uses to manipulate the window (minimise, maximise, front, back,
move, resize) and report things about the window (is it minimised or
maximised, how big is it, what's its title). Missing are ESC[4;X;Yt
(resize to a specified pixel size; our resize code doesn't like it)
and ESC[19;X;Yt (report size of _screen_ in _characters_, which it
isn't even obvious how to do when you've got a variable font size).
[originally from svn r1414]
you enable it text will paste into Word et al in the same font as
PuTTY itself is displaying in. In particular, this will be a fixed-
pitch font, so tables and `ls' and the like will naturally line up.
[originally from svn r1373]
wraparound, not referencing vbell_timeout if in_vbell==FALSE, that
sort of thing. I doubt it'll fix the reported problems with screen
vbells, since none of the failure modes I've just prevented looked
all that probable to me, but it's nice to have extra robustness
anyway.
[originally from svn r1314]
multi-monitor aware and make the scrollbar separately configurable
in and out of full-screen mode. Also (not Wez's patch, this bit) fix
the case where the user reconfigures _while_ the window is
full-screen, and disables full-screening. (In this case the window
should return gracefully to normal, rather than losing all its title
bars and getting confused.)
[originally from svn r1310]
rather than four. Should fix all sorts of bugs, since the fourth
(and default!) state was behaving weirdly and nobody liked it.
[originally from svn r1307]
term_out() can in turn call ldisc_send() which calls back to
from_backend() when local echo is enabled. This was giving rise to
crazy re-entrancy stuff and stack overflows. Instead from_backend()
deposits its data in a bufchain which term_out() empties the next
time it's called.
[originally from svn r1276]
kicked out by the Unicode patch. It's not very good - only works
sanely on US keyboards - but it's no worse than it was in 0.51.
After 0.52 maybe I should fix it properly.
[originally from svn r1273]
fiddle with the widths of characters in DBCS screen fonts, and (the
big one) one to enable a mode in which resizing the window locks the
terminal size and lets the font change, instead of vice versa. That
should shut up a few feature requests!
[originally from svn r1269]
mouse tracking is enabled. (This can be turned off if your app
really wants Shift+mouse, but it defaults to on for general
usefulness.)
[originally from svn r1235]
scp1 if it can't. Currently not very tested - I checked it in as
soon as it completed a successful recursive copy in both directions.
Also, one known bug: you can't specify a remote wildcard, because by
the nature of SFTP we'll need to implement the wildcard engine on
the client side. I do intend to do this (and use the same wildcard
engine in PSFTP as well) but I haven't got round to it yet.
[originally from svn r1208]
by me to make the drag list behaviour slightly more intuitive.
WARNING: DO NOT LOOK AT pl_itemfrompt() IF YOU ARE SQUEAMISH.
[originally from svn r1199]
by ceasing to listen on input channels if the corresponding output
channel isn't accepting data. Has had basic check-I-didn't-actually-
break-anything-too-badly testing, but hasn't been genuinely tested
in stress conditions (because concocting stress conditions is non-
trivial).
[originally from svn r1198]
box. Also default to ISO8859-1 so that CSI works in the default
mode; this is ridiculously Western-centric but I can't honestly
think of a better option.
[originally from svn r1183]
Only currently works on SSH1; SSH2 should be doable but it's late
and I have other things to do tonight. The Cool Guy award for this
one goes to Nicolas Barry, for doing most of the work and actually
understanding the code he was adding to.
[originally from svn r1176]
possible and we have a single unified means of trying to display any
Unicode code point. Instead of the various ad-hoc translation modes
we had before, we now have a single `codepage' option which allows
us to treat the incoming (and outgoing) text as any given character
set, and locally we map that to Unicode and back.
[originally from svn r1110]
send Telnet special sequences (Interrupt Process, Suspend, Erase
Char, End Of Line) instead of their ASCII equivalents. In particular
Return -> Telnet End Of Line is _always_ enabled irrespective of the
configuration, while the others are optional. Also in this patch, an
entertainingly ghastly use of `switch' to allow literal ^M^J to do
the same thing as magic-^M (the Return key) when in Raw protocol.
[originally from svn r1109]
configurable bell overload handling. Thanks to Robert de Bath for
galvanising me into doing this, but I've had to rip most of his code
out and redo it myself...
[originally from svn r1039]
always Compose (we have no better use for it), and Ctrl-Alt can be
made to act like AltGr (but it's never Compose even when AltGr is).
[originally from svn r1033]
now to translate them into poor man's characters (+--+ and |). We also
have an option to disable this (and map line drawing characters to the
corresponding ASCII code as before). Thanks to Robert de Bath.
[originally from svn r1029]
remote command from a local file. Advantage: you can have more than
one line in it, so you can remotely run what's effectively a small
script.
[originally from svn r1010]
introduce another layer of abstraction in SSH2 ciphers, such that a
single `logical cipher' (as desired by a user) can equate to more
than one `physical cipher'. This is because AES comes in several key
lengths (PuTTY will pick the highest supported by the remote end)
and several different SSH2-protocol-level names (aes*-cbc,
rijndael*-cbc, and an unofficial one rijndael-cbc@lysator.liu.se).
[originally from svn r967]
- wording change (required a patch to winctrls.c:radioline())
- `only on clean exit' is used when an old-style config says `yes',
on the grounds that it's more generally useful than `always' and
also we want to map the old default to the new default.
[originally from svn r928]
multiple switchable line disciplines, we now have a single unified
one which changes its behaviour based on option settings. Each
option setting can be suggested by the back end and/or the terminal
handler, and can be forcibly overridden by the configuration. Local
echo and local line editing are separate, independently switchable,
options.
[originally from svn r895]