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Commit Graph

124 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Tatham
7efa4a5305 Clean up a 'void *' in a unix.h typedef.
'struct draw_ctx' has a structure tag inside gtkwin.c, so as per this
week's standard practice, let's expose the tag elsewhere so that
pointers declared that way can't be confused with anything else.
2018-09-19 23:08:07 +01:00
Simon Tatham
8dfb2a1186 Introduce a typedef for frontend handles.
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.
2018-09-19 22:10:58 +01:00
Simon Tatham
eefebaaa9e Turn Backend into a sensible classoid.
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.
2018-09-19 22:10:58 +01:00
Simon Tatham
5129c40bea Modernise the Socket/Plug vtable system.
Now I've got FROMFIELD, I can rework it so that structures providing
an implementation of the Socket or Plug trait no longer have to have
the vtable pointer as the very first thing in the structure. In
particular, this means that the ProxySocket structure can now directly
implement _both_ the Socket and Plug traits, which is always
_logically_ how it's worked, but previously it had to be implemented
via two separate structs linked to each other.
2018-05-27 15:28:54 +01:00
Simon Tatham
12b38ad9e1 New header file 'defs.h'.
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.
2018-05-25 14:12:44 +01:00
Simon Tatham
7fee4e9b43 Basic support for running under GDK Wayland back end.
GTK 3 PuTTY/pterm has always assumed that if it was compiled with
_support_ for talking to the raw X11 layer underneath GTK and GDK,
then it was entitled to expect that raw X11 layer to exist at all
times, i.e. that GDK_DISPLAY_XDISPLAY would return a meaningful X
display that it could do useful things with. So if you ran it over the
GDK Wayland backend, it would immediately segfault.

Modern GTK applications need to cope with multiple GDK backends at run
time. It's fine for GTK PuTTY to _contain_ the code to find and use
underlying X11 primitives like the display and the X window id, but it
should be prepared to find that it's running on Wayland (or something
else again!) so those functions don't return anything useful - in
which case it should degrade gracefully to the subset of functionality
that can be accessed through backend-independent GTK calls.

Accordingly, I've centralised the use of GDK_DISPLAY_XDISPLAY into a
support function get_x_display() in gtkmisc.c, which starts by
checking that there actually is one first. All previous direct uses of
GDK_*_XDISPLAY now go via that function, and check the result for NULL
afterwards. (To save faffing about calling that function too many
times, I'm also caching the display pointer in more places, and
passing it as an extra argument to various subfunctions, mostly in
gtkfont.c.)

Similarly, the get_windowid() function that retrieves the window id to
put in the environment of pterm's child process has to be prepared for
there not to be a window id.

This isn't a complete fix for all Wayland-related problems. The other
one I'm currently aware of is that the default font is "server:fixed",
which is a bad default now that it won't be available on all backends.
And I expect that further problems will show up with more testing. But
it's a start.
2018-05-09 09:21:27 +01:00
Simon Tatham
04184c87cc Fill in some more of the OS X menu bar.
This still isn't complete: I also need to add the variable collections
of things like mid-session special commands and saved session names,
and also I need to try to grey out menu items when they're not
applicable. But it's a start.
2017-12-18 11:46:48 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2065fb647f Minor refactoring of gtkapp.c -> gtkwin.c menu triggers.
Just to avoid an endless proliferation of functions too small to see,
I've arranged an enumeration of action ids and a single
app_menu_action function on the receiving end, and in gtkapp.c, a list
macro that means I at least don't have to define the tiny callback
functions and the GActionEntry records by hand and keep them in sync.
2017-12-18 11:19:26 +00:00
Simon Tatham
3faca7724a Correct the OS X branch of the clipboards ifdef.
That's what I get for not testing on all platforms before I push.
Forgot that, since OS X GTK mimics X11 GTK closely enough to still use
the name "CLIPBOARD" for the unique system clipboard, I had left this
code base's internal name for it as CLIP_CLIPBOARD and not the
CLIP_SYSTEM I used on Windows.
2017-12-18 10:31:42 +00:00
Simon Tatham
7bc637ad07 Sort out clipboard-related menu items.
The gtkapp.c menu now has a Copy as well as Paste option; those menu
items, as well as the corresponding ones on the context menu and Copy
All, now address sets of clipboards parametrised between OS X and
ordinary GTK in unix.h. Also I've tweaked the wording of the
context-menu items to not use the X-specific terminology "CLIPBOARD"
on OS X.
2017-12-17 20:35:45 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2a76f8d4a2 Support custom clipboard names under X.
This required me to turn the drop-lists into combo boxes and add an
extra string-typed Conf setting alongside each enumerated value.
2017-12-17 18:49:00 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0e7f0883a9 Add GUI configuration for choice of clipboards.
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.
2017-12-17 17:02:56 +00:00
Simon Tatham
41aa675a5b Make gtkwin.c able to support multiple selections.
All the data fields referring to the selection in 'struct gui_data'
have been pulled out into a separate structure of which there are now
multiple instances, and I've plumbed through what should be the right
pointers and integer ids to everywhere they should go. So now the GTK
front end defines CLIP_PRIMARY and CLIP_CLIPBOARD in place of the
temporary cop-out CLIP_SYSTEM from the previous commit, and copying
and pasting can be done via either one.

The defaults should be the same as before, except that now the non-Mac
versions of the GtkApplication front ends will access CLIP_PRIMARY in
response to most actions but the 'Paste' menu item will paste from
CLIP_CLIPBOARD. (That's mostly just as a demonstration that accessing
multiple clipboards even works.)
2017-12-16 13:50:47 +00:00
Simon Tatham
1829719639 Add a system of clipboard identifiers.
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.
2017-12-16 13:50:47 +00:00
Simon Tatham
b9a25510b0 Centralise PuTTY and Plink's non-option argument handling.
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.
2017-12-07 20:13:33 +00:00
Simon Tatham
4b8baed84a GTK: fix the exit(1) response to startup-time font errors.
For gtkapp-based tools that will have to stop being a program-fatal
error, so I've turned it into a function called window_setup_error
(which I could in principle reuse for other problems in the long and
tortuous progress of new_session_window), and kept the original
handling in gtkmain.c's implementation of that function while gtkapp.c
does something more sensible with a message box.
2017-11-27 20:45:14 +00:00
Simon Tatham
71b00097dd Remove the post_main() mechanism.
This existed in order to avoid the various confusions that could
happen if a toplevel callback ran in the context of a subsidiary
instance of gtk_main(). Now there aren't any subsidiary gtk_main
instances any more, this mechanism is no longer needed, and I can
throw it out. It was horrible anyway.
2017-11-26 20:03:12 +00:00
Simon Tatham
3e24bb610d Make connection_fatal() nonmodal.
This change requires me to break up the general cleanups in
delete_inst() into two halves: one runs when the error message box is
created, and cleans up the network connection and all the stuff
associated with it, and the other runs when the error message is
dismissed and the window can actually close.
2017-11-26 19:59:24 +00:00
Simon Tatham
a8e9fd7860 Reimplement 'really close session?' as a non-modal message box.
I've also moved it out into gtkwin.c, because it seemed easier to do
the 'find existing instance of this dialog and raise it' dance there
than to split it across source files pointlessly.
2017-11-26 17:21:32 +00:00
Simon Tatham
71ed04dbc3 Make the GTK font setup error box non-modal.
That was the last (in fact, the only) call to the modal version of
message_box() outside gtkdlg.c, so I can remove it from the header
file.
2017-11-26 17:07:47 +00:00
Simon Tatham
8b0d460578 Replace dlg_error_message() with a non-modal message box.
Apart from the specific benefit of non-modality, this also makes it a
lot simpler compared to the previous code! I'm not completely sure why
I wasn't using the standard gtkdlg.c message box system all along.
2017-11-26 17:05:51 +00:00
Simon Tatham
b6ed82321c Make the askappend() prompt non-modal.
This fits into a new dialog-box slot (because it might have to come up
at the same time as a network prompt), and makes use of the existing
callback system in logging.c which buffers the logging data until the
user says what they want done with it.
2017-11-26 16:56:03 +00:00
Simon Tatham
86741a1b09 Expand the dialog registering/unregistering system.
Now it has several 'slots', each named for a particular class of
subsidiary dialog box that a session window can have at most one of,
and register_network_prompt_dialog has a more general name and takes
an enum-typed argument identifying a slot. This lets me avoid writing
a zillion annoyingly similar function pairs and corresponding snippets
of cleanup code in delete_inst.
2017-11-26 16:51:19 +00:00
Simon Tatham
671267f44b GTK: system for not leaving stale network prompt dialogs.
When I switch verify_ssh_host_key() and friends over to creating
non-modal message boxes and returning to the main loop, there will be
a risk that their parent window will need to close for some other
reason while the user hasn't answered the pending question yet. (E.g.
if the user presses the main session window's close button, which will
no longer be a prohibited UI action once the transient dialog is not
modal.)

At that point we need to get rid of the pending dialog box, both for
UI purposes (it would look silly and be confusing to leave it lying
around) and for memory management (if the user subsequently clicks OK
in such a dialog it would probably try to leave its result somewhere
stale).

So now there's a mechanism for gtkwin.c remembering what the current
'network prompt dialog' is, if any (in which category I intend to
include everything triggered from ssh.c's various reasons for asking
crypto-related questions), and cleaning it up when the struct gui_data
it belongs to goes away.
2017-11-26 15:20:00 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2d289a9970 Make the GTK message-box function non-variadic.
Now, in place of a variadic argument list with four parameters per
button and a terminating NULL, it takes a pointer to a struct which in
turn contains an (array,length) pair of small per-button structures.

In the process I've renamed the function from messagebox() to
message_box(). Partly that was just because it gave me a convenient
way to search the source for calls I hadn't converted yet, but also
I've thought for a while that that missing underscore didn't really
match the rest of my naming.

NFCI. Partly this minor refactor has the virtue that we can reuse the
more common button layouts without having to type them in at multiple
places in the code (and, indeed, I've provided buttons_yn and
buttons_ok for easy reuse, and could easily provide other things like
yesnocancel any time I need them). But mostly it's because I'm about
to split up message_box into multiple functions, and this saves me the
hassle of deciding which ones to make variadic and which to pass an
actual va_list to - particularly since messagebox() used to go over
its variadic argument list twice, which always makes delegating it to
another function that much more annoying.
2017-11-26 14:05:02 +00:00
Simon Tatham
817e4ad2dd Make the configuration dialog non-modal.
Now every call to do_config_box is replaced with a call to
create_config_box, which returns immediately having constructed the
new GTK window object, and is passed a callback function which it will
arrange to be called when the dialog terminates (whether by OK or by
Cancel). That callback is now what triggers the construction of a
session window after 'Open' is pressed in the initial config box, or
the actual mid-session reconfiguration action after 'Apply' is pressed
in a Change Settings box.

We were already prepared to ignore the re-selection of 'Change
Settings' from the context menu of a window that already had a Change
Settings box open (and not accidentally create a second config box for
the same window); but now we do slightly better, by finding the
existing config box and un-minimising and raising it, in case the user
had forgotten it was there.

That's a useful featurelet, but not the main purpose of this change.
The mani point, of course, is that now the multi-window GtkApplication
based front ends now don't do anything confusing to the nesting of
gtk_main() when config boxes are involved. Whether you're changing the
settings of one (or more than one) of your already-running sessions,
preparing to start up a new PuTTY connection, or both at once, we stay
in the same top-level instance of gtk_main() and all sessions' top-
level callbacks continue to run sensibly.
2017-11-26 11:58:02 +00:00
Ben Harris
d56496c31c unix: make uxsel callback functions return void.
Nothing used their return values anyway.  At least, not after the
previous commit.
2017-05-14 16:34:48 +01:00
Ben Harris
30cdaa7ca8 unix: make select_result() return void.
Nothing was using its return value anyway.
2017-05-14 16:34:48 +01:00
Simon Tatham
3f29d939ee Unix buildinfo: stop saying 'GTK' in pure CLI utilities.
Unix PSCP, PSFTP, Plink and PuTTYgen now just report their build
platform as '64-bit Unix' or '32-bit Unix', without mentioning
irrelevant details of what flavour of GTK the other tools in the suite
might have been built against.

(In particular, they now won't imply anything outright untrue if there
was no GTK present at build time at all!)
2017-02-22 22:10:05 +00:00
Simon Tatham
fb839a27fb Include the compile-time GTK version in the build info.
It's obvious to the trained eye whether GTK PuTTY was compiled against
GTK2 or GTK3, but the untrained eye would probably appreciate a little
help, and even the trained eye probably can't tell GTK 3.18 from 3.19
at a glance :-)
2017-02-15 19:32:42 +00:00
Simon Tatham
8923a1b488 Move declaration of frontend_is_utf8 into putty.h.
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.
2017-02-03 19:35:41 +00:00
Simon Tatham
7e14730b83 Include 'build info' in all --version text and About boxes.
This shows the build platform (32- vs 64-bit in particular, and also
whether Unix GTK builds were compiled with or without the X11 pieces),
what compiler was used to build the binary, and any interesting build
options that might have been set on the make command line (especially,
but not limited to, the security-damaging ones like NO_SECURITY or
UNPROTECT). This will probably be useful all over the place, but in
particular it should allow the different Windows binaries to be told
apart!

Commits 21101c739 and 2eb952ca3 laid the groundwork for this, by
allowing the various About boxes to contain free text and also
ensuring they could be copied and pasted easily as part of a bug
report.
2017-01-21 14:55:53 +00:00
Simon Tatham
23a02f429c New Unix utility function to make a directory path.
Essentially 'mkdir -p' - we try to make each prefix of the pathname,
terminating on any error other than EEXIST. Semantics are similar to
make_dir_and_check_ours(): we return NULL on success or a dynamically
allocated error message string on failure.
2016-08-08 20:37:07 +01:00
Ben Harris
de52cc8597 Remove inaccurate comment about Unix getticks() function.
It's not always based on gettimeofday(); now it mostly uses
clock_gettime().
2016-05-17 13:07:36 +02:00
Simon Tatham
f23375b14e Delegate GTK window creation to gtkmain.c.
This is a weird thing to have to do, but it is necessary: the OS X
PuTTY will need its top-level windows to be instances of a thing
called GtkApplicationWindow, rather than plain GtkWindow. Hence, the
actual creation of windows needs to be somewhere that isn't
centralised between the two kinds of front end.
2016-03-23 22:03:46 +00:00
Simon Tatham
eac66b0281 Divide the whole of gtkwin.c into three parts.
This lays further groundwork for the OS X GTK3 port, which is going to
have to deal with multiple sessions sharing the same process. gtkwin.c
was a bit too monolithic for this, since it included some
process-global runtime state (timers, toplevel callbacks), some
process startup stuff (gtk_init, gtk_main, argv processing) and some
per-session-window stuff.

The per-session stuff remains in gtkwin.c, with the top-level function
now being new_session_window() taking a Conf. The new gtkmain.c
contains the outer skeleton of pt_main(), handling argv processing and
one-off startup stuff like setlocale; and the new gtkcomm.c contains
the pieces of PuTTY infrastructure like timers and uxsel that are
shared between multiple sessions rather than reinstantiated per
session, which have been rewritten to use global variables rather than
fields in 'inst' (since it's now clear to me that they'll have to
apply to all the insts in existence at once).

There are still some lurking assumptions of one-session-per-process,
e.g. the use of gtk_main_quit when a session finishes, and the fact
that the config box insists on running as a separate invocation of
gtk_main so that one session's preliminary config box can't coexist
with another session already active. But this should make it possible
to at least write an OS X app good enough to start testing with, even
if it doesn't get everything quite right yet.

This change is almost entirely rearranging existing code, so it
shouldn't be seriously destabilising. But two noticeable actual
changes have happened, both pleasantly simplifying:

Firstly, the global-variables rewrite of gtkcomm.c has allowed the
post_main edifice to become a great deal simpler. Most of its
complexity was about remembering what 'inst' it had to call back to,
and in fact the right answer is that it shouldn't be calling back to
one at all. So now the post_main() called by gtkdlg.c has become the
same function as the old inst_post_main() that actually did the work,
instead of the two having to be connected by a piece of ugly plumbing.

Secondly, a piece of code that's vanished completely in this
refactoring is the temporary blocking of SIGCHLD around most of the
session setup code. This turns out to have been introduced in 2002,
_before_ I switched to using the intra-process signal pipe strategy
for SIGCHLD handling in 2003. So I now expect that we should be robust
in any case against receiving SIGCHLD at an inconvenient moment, and
hence there's no need to block it.
2016-03-22 22:27:09 +00:00
Simon Tatham
21101c7397 Make some static text in GTK dialogs selectable.
I've made the licence text, the About box, and the host key dialog
into GTK selectable edit controls. (The former because it contains a
lot of text; the About box because pasting version numbers into bug
reports is obviously useful; the host key because of the fingerprint.)
2015-12-22 13:27:49 +00:00
Simon Tatham
5133d2a133 Avoid logging pre-verstring EPIPE from sharing downstreams.
If you use the new 'plink -shareexists' feature, then on Unix at least
it's possible for the upstream to receive EPIPE, because the
downstream makes a test connection and immediately closes it, so that
upstream fails to write its version string.

This looks a bit ugly in the upstream's Event Log, so I'm making a
special case: an error of 'broken pipe' type, which occurs on a socket
from a connection sharing downstream, before we've received a version
string from that downstream, is treated as an unusual kind of normal
connection termination and not logged as an error.
2015-09-25 12:17:35 +01:00
Simon Tatham
a50da0e309 Initial support for clipboard on OS X.
Rather than trying to get my existing hugely complicated X-style
clipboard code to somehow work with the Quartz GTK back end, I've
written an entirely new and much simpler alternative clipboard handler
usnig the higher-leve GtkClipboard interface. It assumes all clipboard
text can be converted to and from UTF-8 sensibly (which isn't a good
assumption on all front ends, but on OS X I think it's reasonable),
and it talks to GDK_SELECTION_CLIPBOARD rather than PRIMARY, which is
the only clipboard OS X has.

I had to do a fiddly thing to cope with the fact that each call to
gtk_clipboard_set_with_data caused a call to the clipboard clear
function left over from the previous set of data, so I had to avoid
mistaking that for a clipboard-clear for the _new_ data and
immediately deselecting it. I did that by allocating a distinct
placeholder object in memory for each instance of the copy operation,
so that I can tell whether a clipboard-clear is for the current copy
or a previous one.

This is only very basic support which demonstrates successful copying
and pasting is at least possible. For a sensible OS X implementation
we'll need a more believable means of generating a paste UI action
(it's quite easy to find a Mac on which neither Shift-Ins nor the
third mouse button even exists!). Also, after the trouble I had with
the clipboard-clear event, it's a bit annoying to find that it
_doesn't_ seem to get called when another application becomes the
clipboard owner. That may just be something we have to put up with, if
I can't find any reason why it's failing.
2015-09-02 21:54:03 +01:00
Simon Tatham
0afc496a5f Work around OS X GTK treating Option as an AltGr key.
If I'm using Option as the Meta key, I want to suppress OS X GTK's
default behaviour of treating it as an AltGr-oid which changes the
keyval and Unicode translation of alphabetic keys. So on OS X I enable
a somewhat bodgy workaround which retranslates from the hardware
keycode as if the Option modifier had not been active at the time, and
use that as the character to prefix Esc to.

This is a bit nasty because I have to hardwire group = 0 in the call
to gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state(), whereas in principle what I
wanted was group = (whatever would have resulted from everything else
in the key event other than MOD1). However, in practice, they seem to
be the same, so this will do for the moment.
2015-09-01 19:13:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
dc253b3c51 On OS X, be able to configure either Option or Command as Meta.
Personally I like using Command as the Esc-prefixing Meta key in
terminal sessions, because it occupies the same physical keyboard
position as the Alt key that I'm used to using on non-Macs. OS X
Terminal uses Option for that purpose (freeing up Command for the
conventional Mac keyboard shortcuts, of course), so I anticipate
differences of opinion.

Hence, here's a pair of OSX-specific config options which permit a
user to set either, or neither, or both of those modifier keys to
function as the terminal Meta key.
2015-09-01 19:12:19 +01:00
Simon Tatham
1840103c05 pterm: set IUTF8 on pty devices depending on charset.
In a UTF-8 pterm, it makes sense to set the IUTF8 flag (on systems
that have one) on the pty device, so that line editing will take
account of UTF-8 multibyte characters.
2015-09-01 18:35:38 +01:00
Simon Tatham
49ff9f480e Move more functions into the new gtkmisc.c.
Several utility functions I've written over the last few weeks were in
rather random places because I didn't have a central gtkmisc.c to put
them in. Now I've got one, put them there!
2015-08-31 15:45:43 +01:00
Simon Tatham
0b5a0c4da1 Avoid deprecated gtk_misc_set_alignment().
As of GTK 3.16 (but not in previous GTK 3 versions), there's a new
gtk_label_set_xalign which does this job.
2015-08-31 13:57:34 +01:00
Simon Tatham
5de838a979 Don't use "server:fixed" as the default font without X.
If we're not supporting server-side fonts, it's utterly silly to set
one as the default! Instead, we use Pango's guarantee that some
reasonably sensible monospaced font will be made available under the
name "Monospace", and use that at a reasonable default size of 12pt.
2015-08-31 13:24:09 +01:00
Simon Tatham
1fa0b5a1ac Introduce a config option for building on OS X GTK.
Using GTK to run on OS X is going to require several workarounds and
behaviour tweaks to be enabled at various points in the code, and it's
already getting cumbersome to remember what they all are to put on the
command line. Here's a central #define (OSX_GTK) that enables them all
in one go, and a configure option (--with-quartz) that sets it.

As part of this commit, I've also rearranged the #include order in the
GTK source files, so that they include unix.h (which now might be
where NOT_X_WINDOWS gets defined) before they test NOT_X_WINDOWS to
decide whether to include X11 headers.
2015-08-31 13:21:50 +01:00
Simon Tatham
afe2c355cf Make string_width() work in GTK3.
This was another piece of code that determined text size by
instantiating a GtkLabel and asking for its size, which I had to fix
in gtkfont.c recently because that strategy doesn't work in GTK3.

Replaced the implementation of string_width() with a call to the
function I added in gtkfont.c, and now dialog boxes which depend on
that for their width measurement (e.g. the one in reallyclose()) don't
come out in silly sizes on GTK3 any more.
2015-08-24 19:34:23 +01:00
Simon Tatham
5cef6f96c2 Stop using GTK3-deprecated gdk_get_display().
The new way is gdk_display_get_name(gdk_display_get_default()), which
returns a const char * rather than a char *, so I've also had to
fiddle with the prototype and call sites of get_x_display().

(Also included gtkcompat.h into uxputty.c, since that wanted to call
gdk_get_display() but didn't previously include it.)
2015-08-22 14:07:02 +01:00
Simon Tatham
b5423b51d4 Change uxsel_input_add's return type from int to pointer.
In case a front end needs to store more than an integer id to be
returned to uxsel_input_remove, we now return a pointer to a
frontend-defined structure.
2015-08-16 13:11:51 +01:00
Simon Tatham
7a80ab14e0 GTK 3 prep: write a replacement for gtk_quit_add().
GTK 2 has deprecated it and provided no replacement; a bug tracker
entry I found on the subject suggested that it was functionality that
didn't really belong in GTK, and glib ought to provide a replacement
instead, which would be a perfectly fine thing to suggest if they had
waited for glib to get round to doing so *before* throwing out a
function people were actually using. Sigh.

Anyway, it turns out that subsidiary invocations of gtk_main() don't
happen inside GTK as far as I can see, so all I need to do is to make
sure my own invocations of gtk_main() are followed by a cleanup
function which runs any quit functions that I've registered.

That was the last deprecated GTK function, so we now build cleanly
with -DGTK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED. (But, as mentioned a couple of commits
ago, we still don't build with -DGDK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED, because that
has migrating to Cairo drawing as a prerequisite.)
2015-08-09 11:39:40 +01:00