cuts and pastes a lot of code from macctrl_popup, which perhaps should be
consolidated. Also change the effective line codepage when it is changed
with Change Settings.
[originally from svn r5363]
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]
now returns an integer: 0 means cancel the SSH connection and 1
means continue with it. Additionally, they can return -1, which
means `front end has set an asynchronous alert box in motion, please
wait to be called back with the result', and each one is passed a
callback function pointer and context for this purpose.
I have not yet done the same to askappend() yet, because it will
take a certain amount of reorganisation of logging.c.
Importantly, this checkin means the host key dialog box now works on
OS X.
[originally from svn r5330]
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]
completely untested so far, but the Appearance Manager version works and
looks plausible. There are still some HI Guideline spacing issues to
address.
[originally from svn r5310]
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]
the edges and need to have all their controls properly aligned and spaced
according to the HI guidelines. Also, fix store_host_key() so that it
replaces a host key correctly when the host key has changed and the user
opts to update the cached one.
[originally from svn r5280]
breaks netatalk-based setups (which _swap_ LF and CR). Instead,
setfile.sh (which I have to run _anyway_ on OS X) copies mkputty.mpw
to mk.mpw and then makes that CR-based.
[originally from svn r5271]
if you load a session all the panels in the configuration dialogue
reflect the new settings. However, there's a glitch which paints a white
rectangle between the Saved Sessions listbox and the Close-on-exit radios.
[originally from svn r5256]
* Make sk_getxdmdata() return an arbitrary string rather than two integers.
This better matches the spec, even if the current version always returns
six bytes
* On Unix, for PF_UNIX sockets, return a counter rather than a constant along
with the PID. This should allow multiple clients to connect within one
second, and is what Xlib does.
* On Unix, interpret AF_INET6 addresses like Xlib does, returning the
embedded IPv4 address for v4-mapped addresses, and six bytes of zeroes
otherwise. The latter is silly, but if I'm going to do anything more sane
I need to check that X servers won't reject it.
[originally from svn r5219]
of polishing to bring them to what I think should in principle be
release quality. Unlike the unfix.org patches themselves, this
checkin enables IPv6 by default; if you want to leave it out, you
have to build with COMPAT=-DNO_IPV6.
I have tested that this compiles on Visual C 7 (so the nightlies
_should_ acquire IPv6 support without missing a beat), but since I
don't have IPv6 set up myself I haven't actually tested that it
_works_. It still seems to make correct IPv4 connections, but that's
all I've been able to verify for myself. Further testing is needed.
[originally from svn r5047]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
mid-session if we are not using SSHv1. I've done this by introducing
a generic `cfg_info' function which every back end can use to
communicate an int's worth of data to setup_config_box; in SSH
that's the protocol version in use, and in everything else it's
currently zero.
[originally from svn r5040]
[r5031 == d77102a8d5]
(which will gain more content anon).
Retire BUG_SSH2_DH_GEX and add a backwards-compatibility wart, since we never
did find a way of automatically detecting this alleged server bug, and in any
case there was only ever one report (<3D91F3B5.7030309@inwind.it>, FWIW).
Also generalise askcipher() to a new askalg() (thus touching all the
front-ends).
I've made some attempt to document what SSH key exchange is and why you care,
but it could use some review for clarity (and outright lies).
[originally from svn r5022]
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]
[originally from svn r4788]
[this svn revision also touched bmbm,caltrap,charset,enigma,filter,fonts,golem,grunge,halibut,html,lj,local,misc,polyhedra,putty-website,putty-wishlist,puzzles,pycee,sdlgames,svn-tools,timber,tweak]
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]