appears to merely fix the background colour (arranging for it to
have transparency rather than being on some kind of default grey
background), but it turns out to also fix the strange blurry
behaviour I see in the GNOME Taskbar, for no very obvious reason.
[originally from svn r7186]
comes last on the compiler command line. This makes it easier to
override the normal compile options (since conflicting command-line
options usually follow a last-wins policy) in order to compile (for
example) the Unix version -g -O0.
[originally from svn r7170]
term_provide_resize_fn() was not being broken when the back end was
destroyed on session termination, causing resizing an inactive PuTTY
to be a segfault hazard.
[originally from svn r7143]
which have been broken since r6797.
(At least some versions of Win9x are gratuitously picky about the arguments to
CreateThread(), requiring lpThreadId not to be NULL.)
[originally from svn r7132]
[r6797 == 291533d3f9]
It's specific to the Windows installer, so it seems unnecessarily confusing to
have it in the top level of the source distribution alongside README.
[originally from svn r7125]
will close the window even in `close window only on clean exit'
mode. Also, while I'm here, arrange a suitable exit code for
"exit-signal".
[originally from svn r7121]
quite big and tends to hide the existence of the `Serial' config
panel.
This is implemented by folding up every branch of depth 2 or more,
which with any luck might turn out to be general enough to carry
over unchanged if other branches start expanding. Then again, we may
have to fiddle with it again when that time comes; who knows?
[originally from svn r7117]
subprocess. They were intended to make sure the child process didn't
inherit anything embarrassing or inconvenient from us, such as the
master end of its own pty, but now we instead do this by making sure
to set all our own fds to not-FD_CLOEXEC on creation. This should
fix Debian bug #357520.
(This doesn't seem to work _quite_ right in uxproxy.c's invocation
of a local proxy command: both ends of a GTK internal pipe end up in
the child process's fd space. This appears to be another GTK 1 bug,
inasmuch as it goes away when I build with Colin's preliminary GTK 2
patch; for the moment I think leaving that pipe lying around is
probably less harmful than hampering the proxy process's ability to
use extra fds by prior arrangement with PuTTY's parent process.)
[originally from svn r7107]
about it very hard; it's a plausible fix for the observed cause of the extreme
CPU usage, being that we were asking to be notified of Windows messages and
then not dealing with them, plausibly leading to a loop. Works for me,
anyway.)
[originally from svn r7098]
it'll let you see an identifier (SHGFP_TYPE_CURRENT) referenced since r7082.
(Actually, you need a pretty recent w32api before it's there at all.)
Morally, this should be defined for all toolchains, not just MinGW/Cygwin, but I'll leave that to people who have those toolchains.
<http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa383745.aspx>
Also add some other comments on our use of this API (since it's a horrible one
that I suspect will come back and haunt us...)
[originally from svn r7087]
[r7082 == dbbd6eb5ec]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
takes a third argument which is TRUE if the file is being opened for
writing and wants to be created in such a way that it's readable
only to the owner. This is used when saving private keys.
While I'm here, I also use this option when writing session logs, on
the general principle that they probably contain _something_
sensitive.
The new argument is only supported on Unix, for the moment. (I think
writing owner-accessible-only files is the default on Windows.)
[originally from svn r7084]
Application Data directory in preference to the old-fashioned
attempt to find the user's home directory, and use the _local-
machine_ Application Data directory in preference even to that.
SHGetFolderPath() is called via GetProcAddress, so this degrades
gracefully on old Windowses. (Tested myself on Win95.)
As part of this change, we now search for a location for the seed
file separately for reading and writing, so that installing the new
PuTTY should cause a seamless migration as the old seed file is read
from the old location and then a new one written to the new location.
`putty -cleanup' attempts to delete the seed file from _all_
affected locations.
Naturally, a user-specified seed file path in the Registry still
takes priority over all other means of finding the location.
[originally from svn r7082]
caused by the MessageBox() internal message loop eating WinSock
FD_READ notifications, which then don't reappear afterwards because
you have to explicitly prod a socket in order to get a repeat
notification on it.
Hence, here's a piece of infrastructure which seems to sort it out:
a new winnet.c function called socket_reselect_all(), whose function
is to go through all currently active sockets and re-run
WSAAsyncSelect() on them, causing repeat notifications for anything
we might have missed. I call this after every call to MessageBox(),
and that seems to solve the problem.
(The problem was actually masked in very recent revisions, probably
by the reinstatement of pending_netevent in r7071. However, I don't
believe that was a complete fix. This should be.)
[originally from svn r7077]
[r7071 == 57a763b0ec]
instead of the previous rate of one per character. In `Flush log
file frequently' mode, the latter was causing excessive slowdown due
to fflush()ing once per byte.
[originally from svn r7076]
ability to easily re-enable the r5122 behaviour, in case we need to
conditionally switch between the two at a later date.
[originally from svn r7073]
[r5122 == 8a20515844]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
and LF, and don't object if the final line of the key lacks a
newline. Also, while I'm here, switch to using fgetline() throughout
so as not to have to do nasty buffer-size ad-hockery.
[originally from svn r7072]
r4906 in the process of adding the new timing code. It seems to have
been what was previously preventing spew-lockup, and still seems to
prevent it now I've put it back in.
[originally from svn r7071]
[r4906 == 7ecf13564a]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
match the original icons. (Apparently I managed to introduce errors
while transcribing the originals for detailed analysis.)
While I'm at it, add the obviously useful `make install' target in
icons/Makefile, and fix the svn:ignore property on the icons
directory.
[originally from svn r7068]
suite. In a dramatic break with tradition, I'm actually checking in
the resulting icon files as well as the script that generates them,
because the script requires Python and ImageMagick and I don't think
it's reasonable to require that much extra infrastructure on
everyone checking out from Subversion.
The new icons should be _almost_ indistinguishable from the old
ones, at least at the 32x32 resolution. The immediately visible
change is that all the icons now come in 16x16, 32x32 and 48x48
formats, in both 16 colours and monochrome, instead of an ad-hoc
mixture of whichever ones I could be bothered to draw.
The same code can also be adapted to generate icons for the GTK port
(although icons for the running programs don't seem to be supported
by GTK 1 - another reason to upgrade to GTK 2!).
[originally from svn r7063]