Obviously we can't do that by inverting the hash function itself, but
if the user provides one or more host names on the command line that
they're expecting to appear in the file, we can at least compare the
stored hashes against those.
This change gives us an automatic --help option, which is always
useful for a script used very rarely. It also makes it that much
easier to add extra options.
Now most of the program consists of function and class definitions,
and the code that activates it all is localised in one place at the
bottom instead of interleaved between the definitions.
We support it in the ECC code proper these days, as of the bignum
rewrite in commit 25b034ee3. So we should support it in this auxiliary
script too, and fortunately, there's no real difficulty in doing so
because I already had some Python code kicking around in
test/eccref.py for taking modular square roots.
Bare string exceptions aren't supported any more.
Patch by Will Aoki, plus a backward compatibility tweak from Colin Watson.
Seen working with Python 2.4.3 and 2.7.6.
I've shifted away from using the SVN revision number as a monotonic
version identifier (replacing it in the Windows version resource with
a count of days since an arbitrary epoch), and I've removed all uses
of SVN keyword expansion (replacing them with version information
written out by Buildscr).
While I'm at it, I've done a major rewrite of the affected code which
centralises all the computation of the assorted version numbers and
strings into Buildscr, so that they're all more or less alongside each
other rather than scattered across multiple source files.
I've also retired the MD5-based manifest file system. A long time ago,
it seemed like a good idea to arrange that binaries of PuTTY would
automatically cease to identify themselves as a particular upstream
version number if any changes were made to the source code, so that if
someone made a local tweak and distributed the result then I wouldn't
get blamed for the results. Since then I've decided the whole idea is
more trouble than it's worth, so now distribution tarballs will have
version information baked in and people can just cope with that.
[originally from svn r10262]
discussed. Use Barrett and Silverman's convention of "SSH-1" for SSH protocol
version 1 and "SSH-2" for protocol 2 ("SSH1"/"SSH2" refer to ssh.com
implementations in this scheme). <http://www.snailbook.com/terms.html>
[originally from svn r5480]