out, but are now just ignored.
(We should make more effort to prevent duplicates before they get as far as
ssh_setup_portfwd() -- it's currently trivially easy to enter them in the
GUI and on the command line, let alone both -- but there's bound to be someone
with a saved session containing dupes out there by now, and anyway there are
duplicates we can't detect before getting this far, for instance
"1234:localhost:22" vs "1234:localhost:ssh".)
[originally from svn r8623]
re-entrant call to its handler in config.c, which destroys the
previous value in cfg->line_codepage. Therefore, preserve the right
value in an automatic variable until all the re-entrant calls have
finished.
[originally from svn r8592]
into a single gdk_draw_layout() where conveniently feasible, after
some work with xtrace revealed this as a major source of pterm's
slow display updates when using client-side fonts.
Ideally we ought to be able to do better. I know exactly what
sequence of X protocol operations I want to see on the wire, but I
don't know how to persuade Pango to generate them.
[originally from svn r8558]
name the proxy using the global 'appname' variable, instead of
statically calling it PuTTY.
(Knock-on effect is that PSCP and PSFTP have to declare that
variable, though of course they shouldn't ever actually _use_ the X
forwarding code. Probably I ought to replace it with a stub
nox11fwd.c for those applications.)
[originally from svn r8501]
local socket _before_ calling the SSH setup functions. This makes no
difference to ssh.c itself, but it makes portfwd.c easier to reuse
for other purposes (e.g. as a component of a standalone SOCKS
server), because now ssh_send_port_open() can itself call
pfd_confirm() without the freeze and unfreeze happening in the wrong
order.
[originally from svn r8500]
UTF-16 when exchanging wchar_t strings with the front end. Enabled
by a #define in the platform's header file (one should not
promiscuously translate UTF-16 surrogate pairs on 32-bit wchar_t
platforms since that could give rise to redundant encoding attacks),
which is present on Windows.
[originally from svn r8495]
some servers (Debian in particular seems prone to this) send a k-i packet with
no prompts and nothing to display. We were printing an extra "Using
keyboard-interactive authentication" message in this case. (Introduced by me
in r8172, I think.)
[originally from svn r8492]
[r8172 == 211fdb9f46]
prompts packet containing no actual prompts (perhaps due to odd
server organisation, or perhaps so it can print a banner message and
do nothing else). Previously, the get_userpass_input functions
always returned failure when in '-batch' mode, even in this case
where no actual input would be required.
[originally from svn r8490]
my editor, which has defaulted to showing them as explicit ^I for a
while now, but it seems like a generally prudent idea in any case.)
[originally from svn r8472]
'string' field in a GdkEventKey structure as ISO-8859-1, which was
correct for GTK 1.2 but in 2.0 that field is encoded according to
the current C library locale. Hence, we now process that field by
converting it to UTF-8 via trips through both libc and libcharset,
and then let lpage_send() convert from UTF-8 back to whatever it's
supposed to actually go down the line in.
[originally from svn r8470]
to a Unix-domain socket. This typically works fine when PuTTY is run on the
same machine as the X server, but it's broken multi-hop X forwarding through
OpenSSH; when OpenSSH creates a proxy X server "localhost:10", it only listens
on TCP, not on a Unix-domain socket.
Instead, when deciding on the details of the display, we actively probe to see
if there's a Unix-domain socket we can use instead, and only use it if it's
there, falling back to the specified IP "localhost" if not.
Independently, when looking for local auth details in Xauthority for a
"localhost" TCP display, we prefer a matching Unix-domain entry, but will fall
back to an IP "localhost" entry (which would be unusual, but we don't trust a
Windows X server not to do it) -- this is a generalisation of the special case
added in r2538 (but removed in r8305, as the automatic upgrade masked the need
for it).
(This is now done in platform-independent code, so a side-effect is that
get_hostname() is now part of the networking abstraction on all platforms.)
[originally from svn r8462]
[r2538 == fda9983243]
[r8305 == ca6fc3a4da]
r7084 at the same time as sensible permissions when writing private key files;
however, it causes an assertion failure whenever an attempt is made to append
to an existing log file on Unix, and it's not clear what "is_private" *should*
do for append, so revert to log file security being the user's responsibility.
(Fixes Ubuntu LP#212711.)
[originally from svn r8461]
[r7084 == 4fa9564c90]
read at connection setup time, so don't offer it in the Change
Settings dialog box.
(In particular, this fixes an assertion failure when selecting
Change Settings on a non-SSH connection, since wincfg.c would have
added that control to Connection/SSH/X11 when the parent panel
Connection/SSH didn't exist. Making the control conditional on the
selected protocol would have been sufficient to fix that failure,
but I now realise that the setting should never have been presented
in mid-session in any case.)
[originally from svn r8443]
only call it when the _last_ mouse button comes back up. Otherwise,
xterm mouse tracking will lose a button-up event if you press down
two buttons, move the mouse outside the window, then release them
one at a time.
[originally from svn r8425]
OVERLAPPED structure in output threads, as we already do for input
threads. This apparently sorts out a hanging issue with serial ports
when trying to do simultaneous read and write, because (GJV says,
and it sounds plausible to me) in the absence of that event object
Windows signals the file handle itself to notify GetOverlappedResult
that it can return - and since the file handle might be being
signalled by a read operation instead, that leads to ambiguity.
Using an explicit event object in both directions means Windows
always knows which way the data is going.
Also a trivial fix in handle_output_new(), which was referencing the
wrong element of a union due to a copy and paste error. (Since the
result was address-taken and cast to void *, this wasn't a
functional error, but it was conceptually wrong.)
[originally from svn r8410]
as unsigned char. This means that passing in a bare char is incorrect on
systems where char is signed. Sprinkle some appropriate casts to prevent
this.
[originally from svn r8406]
case of double-width text (ESC # 3, ESC # 4, ESC # 6), because the
string passed to it was not truncated to the same width as the
clipping rectangle. (In fact, it _can't_ reliably be, in the case
where the window width is odd.) So instead we just assert that we
managed to _at least_ fill the clipping rectangle, not that we
exactly filled it.
The problem is easily reproduced by sending ESC # 8 (fill the screen
with Es) followed by ESC # 3. It doesn't typically happen, though,
if you _manually_ fill the screen with Es, because in that case
PuTTY's terminal buffer ends up being filled with CSET_ACP | 'E' or
similar, which means that general_textout() never gets called
because one of the other branches of do_text_internal() does the
work instead. ESC # 8 will fill the terminal buffer with genuine
_Unicode_ 'E' characters, which exercises the failing code path.
[originally from svn r8403]
makefile with make's own $(shell ...) function, which means that
gtk-config and krb5-config and so on only get run once per make
invocation instead of once per gcc invocation.
[originally from svn r8400]
incorporates the environment variable CFLAGS into its output. Avoid
exporting our version of it from the Makefile (which actually causes
build failures, since quoting phase issues mean that the backticks
in our version end up unexpanded).
[originally from svn r8399]
This could cause Unix PuTTY to segfault when X forwarding over an SSH session
through a proxy.
(sk_getaddr() wouldn't cope either -- in that case, add an assertion to make it
more obvious; I don't think it should ever happen.)
[originally from svn r8391]
have default settings for "bell overload" mode will have inherited a twitchy
set of defaults where bells are disabled after 2ms and enabled after 5ms,
rather than 2s and 5s as intended. This error has probably propagated into some
people's saved sessions by now, but there's not much to be done.
[originally from svn r8389]
[r5080 == 7647f57dc4]