(generating detail in bug reports when SSH2 repeat key exchange
failed) is no longer an issue, but it might be useful for other
things. It's a _log_ dammit, and logs should be timestamped.
[originally from svn r956]
behaviour of FXP_REALPATH. (Specifically, BSD and GNU realpath(3)
disagree over whether to return success when computing the realpath
for a putative new file to be created in a valid directory. There's
no way we can tell from (say) the OpenSSH version string because
OpenSSH might have been compiled to use the local realpath _or_ its
own nonbroken one.)
[originally from svn r953]
- wording change (required a patch to winctrls.c:radioline())
- `only on clean exit' is used when an old-style config says `yes',
on the grounds that it's more generally useful than `always' and
also we want to map the old default to the new default.
[originally from svn r928]
version allows you to specify, per socket, which sockets receive OOB
data in-line (so that you know what was before the mark and what was
after) and which receive it out of line (so it's really a one-byte
out-of-band facility rather than discard-to-mark). This reflects the
fact that rlogin appears to make more sense in the latter mode, and
telnet in the former. This patch makes rlogin work right for me.
[originally from svn r921]
it's already NULL. The `Incorrect MAC' problem was causing
ssh2_rdpkt to bombout(), setting s to NULL, and then a secondary
bombout() was happening at the next level up, causing a segfault.
[originally from svn r909]
because the session id is the exchange hash from the _first_ key
exchange, so in subsequent key exchanges they're different.
[originally from svn r901]
multiple switchable line disciplines, we now have a single unified
one which changes its behaviour based on option settings. Each
option setting can be suggested by the back end and/or the terminal
handler, and can be forcibly overridden by the configuration. Local
echo and local line editing are separate, independently switchable,
options.
[originally from svn r895]
automatic fatalbox(). Instead, the error is passed to the receiver
routine, which can decide just how fatal the problem really is.
[originally from svn r894]