In terminal-based GUI applications, this is passed through to
term_set_trust_status, to toggle whether lines are prefixed with the
new trust sigil. In console applications, the function returns false,
indicating to the backend that it should employ some other technique
for spoofing protection.
This indicates that a line contains trusted information (originated by
PuTTY) or untrusted (from the server). Trusted lines are prefixed by a
three-column signature consisting of the trust sigil (i.e. PuTTY icon)
and a separating space.
To protect against a server using escape sequences to move the cursor
back up to a trusted line and overwrite its contents, any attempt to
write to a termline is preceded by a call to check_trust_status(),
which clears the line completely if the terminal's current trust
status is different from the previous state of that line.
In the terminal data structures, the trust sigil is represented by
0xDFFE (an otherwise unused value, because it's in the surrogate
space). For bidi purposes I've arranged to treat that value as
direction-neutral, so that it will appear on the right if a terminal
line needs it to. (Not that that's currently likely to happen, with
PuTTY not being properly localised, but it's a bit of futureproofing.)
The bidi system is also where I actually insert the trust sigil: the
_logical_ terminal data structures don't include it. term_bidi_line
was a convenient place to add it, because that function was already
transforming a logical terminal line into a physical one in a way that
also generates a logical<->physical mapping table for handling mouse
clicks and cursor positioning; so that function now adds the trust
sigil as well as running the bidi algorithm.
(A knock-on effect of _that_ is that the log<->phys position map now
has to have a value for 'no correspondence', because if the user does
click on the trust sigil, there's no logical terminal position
corresponding to that. So the map can now contain the special value
BIDI_CHAR_INDEX_NONE, and anyone looking things up in it has to be
prepared to receive that as an answer.)
Of course, this terminal-data transformation can't be kept _wholly_
within term_bidi_line, because unlike proper bidi, it actually reduces
the number of visible columns on the line. So the wrapping code
(during glyph display and also copy and paste) has to take account of
the trusted status and use it to ignore the last 3 columns of the
line. This is probably not done absolutely perfectly, but then, it
doesn't need to be - trusted lines will be filled with well-controlled
data generated from the SSH code, which won't be doing every trick in
the book with escape sequences. Only untrusted terminal lines will be
using all the terminal's capabilities, and they don't have this sigil
getting in the way.
This is not yet used by anything, but the idea is that it'll be a
graphic in the terminal window that can't be replicated by a server
sending escape sequences, and hence can be used as a reliable
indication that the text on a particular terminal line is generated by
PuTTY itself and not passed through from the server. This will make it
possible to detect a malicious server trying to mimic local prompts to
trick you out of information that shouldn't be sent over the wire
(such as private-key passphrases).
The trust sigil I've picked is a small copy of the PuTTY icon, which
is thematically nice (it can be read as if the PuTTY icon is the name
of the speaker in a dialogue) and also convenient because we had that
graphic available already on all platforms. (Though the contortions I
had to go through to make the GTK 1 code draw it were quite annoying.)
The trust sigil has the same dimensions as a CJK double-width
character, i.e. it's 2 character cells wide by 1 high.
This goes with the existing 'to_server' flag (indicating whether the
values typed by the user are going to be sent over the wire or remain
local), to indicate whether the _text of the prompts_ has come over
the wire or is originated locally.
Like to_server, nothing yet uses this. It's a hedge against the
possibility of maybe having an option for all the auth prompts to work
via GUI dialog boxes.
I've always thought poll was more hassle to set up, because if you
want to reuse part of your pollfds list between calls then you have to
index every fd by its position in the list as well as the fd number
itself, which gives you twice as many indices to keep track of than if
the fd is always its own key.
But the problem is that select is fundamentally limited to the range
of fds that can fit in an fd_set, which is not the range of fds that
can _exist_, so I've had a change of heart and now have to go with
poll.
For the moment, I've surrounded it with a 'pollwrapper' structure that
lets me treat it more or less like select, containing a tree234 that
maps each fd to its location in the list, and also translating between
the simple select r/w/x classification and the richer poll flags.
That's let me do the migration with minimal disruption to the call
sites.
In future perhaps I can start using poll more directly, and/or using
the richer flag system (though the latter might be fiddly because of
sometimes being constrained to use the glib event loop). But this will
do for now.
A user reports that under OpenWatcom these are defined in <winnls.h>,
in which case it's redundant to redefine them ourselves and provokes a
compiler diagnostic.
Now instead of taking raw arguments to configure the output
StripCtrlChars with, it takes an enumerated value giving the context
of what's being sanitised, and allows the seat to decide what the
output parameters for that context should be.
The only context currently used is SIC_BANNER (SSH login banners).
I've also added a not-yet-used one for keyboard-interactive prompts.
If centralised code like the SSH implementation wants to sanitise
escape sequences out of a piece of server-provided text, it will need
to do it by making a locale-based StripCtrlChars if it's running in a
console context, or a Terminal-based one if it's in a GUI terminal-
window application.
All the other changes of behaviour needed between those two contexts
are handled by providing reconfigurable methods in the Seat vtable;
this one is no different. So now there's a new method in the Seat
vtable that will construct a StripCtrlChars appropriate to that kind
of seat. Terminal-window seats (gtkwin.c, window.c) implement it by
calling the new stripctrl_new_term(), and console ones use the locale-
based stripctrl_new().
The idea of these is that they centralise the common idiom along the
lines of
if (logical_array_len >= physical_array_size) {
physical_array_size = logical_array_len * 5 / 4 + 256;
array = sresize(array, physical_array_size, ElementType);
}
which happens at a zillion call sites throughout this code base, with
different random choices of the geometric factor and additive
constant, sometimes forgetting them completely, and generally doing a
lot of repeated work.
The new macro sgrowarray(array,size,n) has the semantics: here are the
array pointer and its physical size for you to modify, now please
ensure that the nth element exists, so I can write into it. And
sgrowarrayn(array,size,n,m) is the same except that it ensures that
the array has size at least n+m (so sgrowarray is just the special
case where m=1).
Now that this is a single centralised implementation that will be used
everywhere, I've also gone to more effort in the implementation, with
careful overflow checks that would have been painful to put at all the
previous call sites.
This commit also switches over every use of sresize(), apart from a
few where I really didn't think it would gain anything. A consequence
of that is that a lot of array-size variables have to have their types
changed to size_t, because the macros require that (they address-take
the size to pass to the underlying function).
This replaces all the macros like ssh_key_sign() and win_draw_text()
which take an object containing a vtable pointer and do the
dereferencing to find the actual concrete method to call. Now they're
all inline functions, which means more sensible type-checking and more
comprehensible error reports when the types go wrong, and also means
that there's no risk of double-evaluating the object argument.
Previously, any double-width character would break the bidi algorithm,
because of the quirk of data representation in which we store UCSWIDE
(0xDFFF) in the right-hand termchar overlapped by the character.
UCSWIDE has bidirectional character class L according to minibidi's
getType(), so it disrupted the algorithm.
Now we remove UCSWIDE from the input line before passing it to
do_bidi(), replacing it with an 'nchars' field in the bidi_char
structure indicating single or double width, and put the UCSWIDEs back
afterwards once do_bidi returns.
Although I've reinstated the tedious manual mouse input, I can at
least reduce the amount of it that the user is required to provide:
the new PRNG has a hard limit on the size of its seed, so once we've
generated enough entropy to fill that up, there's no point in
collecting more, even if we're generating a particularly large key.
Now that all the call sites are expecting a size_t instead of an int
length field, it's no longer particularly difficult to make it
actually return the pointer,length pair in the form of a ptrlen.
It would be nice to say that simplifies call sites because those
ptrlens can all be passed straight along to other ptrlen-consuming
functions. Actually almost none of the call sites are like that _yet_,
but this makes it possible to move them in that direction in future
(as part of my general aim to migrate ptrlen-wards as much as I can).
But also it's just nicer to keep the pointer and length together in
one variable, and not have to declare them both in advance with two
extra lines of boilerplate.
This is a general cleanup which has been overdue for some time: lots
of length fields are now the machine word type rather than the (in
practice) fixed 'int'.
This tears out the entire previous random-pool system in sshrand.c. In
its place is a system pretty close to Ferguson and Schneier's
'Fortuna' generator, with the main difference being that I use SHA-256
instead of AES for the generation side of the system (rationale given
in comment).
The PRNG implementation lives in sshprng.c, and defines a self-
contained data type with no state stored outside the object, so you
can instantiate however many of them you like. The old sshrand.c still
exists, but in place of the previous random pool system, it's just
become a client of sshprng.c, whose job is to hold a single global
instance of the PRNG type, and manage its reference count, save file,
noise-collection timers and similar administrative business.
Advantages of this change include:
- Fortuna is designed with a more varied threat model in mind than my
old home-grown random pool. For example, after any request for
random numbers, it automatically re-seeds itself, so that if the
state of the PRNG should be leaked, it won't give enough
information to find out what past outputs _were_.
- The PRNG type can be instantiated with any hash function; the
instance used by the main tools is based on SHA-256, an improvement
on the old pool's use of SHA-1.
- The new PRNG only uses the completely standard interface to the
hash function API, instead of having to have privileged access to
the internal SHA-1 block transform function. This will make it
easier to revamp the hash code in general, and also it means that
hardware-accelerated versions of SHA-256 will automatically be used
for the PRNG as well as for everything else.
- The new PRNG can be _tested_! Because it has an actual (if not
quite explicit) specification for exactly what the output numbers
_ought_ to be derived from the hashes of, I can (and have) put
tests in cryptsuite that ensure the output really is being derived
in the way I think it is. The old pool could have been returning
any old nonsense and it would have been very hard to tell for sure.
The upcoming PRNG revamp will want to tell noise sources apart, so
that it can treat them all fairly. So I've added an extra parameter to
noise_ultralight and random_add_noise, which takes values in an
enumeration covering all the vague classes of entropy source I'm
collecting. In this commit, though, it's simply ignored.
This is in preparation for a PRNG revamp which will want to have a
well defined boundary for any given request-for-randomness, so that it
can destroy the evidence afterwards. So no more looping round calling
random_byte() and then stopping when we feel like it: now you say up
front how many random bytes you want, and call random_read() which
gives you that many in one go.
Most of the call sites that had to be fixed are fairly mechanical, and
quite a few ended up more concise afterwards. A few became more
cumbersome, such as mp_random_bits, in which the new API doesn't let
me load the random bytes directly into the target integer without
triggering undefined behaviour, so instead I have to allocate a
separate temporary buffer.
The _most_ interesting call site was in the PKCS#1 v1.5 padding code
in sshrsa.c (used in SSH-1), in which you need a stream of _nonzero_
random bytes. The previous code just looped on random_byte, retrying
if it got a zero. Now I'm doing a much more interesting thing with an
mpint, essentially scaling a binary fraction repeatedly to extract a
number in the range [0,255) and then adding 1 to it.
A long time ago, in commit 4d77b6567, I moved the generation of the
arrow-key escape sequences into a function format_arrow_key(). Mostly
the reason for that was a special purpose I had in mind at the time
which involved auto-generating the same sequences in response to
things other than a keypress, but I always thought it would be nice to
centralise a lot more of PuTTY's complicated keyboard handling in the
same way - at least the handling of the function keys and their
numerous static and dynamic config options.
In this year's general spirit of tidying up and refactoring, I think
it's finally time. So here I introduce three more centralised
functions for dealing with the numbered function keys, the small
keypad (Ins, Home, PgUp etc) and the numeric keypad. Lots of horrible
and duplicated code from the key handling functions in window.c and
gtkwin.c is now more sensibly centralised: each platform keyboard
handler concerns itself with the local format of a keyboard event and
platform-specific enumeration of key codes, and once it's decided what
the logical key press actually _is_, it hands off to the new functions
in terminal.c to generate the appropriate escape code.
Mostly this is intended to be a refactoring without functional change,
leaving the keyboard handling how it's always been. But in cases where
the Windows and GTK handlers were accidentally inconsistent, I've
fixed the inconsistency rather than carefully keeping both sides how
they were. Known consistency fixes:
- swapping the arrow keys between normal (ESC [ A) and application
(ESC O A) is now done by pressing Ctrl with them, and _not_ by
pressing Shift. That was how it was always supposed to work, and
how it's worked on GTK all along, but on Windows it's been done by
Shift as well since 2010, due to a bug at the call site of
format_arrow_key() introduced when I originally wrote that function.
- in Xterm function key mode plus application keypad mode, the /*-
keys on the numeric keypad now send ESC O {o,j,m} in place of ESC O
{Q,R,S}. That's how the Windows keyboard handler has worked all
along (it was a deliberate behaviour tweak for the Xterm-like
function key mode, because in that mode ESC O {Q,R,S} are generated
by F2-F4). But the GTK keyboard handler omitted that particular
special case and was still sending ESC O {Q,R,S} for those keys in
all application keypad modes.
- also in Xterm function key mode plus app keypad mode, we only
generates the app-keypad escape sequences if Num Lock is on; with
Num Lock off, the numeric keypad becomes arrow keys and
Home/End/etc, just as it would in non-app-keypad mode. Windows has
done this all along, but again, GTK lacked that special case.
This is mostly to make static analysers and compiler warnings a bit
happier - now they know that a call to, say, modalfatalbox() means
they don't have to worry about what the rest of the function will do.
This is another cleanup I felt a need for while I was doing
boolification. If you define a function or variable in one .c file and
declare it extern in another, then nothing will check you haven't got
the types of the two declarations mismatched - so when you're
_changing_ the type, it's a pain to make sure you've caught all the
copies of it.
It's better to put all those extern declarations in header files, so
that the declaration in the header is also in scope for the
definition. Then the compiler will complain if they don't match, which
is what I want.
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'!
I think this is the full set of things that ought logically to be
boolean.
One annoyance is that quite a few radio-button controls in config.c
address Conf fields that are now bool rather than int, which means
that the shared handler function can't just access them all with
conf_{get,set}_int. Rather than back out the rigorous separation of
int and bool in conf.c itself, I've just added a similar alternative
handler function for the bool-typed ones.
It's not actually used anywhere yet, though. This is just adding the
accessor functions, which will enforce a rigorous separation between
conf keys typed as int and as bool.
This commit includes <stdbool.h> from defs.h and deletes my
traditional definitions of TRUE and FALSE, but other than that, it's a
100% mechanical search-and-replace transforming all uses of TRUE and
FALSE into the C99-standardised lowercase spellings.
No actual types are changed in this commit; that will come next. This
is just getting the noise out of the way, so that subsequent commits
can have a higher proportion of signal.
After the recent Seat and LogContext revamps, _nearly_ all the
remaining uses of the type 'Frontend' were in terminal.c, which needs
all sorts of interactions with the GUI window the terminal lives in,
from the obvious (actually drawing text on the window, reading and
writing the clipboard) to the obscure (minimising, maximising and
moving the window in response to particular escape sequences).
All of those functions are now provided by an abstraction called
TermWin. The few remaining uses of Frontend after _that_ are internal
to a particular platform directory, so as to spread the implementation
of that particular kind of Frontend between multiple source files; so
I've renamed all of those so that they take a more specifically named
type that refers to the particular implementation rather than the
general abstraction.
So now the name 'Frontend' no longer exists in the code base at all,
and everywhere one used to be used, it's completely clear whether it
was operating in one of Frontend's three abstract roles (and if so,
which), or whether it was specific to a particular implementation.
Another type that's disappeared is 'Context', which used to be a
typedef defined to something different on each platform, describing
whatever short-lived resources were necessary to draw on the terminal
window: the front end would provide a ready-made one when calling
term_paint, and the terminal could request one with get_ctx/free_ctx
if it wanted to do proactive window updates. Now that drawing context
lives inside the TermWin itself, because there was never any need to
have two of those contexts live at the same time.
(Another minor API change is that the window-title functions - both
reading and writing - have had a missing 'const' added to their char *
parameters / return values.)
I don't expect this change to enable any particularly interesting new
functionality (in particular, I have no plans that need more than one
implementation of TermWin in the same application). But it completes
the tidying-up that began with the Seat and LogContext rework.
In the very old days, when PuTTY was new and computers were slow, I
tried to implement a feature where scrolling the window would be
implemented using a fast rectangle-copy GDI operation, rather than an
expensive character-by-character redraw of all the changed areas.
It never quite worked right, and I ended up conditioning it out on
Windows, and never even tried to implement it on GTK. It's now been
sitting around unused for so long that I think it's no longer worth
keeping in the code at all - if I tried to put it back in, it surely
wouldn't even compile, and would need rewriting from scratch anyway.
Disturbingly, it looks as if I _tried_ to re-enable it at one point,
in that there was a '#define OPTIMISE_IS_SCROLL 1' in putty.h - but
that never had any effect, because the macro name is misspelled. All
the #ifdefs are for 'OPTIMISE_SCROLL', without the 'IS'. So despite
appearances, it really _has_ been conditioned out all along!
The main wildcard matching code now doesn't depend on having a NUL
terminator in the string to be matched; instead it works with a pair
of pointers, one working along the string as we match, and the other
identifying the end of the string, and tests that p < target_end
before dereferencing p. User-facing entry points now allow you to pass
either an ordinary ASCIZ const char * or a ptrlen, and set up
target_end accordingly.
For the moment, the _wildcard_ parameter still has to be an ordinary
null-terminated string, but who knows, maybe that will have to change
too at some later point.
Previously, it returned a human-readable string suitable for log
files, which tried to say something useful about the remote end of a
socket. Now it returns a whole SocketPeerInfo structure, of which that
human-friendly log string is just one field, but also some of the same
information - remote IP address and port, in particular - is provided
in machine-readable form where it's available.
That's more directly useful in uxpty.c (which is currently the only
actual client of the function), and also matches the data that SSH
clients send in "pty-req". Also, it makes that method behave more like
the GUI query function get_window_pixels used by terminal.c (with the
sole exception that unlike g_w_p it's allowed to return failure), so
it becomes even more trivial to implement in the GUI front ends.
This is in much the same style as the ttymodes revamp, using a header
file which can be included in different ways to either iterate over
_all_ the signals in the known list or just the ones for which a
definition exists on the target OS.
So this doesn't actually _remove_ the horrid pile of ifdefs in
mainchan_rcvd_exit_signal, but at least it puts it somewhere less
intrusive and more reusable.
This gets another big pile of logic out of ssh2connection and puts it
somewhere more central. Now the only thing left in ssh2connection is
the formatting and parsing of the various channel requests; the logic
deciding which ones to issue and what to do about them is devolved to
the Channel implementation, as it properly should be.
A function to compare two strings _both_ in ptrlen form (I've had
ptrlen_eq_string for ages, but for some reason, never quite needed
ptrlen_eq_ptrlen). A function to ask whether one ptrlen starts with
another (and, optionally, return a ptrlen giving the remaining part of
the longer string). And the va_list version of logeventf, which I
really ought to have written in the first place by sheer habit, even
if it was only needed by logeventf itself.
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.)
This was used by ldisc to communicate back to the front end that a key
had been pressed (or rather, that a keypress had caused a nonzero
amount of session input data). Its only nontrivial implementation was
in gtkwin.c, which used that notification to implement the Unix GUI's
"close window on keypress, if the session was already over" policy.
(Which in turn is Unix-specific, because the rationale is that
sometimes X servers don't have a functioning window manager, so it's
useful to have a way of telling any application to close without using
WM-provided facilities like a close button.)
But gtkwin.c doesn't need to be told by the ldisc that a keypress
happened - it's the one _sending_ those keypresses to ldisc in the
first place! So I've thrown away the three stub implementations of
frontend_keypress, removed the call to it in ldisc.c, and replaced it
with calls in gtkwin.c at all the points during keypress handling
that call ldisc_send.
A visible effect is that pterm's close-on-keypress behaviour will now
only trigger on an actual (input-generating) _keypress_, and not on
other input generation such as a paste action. I think that's an
improvement.
One quite recent - an unused variable in the Windows code that was
obsoleted by commit cea1329b9 last month - and one not recent at all,
namely the obsolete declaration of begin_session() in putty.h that
hasn't existed since commit 7a79df8fe replaced it with the ldisc
system in *2001*!
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.
It's never set to anything but NULL at any call site, and there's been
a FIXME comment in uxucs.c for ages saying it should be removed. I
think it only existed in the first place because it was a facility
supported by the underlying Windows API function and we couldn't see a
reason _not_ to pass it through. But I'm cleaning up FIXMEs, so we
should get rid of it.
(It stood for 'default used', incidentally - as in 'did the function
at any point have to make use of the parameter providing a default
fallback character?'. Nothing to do with _defusing_ things :-)
All the main backend structures - Ssh, Telnet, Pty, Serial etc - now
describe structure types themselves rather than pointers to them. The
same goes for the codebase-wide trait types Socket and Plug, and the
supporting types SockAddr and Pinger.
All those things that were typedefed as pointers are older types; the
newer ones have the explicit * at the point of use, because that's
what I now seem to be preferring. But whichever one of those is
better, inconsistently using a mixture of the two styles is worse, so
let's make everything consistent.
A few types are still implicitly pointers, such as Bignum and some of
the GSSAPI types; generally this is either because they have to be
void *, or because they're typedefed differently on different
platforms and aren't always pointers at all. Can't be helped. But I've
got rid of the main ones, at least.
It is useful to be able to exclude the header so that the log file
can be used for realtime input to other programs such as Kst for
plotting live data from sensors.
We define a macro in terms of INT_MAX, so we ought to include
<limits.h> to ensure INT_MAX is defined, rather than depending on
every call site to have remembered to do that themselves.
In order to list cross-certifiable host keys in the GUI specials menu,
the SSH backend has been inventing new values on the end of the
Telnet_Special enumeration, starting from the value TS_LOCALSTART.
This is inelegant, and also makes it awkward to break up special
handlers (e.g. to dispatch different specials to different SSH
layers), since if all you know about a special is that it's somewhere
in the TS_LOCALSTART+n space, you can't tell what _general kind_ of
thing it is. Also, if I ever need another open-ended set of specials
in future, I'll have to remember which TS_LOCALSTART+n codes are in
which set.
So here's a revamp that causes every special to take an extra integer
argument. For all previously numbered specials, this argument is
passed as zero and ignored, but there's a new main special code for
SSH host key cross-certification, in which the integer argument is an
index into the backend's list of available keys. TS_LOCALSTART is now
a thing of the past: if I need any other open-ended sets of specials
in future, I can add a new top-level code with a nicely separated
space of arguments.
While I'm at it, I've removed the legacy misnomer 'Telnet_Special'
from the code completely; the enum is now SessionSpecialCode, the
struct containing full details of a menu entry is SessionSpecial, and
the enum values now start SS_ rather than TS_.
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 :-)
Now there's a centralised routine in misc.c to do the sanitisation,
which copies data on to an outgoing bufchain. This allows me to remove
from_backend_untrusted() completely from the frontend API, simplifying
code in several places.
Two use cases for untrusted-terminal-data sanitisation were in the
terminal.c prompts handler, and in the collection of SSH-2 userauth
banners. Both of those were writing output to a bufchain anyway, so
it was very convenient to just replace a bufchain_add with
sanitise_term_data and then not have to worry about it again.
There was also a simplistic sanitiser in uxcons.c, which I've now
replaced with a call to the good one - and in wincons.c there was a
FIXME saying I ought to get round to that, which now I have!
Most of these were 'void *' because they weren't even reliably a
structure type underneath - the per-OS storage systems would directly
cast read/write/enum settings handles to and from random things like
FILE *, Unix DIR *, or Windows HKEY. So I've wrapped them in tiny
structs for the sake of having a sensible structure tag visible
elsewhere in the code.
This is another major source of unexplained 'void *' parameters
throughout the code.
In particular, the currently unused testback.c actually gave the wrong
pointer type to its internal store of the frontend handle - it cast
the input void * to a Terminal *, from which it got implicitly cast
back again when calling from_backend, and nobody noticed. Now it uses
the right type internally as well as externally.
Nearly every part of the code that ever handles a full backend
structure has historically done it using a pair of pointer variables,
one pointing at a constant struct full of function pointers, and the
other pointing to a 'void *' state object that's passed to each of
those.
While I'm modernising the rest of the code, this seems like a good
time to turn that into the same more or less type-safe and less
cumbersome system as I'm using for other parts of the code, such as
Socket, Plug, BinaryPacketProtocol and so forth: the Backend structure
contains a vtable pointer, and a system of macro wrappers handles
dispatching through that vtable.
Same principle again - the more of these structures have globally
visible tags (even if the structure contents are still opaque in most
places), the fewer of them I can mistake for each other.
That's one fewer anonymous 'void *' which might be accidentally
confused with some other pointer type if I misremember the order of
function arguments.
While I'm here, I've made its pointer-nature explicit - that is,
'Ldisc' is now a typedef for the structure type itself rather than a
pointer to it. A stylistic change only, but it feels more natural to
me these days for a thing you're going to eventually pass to a 'free'
function.
This commit adds the new ids and fingerprints in the keys appendix of
the manual, and moves the old ones down into the historic-keys
section. I've tweaked a few pieces of wording for ongoing use, so that
they don't imply a specific number of past key rollovers.
The -pgpfp option in all the tools now shows the new Master Key
fingerprint and the previous (2015) one. I've adjusted all the uses of
the #defines in putty.h so that future rollovers should only have to
modify the #defines themselves.
Most importantly, sign.sh bakes in the ids of the current release and
snapshot keys, so that snapshots will automatically be signed with the
new snapshot key and the -r option will invoke the new release key.
Like the corresponding rewrite of conf serialisation, this affects not
just conf_deserialise itself but also the per-platform filename and
fontspec deserialisers.
This is a cleanup I started to notice a need for during the BinarySink
work. It removes a lot of faffing about casting things to char * or
unsigned char * so that some API will accept them, even though lots of
such APIs really take a plain 'block of raw binary data' argument and
don't care what C thinks the signedness of that data might be - they
may well reinterpret it back and forth internally.
So I've tried to arrange for all the function call APIs that ought to
have a void * (or const void *) to have one, and those that need to do
pointer arithmetic on the parameter internally can cast it back at the
top of the function. That saves endless ad-hoc casts at the call
sites.
There was a time, back when the USA was more vigorously against
cryptography, when we toyed with the idea of having a version of PuTTY
that outsourced its cryptographic primitives to the Microsoft optional
encryption API, which would effectively create a tool that acted like
PuTTY proper on a system with that API installed, but automatically
degraded to being PuTTYtel on a system without, and meanwhile (so went
the theory) it could be moved freely across national borders with
crypto restrictions, because it didn't _contain_ any of the actual
crypto.
I don't recall that we ever got it working at all. And certainly the
vestiges of it here and there in the current code are completely
unworkable - they refer to an 'mscrypto.c' that doesn't even exist,
and the ifdefs in the definitions of structures like RSAKey and
MD5Context are not matched by any corresponding ifdefs in the code. So
I ought to have got round to removing it long ago, in order to avoid
misleading anyone.
This simplifies the client code both in ssh.c and in the client side
of Pageant.
I've cheated a tiny bit by preparing agent requests in a strbuf that
has space reserved at the front for the packet frame, which makes life
easier for the code that sends them off.
Now instead of iterating through conf twice in separate functions,
once to count up the size of the serialised data and once to write it
out, I just go through once and dump it all in a strbuf.
(Of course, I could still do a two-pass count-then-allocate approach
easily enough in this system; nothing would stop me writing a
BinarySink implementation that didn't actually store any data and just
counted its size, and then I could choose at each call site whether I
preferred to do it that way.)
This centralises a few things that multiple header files were
previously defining, and were protecting against each other's
redefinition with ifdefs - small things like structs and typedefs. Now
all those things are in a defs.h which is by definition safe to
include _first_ (out of all the codebase-local headers) and only need
to be defined once.
This seems to be a knock-on effect of my recent reworking of the SSH
code to be based around queues and callbacks. The loop iteration
function in uxsftp.c (ssh_sftp_do_select) would keep going round its
select loop until something had happened on one of its file
descriptors, and then return to the caller in the assumption that the
resulting data might have triggered whatever condition the caller was
waiting for - and if not, then the caller checks, finds nothing
interesting has happened, and resumes looping with no harm done.
But now, when something happens on an fd, it doesn't _synchronously_
trigger the follow-up condition PSFTP was waiting for (which, at
startup time, happens to be back->sendok() starting to return TRUE).
Instead, it schedules a callback, which will schedule a callback,
which ... ends up setting that flag. But by that time, the loop
function has already returned, the caller has found nothing
interesting and resumed looping, and _now_ the interesting thing
happens but it's too late because ssh_sftp_do_select will wait until
the next file descriptor activity before it next returns.
Solution: give run_toplevel_callbacks a return value which says
whether it's actually done something, and if so, return immediately in
case that was the droid the caller was looking for. As it were.
NFC for the moment, because the bufchain is always specially
constructed to hold exactly the same data that would have been passed
in to the function as a (pointer,length) pair. But this API change
allows get_userpass_input to express the idea that it consumed some
but not all of the data in the bufchain, which means that later on
I'll be able to point the same function at a longer-lived bufchain
containing the full stream of keyboard input and avoid dropping
keystrokes that arrive too quickly after the end of an interactive
password prompt.
This is a set of convenience wrappers around the existing toplevel
callback function, which arranges to avoid scheduling a second call to
a callback function if one is already in the queue.
Just like the last few commits, this is a piece of infrastructure that
nothing is yet using. But it will.
NFC: this is a preliminary refactoring, intended to make my life
easier when I start changing around the APIs used to pass user
keyboard input around. The fewer functions even _have_ such an API,
the less I'll have to do at that point.
Thanks to Jiri Kaspar for sending this patch (apart from the new docs
section, which is in my own words), which implements a feature we've
had as a wishlist item ('utf8-plus-vt100') for a long time.
I was actually surprised it was possible to implement it in so few
lines of code! I'd forgotten, or possibly never noticed in the first
place, that even in UTF-8 mode PuTTY not only accepts but still
_processes_ all the ISO 2022 control sequences and shift characters,
and keeps running track of all the same state in term->cset and
term->cset_attrs that it tracks in IS0-2022-enabled modes. It's just
that in UTF-8 mode, at the very last minute when a character+attribute
pair is about to be written into the terminal's character buffer, it
deliberately ignores the contents of those variables.
So all that was needed was a new flag checked at that last moment
which causes it not quite to ignore them after all, and bingo,
utf8-plus-vt100 is supported. And it works no matter which ISO 2022
sequences you're using; whether you're using ESC ( 0 to select the
line drawing set directly into GL and ESC ( B to get back when you're
done, or whether you send a preliminary ESC ( B ESC ) 0 to get GL/GR
to be ASCII and line drawing respectively so you can use SI and SO as
one-byte mode switches thereafter, both work just as well.
This implementation strategy has a couple of consequences, which I
don't think matter very much one way or the other but I document them
just in case they turn out to be important later:
- if an application expecting this mode has already filled your
terminal window with lqqqqqqqqk, then enabling this mode in Change
Settings won't retroactively turn them into the line drawing
characters you wanted, because no memory is preserved in the screen
buffer of what the ISO 2022 state was when they were printed. So
the application still has to do a screen refresh.
- on the other hand, if you already sent the ESC ( 0 or whatever to
put the terminal _into_ line drawing mode, and then you turn on
this mode in Change Settings, you _will_ still be in line drawing
mode, because the system _does_ remember your current ISO 2022
state at all times, whether it's currently applying it to output
printing characters or not.
Commit d515e4f1a went through a lot of very different shapes before it
was finally pushed. In some of them, GSS kex had its own value in the
kex enumeration, but it was used in ssh.c but not in config.c
(because, as in the final version, it wasn't configured by the same
drag-list system as the rest of them). So we had to distinguish the
set of key exchange ids known to the program as a whole from the set
controllable in the configuration.
In the final version, GSS kex ended up even more separated from the
kex enumeration than that: the enum value KEX_GSS_SHA1_K5 isn't used
at all. Instead, GSS key exchange appears in the list at the point of
translation from the list of enum values into the list of pointers to
data structures full of kex methods.
But after all the changes, everyone involved forgot to revert the part
of the patch which split KEX_MAX in two and introduced the pointless
value KEX_GSS_SHA1_K5! Better late than never: I'm reverting it now,
to avoid confusion, and because I don't have any reason to think the
distinction will be useful for any other purpose.
The former has advantages in terms of keeping Kerberos credentials up
to date, but it also does something sufficiently weird to the usual
SSH host key system that I think it's worth making sure users have a
means of turning it off separately from the less intrusive GSS
userauth.
This is a heavily edited (by me) version of a patch originally due to
Nico Williams and Viktor Dukhovni. Their comments:
* Don't delegate credentials when rekeying unless there's a new TGT
or the old service ticket is nearly expired.
* Check for the above conditions more frequently (every two minutes
by default) and rekey when we would delegate credentials.
* Do not rekey with very short service ticket lifetimes; some GSSAPI
libraries may lose the race to use an almost expired ticket. Adjust
the timing of rekey checks to try to avoid this possibility.
My further comments:
The most interesting thing about this patch to me is that the use of
GSS key exchange causes a switch over to a completely different model
of what host keys are for. This comes from RFC 4462 section 2.1: the
basic idea is that when your session is mostly bidirectionally
authenticated by the GSSAPI exchanges happening in initial kex and
every rekey, host keys become more or less vestigial, and their
remaining purpose is to allow a rekey to happen if the requirements of
the SSH protocol demand it at an awkward moment when the GSS
credentials are not currently available (e.g. timed out and haven't
been renewed yet). As such, there's no need for host keys to be
_permanent_ or to be a reliable identifier of a particular host, and
RFC 4462 allows for the possibility that they might be purely
transient and only for this kind of emergency fallback purpose.
Therefore, once PuTTY has done a GSS key exchange, it disconnects
itself completely from the permanent host key cache functions in
storage.h, and instead switches to a _transient_ host key cache stored
in memory with the lifetime of just that SSH session. That cache is
populated with keys received from the server as a side effect of GSS
kex (via the optional SSH2_MSG_KEXGSS_HOSTKEY message), and used if
later in the session we have to fall back to a non-GSS key exchange.
However, in practice servers we've tested against do not send a host
key in that way, so we also have a fallback method of populating the
transient cache by triggering an immediate non-GSS rekey straight
after userauth (reusing the code path we also use to turn on OpenSSH
delayed encryption without the race condition).
This is a preliminary refactoring for an upcoming change which will
need to affect every use of schedule_timer to wait for the next rekey:
those calls to schedule_timer are now centralised into a function that
does an organised piece of thinking about when the next timer should
be.
A side effect of this change is that the translation from
CONF_ssh_rekey_time to an actual tick count is now better proofed
against integer overflow (just in case the user entered a completely
silly value).
This is a mild security measure against malicious clipboard-writing.
It's only mild, because of course there are situations in which even a
sanitised paste could be successfully malicious (imagine someone
managing to write the traditional 'rm -rf' command into your clipboard
when you were going to paste to a shell prompt); but it at least
allows pasting into typical text editors without also allowing the
control sequence that exits the editor UI and returns to the shell
prompt.
This is a configurable option, because there's no well defined line to
be drawn between acceptable and unacceptable pastes, and it's very
plausible that users will have sensible use cases for pasting things
outside the list of permitted characters, or cases in which they know
they trust the clipboard-writer. I for one certainly find it useful on
occasion to deliberately construct a paste containing control
sequences that automate a terminal-based UI.
While I'm at it, when bracketed paste mode is enabled, we also prevent
pasting of data that includes the 'end bracketed paste' sequence
somewhere in the middle. I really _hope_ nobody was treating bracketed
paste mode as a key part of their security boundary, but then again, I
also can't imagine that anyone had an actually sensible use case for
deliberately making a bracketed paste be only partly bracketed, and
it's an easy change while I'm messing about in this area anyway.
On all platforms, you can now configure which clipboard the mouse
pastes from, which clipboard Ctrl-Ins and Shift-Ins access, and which
Ctrl-Shift-C and Ctrl-Shift-V access. In each case, the options are:
- nothing at all
- a clipboard which is implicitly written by the act of mouse
selection (the PRIMARY selection on X, CLIP_LOCAL everywhere else)
- the standard clipboard written by explicit copy/paste UI actions
(CLIPBOARD on X, the unique system clipboard elsewhere).
Also, you can control whether selecting text with the mouse _also_
writes to the explicitly accessed clipboard.
The wording of the various messages changes between platforms, but the
basic UI shape is the same everywhere.
This stores the last text selected in _this_ terminal, regardless of
whether any other application has since taken back whatever system
clipboard we also copied it to. It's written unconditionally whenever
text is selected in terminal.c.
The main purpose of this will be that it's also the place that you can
go and find the data you need to write to a system clipboard in
response to an explicit Copy operation. But it can also act as a data
source for pastes in its own right, so you can use it to implement an
intra-window private extra clipboard if that's useful. (OS X Terminal
has one of those, so _someone_ at least seems to like the idea.)
This lays some groundwork for making PuTTY's cut and paste handling
more flexible in the area of which clipboard(s) it reads and writes,
if more than one is available on the system.
I've introduced a system of list macros which define an enumeration of
integer clipboard ids, some defined centrally in putty.h (at present
just a CLIP_NULL which never has any text in it, because that seems
like the sort of thing that will come in useful for configuring a
given copy or paste UI action to be ignored) and some defined per
platform. All the front end functions that copy and paste take a
clipboard id, and the Terminal structure is now configured at startup
to tell it which clipboard id it should paste from on a mouse click,
and which it should copy from on a selection.
However, I haven't actually added _real_ support for multiple X11
clipboards, in that the Unix front end supports a single CLIP_SYSTEM
regardless of whether it's in OS X or GTK mode. So this is currently a
NFC refactoring which does nothing but prepare the way for real
changes to come.
It's actually a function specific to the Windows front end, and has
been all along - but I've only just noticed that no other front end
either uses it or defines it.
Previously, both the Unix and Windows front ends would respond to a
paste action by retrieving data from the system clipboard, converting
it appropriately, _storing_ it in a persistent dynamic data block
inside the front end, and then calling term_do_paste(term), which in
turn would call back to the front end via get_clip() to retrieve the
current contents of that stored data block.
But, as far as I can tell, this was a completely pointless mechanism,
because after a data block was written into this storage area, it
would be immediately used for exactly one paste, and then never
accessed again until the next paste action caused it to be freed and
replaced with a new chunk of pasted data.
So why on earth was it stored persistently at all, and why that
callback mechanism from frontend to terminal back to frontend to
retrieve it for the actual paste action? I have no idea. This change
removes the entire system and replaces it with the completely obvious
alternative: the character-set-converted version of paste data is
allocated in a _local_ variable in the frontend paste functions,
passed directly to term_do_paste which now takes (buffer,length)
parameters, and freed immediately afterwards. get_clip() is gone.
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.
A more or less identical piece of code to sanitise the CONF_host
string prior to session launch existed in Windows PuTTY and both
Windows and Unix Plink. It's long past time it was centralised.
While I'm here, I've added a couple of extra comments in the
centralised version, including one that - unfortunately - tries _but
fails_ to explain why a string of the form "host.name:1234" doesn't
get the suffix moved into CONF_port the way "user@host" moves the
prefix into CONF_username. Commit c1c1bc471 is the one I'm referring
to in the comment, and unfortunately it has an unexplained one-liner
log message from before I got into the habit of being usefully
verbose.
It's an incoherent concept! There should not be any such thing as an
error box that terminates the entire program but is not modal. If it's
bad enough to terminate the whole program, i.e. _all_ currently live
connections, then there's no point in permitting progress to continue
in windows other than the affected one, because all windows are
affected anyway.
So all previous uses of fatalbox() have become modalfatalbox(), except
those which looked to me as if they shouldn't have been fatal in the
first place, e.g. lingering pieces of error handling in winnet.c which
ought to have had the severity of 'give up on this particular Socket
and close it' rather than 'give up on the ENTIRE UNIVERSE'.
This is used when you're about to destroy an object that is
(potentially) the context parameter for some still-pending toplevel
callback. It causes callbacks.c to go through its pending list and
delete any callback records referring to that context parameter, so
that when you destroy the object those callbacks aren't still waiting
to cause stale-pointer dereferences.
I've done this on a 'where possible' basis: in Windows paletted mode
(in case anyone is still using an old enough graphics card to need
that!) I simply haven't bothered, and will completely ignore the dim
flag.
Markus Gans points out that some applications which (not at all
unreasonably) don't trust $TERM to tell them the full capabilities of
their terminal will use the sequence "OSC 4 ; nn ; ? BEL" to ask for
the colour-palette value in position nn, and they may not particularly
care _what_ the results are but they will use them to decide whether
the right number of colour palette entries even exist.
I know some users don't like any colour _at all_, and we have a
separate option to turn off xterm-style 256-colour sequences, so it
seems remiss not to have an option to disable true colour as well.
This is a heavily rewritten version of a patch originally by Lorenz
Diener; it was tidied up somewhat by Christian Brabandt, and then
tidied up more by me. The basic idea is to add to the termchar
structure a pair of small structs encoding 24-bit RGB values, each
with a flag indicating whether it's turned on; if it is, it overrides
any other specification of fg or bg colour for that character cell.
I've added a test line to colours.txt containing a few example colours
from /usr/share/X11/rgb.txt. In fact it makes quite a good demo to run
the whole of rgb.txt through this treatment, with a command such as
perl -pe 's!^\s*(\d+)\s+(\d+)\s+(\d+).*$!\e[38;2;$1;$2;$3m$&\e[m!' rgb.txt
It's a function that exists on all platforms, not just on Unix - it's
used in ldisc.c - so it shouldn't have been declared only in unix.h.
Score another for clang's warnings.
Now, instead of returning a boolean indicating whether the query has
completed or is still pending, agent_query() returns NULL to indicate
that the query _has_ completed, and if it hasn't, it returns a pointer
to a context structure representing the pending query, so that the
latter can be used to cancel the query if (for example) you later
decide you need to free the thing its callback was using as a context.
This should fix a potential race-condition segfault if you overload an
agent forwarding channel and then close it abruptly. (Which nobody
will be doing for sensible purposes, of course! But I ran across this
while stress-testing other aspects of agent forwarding.)
I can't believe this codebase is around 20 years old and has had
multiple giant const-fixing patches, and yet there are _still_ things
that should have been const for years and aren't.
The UI now only has "1" and "2" options for SSH protocol version, which
behave like the old "1 only" and "2 only" options; old
SSH-N-with-fallback settings are interpreted as SSH-N-only.
This prevents any attempt at a protocol downgrade attack.
Most users should see no difference; those poor souls who still have to
work with SSH-1 equipment now have to explicitly opt in.
A compiler warning drew my attention to the fact that 'next' in
pinger_schedule() was an int, not the unsigned long it should have
been. And looking at the code that handles it, it was also taking no
care with integer wraparound when checking whether an existing
scheduled ping should be moved forward.
So now I do something a bit more robust, by remembering what time it
_was_ when we set pinger->next, and checking if the new time value
falls in the interval between those two times.
E.g. you might pass '--random-device=/dev/urandom'.
Mostly because I got sick of waiting for /dev/random to finish
blocking while I was trying to generate throwaway keys for testing bug
fixes in cmdgen itself. But it might also be useful on systems that
call their random device by a different name that we haven't
encountered.
(Since cmdgen also reads the saved PuTTY random seed file, setting
this option to /dev/zero will not render key generation deterministic.
It's tempting to provide _some_ way to do that, for testing purposes
and clearly marked as dangerous of course, but I think it would take
more faff than this.)
If you're connecting to a new server and it _only_ provides host key
types you've configured to be below the warning threshold, it's OK to
give the standard askalg() message. But if you've newly demoted a host
key type and now reconnect to some server for which that type was the
best key you had cached, the askalg() wording isn't really appropriate
(it's not that the key we've settled on is the first type _supported
by the server_, it's that it's the first type _cached by us_), and
also it's potentially helpful to list the better algorithms so that
the user can pick one to cross-certify.
Now we actually have enough of them to worry about, and especially
since some of the types we support are approved by organisations that
people might make their own decisions about whether to trust, it seems
worth having a config list for host keys the same way we have one for
kex types and ciphers.
To make room for this, I've created an SSH > Host Keys config panel,
and moved the existing host-key related configuration (manually
specified fingerprints) into there from the Kex panel.
It has three settings: on, off, and 'only until session starts'. The
idea of the last one is that if you use something like 'ssh -v' as
your proxy command, you probably wanted to see the initial SSH
connection-setup messages while you were waiting to see if the
connection would be set up successfully at all, but probably _didn't_
want a slew of diagnostics from rekeys disrupting your terminal in
mid-emacs once the session had got properly under way.
Default is off, to avoid startling people used to the old behaviour. I
wonder if I should have set it more aggressively, though.