required. (I just tried getting rid of them; it worked fine for
serial ports, but not for anything else. The Windows I/O API sucks.)
[originally from svn r6843]
behave like a pointer. In particular, the right thing to set a
HANDLE to to indicate that it's invalid is INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE, not
NULL. Crack down on sloppy use of NULL HANDLEs across all Windows
code.
(There is one oddity, which is that {Create,Open}FileMapping are
documented to return a NULL HANDLE instead of INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE
on failure. Shrug. If MS want to be inconsistent, I suppose I have
to live with it.)
[originally from svn r6833]
values one might expect, which means that GetMessage() was
occasionally blocking the process. That appears to be the last of
the annoying data loss issues, so I think the Windows serial back
end actually looks vaguely reliable now. Phew.
[originally from svn r6830]
unfriendly in an interactive session, because at 19200 baud it takes
nearly two seconds to receive that much data, and as long as the
data is flowing continuously Windows waits until it has a full
buffer. So here's another annoying flag in the winhandl API, which
restricts reads to length 1 so that serial output shows up as it
appears.
(I tried this yesterday, but without the OVERLAPPED fix in r6826 it
behaved very erratically. It now seems solid.)
[originally from svn r6827]
[r6826 == 2aedc83f8d]
there): `plink host -nc host2:port' causes the SSH connection's main
channel to be replaced with a direct-tcpip connection to the
specified destination. This feature is mainly designed for use as a
local proxy: setting your local proxy command to `plink %proxyhost
-nc %host:%port' lets you tunnel SSH over SSH with a minimum of
fuss. Works on all platforms.
[originally from svn r6823]
options, here's a slight change to the API of ser_setup_config_box()
to make it filter its parity and flow control options using
platform-supplied bit masks.
[originally from svn r6820]
in place of making a network connection. This has involved a couple
of minor infrastructure changes:
- New dlg_label_change() function in the dialog.h interface, which
alters the label on a control. Only used, at present, to switch
the Host Name and Port boxes into Serial Line and Speed, which
means that any platform not implementing serial connections (i.e.
currently all but Windows) does not need to actually do anything
in this function. Yet.
- New small piece of infrastructure: cfg_launchable() determines
whether a Config structure describes a session ready to be
launched. This was previously determined by seeing if it had a
non-empty host name, but it has to check the serial line as well
so there's a centralised function for it. I haven't gone through
all front ends and arranged for this function to be used
everywhere it needs to be; so far I've only checked Windows.
- Similarly, cfg_dest() returns the destination of a connection
(host name or serial line) in a text format suitable for putting
into messages such as `Unable to connect to %s'.
[originally from svn r6815]
a serial port backend:
- In order to do simultaneous reading and writing on the same
HANDLE, you must enable overlapped access and pass an OVERLAPPED
structure to each ReadFile and WriteFile call. This would make
sense if it were an optional thing I could do if I wanted to do
the reading and writing in the same thread, but making it
mandatory even if I'm doing them in _different_ threads is just
annoying and arbitrary.
- Serial ports occasionally return length 0 from ReadFile, for no
particularly good reason. Fortunately serial ports also don't
have a real EOF condition to speak of, so ignoring EOFs is
actually a viable response in spite of sounding utterly gross.
Hence, handle_{input,output}_new() now accept a flags parameter,
which includes a flag to enable the OVERLAPPED bureaucracy and a
flag to cause EOFs to be ignored on input handles. The current
clients of winhandl.c do not use either of these.
[originally from svn r6813]
it's NULL. Since we already have one back end (uxpty) which doesn't
in fact talk to a network socket, and may well have more soon, I'm
replacing this TCP/IP-centric function with a nice neutral
`connected' function returning a boolean. Nothing else about its
semantics has currently changed.
[originally from svn r6810]
inherit _our_ ends of its I/O pipes! Otherwise, closing our copy of
those handles does not cause it to see EOF on its stdin, because
it's holding the pipe open itself.
[originally from svn r6808]
to do something, otherwise handle_get_events will forget to tell the
front end to check for that subthread finishing. This applies even
when we're only setting `busy' to tell the subthread to terminate!
[originally from svn r6805]
of the previous ad-hockery which depended on the return value from
select_result() and hence which will not adapt sensibly to a world
in which the primary session is something local rather than a
network connection.
[originally from svn r6802]
because it gets unconditionally sfree()d in sk_addr_free(). This
just bit me when running under the MSVC debugger; not sure how it
hasn't bitten anyone until now!
[originally from svn r6800]
thread-based approach to stdin and stdout, wraps it in a halfway
sensible API, and makes it a globally available service across all
network tools.
There is no direct functionality enhancement from this checkin:
winplink.c now talks to the new API instead of doing it all
internally, but does nothing different as a result.
However, this should lay the groundwork for several diverse pieces
of work in future: pipe-based ProxyCommand on Windows, a serial port
back end, and (hopefully) a pipe-based means of communicating with
Pageant, which should have sensible blocking behaviour and hence
permit asynchronous agent requests and decrypt-on-demand.
[originally from svn r6797]
we set _FILE_OFFSET_BITS to 64 on the compiler command line (via mkfiles.pl),
and on Windows we use SetFilePointer and GetFileSize to cope with 64-bit sizes
where possible. Not tested on Win9x.
[originally from svn r6783]
Shift-hjklyubn for batch movement in NetHack, because they have
subtly different behaviour within the game and the Ctrl-moves are
more useful. Unfortunately, PuTTY's NetHack keypad mode doesn't
support Ctrl-moves. Therefore, it does now :-)
[originally from svn r6593]
- Now we've fixed `win-versioninfo', choose some sensible outcomes from
the installer's comparisons of binary version numbers. Also, give the
installer _itself_ a matching binary version.
In particular, without this change, it would not have been possible
to downgrade PuTTY -- it would have silently left the "newer" files in
place. Now it will make some fuss, but permit it.
- Also remove descriptions from shortcuts, on the grounds that the
binaries have embedded descriptions now. (Although I've not checked
whether those are actually visible in the Start Menu.)
- At the request of various people (e.g., PJB), add flags so that if
files are in use at the time the (un)installer is run, replacement is
deferred to the next restart. (The user may be prompted to restart,
which isn't ideal; see comments).
This is supposed to make centrally-pushed silent upgrades more robust.
- Note some limitations of the installer.
[originally from svn r6585]
Pageant for local authentication. (This is a `don't use Pageant for
authentication at session startup' button rather than a `pretend
Pageant doesn't exist' button: that is, agent forwarding is
independent of this option.)
[originally from svn r6572]
button tend to get disabled on login.
After a suggestion by "Tkil", change the way we handle the specials menu
to be robust against the window menu being externally modified.
[originally from svn r6546]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
nicely elsewhere, which should fix `win64' _properly_.
Tested on recent-ish MinGW (with GetWindowLongPtr but not GetClassLongPtr),
and VC++ 6.0 with a recent SDK, but not with vanilla VC++.
[originally from svn r6535]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
basis for other terminal-involving applications: a stub
implementation of the printing interface, an additional function in
notiming.c, and also I've renamed the front-end function beep() to
do_beep() so as not to clash with beep() in lib[n]curses.
[originally from svn r6479]
abstracted out; replace loops structured around a single interaction
per loop with less tortuous code (fixes: `ki-multiprompt-crash',
`ssh1-bad-passphrase-crash'; makes `ssh2-password-expiry' and
`proxy-password-prompt' easier).
The new interaction abstraction has a lot of fields that are unused in
the current code (things like window captions); this is groundwork for
`gui-auth'. However, ssh.c still writes directly to stderr; that may
want to be fixed.
In the GUI apps, user interaction is moved to terminal.c. This should
make it easier to fix things like UTF-8 username entry, although I
haven't attempted to do so. Also, control character filtering can be
tailored to be appropriate for individual front-ends; so far I don't
promise anything other than not having made it any worse.
I've tried to test this fairly exhaustively (although Mac stuff is
untested, as usual). It all seems to basically work, but I bet there
are new bugs. (One I know about is that you can no longer make the
PuTTY window go away with a ^D at the password prompt; this should be
fixed.)
[originally from svn r6437]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]