... here's a Unix port of PSFTP. Woo. (Oddly PSCP looks to be
somewhat harder; there's more Windows code interleaved than there
was in PSFTP.)
[originally from svn r3419]
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]
Euro-supporting font with a Euro-enabled X key map will now actually
generate a Euro character rather than shrugging and doing nothing.
[originally from svn r3151]
had to move another of its values out into wincfg.c - paradoxically,
this was the `font has X encoding' option! (Because the Unix font
handling code expects to be able to tell for _itself_ whether it has
a font with X-encoded line drawing glyphs.)
[originally from svn r3145]
contents, and doesn't automatically maintain scroll position at the
bottom when new entries are added while the list is open, but it's a
start.
[originally from svn r3087]
This menu is not yet fully populated, but it has an About box (yet
another licence location :-/ ) and supports the new configurable
specials menu (thus making Unix PuTTY do one tiny thing which
OpenSSH-in-a-pterm can't :-).
[originally from svn r3062]
think it's now actually usable as a day-to-day SSH client, even if
things like the Event Log are still missing. So I call that a decent
lunch hour's work :-)
[originally from svn r3034]
being able to be a PuTTY as well as a pterm. In the process I've
also moved icky things like actually reading from the pty fd and
printing the `terminated on signal' messages into pty.c where they
obviously should have been in the first place. Also there's been one
interesting repercussion in the terminal code: terminal.c's
from_backend now calls term_out() directly rather than expecting the
front end to call it afterwards. This has had the entertaining side
effect of fixing a Windows-specific bug whereby activity in a port
forwarding through a PuTTY with a blinking cursor caused the cursor
to blink to ON (!!!!). So, a surprisingly far-reaching checkin as it
turns out...
[originally from svn r3017]
functionality that deal with selectable fds in general. The idea is
that pty.c will stop passing its fd straight to pterm.c and hand it
to this module instead, and pterm.c will start requesting a general
list of fds from this module rather than expecting a single one from
pty.c, with the ultimate aim of pterm.c being able to form the basis
of a Unix PuTTY as well as pterm proper.
[originally from svn r3015]
Unix-specific config items; moved a stray Windows-specific config
item (scrollbar-in-fullscreen) out into wincfg.c to stop it
appearing on Unix; continued updates to gtkdlg.c. I now believe the
GTK config box looks basically correct (modulo minor cosmetic issues
and keyboard accelerators). Next step, add the event handling so
it's actually functional.
[originally from svn r2933]
(list boxes are particularly conspicuously absent), it has no event
handling at all, and it isn't in any way integrated into pterm - you
have to build it specially using the test stubs in gtkdlg.c. But
what there is so far seems to work plausibly well, so it's a start.
Rather than browbeat the existing GTK container/layout widgets into
doing what I wanted, I decided to implement two subclasses of
GtkContainer myself, which implement precisely the layout model
assumed by the config box specification; this has the rather cool
consequence that the box can be resized and will maintain the same
layout at all times that it would have had if initially created at
that size.
[originally from svn r2931]
opaque to all platform-independent modules and only handled within
per-platform code. `Filename' is there because the Mac has a magic
way to store filenames (though currently this checkin doesn't
support it!); `FontSpec' is there so that all the auxiliary stuff
such as font height and charset and so on which is needed under
Windows but not Unix can be kept where it belongs, and so that I can
have a hope in hell of dealing with a font chooser in the forthcoming
cross-platform config box code, and best of all it gets the horrid
font height wart out of settings.c and into the Windows code where
it should be.
The Mac part of this checkin is a bunch of random guesses which will
probably not quite compile, but which look roughly right to me.
Sorry if I screwed it up, Ben :-)
[originally from svn r2765]
holdout static I hadn't noticed; unicode.c had one too; and a large
number of statics that were perfectly OK due to being constants have
been made `const', with assorted `const' repercussions all over the
place. I now declare `remove-statics' to be fixed.
[originally from svn r2594]
just done this the very simple way - bundle all the globals into a
data structure and pass pointers around. One particularly ugly wart
is that wc_to_mb now takes a pointer to this structure as an
argument (optional, may be NULL, and unused in any Unicode layer
that's even marginally less of a mess than the Windows one). I do
need to do this properly at some point, but for now this should just
about be adequate. As usual, the Mac port has not been updated.
[originally from svn r2592]
relevant bits of it passed in to init_ucs(). (Actually I pass in all
of it in the Windows version, since it's a bit hairy in there.)
[originally from svn r2565]
we're going to be a security program, we can at least make a token
effort to use the most secure local X auth available! And I'm still
half-tempted to see if I can support it for remote X servers too...
[originally from svn r2537]
font whose encoding comes up as CS_NONE - but this is also true for
iso10646-1 fonts, since libcharset doesn't support wide-character
encodings! Hence UTF-8 cut and paste was enabled in ordinary modes,
but disabled in UTF-8 mode, which was a bit embarrassing. Now we
have a dedicated flag variable indicating direct-to-font mode.
[originally from svn r2425]
know what that encoding actually is, we can do our best to support
additional charsets (VT100 linedrawing, SCO ACS, UTF-8 mode) using
the available characters; if we don't, we fall back to a mode where
we disable all Unicode cut-and-paste and assume any Unicode
character is undisplayable.
[originally from svn r2413]
does UTF-8 copy and paste (falling back to normal strings if
necessary), it understands X font encodings and translates things
accordingly so that if you have a Unicode font you can ask for
virtually any single-byte encoding and get it (Mac-Roman pterm,
anyone?), and so on. There's work left to be done (wide fonts for
CJK spring to mind), but I reckon this is a pretty good start.
[originally from svn r2395]
doesn't yet use the SSH agent, no way to specify arbitrary config
options, no manpage yet, couple of other fiddly things need doing,
but it makes SSH connections and doesn't fall over horribly so I say
it's a good start. Now to run it under valgrind...
[originally from svn r2165]
source files in which it's no longer required (it was previously
required in anything that included <putty.h>, but not any more).
Also moved a couple of stray bits of exposed WinSock back into
winnet.c (getservbyname from ssh.c and AF_INET from proxy.c).
[originally from svn r2160]
absent, and also (I think) all the frontend request functions (such
as request_resize) take a context pointer, so that multiple windows
can be handled sensibly. I wouldn't swear to this, but I _think_
that only leaves the Unicode stuff as the last stubborn holdout.
[originally from svn r2147]
lpage_send out into the line discipline, making them _clients_ of
the Unicode layer rather than part of it. This means they can access
ldisc->term, which in turn means I've been able to remove the
temporary global variable `term'. We're slowly getting there.
[originally from svn r2143]
The current pty.c backend is temporarily a loopback device for
terminal emulator testing, the display handling is only just enough
to show that terminal.c is functioning, the keyboard handling is
laughable, and most features are absent. Next step: bring output and
input up to a plausibly working state, and put a real pty on the
back to create a vaguely usable prototype. Oh, and a scrollbar would
be nice too.
In _theory_ the Windows builds should still work fine after this...
[originally from svn r2010]
beginning of a Unix port. It's nowhere near done, and currently it
won't even compile on Unix. But this represents the start of the
process of separating out platform-specific code, and also contains
the mkfiles.pl changes required to support a Unix makefile and a
non-flat source tree.
[originally from svn r1993]