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6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Tatham
d13547d504 Move some more files into subdirectories.
While I'm in the mood for cleaning up the top-level directory here:
all the 'nostuff.c' files have moved into a new 'stubs' directory, and
I broke up be_misc.c into smaller modules that can live in 'utils'.
2021-11-23 18:52:15 +00:00
Simon Tatham
f1746d69b1 Add 'description' methods for Backend and Plug.
These will typically be implemented by objects that are both a Backend
*and* a Plug, and the two methods will deliver the same results to any
caller, regardless of which facet of the object is known to that
caller.

Their purpose is to deliver a user-oriented natural-language
description of what network connection the object is handling, so that
it can appear in diagnostic messages.

The messages I specifically have in mind are going to appear in cases
where proxies require interactive authentication: when PuTTY prompts
interactively for a password, it will need to explain which *thing*
it's asking for the password for, and these descriptions are what it
will use to describe the thing in question.

Each backend is allowed to compose these messages however it thinks
best. In all cases at present, the description string is constructed
by the new centralised default_description() function, which takes a
host name and port number and combines them with the backend's display
name. But the SSH backend does things a bit differently, because it
uses the _logical_ host name (the one that goes with the SSH host key)
rather than the physical destination of the network connection. That
seems more appropriate when the question it's really helping the user
to answer is "What host am I supposed to be entering the password for?"

In this commit, no clients of the new methods are introduced. I have a
draft implementation of actually using it for the purpose I describe
above, but it needs polishing.
2021-10-24 10:48:25 +01:00
Simon Tatham
c35d8b8328 win_set_[icon_]title: send a codepage along with the string.
While fixing the previous commit I noticed that window titles don't
actually _work_ properly if you change the terminal character set,
because the text accumulated in the OSC string buffer is sent to the
TermWin as raw bytes, with no indication of what character set it
should interpret them as. You might get lucky if you happened to
choose the right charset (in particular, UTF-8 is a common default),
but if you change the charset half way through a run, then there's
certainly no way the frontend will know to interpret two window titles
sent before and after the change in two different charsets.

So, now win_set_title() and win_set_icon_title() both include a
codepage parameter along with the byte string, and it's up to them to
translate the provided window title from that encoding to whatever the
local window system expects to receive.

On Windows, that's wide-string Unicode, so we can just use the
existing dup_mb_to_wc utility function. But in GTK, it's UTF-8, so I
had to write an extra utility function to encode a wide string as
UTF-8.
2021-10-16 14:00:46 +01:00
Simon Tatham
fb663d4761 Promote ssh2_userauth_antispoof_msg into utils.
It doesn't actually do anything specific to the userauth layer; it's
just a helper function that deals with the mechanics of printing an
unspoofable message on various kinds of front end, and the only
parameters it needs are a Seat and a message.

Currently, it's used for 'here is the start/end of the server banner'
only. But it's also got all the right functionality to be used for the
(still missing) messages about which proxy SSH server the next set of
login prompts are going to refer to.
2021-09-16 17:49:31 +01:00
Simon Tatham
6d272ee007 Allow new_connection to take an optional Seat. (NFC)
This is working towards allowing the subsidiary SSH connection in an
SshProxy to share the main user-facing Seat, so as to be able to pass
through interactive prompts.

This is more difficult than the similar change with LogPolicy, because
Seats are stateful. In particular, the trust-sigil status will need to
be controlled by the SshProxy until it's ready to pass over control to
the main SSH (or whatever) connection.

To make this work, I've introduced a thing called a TempSeat, which is
(yet) another Seat implementation. When a backend hands its Seat to
new_connection(), it does it in a way that allows new_connection() to
borrow it completely, and replace it in the main backend structure
with a TempSeat, which acts as a temporary placeholder. If the main
backend tries to do things like changing trust status or sending
output, the TempSeat will buffer them; later on, when the connection
is established, TempSeat will replay the changes into the real Seat.

So, in each backend, I've made the following changes:
 - pass &foo->seat to new_connection, which may overwrite it with a
   TempSeat.
 - if it has done so (which we can tell via the is_tempseat() query
   function), then we have to free the TempSeat and reinstate our main
   Seat. The signal that we can do so is the PLUGLOG_CONNECT_SUCCESS
   notification, which indicates that SshProxy has finished all its
   connection setup work.
 - we also have to remember to free the TempSeat if our backend is
   disposed of without that having happened (e.g. because the
   connection _doesn't_ succeed).
 - in backends which have no local auth phase to worry about, ensure
   we don't call seat_set_trust_status on the main Seat _before_ it
   gets potentially replaced with a TempSeat. Moved some calls of
   seat_set_trust_status to just after new_connection(), so that now
   the initial trust status setup will go into the TempSeat (if
   appropriate) and be buffered until that seat is relinquished.

In all other uses of new_connection, where we don't have a Seat
available at all, we just pass NULL.

This is NFC, because neither new_connection() nor any of its delegates
will _actually_ do this replacement yet. We're just setting up the
framework to enable it to do so in the next commit.
2021-09-13 17:24:47 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e6c0fa6ba4 Move utils filename list into its own subdir.
Now there's a utils/CMakeLists.txt, which contains the huge list of
source files in that directory, so that the top-level file does a
better job of showing the overview.
2021-04-19 18:26:56 +01:00