I was tacitly assuming that mfont->fallback would always be non-NULL,
which is true in a world containing Pango, but untrue in GTK1 when
Pango isn't there. In that situation we fall back to just omitting the
characters that would be displayed in the fallback font, on the
grounds that that's better than dereferencing through a NULL vtable.
We are passing pointers as third argument to AppendMenu. Do not
truncate them to UINT, use UINT_PTR instead which has the required
size on 64bit Windows.
We're passing a pointer as 4th argument to WinHelp. Do not cast it to
DWORD which would truncate the pointer. Instead use UINT_PTR as that
is what WinHelp expects.
The aim is to try to reduce the incidence of the two least helpful
classes of those reports: the ones which have just got mismatched
checksum files, and the ones which don't tell us the information that
would help.
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.)
Now that I've got a general place to centralise handling of at least
the simple differences between GTK 1 and 2, I should use it wherever
possible. So this commit removes just a small number of ifdefs which
are either obsoleted by definitions already in gtkcompat.h (like
set_size_request vs set_usize), or can easily be replaced by adding
another (e.g. gtk_color_selection_set_has_opacity_control).
Building with -DGTK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED, we now suffer only one compile
failure, for the use of gtk_quit_add() in idle_toplevel_callback_func.
That function is apparently removed with no replacement in GTK 3, so
I'll need to find a completely different approach to getting toplevel
callbacks to run only in the outermost instance of gtk_main().
Also, this change doesn't do anything about the use of *GDK*
deprecated functions, because those include the entire family of
old-style drawing functions - i.e. the only way to build cleanly with
-DGDK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED will be to switch to Cairo drawing.
On GTK versions where it's available, this is a much nicer way of
handling the -geometry command-line option, since not only do we get
all the faffing about with gravity for free, it also automatically
sets the user-position WM hints.
I've put in a special #define to control this selection, in case I
decide that for reasons of taste I'd prefer to switch back to
GtkFileSelection in GTK2 which supports both!
Replaces the deprecated gtk_color_selection_set_color() which took an
array of four doubles (RGBA), and instead takes a 'GdkColor' struct
containing four 16-bit integers.
For GTK1, we still have to retain the original version.
All the things like GtkType, GtkObject, gtk_signal_connect and so on
should now consistently have the new-style glib names like GType,
GObject, g_signal_connect, etc.
A major aim of introducing GTK 3 support is to permit compiling for
non-X11 platforms that GTK 3 supports, so I'm going to need to be able
to build as a pure GTK application with no use of X11 internals.
Naturally, I don't intend to stop supporting the hybrid GTK+X11 mode
in which X server-side bitmap fonts are available.
Use of X11 can be removed by compiling with -DNOT_X_WINDOWS. That's
the same compatibility flag that was already used by the unfinished OS
X port to disable the X-specific parts of uxpty.c; now it just applies
to more source files.
(There's no 'configure' option to set this flag at present. I haven't
worked out whether we'll need one yet.)
GTK 2 doesn't _documentedly_ provide a helpful compile option to let
us check this one in advance of GTK 3, but you can fake one anyway by
compiling with -D__GDK_KEYSYMS_COMPAT_H__, so that gdkkeysyms-compat.h
will believe that it's already been included :-) We now build cleanly
under GTK 2 with that predefine.
This is the first of several cleanup steps recommended by the GTK 2->3
migration guide.
I intend to begin work towards compatibility with GTK 3, but without
breaking GTK 2 and even GTK 1 compatibility in the process; GTK 2 is
still useful to _me_ (not least because it permits much easier support
of old-style server-side X11 fonts), and I recall hearing a rumour
that at least one kind of strange system can only run GTK 1, so for
the moment I don't intend to stop supporting either.
Including gdkkeysyms.h is not optional in GTK 2, because gdk.h does
not include it. In GTK 3 it does, so we don't explicitly reinclude it
ourselves.
We now build cleanly in GTK2 with -DGTK_DISABLE_SINGLE_INCLUDES. (But
that doesn't say much, because we did already! Apparently gdkkeysyms.h
was a special case which that #define didn't forbid.)
This is less than ideal - passphrase input now happens in ISO 8859-1,
and the passphrase prompt window is neither centred nor always-on-top.
But it basically works, and restores bare-minimum GTK 1 support to the
codebase as a whole.
Users have requested this from time to time, for distinguishing log
file names when there's more than one SSH server running on different
ports of the same host. Since we do take account of that possibility
in other areas (e.g. we cache host keys indexed by (host,port) rather
than just host), it doesn't seem unreasonable to do so here too.
We've had several reports that launching saved sessions from the
Windows 10 jump list fails; Changyu Li reports that this is because we
create those IShellLink objects with a command line string starting
with @, and in Windows 10 that causes the SetArguments method to
silently do the wrong thing.
If a PuTTY SSH packet log has gone through line-wrapping at 72
columns, destroying the long lines of the packet hex dumps, then this
script will reconstitute it as best it can, by reconstructing the
ASCII section at the end of the dump from the (hopefully) undamaged
hex part, and using that to spot wrapped lines and remove the
subsequent debris.
A user reports that in a particular situation one of the calls to
LoadLibrary from wingss.c has unwanted side effects, and points out
that this happens even when the saved session has GSSAPI disabled. So
I've evaluated as much as possible of the condition under which we
check the results of GSS library loading, and deferred the library
loading itself until after that condition says we even care about the
results.
If you're counting up to ms_limit in steps of ms_step, it's silly to
add ms_step at the end of the loop body _and_ increment the loop
variable by 1 in the loop header. I must have been half asleep.
This is generated in response to the SendInput() Windows API call, if
that in turn is passed an KEYBDINPUT structure with KEYEVENTF_UNICODE
set. That method of input generation is used by programs such as
'WinCompose' to send an arbitrary Unicode character as if it had been
typed at the keyboard, even if the keyboard doesn't actually provide a
key for it.
Like VK_PROCESSKEY, this key code is an exception to our usual policy
of manually translating keystrokes: we handle it by calling
TranslateMessage, to get back the Unicode character it contains as a
WM_CHAR message.
(If that Unicode character in turn is outside the BMP, it may come
back as a pair of WM_CHARs in succession containing UTF-16 surrogates;
if so, that's OK, because the new Unicode WM_CHAR handler can cope.)
This causes WM_CHAR messages sent to us to have a wParam containing a
16-bit value encoded in UTF-16, rather than an 8-bit value encoded in
the system code page.
As far as I can tell, there aren't many other knock-on effects - e.g.
you can still interact with the window using ordinary char-based API
functions such as SetWindowText, and the Windows API will do the
necessary conversions behind the scenes. However, even so, I'm half
expecting some sort of unforeseen bug to show up as a result of this.
PuTTY's main mb_to_wc() function is all very well for embedding in
fiddly data pipelines, but for the simple job of turning a C string
into a C wide string, really I want something much more like
dupprintf. So here is one.
I've had to put it in a new separate source file miscucs.c rather than
throwing it into misc.c, because misc.c is linked into tools that
don't also include a module providing the internal Unicode API (winucs
or uxucs). The new miscucs.c appears only in Unicode-using tools.
The -F option is no longer needed to bob in this situation; that
hasn't been the directory I keep release announcements in for a long
time; the Docs page needs adjusting for pre-release retirement as well
as the Downloads page.
Coverity complained that some paths through the loop in the
WM_INITDIALOG handler might leave firstpath==NULL. In fact this can't
happen because the input data to that loop is largely static and we
know what it looks like, but it doesn't seem unreasonable to add an
assertion anyway, to keep static checkers happy and as an explanatory
quasi-comment for humans.