Should be no significant change in behaviour.
(Well, entering usernames containing commas on Plink's command line will be
a little harder now.)
[originally from svn r7628]
basis for other terminal-involving applications: a stub
implementation of the printing interface, an additional function in
notiming.c, and also I've renamed the front-end function beep() to
do_beep() so as not to clash with beep() in lib[n]curses.
[originally from svn r6479]
abstracted out; replace loops structured around a single interaction
per loop with less tortuous code (fixes: `ki-multiprompt-crash',
`ssh1-bad-passphrase-crash'; makes `ssh2-password-expiry' and
`proxy-password-prompt' easier).
The new interaction abstraction has a lot of fields that are unused in
the current code (things like window captions); this is groundwork for
`gui-auth'. However, ssh.c still writes directly to stderr; that may
want to be fixed.
In the GUI apps, user interaction is moved to terminal.c. This should
make it easier to fix things like UTF-8 username entry, although I
haven't attempted to do so. Also, control character filtering can be
tailored to be appropriate for individual front-ends; so far I don't
promise anything other than not having made it any worse.
I've tried to test this fairly exhaustively (although Mac stuff is
untested, as usual). It all seems to basically work, but I bet there
are new bugs. (One I know about is that you can no longer make the
PuTTY window go away with a ^D at the password prompt; this should be
fixed.)
[originally from svn r6437]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
Unix Plink sends everything sensible it can find, and it's fully configurable
from the GUI.
I'm not entirely sure about the precise set of modes that Unix Plink should
look at; informed tweaks are welcome.
Also the Mac bits are guesses (but trivial).
[originally from svn r5653]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
across mac_closeterm() and notify_remote_exit() but it will do for now.
Also, "PuTTY (inactive)" looks strange as a Mac window title in a way it
doesn't on Unix or Windows. Perhaps we should find another way of
indicating that a window contains a dead session?
[originally from svn r5424]
This was harder than verify_ssh_host_key() and askalg() put
together, because:
(a) askappend() can be called at any time, since it's a side effect
of data-logging functions. Therefore there can be an unfinished
askappend() alert at any time, and hence the OS X front end has
to be prepared to _queue_ other alerts which occur during that
time.
(b) logging.c has to do something with data that comes in while
it's waiting for an answer to askappend(). It buffers it until
it knows what the user wants done with it. This involved
something of a reorganisation of logging.c.
[originally from svn r5344]
characters. I've just used libcharset in macucs.c since there seemed
little reason not to, and implemented combining characters by naive
overprinting. It's not yet a lot of use without the ability to select
a font, of course.
[originally from svn r5322]
changing its mouse pointer. Currently this is only used in the (slightly-
arbitrarily-defined) "heavy" bits of SSH-2 key exchange. We override pointer
hiding while PuTTY is busy, but preserve pointer-hiding state.
Not yet implemented on the Mac.
Also switch to frobbing window-class cursor in Windows rather than relying on
SetCursor().
[originally from svn r5303]
blink when the window doesn't have focus, we don't schedule blink
timers at that point either.
Infrastructure change: term->has_focus should now not be written
directly from outside terminal.c. Instead, use the function
term_set_focus, which will sort out the blink timers as well.
[originally from svn r4911]
which pretty much any module can call to request a call-back in the
future. So terminal.c can do its own handling of blinking, visual
bells and deferred screen updates, without having to rely on
term_update() being called 50 times a second (fixes: pterm-timer);
and ssh.c and telnet.c both invoke a new module pinger.c which takes
care of sending keepalives, so they get sent uniformly in all front
ends (fixes: plink-keepalives, unix-keepalives).
[originally from svn r4906]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
array of each `termline' structure now contains optional additional
entries after the normal number of columns, which are used to chain
a linked list of combining characters off any primary termchar that
needs it. This means we support arbitrarily many combining
characters per cell (unlike xterm's hard limit of 2).
Cut and paste works correctly (selecting a character cell containing
multiple code points causes all those code points to be cut and
pasted). Display works by simply overlaying all the relevant
characters on top of one another; this is good enough for Unix
(xterm does the same thing), and mostly seems OK for Windows except
that the Windows Unicode fonts have a nasty habit of not containing
most of the combining characters and thus overlaying an
unknown-code-point box on your perfectly good base glyph.
I had no idea how to add support in the Mac do_text(), so I've
simply stuck in an assertion that will trigger the first time a
combining character is displayed, and hopefully this will bite
someone with the clue to fix it.
[originally from svn r4622]
The active terminal screen is no longer an array of `unsigned long'
encoding 16-bit Unicode plus 16 attribute bits. Now it's an array of
`termchar' structures, which currently have 32-bit Unicode and 32
attribute bits but which will probably expand further in future.
To prevent bloat of the memory footprint, I've introduced a mostly
RLE-like compression scheme for storing scrollback: each line is
compressed into a compact (but hard to modify) form when it moves
into the term->scrollback tree, and is temporarily decompressed when
the user wants to scroll back over it. My initial tests suggest that
this compression averages about 1/4 of the previous (32 bits per
character cell) data size in typical output, which means this is an
improvement even without counting the new ability to extend the
information stored in each character cell.
Another beneficial side effect is that the insane format in which
Unicode was passed to front ends through do_text() has now been
rendered sane.
Testing is incomplete; this _may_ still have instabilities. Windows
and Unix front ends both seem to work as far as I've looked, but I
haven't yet looked very hard. The Mac front end I've edited (it
seemed obvious how to change it) but I can't compile or test it.
As an immediate functional effect, the terminal emulator now
supports full 32-bit Unicode to whatever extent the host platform
allows it to. For example, if you output a 4-or-more-byte UTF-8
character in Unix pterm, it will not display it properly, but it
will correctly paste it back out in a UTF8_STRING selection. Windows
is more restricted, sadly.
[originally from svn r4609]
No very good reason, but I've occasionally wanted to frob it to see if it
makes any difference to problems I'm having, and it was easy.
Tested that it does actually cause keepalives on Windows (with tcpdump);
should also work on Unix. Not implemented on Mac (does nothing), but then
neither is TCP_NODELAY.
Quite a big checkin, much of which is adding `keepalive' alongside `nodelay'
in network function calls.
[originally from svn r4309]
a bunch of function pointers associated with each window to do things like
updates and click handling. This is all looking disturbingly object-oriented.
.
While I'm here, separate out the about box into its own file, shared by PuTTY
and PuTTYgen.
[originally from svn r2850]
using the List Manager was entirely the wrong decision on my part, so I'll
probably rewrite this to use TextEdit at some point, but it's better than
stderr even so.
[originally from svn r2811]
/*
Newsflash! After 15 years of arduous toil, it's finally possible
for specially trained typists wielding advanced text editing
technology to define symbolic names for commonly used scrap
flavor type constants! Apple triumphs again!
*/
[originally from svn r2791]
that outside Carbon, CGrafPtr and GrafPtr are different types, even though
they're mostly interchangeable, so we need to interpose a cast between
GetWindowPort and SetPort.
[originally from svn r2790]
opaque to all platform-independent modules and only handled within
per-platform code. `Filename' is there because the Mac has a magic
way to store filenames (though currently this checkin doesn't
support it!); `FontSpec' is there so that all the auxiliary stuff
such as font height and charset and so on which is needed under
Windows but not Unix can be kept where it belongs, and so that I can
have a hope in hell of dealing with a font chooser in the forthcoming
cross-platform config box code, and best of all it gets the horrid
font height wart out of settings.c and into the Windows code where
it should be.
The Mac part of this checkin is a bunch of random guesses which will
probably not quite compile, but which look roughly right to me.
Sorry if I screwed it up, Ben :-)
[originally from svn r2765]
combining adjacent ones for the same region, and runs them all in do_paint.
I'm not sure it's entirely right, but it works on my Mac in every case I've
tested.
[originally from svn r2763]
foreground colours, and ESC[100m through ESC[107m to set bright
background colours. Hence, so do we. Bright-foreground is
distinguishable from bold, and bright-background distinguishable
from blink, when it leaves terminal.c; the front end may then choose
to display them in the same way if it's configured to do so. This
change makes the xterm backend for Turbo Vision (!!!) work properly.
Untested on Mac.
[originally from svn r2734]
yet -- there's no Alt+keypad support, and no way for the front-end to find
out what it should do with the Num Lock light. It's also not fully tested.
Nonetheless, it's at least as good as the previous Mac keyboard handler.
Other platforms probably shouldn't adopt it just yet.
[originally from svn r2728]
simple 'styl' record along with it to specify the font and suchlike. I'm
not sure it's worth making this optional in the way the RTF is in Windows.
[originally from svn r2724]
both the raw and the cooked mouse button, with the mapping being done in
advance by the front-end. This is useful because it allows the front-end to
use information other than the raw button (e.g. the modifier state) to decide
which cooked button to generate.
.
Front ends other than the Mac one are untested, but they just call
translate_button() themselves and pass the result to term_mouse().
[originally from svn r2721]
areas of the code. Not all back-ends have been tested, but Telnet and SSH
behave reasonably.
Incidentally, almost all of this patch was written through Mac PuTTY,
admittedly over a Telnet connection.
[originally from svn r2615]
vttest apart from the "mad programmer" screen, which I think is a linedraw
problem.
This also intorduces proper clipping of the drawn text for good measure.
[originally from svn r2593]