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]
position in GTK, so I can now implement the other half of -geometry
which I'd previously believed to be impossible in GTK. It's still
not perfect, because GTK apparently provides no way for us to get
hold of the X reparent event in order to support negative geometries
in a manner which takes account of the WM borders; but for positive
position it's at least an improvement on the previous version!
[originally from svn r3078]
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]
`Special Command' menu, in which any backend can place its own list
of magical things the user might want to ask the backend to do. In
particular I've implemented the recently proposed "break" extension
in SSH2 using this mechanism.
NB this checkin slightly breaks the Mac build, since it needs to
provide at least a stub form of update_specials_menu().
[originally from svn r3054]
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]
practically trivial to put all the pieces together and create a
working prototype of Unix PuTTY! It's missing a lot of things -
notably GUI request boxes for host keys and logfiles and so forth,
the Event Log, mid-session reconfiguration, session loading and
saving, sensible population of the character sets drop-down list and
probably other fiddly little things too - but it will put up a
config box and then create a GUI window containing an SSH connection
to the host you specified, so it's _basically_ there. Woo!
[originally from svn r3020]
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]
malloc functions, which automatically cast to the same type they're
allocating the size of. Should prevent any future errors involving
mallocing the size of the wrong structure type, and will also make
life easier if we ever need to turn the PuTTY core code from real C
into C++-friendly C. I haven't touched the Mac frontend in this
checkin because I couldn't compile or test it.
[originally from svn r3014]
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]
default for CloseOnExit was encoded wrongly. Hopefully this should
be everything now; I'm really starting to get sick of picking up the
pieces after my two checkins yesterday. Perhaps I should have waited
until I had a brain before doing them in the first place.
[originally from svn r2746]
foreground colours, and ESC[100m through ESC[107m to set bright
background colours. Hence, so do we. Bright-foreground is
distinguishable from bold, and bright-background distinguishable
from blink, when it leaves terminal.c; the front end may then choose
to display them in the same way if it's configured to do so. This
change makes the xterm backend for Turbo Vision (!!!) work properly.
Untested on Mac.
[originally from svn r2734]
Everything in there which is integral is now an actual int, which
means my forthcoming revamp of the config box will be able to work
with `int *' pointers without fear of doom.
[originally from svn r2733]
both the raw and the cooked mouse button, with the mapping being done in
advance by the front-end. This is useful because it allows the front-end to
use information other than the raw button (e.g. the modifier state) to decide
which cooked button to generate.
.
Front ends other than the Mac one are untested, but they just call
translate_button() themselves and pass the result to term_mouse().
[originally from svn r2721]
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]
let's try to make sure it doesn't happen inside any strings! The
-cfg option for cursor foreground colour nearly had a nasty accident
there.
[originally from svn r2569]
completely from putty.h. It's now static in each of the command-line
front ends, shared only between window.c and windlg.c in PuTTY
proper (I've tested this by doing #define cfg cfgsillyname in those
two files only, and it still links so nobody else is using that
symbol!), and part of the `inst' structure in pterm. I think that
only leaves the Unicode module as the last stubborn holdout in the
anti-global-variables campaign.
[originally from svn r2568]
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]
and have a function to pass in a new one. (Well, actually several
back ends don't actually bother to do this because they need nothing
out of Config after the initial setup phase, but they could if they
wanted to.)
[originally from svn r2561]
and pterm need at least one default setting to be _different_ (pterm
needs the default term type to be `xterm', while plink needs it to
be taken from $TERM). So here's a completely new alternative
mechanism for platform- and app-specific default settings. Ben will
probably want to check the integrity of the Mac port, since I've
fiddled with it without testing that it still compiles.
[originally from svn r2513]
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]
not -1 (it turns out _most_ X fonts prefer the former, though
irritatingly my favourite real X font used to prefer the latter
which was why I made the X version of my Font Of Choice do so too),
and also clip to the boundaries of the rectangle we should be
drawing text in. This still doesn't completely prevent display
corruption in the case where text drawn in one sweep is partially
overwritten in a future one, but gnome-terminal has this problem
too, and now we've got the right default SB offset _and_ offer the
opportunity to reconfigure it I think this is pretty good for now.
[originally from svn r2184]
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]
this init sequence - it surely can't be right that `pterm --help'
with no DISPLAY complains at the lack of DISPLAY rather than giving
a help message!
[originally from svn r2164]
mode==BELL_VISUAL, otherwise taskbar flashing won't happen on visual
bells. It's up to the frontend routine to spot BELL_VISUAL and avoid
making any noise.
[originally from svn r2155]
a pterm came up while Alt was down, then releasing it would cause a
^@ to be generated. Also, though, I've decided that Alt plus a
single numberpad key should not generate a low-numbered control
code, because that's too easy to do by mistake and the codes are too
powerful. Anyone who really _wants_ to create a ^C or ^D from the
numberpad can do Alt-03 or Alt-04 easily enough; two-digit codes and
more such as Alt-65 are unaffected.
[originally from svn r2153]
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]
As a result I've now been able to turn the global variables `back'
and `backhandle' into module-level statics in the individual front
ends. Now _that's_ progress!
[originally from svn r2142]
now compiles and runs again after the major destabilisation.
Unfortunately it wasn't feasible to actually encapsulate all of the
pty backend's data, since the utmp helper and the need to fork and
drop privileges before doing anything else at all rather confuses
matters. So the data handle passed around to the pty backend is a
null pointer, and the pty backend is just as global-ridden as it
always has been. Shame, but such is life.
[originally from svn r2128]
only on clean exit, which is a departure from most xterm-alikes but
Ian reckons people will love me for it. If this turns out to be
wrong, we can always change the default for Unix.
[originally from svn r2120]
all the global and function-static variables out of terminal.c into
a dynamically allocated data structure. Note that this does not yet
confer the ability to run more than one of them in the same process,
because other things (the line discipline, the back end) are still
global, and also in particular the address of the dynamically
allocated terminal-data structure is held in a global variable
`term'. But what I've got here represents a reasonable stopping
point at which to check things in. In _theory_ this should all still
work happily, on both Unix and Windows. In practice, who knows?
[originally from svn r2115]
it's automatically deactivated by any keypress, so that command-line
beeps from (e.g.) filename completion don't suddenly stop occurring,
but it still provides a rapid response to an accidental spewing of a
binary to your terminal.
[originally from svn r2107]
set[ug]id. All privs-requiring pty operations are done at the very
start of the run, then privs are dropped before initialising GTK.
Utmp is handled by forking a still-privileged subprocess at this
point, and later asking it (through a pipe) to stamp utmp. The
subprocess cleans up utmp on exit, which has the additional
advantage that if the main pterm process suffers some sort of
unexpected termination (up to and including SIGKILL) the subprocess
can still mop up utmp.
[originally from svn r2082]
send a button 4 press for an upward wheel movement and a button 5
press for a downward one). Untested since my own trackball's button
4 does nothing obvious. Someone with a mouse wheel should give this
a workout.
[originally from svn r2069]
rather than the gtk_window_set_policy approach; the GNOME people say
that the former is the Right Thing in spite of the latter looking
obviously plausible.
[originally from svn r2066]
want a new option to configure it to be on the LHS though. And some
lunatic is bound to ask for an xterm-style scrollbar too... :-)
[originally from svn r2062]
including server-controlled resizing. Irritatingly I've had to use a
deprecated option to gtk_window_set_policy() to make this work,
resulting in me raising GNOME bug #95818 to ask for it to be un-
deprecated again...
[originally from svn r2061]
login shell or not. Also moved these new pieces of configuration
into the Config structure, though they won't stay there forever
since they will need to be moved out into platform-dependent config.
[originally from svn r2060]