I scrolled past it just now and decided those open braces at the ends
of the lines are just too ugly to live. They originally got that way
when I put the whole source base through GNU indent, which as far as
I'm concerned is a horrible misfeature of indent!
This is apparently the other half of what we should have done when we
called SetCurrentProcessExplicitAppUserModelID at run time: it
associates to PuTTY's Start Menu shortcut the same identifier that we
give to the running PuTTY process, so that jump lists saved under the
latter will be visible to users mousing over the former.
I've also done the same thing to the desktop shortcut, just in case
that does anything useful.
In the sentdata callback function given to handle_output_new, the
'new_backlog' parameter can be negative, and if so, it represents a
Windows error code and not a backlog size at all. handle_sentdata was
not checking for this before passing it on to plug_sent.
While I'm looking at these two dialog boxes, I notice there's another
prominent difference between PuTTY's one and these: I also never got
round to adding the button to go to PuTTY's main website. Now added.
The current About boxes are too small to fit in all the buildinfo
data, in particular the source-control commit id. Apparently I forgot
to enlarge them when I enlarged the one in PuTTY proper.
(All the same information is nonetheless *present* in the box, but
there seems to be no way to scroll a static text control, so you can
only find that out by 'Select All' and copying to the clipboard.)
Anyway. Now resized to the same dimensions as the main PuTTY About
box. (Really I should centralise more definitions into a common
resource file, but there we go.)
Conflicts in the FAQ are fixed by incorporating Jacob's rewritten
post-0.68 version. (But owing to considerable git confusion I haven't
managed to get his name on to this commit anywhere.)
When we create a socket with socket() (in try_connect, sk_newlistener, and
ipv4_is_local_addr) also call SetHandleInformation to disable handle
inheritance for this socket. This fixes dup-sessions-dont-close.
This commit also updates the dumps of Plink's and PSCP's help output,
adding the -proxycmd option to both and the -shareexists option to
Plink.
(Or rather, _re_-adding the latter, since it was introduced in error
by commit 07af4ed10 due to a branch management error and hastily
removed again in 29e8c24f9. This time it really does match reality.)
When a handle socket is in THAWING state and handle_socket_unfreeze is
gradually passing the backlogged data on to the plug, the plug might
suddenly turn round and close the socket in the course of handling
plug_receive(), which means that handle_socket_unfreeze had better be
careful not to have had everything vanish out from under it when that
call returns. To solve this, I've added a 'deferred close' flag which
handle_socket_unfreeze can set around its call to plug_receive, and
handle_socket_close will detect that and not actually free the socket,
instead leaving that for handle_socket_unfreeze to do under its own
control.
When called with -V to ask for our version, return 0 rather than 1.
This is the usual behaviour observed by ssh(1) and other Unix commands.
Also use exit() rather than cleanup_exit() in pscp.c and psftp.c ; at
this point we have nothing to cleanup!
Firstly, I had asserted that data would never arrive on a handle
socket in state FREEZING, which is just an error, because FREEZING is
precisely the state of not being quite frozen _yet_ because one last
read is still expected to arrive from the winhandl.c reading subthread
which it's too late to cancel. I meant to assert that it wasn't
FROZEN.
Secondly, when the handle socket was in state FREEZING, I failed to
actually _set_ it to FROZEN.
And thirdly, when the handle socket starts thawing again (i.e. there's
now outgoing buffer space so we can start sending our backlogged
data), I forgot to ever call bufchain_consume, so that the same block
of data would get sent repeatedly.
I can only assume that nothing I've ever done has actually exercised
this code!
I think all of the cases in this switch must have originally said
(shift_state ? 'this' : 'that'), and in all but the VK_NUMPAD5 case
the two options were different, and I left VK_NUMPAD5 containing a
redundant ?: just to make it line up in a nice table with the others.
But now the others all have more options than that because I had to
support Ctrl as well as Shift modifiers, so there's no reason to have
that silly ?: lingering around (and it annoys Coverity).
Avoided referring to some functions and header files that aren't there
in the winelib world (_vsnprintf, _stricmp, SecureZeroMemory,
multimon.h), and worked around a really amazingly annoying issue in
which Winelib objects to you using the type 'fd_set' unless you
included winsock2.h before stdlib.h.
The loops that were supposed to count up the number of buttons in the
variadic argument list forgot to increment the counter.
On the other hand, these functions aren't actually _used_ anywhere in
the current code - looks as if commit 616c837cf was the last time they
were seen - but manual dialog stuff like PuTTYgen might yet find a use
for them in future.
Coverity observes that sometimes 'struct tm' can have other fields
(e.g. glibc's tm_gmtoff), so it's as well to make sure we initialise
the whole thing to zero.
Assignments that are overwritten shortly afterwards and never used,
and a completely unused variable. Also, the bogus array access in
testbn.c could have actually accessed one beyond the array limit
(though of course it's only in a test harness).
Partly to reassure the user that they got what they asked for, and
partly so that's a clue for us in the logs when we get bug reports.
This involved repurposing platform_psftp_post_option_setup() (no longer
used since e22120fe) as platform_psftp_pre_conn_setup(), and moving it
to after logging is set up.
These are benign, I think. clang warns about casting non-pointer-sized
integers to pointers, but the Windows API actually does sometimes
involve values that are either pointers or _small_ integers, so in the
two cases involved I just cast through ULONG_PTR to silence the
warning. And clang insists that the integer whose address I give to
sk_getxdmdata is still uninitialised afterwards, which is just a lie.
clang-cl generates warnings saying they're deprecated, in favour of
the same names but prefixed with an underscore. The warnings are
coming from the standard MS headers, and I'm already #defining those
names differently on Unix, so I'll honour them.
When I added some extra braces in commit 095072fa4 to suppress this
warning, I think in fact I did the wrong thing, because the
declaration syntax I was originally using is the Microsoft-recommended
one in spite of clang not liking it - I think MS would be within their
rights (should they feel like it) to add those missing braces in a
later version of the WinSock headers, which would make the current
warning-clean code stop compiling. So it's better to put the code back
as it was, and avoid the clang warning by using clang's
warning-suppression pragmas for just those declarations.
I've also done the same thing in winnet.c, for two initialisers of
IPv6 well-known addresses which had the same problem (but which I
didn't notice yesterday because a misjudged set of Windows version
macros had prevented me from compiling that file successfully at all).
We used to offer to clean up saved sessions, so we should mention that
we don't for the benefit of users of old versions, who might have been
relying on it.
This change applies to every situation when GUI PuTTY knowingly spawns
another GUI PuTTY, to wit, the System menu options 'New Session',
'Duplicate Session' and the 'Saved Sessions' submenu.
(Literally speaking, what we actually pass through to the sub-PuTTY's
command line is not the "-restrict-acl" option itself, but a special
prefix "&R", which has the same meaning but which lives in the special
pre-argv-splitting command-line namespace like the magic options used
for Duplicate Session and the old '@sessionname' prefix which the
Saved Sessions submenu still uses. Otherwise, by the time we split up
argv and recognised -restrict-acl, it would be too late to parse those
other options.)
One case in which PuTTY spawns a subprocess and this change _doesn't_
apply is when the subprocess is a proxy command which happens to be a
Plink. Recognising Plink commands in that situation would be fragile
and unreliable, and in any case if the user wants a proxy Plink to be
ACL-restricted, they are in control of its exact command line so they
can add -restrict-acl themselves.
These ones are stylistic rather than potential bugs: mostly signedness
of char pointers in cases where they clearly aren't going to cause the
wrong thing to actually happen, and one thing in winsecur.c where
clang would have preferred an extra pair of braces around some
initialisers but it's legal with or without. But since some of clang's
warnings turn out to be quite useful, it seems worth silencing these
harmless ones so as to be able to see the rest.
I was having a play with clang's MSVC compatibility mode, just to see
how much of PuTTY it could compile, and one of its warnings pointed
out this error which must have crept in when I was changing the EOF
flags in winhandl.c from booleans to three-state enums - I left the !
on the front of what was previously an if (!thing) and needed to turn
into if (thing == EOF_NO).
Several functions were passing a 'char *error' and assigning error
messages directly into 'error', where they should have been passing
'char **error' and assigning error messages into '*error' if the error
message is to be returned to the caller. This would have led to
incomplete error messages.
As documented in bug 'win-process-acl-finesse', we've had enough
assorted complaints about it breaking various non-malicious pieces of
Windows process interaction (ranging from git->plink integration to
screen readers for the vision-impaired) that I think it's more
sensible to set the process back to its default level of protection.
This precaution was never a fully effective protection anyway, due to
the race condition at process startup; the only properly effective
defence would have been to prevent malware running under the same user
ID as PuTTY in the first place, so in that sense, nothing has changed.
But people who want the arguable defence-in-depth advantage of the ACL
restriction can now turn it on with the '-restrict-acl' command-line
option, and it's up to them whether they can live with the assorted
inconveniences that come with it.
In the course of this change, I've centralised a bit more of the
restriction code into winsecur.c, to avoid repeating the error
handling in multiple places.
The previous agent-forwarding system worked by passing each complete
query received from the input to agent_query() as soon as it was
ready. So if the remote client were to pipeline multiple requests,
then Unix PuTTY (in which agent_query() works asynchronously) would
parallelise them into many _simultaneous_ connections to the real
agent - and would not track which query went out first, so that if the
real agent happened to send its replies (to what _it_ thought were
independent clients) in the wrong order, then PuTTY would serialise
the replies on to the forwarding channel in whatever order it got
them, which wouldn't be the order the remote client was expecting.
To solve this, I've done a considerable rewrite, which keeps the
request stream in a bufchain, and only removes data from the bufchain
when it has a complete request. Then, if agent_query decides to be
asynchronous, the forwarding system waits for _that_ agent response
before even trying to extract the next request's worth of data from
the bufchain.
As an added bonus (in principle), this gives agent-forwarding channels
some actual flow control for the first time ever! If a client spams us
with an endless stream of rapid requests, and never reads its
responses, then the output side of the channel will run out of window,
which causes us to stop processing requests until we have space to
send responses again, which in turn causes us to stop granting extra
window on the input side, which serves the client right.
Now, instead of returning a boolean indicating whether the query has
completed or is still pending, agent_query() returns NULL to indicate
that the query _has_ completed, and if it hasn't, it returns a pointer
to a context structure representing the pending query, so that the
latter can be used to cancel the query if (for example) you later
decide you need to free the thing its callback was using as a context.
This should fix a potential race-condition segfault if you overload an
agent forwarding channel and then close it abruptly. (Which nobody
will be doing for sensible purposes, of course! But I ran across this
while stress-testing other aspects of agent forwarding.)
It's been commented out for ages because it never really worked, and
it's about to become further out of date when I make other changes to
the agent client code, so it's time to get rid of it before it gets in
the way.
If and when I do get round to supporting asynchronous agent requests
on Windows, it's now pretty clear to me that trying to coerce this
ghastly window-message IPC into the right shape is the wrong way, and
a better approach will be to make Pageant support a named-pipe based
alternative transport for its agent connections, and speaking the
ordinary stream-oriented agent protocol over that. Then Pageant will
be able to start adding interactive features (like confirmation
dialogs or on-demand decryption) with freedom to reply to multiple
simultaneous agent connections in whatever order it finds convenient.
backend_socket_log was generating the IP address in its error messages
by means of calling sk_getaddr(). But sk_getaddr only gets a SockAddr,
which may contain a whole list of candidate addresses; it doesn't also
get the information stored in the 'step' field of the Socket that was
actually trying to make the connection, which says _which_ of those
addresses we were in the middle of trying to connect to.
So now we construct a temporary SockAddr that points at the
appropriate one of the addresses, and use that for calls to plug_log
during connection setup.
In case of connection errors before and during the handshake,
net_select_result is retrying with the next address of the server. It
however was immediately going to the last address as it was not
checking the return value of try_connect for all intermediate
addresses.
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.
It's a bit conceptually incoherent anyway - if you're uninstalling
PuTTY _systemwide_ across a multi-user system, it doesn't really make
sense that you'd also want to wipe the saved sessions for the
individual user running the uninstaller.
Also, making this change to the Inno Setup uninstaller opens up a
nicer migration path to MSI for people doing large corporate rollouts:
they can upgrade to this version of the Inno Setup package, then do a
silent uninstall of it (which should now _actually_ be silent, since
this cleanup step was the thing that interrupted it otherwise) and
then a silent install of the MSI.
The MSI format has a fixed field for target architecture, so there's
no way to build a single MSI that can decide at install time whether
to install 32-bit or 64-bit (or both). The best you can do along those
lines, apparently, is to have two MSI files plus a bootstrap .EXE that
decides which of them to run, and as far as I'm concerned that would
just reintroduce all the same risks and annoyances that made us want
to migrate away from .EXE installers anyway.
Uses the BUILDDIR mechanism I added to Makefile.vc in commit
d3db17f3e.
This change is purely internal to Buildscr, and shouldn't affect the
output of a build. It paves the way to have Buildscr run multiple
Windows builds using different compilers, by putting each one in a
different subdirectory so that their outputs don't collide.
A user points out that buf[] in sk_tcp_peer_info is only used in the
IPv6 branch of an ifdef, and is declared with a size of
INET6_ADDRSTRLEN, which won't be defined in NO_IPV6 mode. So moving
the definition inside another IPv6-only ifdef fixes the resulting
build failure.
The algorithm Windows uses to generate AppUserModelIDs "hangs on" to
removable media (CDs/DVDs) if PuTTY is launched with a CD/DVD in a drive.
Set the AppUserModelID explicitly to avoid using this algorithm.
At least on systems providing SetDefaultDllDirectories, this should
stop PuTTY from being willing to load DLLs from its containing
directory - which makes no difference when it's been properly
installed (in which case the application dir contains no DLLs anyway),
but does if it's being run from somewhere uncontrolled like a browser
downloads directory.
Preliminary testing suggests that this shouldn't break any existing
deliberate use of DLLs, including GSSAPI providers.
The Windows implementation of get_file_posn is calling SetFilePointer
to obtain the current position in the file. However it did not
initialize the variable holding the high order 32-bit to 0. Thus,
SetFilePointer either returned -1 to indicate an error or did move the
file pointer to a different location instead of just returning the
current position. This change just initializes the variable to 0.
As a result, this bug has caused psftp's reget command to fail
resuming transfers or to create corrupt files due to setting up an
incorrect resume offset.
Previously only Unix front ends bothered to include it, on the basis
that only the pty backend needed it (to set IUTF8 in the pty). We're
about to need it everywhere else too.
It's really only useful with MinGW rather than a Cygwin toolchain these
days, as recent versions of the latter insist against linking with the
Cygwin DLL.
(I think it may no longer be possible to build with Cygwin out of the
box at all these days, but I'm not going to say so without having
actually checked that's the case. Settle for listing MinGW first in
various comments and docs.)
I've just upgraded my build environment to the latest Inno Setup
(apparently fixing some DLL hijacking issues), and found that the
build script doesn't run any more because the name of the output file
has changed - it used to produce Output/setup.exe, but now it produces
Output/mysetup.exe.
Rather than just fixing the build script to expect the new name, I've
explicitly specified an output filename of my own choice in putty.iss,
so that the build script should now work with versions before and
after the change.
I can't believe this codebase is around 20 years old and has had
multiple giant const-fixing patches, and yet there are _still_ things
that should have been const for years and aren't.
Ahem. Cut-and-paste goof that I introduced in commit 2eb952ca3, when I
moved the application names out of separate text controls in the
resource-file dialog descriptions.
Blocking PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION access to the process turned out to
stop screen readers like Microsoft Narrator from reading parts of the
PuTTY window like the System Menu.
strcspn() returns a size_t, which is not safe to pass as the parameter
in a printf argument list corresponding to a "*" field width specifier
in the format string, because the latter should be int, which may not
be the same size as size_t.
We were calling Windows file-handling API functions GetFilesize and
SetFilePointer, each of which returns two halves of a large integer by
writing the high half through a pointer, with pointers to the wrong
integer types. Now we're always passing the exact type defined in the
API, and converting after the fact to our own uint64 type, so this
should avoid any risk of wrong-sized pointers.
These integer types are correct for the id/handle parameter to
AppendMenu / InsertMenu / DeleteMenu, and also for the return type of
dialog box procedures.
We also have the special-purpose -DUNPROTECT to disable just the ACL
changes, but if you want to compile without any Windows security API
support at all (e.g. experimentally building against winelib) then
it's easier not to have to specify both defines separately.
The old README.txt instructed you to manually update PATH if you
wanted to run pscp from a command prompt. But the MSI installer can do
that automatically, so the wording needs tweaks. And now that we're
actually launching README (at least optionally) from the installer UI,
it's more important to not make it look silly.
This is a thing that the Inno Setup installer did, and that I didn't
get round to replicating when I rushed out the initial MSI in a hurry.
I've checked that this doesn't prevent unattended installation by
administrators: running 'msiexec /q /i putty-whatever.msi' as
administrator still installs silently after this change, without
popping up the README unexpectedly on anyone's desktop as a side
effect.
(I _think_ - but I'm still a long way from an MSI expert - that that's
because /q turns off the whole UI part of the MSI system, and the
loading of README is actually triggered by the transition away from
the final UI dialog box, which we now never visit in the first place.)
I rushed out the MSI in too much of a hurry to sort out this kind of
thing, but now we've got leisure to reconsider, I think it's better
behaviour not to clutter everyone's desktops unless specifically asked
to.
It's only a warning; Windows PuTTYgen puts it up as a message box, and
will still generate the key if you click yes, and Unix PuTTYgen just
prints the warning and gets on with generation anyway. But it might
help encourage people to move away from 1024-bit keys, if they're
still using them.
Protecting our processes from outside interference need not be limited
to just PuTTY: there's no reason why the other SSH-speaking tools
shouldn't have the same treatment (PSFTP, PSCP, Plink), and PuTTYgen
and Pageant which handle private key material.
If you're connecting to a new server and it _only_ provides host key
types you've configured to be below the warning threshold, it's OK to
give the standard askalg() message. But if you've newly demoted a host
key type and now reconnect to some server for which that type was the
best key you had cached, the askalg() wording isn't really appropriate
(it's not that the key we've settled on is the first type _supported
by the server_, it's that it's the first type _cached by us_), and
also it's potentially helpful to list the better algorithms so that
the user can pick one to cross-certify.
Now we actually have enough of them to worry about, and especially
since some of the types we support are approved by organisations that
people might make their own decisions about whether to trust, it seems
worth having a config list for host keys the same way we have one for
kex types and ciphers.
To make room for this, I've created an SSH > Host Keys config panel,
and moved the existing host-key related configuration (manually
specified fingerprints) into there from the Kex panel.
This is an absolutely horrible piece of code, relying not only on font
metrics but also on an observed correlation between the length of a
key algorithm name and whether or not it needs a separate key size
displayed. But it'll do for the moment, and it's less effort than
writing a custom piece of Windows API code to display the list box
entries in a properly robust way :-(
Jacob pointed out that a free-text field for entering a key size in
bits is all very well for key types where we actually _can_ generate a
key to a size of your choice, but less useful for key types where
there are only three (or one) legal values for the field, especially
if we don't _say_ what they are.
So I've revamped the UI a bit: now, in ECDSA mode, you get a dropdown
list selector showing the available elliptic curves (and they're even
named, rather than just given by bit count), and in ED25519 mode even
that disappears. The curve selector for ECDSA and the bits selector
for RSA/DSA are independent controls, so each one remembers its last
known value even while temporarily hidden in favour of the other.
The actual generation function still expects a bit count rather than
an actual curve or algorithm ID, so the easiest way to actually
arrange to populate the drop-down list was to have an array of bit
counts exposed by sshecc.c. That's a bit ugly, but there we go.
One small functional change: if you enter an absurdly low value into
the RSA/DSA bit count box (under 256), PuTTYgen used to give a warning
and reset it to 256. Now it resets it to the default key length of
2048, basically because I was touching that code anyway to change a
variable name and just couldn't bring myself to leave it in a state
where it intentionally chose such an utterly useless key size. Of
course this doesn't prevent generation of 256-bit keys if someone
still really wants one - it just means they don't get one selected as
the result of a typo.
It would be nicer if we could also make this show up as the icon for
the .msi file itself when viewed in Explorer, but apparently nothing
can change that. But at least this still gives us _some_ use for the
cardboard-box icon :-)
Mostly this is a reaction to the reports of Inno Setup having a DLL
hijacking vulnerability. But also, the new installer has several other
nice features that our Inno Setup one didn't provide: it can put the
PuTTY install directory on PATH automatically, and it supports
completely automatic and silent install/uninstall via 'msiexec /q'
which should make it easier for sysadmins to roll out installation in
large organisations. Also, it just seems like good sense to be using
Windows's own native packaging system (or closest equivalent) rather
than going it alone.
(And on the developer side, I have to say I like the fact that WiX
lets me pass in the version number as a set of command-line #define-
equivalents, whereas for Inno Setup I had to have Buildscr apply Perl
rewriting to the source file.)
For the moment, I'm still building the old Inno Setup installer
alongside this one, but I expect to retire it once the WiX one has
survived in the wild for a while and proven itself more or less
stable.
I've found both MSI and WiX to be confusing and difficult
technologies, so this installer has some noticeable pieces missing
(e.g. retrospective reconfiguration of the installed feature set, and
per-user vs systemwide installation) simply because I couldn't get
them to work. I've commented the new installer source code heavily, in
the hope that a passing WiX expert can give me a hand!
A user reported in January that locking down our process ACL causes
get_user_sid's call to OpenProcessToken to fail with a permissions
error. This _shouldn't_ be important, because we'll already have found
and cached the user SID before getting that far - but unfortunately
the call to get_user_sid in winnpc.c was bypassing the cache and
trying the whole process again.
This fix changes the memory ownership semantics of get_user_sid():
it's now an error to free the value it gives you, or else the *next*
call to get_user_sid() will return a stale pointer. Hence, also
removed those frees everywhere they appear.
Now all the uses of the licence text or the short copyright notice get
it from a new header "licence.h", which in turn is built by a Perl
script licence.pl invoked by mkfiles.pl, using LICENCE itself as the
source.
Hence, I can completely remove a whole section from the list of
licence locations in CHECKLST.txt :-)
(cherry picked from commit 9ddd071ec2)
Conflicts:
unix/gtkdlg.c
windows/winpgnt.c
(cherry-picker's notes: one conflict was just changed context, the
other was deleting a copy of the licence that wasn't quite the same
between branches)
This makes the About and Licence boxes copy-and-pasteable, similarly
to what I've just done on Unix.
(But unlike on the Unix side, here I haven't touched the host key
prompt dialog, because that's a standard Windows MessageBox and not
easy to mess around with. Plus, in any case, you can already hit ^C to
copy the whole text out of a MessageBox. Same goes for the PGP
fingerprints dialog.)
As a side effect, several copies of the copyright notice and licence
text have moved from .rc files into C source. I've updated
CHECKLST.txt, but they won't stay there for long.
(cherry picked from commit 2eb952ca31)
Conflicts:
windows/pageant.rc
windows/puttygen.rc
windows/win_res.rc2
(cherry-picker's notes: the conflict was just because several copies
of the licence text were deleted, and they weren't quite the same
between branches)
logevent() doesn't do printf-style formatting (though the logeventf
wrapper in ssh.c does), so if you need to format a message, it has to
be done separately with dupprintf.
(cherry picked from commit 1659cf3f14)
By default Windows processes have wide open ACLs which allow interference
by other processes running as the same user. Adjust our ACL to make this
a bit harder.
Because it's useful to protect PuTTYtel as well, carve winsecur.c into
advapi functions and wincapi.c for crypt32 functions.
(cherry picked from commit 48db456801)
Conflicts:
Recipe
(cherry-picker's note: the conflict was just some context not looking
quite the same)
make_private_security_descriptor and a new function protectprocess().
protectprocess() opens the running PuTTY process and adjusts the
Everyone and user access control entries in its ACL to deny a
selection of permissions which malicious processes running as the same
user could use to hijack PuTTY.
(cherry picked from commit aba7234bc1)
TOOLTYPE_NONNETWORK (i.e. pterm) already has "-log" (as does Unix
PuTTY), so there's no sense suppressing the synonym "-sessionlog".
Undocumented lacunae that remain:
plink accepts -sessionlog, but does nothing with it. Arguably it should.
puttytel accepts -sshlog/-sshrawlog (and happily logs e.g. Telnet
negotiation, as does PuTTY proper).
(cherry picked from commit a454399ec8)
Conflicts:
unix/uxplink.c
windows/winplink.c
(cherry-picker's notes: the conflict was only contextual, in the Plink
help output)
Now all the uses of the licence text or the short copyright notice get
it from a new header "licence.h", which in turn is built by a Perl
script licence.pl invoked by mkfiles.pl, using LICENCE itself as the
source.
Hence, I can completely remove a whole section from the list of
licence locations in CHECKLST.txt :-)
This makes the About and Licence boxes copy-and-pasteable, similarly
to what I've just done on Unix.
(But unlike on the Unix side, here I haven't touched the host key
prompt dialog, because that's a standard Windows MessageBox and not
easy to mess around with. Plus, in any case, you can already hit ^C to
copy the whole text out of a MessageBox. Same goes for the PGP
fingerprints dialog.)
As a side effect, several copies of the copyright notice and licence
text have moved from .rc files into C source. I've updated
CHECKLST.txt, but they won't stay there for long.
logevent() doesn't do printf-style formatting (though the logeventf
wrapper in ssh.c does), so if you need to format a message, it has to
be done separately with dupprintf.
By default Windows processes have wide open ACLs which allow interference
by other processes running as the same user. Adjust our ACL to make this
a bit harder.
Because it's useful to protect PuTTYtel as well, carve winsecur.c into
advapi functions and wincapi.c for crypt32 functions.
Thanks to Colin Harrison for spotting it very quickly. No thanks to
Visual Studio for only giving me a _warning_ when I prototyped a
function with four parameters and called it with five!
On both Unix and Windows, we now redirect the local proxy command's
standard error into a third pipe; data received from that pipe is
broken up at newlines and logged in the Event Log. So if the proxy
command emits any error messages in the course of failing to connect
to something, you now have a fighting chance of finding out what went
wrong.
This feature is disabled in command-line tools like PSFTP and Plink,
on the basis that in that situation it seems more likely that the user
would expect standard-error output to go to the ordinary standard
error in the ordinary way. Only GUI PuTTY catches it and logs it like
this, because it either doesn't have a standard error at all (on
Windows) or is likely to be pointing it at some completely unhelpful
session log file (under X).
I've defined a new value for the 'int type' parameter passed to
plug_log(), which proxy sockets will use to pass their backend
information on how the setup of their proxied connections are going.
I've implemented support for the new type code in all _nontrivial_
plug log functions (which, conveniently, are precisely the ones I just
refactored into backend_socket_log); the ones which just throw all
their log data away anyway will do that to the new code as well.
We use the new type code to log the DNS lookup and connection setup
for connecting to a networked proxy, and also to log the exact command
string sent down Telnet proxy connections (so the user can easily
debug mistakes in the configured format string) and the exact command
executed when spawning a local proxy process. (The latter was already
supported on Windows by a bodgy logging call taking advantage of
Windows in particular having no front end pointer; I've converted that
into a sensible use of the new plug_log facility, and done the same
thing on Unix.)
make_private_security_descriptor and a new function protectprocess().
protectprocess() opens the running PuTTY process and adjusts the
Everyone and user access control entries in its ACL to deny a
selection of permissions which malicious processes running as the same
user could use to hijack PuTTY.
TOOLTYPE_NONNETWORK (i.e. pterm) already has "-log" (as does Unix
PuTTY), so there's no sense suppressing the synonym "-sessionlog".
Undocumented lacunae that remain:
plink accepts -sessionlog, but does nothing with it. Arguably it should.
puttytel accepts -sshlog/-sshrawlog (and happily logs e.g. Telnet
negotiation, as does PuTTY proper).
This brings in the rest of the 0.66 branch, including some changes new
on master.
Conflicts:
doc/plink.but
sshrsa.c
(The conflicts were both trivial: in one, the addition of an extra
parameter to rsa2_newkey on master happened on the line next to 0.66's
addition of a check for NULL return value, and in the other, I'd got
the version number in the plink -h transcript messed up on master.)
Handles managed by winhandl.c have a 'busy' flag, which is used to
mean two things: (a) is a subthread currently blocked on this handle
so various operations in the main thread have to be deferred until it
finishes? And (b) is this handle currently one that should be returned
to the main loop to be waited for?
For HT_INPUT and HT_OUTPUT, those things are either both true or both
false, so a single flag covering both of them is fine. But HT_FOREIGN
handles have the property that they should always be waited for in the
main loop, but no subthread is blocked on them. The latter means that
operations done on them in the main thread should not be deferred; the
only such operation is cleaning them up in handle_free().
handle_free() was failing to spot this, and was deferring freeing
HT_FOREIGN handles until their subthread terminated - which of course
never happened. As a result, when a named pipe server was closed, its
actual Windows event object got destroyed, but winhandl.c still kept
passing it back to the main thread, leading to a tight loop because
MsgWaitForMultipleObjects would return ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE and never
block.
(cherry picked from commit 431f8db862)
On Windows, colons are illegal in filenames, because they're part of
the path syntax. But colons can appear in automatically constructed
log file names, if an IPv6 address is expanded from the &H placeholder.
Now we coerce any such illegal characters to '.', which is a bit of a
bodge but should at least cause a log file to be generated.
(cherry picked from commit 64ec5e03d5)
For the moment we're also retaining the old ones. Not sure when will
be the best time to get rid of those; after the next release, perhaps?
(cherry picked from commit e88b8d21f2)
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.
(cherry picked from commit 8bf5c1b31f)
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.)
(cherry picked from commit 65f3500906)
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.
(cherry picked from commit 67e5ceb9a8)
Commit f2e61275f introduced the use of uintptr_t, without adding an
include of <stdint.h> which is where the C standard says that type
should be defined. This didn't cause a build failure, because Visual
Studio also defines it in <stddef.h> which we do include. But a user
points out that other Windows toolchains - e.g. MinGW - don't
necessarily do the same.
I can't add an unconditional include of <stdint.h>, because the VS I
use for the current official builds doesn't have that header at all.
So I conditionalise it out for old VS; if it needs throwing out for
any other toolchain, I'll add further conditions as reports come in.
Handles managed by winhandl.c have a 'busy' flag, which is used to
mean two things: (a) is a subthread currently blocked on this handle
so various operations in the main thread have to be deferred until it
finishes? And (b) is this handle currently one that should be returned
to the main loop to be waited for?
For HT_INPUT and HT_OUTPUT, those things are either both true or both
false, so a single flag covering both of them is fine. But HT_FOREIGN
handles have the property that they should always be waited for in the
main loop, but no subthread is blocked on them. The latter means that
operations done on them in the main thread should not be deferred; the
only such operation is cleaning them up in handle_free().
handle_free() was failing to spot this, and was deferring freeing
HT_FOREIGN handles until their subthread terminated - which of course
never happened. As a result, when a named pipe server was closed, its
actual Windows event object got destroyed, but winhandl.c still kept
passing it back to the main thread, leading to a tight loop because
MsgWaitForMultipleObjects would return ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE and never
block.
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.
A Plink invocation of the form 'plink -shareexists <session>' tests
for a currently live connection-sharing upstream for the session in
question. <session> can be any syntax you'd use with Plink to make the
actual connection (a host/port number, a bare saved session name,
-load, whatever).
I envisage this being useful for things like adaptive proxying - e.g.
if you want to connect to host A which you can't route to directly,
and you might already have a connection to either of hosts B or C
which are viable proxies, then you could write a proxy shell script
which checks whether you already have an upstream for B or C and goes
via whichever one is currently active.
Testing for the upstream's existence has to be done by actually
connecting to its socket, because on Unix the mere existence of a
Unix-domain socket file doesn't guarantee that there's a process
listening to it. So we make a test connection, and then immediately
disconnect; hence, that shows up in the upstream's event log.
On Windows, colons are illegal in filenames, because they're part of
the path syntax. But colons can appear in automatically constructed
log file names, if an IPv6 address is expanded from the &H placeholder.
Now we coerce any such illegal characters to '.', which is a bit of a
bodge but should at least cause a log file to be generated.
I noticed that Unix PSCP was unwantedly renaming downloaded files
which had a backslash in their names, because pscp.c's stripslashes()
treated \ as a path component separator, since it hadn't been modified
since PSCP ran on Windows only.
It also turns out that pscp.c, psftp.c and winsftp.c all had a
stripslashes(), and they didn't all have quite the same prototype. So
now there's one in winsftp.c and one in uxsftp.c, with appropriate
OS-dependent behaviour, and the ones in pscp.c and psftp.c are gone.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Our config boxes are constructed using the CreateDialog() API
function, rather than the modal DialogBox(). CreateDialog() is not
that different from CreateWindow(), so windows created with it don't
appear on the screen automatically; MSDN says that they must be shown
via ShowWindow(), just like non-dialog windows have to be. But we
weren't doing that at any point!
So how was our config box ever getting displayed at all? Apparently by
sheer chance, it turns out. The handler for a selection change in the
tree view, which has to delete a whole panel of controls and creates a
different set, surrounds that procedure with some WM_SETREDRAW calls
and an InvalidateRect(), to prevent flicker while lots of changes were
being made. And the creation of the _first_ panelful of controls, at
dialog box setup, was done by simply selecting an item in the treeview
and expecting that handler to be recursively called. And it appears
that calling WM_SETREDRAW(TRUE) and then InvalidateRect was
undocumentedly having an effect equivalent to the ShowWindow() we
should have called, so that we never noticed the latter was missing.
But a recent Vista update (all reports implicate KB3057839) has caused
that not to work any more: on an updated Vista machine, in some
desktop configurations, it seems that any attempt to fiddle with
WM_SETREDRAW during dialog setup can leave the dialog box in a really
unhelpful invisible state - the window is _physically there_ (you can
see its taskbar entry, and the mouse pointer changes as you move over
where its edit boxes are), but 100% transparent.
So now we're doing something a bit more sensible. The first panelful
of controls is created directly by the WM_INITDIALOG handler, rather
than recursing into code that wasn't really designed to run at setup
time. To be on the safe side, that handler for treeview selection
change is also disabled until the WM_INITDIALOG handler has finished
(like we already did with the WM_COMMAND handler), so that we can be
sure of not accidentally messing about with WM_SETREDRAW at all during
setup. And at the end of setup, we show the window in the sensible
way, by a docs-approved call to ShowWindow().
This appears (on the one machine I've so far tested it on) to fix the
Vista invisible-window issue, and also it should be more API-compliant
and hence safer in future.
(cherry picked from commit 6163710f04)
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.
(cherry picked from commit c8f83979a3)
Conflicts:
pageant.c
Cherry-picker's notes: the conflict was because the original commit
also added a use of the same feature in the centralised Pageant code,
which doesn't exist on this branch. Also I had to remove 'const' from
the type of the second parameter to wrap_send_port_open(), since this
branch hasn't had the same extensive const-fixing as master.
The last use of it, to store the contents of the saved session name
edit box, was removed nearly two years ago in svn r9923 and replaced
by ctrl_alloc_with_free. The mechanism has been unused ever since
then, and I suspect any further uses of it would be a bad idea for the
same reasons, so let's get rid of it.
(cherry picked from commit 42c592c4ef)
PuTTY now uses the updated version of Diffie-Hellman group exchange,
except for a few old OpenSSH versions which Darren Tucker reports only
support the old version.
FIXME: this needs further work because the Bugs config panel has now
overflowed.
(cherry picked from commit 62a1bce7cb)
When a winhandl.c input thread returns EOF to the main thread, the
latter might immediately delete the input thread's context. I
carefully wrote in a comment that in that case we had to not touch ctx
ever again after signalling to the main thread - but the test for
whether that was true, which also touched ctx, itself came _after_ the
SetEvent which sent that signal. Ahem.
Spotted by Minefield, which it looks as if I haven't run for a while.
(cherry picked from commit 9fec2e7738)
I had set up an event object for signalling incoming connections to
the named pipe, and then called handle_add_foreign_event to get that
event object watched for connections - but when I closed down the
listening pipe, I deleted the event object without also cancelling
that foreign-event handle, so that winhandl.c would potentially call
the callback for a destroyed object.
(cherry picked from commit 6f241cef2c)