When anyone connects to a PuTTY tool's listening socket - whether it's
a user of a local->remote port forwarding, a connection-sharing
downstream or a client of Pageant - we'd like to log as much
information as we can find out about where the connection came from.
To that end, I've implemented a function sk_peer_info() in the socket
abstraction, which returns a freeform text string as best it can (or
NULL, if it can't get anything at all) describing the thing at the
other end of the connection. For TCP connections, this is done using
getpeername() to get an IP address and port in the obvious way; for
Unix-domain sockets, we attempt SO_PEERCRED (conditionalised on some
moderately hairy autoconfery) to get the pid and owner of the peer. I
haven't implemented anything for Windows named pipes, but I will if I
hear of anything useful.
It was only actually used in X11 and port forwarding, to find internal
state structures given only the Socket that ssh.c held. So now that
that lookup has been reworked to be the sensible way round,
private_ptr is no longer used for anything and can be removed.
[originally from svn r10075]
That's been a FIXME in the code for ages, because it's difficult to
get winhandl.c to stop an already-started read from a handle (since
the read is a blocking system call running in a separate thread). But
I now realise it isn't absolutely necessary to do so - you can just
buffer one lot of data from winhandl and _then_ tell it to stop.
[originally from svn r10067]
It's now kept in a separate module, where it can be reused
conveniently for other kinds of Windows HANDLE that I want to wrap in
the PuTTY Socket abstraction - for example, the named pipes that I
shortly plan to use for the Windows side of connection-sharing IPC.
[originally from svn r10066]