a lot of socket fds from
its parent, which is a pain if one of them then ends up holding open
a listening socket which the parent was using for port forwarding
after the parent itself is dead.
Therefore, this checkin sprinkles FD_CLOEXEC throughout the Unix
platform directory wherever there looks like being a long-lived fd.
[originally from svn r6917]
necessary on Solaris if we want to use SIOCATMARK. Using sockatmark() might
be preferable, but despite being notionally standard it's missing on
Solaris 9 and Mac OS X 10.3.9, whereas everyone seems to have SIOCATMARK
somewhere.
[originally from svn r5676]
the semantics of assert(0) and believes it can return. Add a gratuitous
exit(1) to convince it that this won't happen, and hence quell a couple of
warnings about variables' being used uninitialised.
[originally from svn r5669]
* Make sk_getxdmdata() return an arbitrary string rather than two integers.
This better matches the spec, even if the current version always returns
six bytes
* On Unix, for PF_UNIX sockets, return a counter rather than a constant along
with the PID. This should allow multiple clients to connect within one
second, and is what Xlib does.
* On Unix, interpret AF_INET6 addresses like Xlib does, returning the
embedded IPv4 address for v4-mapped addresses, and six bytes of zeroes
otherwise. The latter is silly, but if I'm going to do anything more sane
I need to check that X servers won't reject it.
[originally from svn r5219]
latter in terms of the former. Also adjust the definition of
ipv4_is_loopback() to avoid using the non-standard inet_netof() and
IN_LOOPBACKNET, and move it next to its remaining uses.
[originally from svn r5215]
connection. Instead, correctly check IPv4 and IPv6 connections, assume that
AF_LOCAL is always local, and anything else is always remote.
This makes trivial local-to-remote forwarding work on my system.
[originally from svn r5180]
of polishing to bring them to what I think should in principle be
release quality. Unlike the unfix.org patches themselves, this
checkin enables IPv6 by default; if you want to leave it out, you
have to build with COMPAT=-DNO_IPV6.
I have tested that this compiles on Visual C 7 (so the nightlies
_should_ acquire IPv6 support without missing a beat), but since I
don't have IPv6 set up myself I haven't actually tested that it
_works_. It still seems to make correct IPv4 connections, but that's
all I've been able to verify for myself. Further testing is needed.
[originally from svn r5047]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
No very good reason, but I've occasionally wanted to frob it to see if it
makes any difference to problems I'm having, and it was easy.
Tested that it does actually cause keepalives on Windows (with tcpdump);
should also work on Unix. Not implemented on Mac (does nothing), but then
neither is TCP_NODELAY.
Quite a big checkin, much of which is adding `keepalive' alongside `nodelay'
in network function calls.
[originally from svn r4309]
trying to bind to the localhost interface with a sockaddr_in which has non-zero
sin_zero fields." Zero sockaddr_in (and sockaddr_in6) before any use.
[originally from svn r3793]
sk_new() on invocation; these functions become responsible for (eventually)
freeing it. The caller must not do anything with 'addr' after it's been passed
in. (Ick.)
Why:
A SOCKS5 crash appears to have been caused by overzealous freeing of
a SockAddr (ssh.c:1.257 [r2492]), which for proxied connections is
squirreled away long-term (and this can't easily be avoided).
It would have been nice to make a copy of the SockAddr, in case the caller has
a use for it, but one of the implementations (uxnet.c) hides a "struct
addrinfo" in there, and we have no defined way to duplicate those. (None of the
current callers _do_ have a further use for the SockAddr.)
As far as I can tell, everything _except_ proxying only needs addr for the
duration of the call, so sk_addr_free()s immediately. If I'm mistaken, it
should at least be easier to find the offending free()...
[originally from svn r3383]
[r2492 == bdd6633970]
ptrs and ints of different size and -Werror makes this serious).
The GTK bits are done by Colin's patch to use GINT_TO_POINTER
(thanks); the uxnet bits are done by cleaning up the rest of the
code. In particular, network.h now typedefs `OSSocket' to be a type
capable of holding whatever the OS's socket data type is that
underlies our socket abstraction. Individual platforms can make this
typedef themselves if they define OSSOCKET_DEFINED to prevent
network.h redoing it; so the Unix OSSocket is now int. Default is
still void *, so other platforms should be unaffected.
[originally from svn r3171]
At the moment, we have to assume that getaddrinfo() will only return AF_INET
and AF_INET6 addresses, since we patch in the port number into the sockaddr
later. Fixing this is probably best done by redesigning the PuTTY network
abstraction a little.
[originally from svn r3125]