This new mode makes it easy to run Pageant as a "supervised" instance,
e.g. as part of a test harness for other programs interacting with an
SSH agent, which is the original use case. Because Pageant is then
running as a child process of the supervisor, the operating system
notifies the supervisor of the child's aliveness without resorting to
PIDs or socket addresses, both of which may principally run stale and/or
get recycled.
In most Halibut man pages I write, I have a standard convention of
referring to another man page by wrapping the page name in \cw and the
section number in \e, leaving the parentheses un-marked-up. Apparently
I forgot in this particular collection.
When I added the psusan man page, I noticed that they've all got
impenetrable names like 'man-pl.but' to fit within 8.3 naming. But
this source base hasn't had to worry about 8.3 naming conventions in a
long time, so I think I can safely rename all those files to ones
whose purpose is more obvious.