I think all of the cases in this switch must have originally said
(shift_state ? 'this' : 'that'), and in all but the VK_NUMPAD5 case
the two options were different, and I left VK_NUMPAD5 containing a
redundant ?: just to make it line up in a nice table with the others.
But now the others all have more options than that because I had to
support Ctrl as well as Shift modifiers, so there's no reason to have
that silly ?: lingering around (and it annoys Coverity).
Avoided referring to some functions and header files that aren't there
in the winelib world (_vsnprintf, _stricmp, SecureZeroMemory,
multimon.h), and worked around a really amazingly annoying issue in
which Winelib objects to you using the type 'fd_set' unless you
included winsock2.h before stdlib.h.
Partly to reassure the user that they got what they asked for, and
partly so that's a clue for us in the logs when we get bug reports.
This involved repurposing platform_psftp_post_option_setup() (no longer
used since e22120fe) as platform_psftp_pre_conn_setup(), and moving it
to after logging is set up.
These are benign, I think. clang warns about casting non-pointer-sized
integers to pointers, but the Windows API actually does sometimes
involve values that are either pointers or _small_ integers, so in the
two cases involved I just cast through ULONG_PTR to silence the
warning. And clang insists that the integer whose address I give to
sk_getxdmdata is still uninitialised afterwards, which is just a lie.
This change applies to every situation when GUI PuTTY knowingly spawns
another GUI PuTTY, to wit, the System menu options 'New Session',
'Duplicate Session' and the 'Saved Sessions' submenu.
(Literally speaking, what we actually pass through to the sub-PuTTY's
command line is not the "-restrict-acl" option itself, but a special
prefix "&R", which has the same meaning but which lives in the special
pre-argv-splitting command-line namespace like the magic options used
for Duplicate Session and the old '@sessionname' prefix which the
Saved Sessions submenu still uses. Otherwise, by the time we split up
argv and recognised -restrict-acl, it would be too late to parse those
other options.)
One case in which PuTTY spawns a subprocess and this change _doesn't_
apply is when the subprocess is a proxy command which happens to be a
Plink. Recognising Plink commands in that situation would be fragile
and unreliable, and in any case if the user wants a proxy Plink to be
ACL-restricted, they are in control of its exact command line so they
can add -restrict-acl themselves.
These ones are stylistic rather than potential bugs: mostly signedness
of char pointers in cases where they clearly aren't going to cause the
wrong thing to actually happen, and one thing in winsecur.c where
clang would have preferred an extra pair of braces around some
initialisers but it's legal with or without. But since some of clang's
warnings turn out to be quite useful, it seems worth silencing these
harmless ones so as to be able to see the rest.
As documented in bug 'win-process-acl-finesse', we've had enough
assorted complaints about it breaking various non-malicious pieces of
Windows process interaction (ranging from git->plink integration to
screen readers for the vision-impaired) that I think it's more
sensible to set the process back to its default level of protection.
This precaution was never a fully effective protection anyway, due to
the race condition at process startup; the only properly effective
defence would have been to prevent malware running under the same user
ID as PuTTY in the first place, so in that sense, nothing has changed.
But people who want the arguable defence-in-depth advantage of the ACL
restriction can now turn it on with the '-restrict-acl' command-line
option, and it's up to them whether they can live with the assorted
inconveniences that come with it.
In the course of this change, I've centralised a bit more of the
restriction code into winsecur.c, to avoid repeating the error
handling in multiple places.
The algorithm Windows uses to generate AppUserModelIDs "hangs on" to
removable media (CDs/DVDs) if PuTTY is launched with a CD/DVD in a drive.
Set the AppUserModelID explicitly to avoid using this algorithm.
At least on systems providing SetDefaultDllDirectories, this should
stop PuTTY from being willing to load DLLs from its containing
directory - which makes no difference when it's been properly
installed (in which case the application dir contains no DLLs anyway),
but does if it's being run from somewhere uncontrolled like a browser
downloads directory.
Preliminary testing suggests that this shouldn't break any existing
deliberate use of DLLs, including GSSAPI providers.
Previously only Unix front ends bothered to include it, on the basis
that only the pty backend needed it (to set IUTF8 in the pty). We're
about to need it everywhere else too.
These integer types are correct for the id/handle parameter to
AppendMenu / InsertMenu / DeleteMenu, and also for the return type of
dialog box procedures.
We also have the special-purpose -DUNPROTECT to disable just the ACL
changes, but if you want to compile without any Windows security API
support at all (e.g. experimentally building against winelib) then
it's easier not to have to specify both defines separately.
logevent() doesn't do printf-style formatting (though the logeventf
wrapper in ssh.c does), so if you need to format a message, it has to
be done separately with dupprintf.
By default Windows processes have wide open ACLs which allow interference
by other processes running as the same user. Adjust our ACL to make this
a bit harder.
Because it's useful to protect PuTTYtel as well, carve winsecur.c into
advapi functions and wincapi.c for crypt32 functions.
This is generated in response to the SendInput() Windows API call, if
that in turn is passed an KEYBDINPUT structure with KEYEVENTF_UNICODE
set. That method of input generation is used by programs such as
'WinCompose' to send an arbitrary Unicode character as if it had been
typed at the keyboard, even if the keyboard doesn't actually provide a
key for it.
Like VK_PROCESSKEY, this key code is an exception to our usual policy
of manually translating keystrokes: we handle it by calling
TranslateMessage, to get back the Unicode character it contains as a
WM_CHAR message.
(If that Unicode character in turn is outside the BMP, it may come
back as a pair of WM_CHARs in succession containing UTF-16 surrogates;
if so, that's OK, because the new Unicode WM_CHAR handler can cope.)
This causes WM_CHAR messages sent to us to have a wParam containing a
16-bit value encoded in UTF-16, rather than an 8-bit value encoded in
the system code page.
As far as I can tell, there aren't many other knock-on effects - e.g.
you can still interact with the window using ordinary char-based API
functions such as SetWindowText, and the Windows API will do the
necessary conversions behind the scenes. However, even so, I'm half
expecting some sort of unforeseen bug to show up as a result of this.
Having found a lot of unfixed constness issues in recent development,
I thought perhaps it was time to get proactive, so I compiled the
whole codebase with -Wwrite-strings. That turned up a huge load of
const problems, which I've fixed in this commit: the Unix build now
goes cleanly through with -Wwrite-strings, and the Windows build is as
close as I could get it (there are some lingering issues due to
occasional Windows API functions like AcquireCredentialsHandle not
having the right constness).
Notable fallout beyond the purely mechanical changing of types:
- the stuff saved by cmdline_save_param() is now explicitly
dupstr()ed, and freed in cmdline_run_saved.
- I couldn't make both string arguments to cmdline_process_param()
const, because it intentionally writes to one of them in the case
where it's the argument to -pw (in the vain hope of being at least
slightly friendly to 'ps'), so elsewhere I had to temporarily
dupstr() something for the sake of passing it to that function
- I had to invent a silly parallel version of const_cmp() so I could
pass const string literals in to lookup functions.
- stripslashes() in pscp.c and psftp.c has the annoying strchr nature
This was an old bug, fixed around 0.59, which apparently regressed
when I rewrote the main event loop using the toplevel_callback
mechanism.
Investigation just now suggests that it has to do with my faulty
assumption that Windows PeekMessage would deliver messages in its
message queue in FIFO order (i.e. that the thing calling itself a
message queue is actually a _queue_). In fact my WM_NETEVENT seems to
like to jump the queue, so that once a steady stream of them starts
arriving, we never do anything else in the main event loop (except
deal with handles).
Worked around in a simple and slightly bodgy way, namely, we don't
stop looping on PeekMessage and run our toplevel callbacks until we've
either run out of messages completely or else seen at least one that
_isn't_ a WM_NETEVENT. That way we should reliably interleave NETEVENT
processing with processing of other stuff.
I'm not actually sure why we've always had back ends notify ldisc of
changes to echo/edit settings by giving ldisc_send(ldisc,NULL,0,0) a
special meaning, instead of by having a separate dedicated notify
function with its own prototype and parameter set. Coverity's recent
observation that the two kinds of call don't even have the same
requirements on the ldisc (particularly, whether ldisc->term can be
NULL) makes me realise that it's really high time I separated the two
conceptually different operations into actually different functions.
While I'm here, I've renamed the confusing ldisc_update() function
which that special operation ends up feeding to, because it's not
actually a function applying to an ldisc - it applies to a front end.
So ldisc_send(ldisc,NULL,0,0) is now ldisc_echoedit_update(ldisc), and
that in turn figures out the current echo/edit settings before passing
them on to frontend_echoedit_update(). I think that should be clearer.
The IDM_RECONF handler unconditionally calls ldisc_configure to
reconfigure the line discipline for the new echo/edit settings, but in
fact ldisc can be NULL if no session is currently active. (Indeed, the
very next line acknowledges this, by testing it for NULL before
calling ldisc_send!) Thanks to Alexander Wong for the report.
[originally from svn r10214]
On Windows (X mouse reporting of the mouse wheel isn't currently done
by the Unix front end, though I'm shortly about to fix that too) a
mouse wheel event is translated into a virtual button, and we send
both a press and a release of that button to terminal.c, which encodes
both in X mouse reporting escape sequences and passes them on to the
server. This isn't consistent with what xterm does - scroll-wheel
events are encoded _like_ button presses, but differ semantically in
that they don't have matching releases. So we're updating to match
xterm.
[originally from svn r10138]
I've gone through everywhere we handle host names / addresses (on
command lines, in PuTTY config, in port forwarding, in X display
names, in host key storage...) and tried to make them handle IPv6
literals sensibly, by using the host_str* functions I introduced in my
previous commit. Generally it's now OK to use a bracketed IPv6 literal
anywhere a hostname might have been valid; in a few cases where no
ambiguity exists (e.g. no :port suffix is permitted anyway)
unbracketed IPv6 literals are also acceptable.
[originally from svn r10120]
The basic strategy is described at the top of the new source file
sshshare.c. In very brief: an 'upstream' PuTTY opens a Unix-domain
socket or Windows named pipe, and listens for connections from other
PuTTYs wanting to run sessions on the same server. The protocol spoken
down that socket/pipe is essentially the bare ssh-connection protocol,
using a trivial binary packet protocol with no encryption, and the
upstream has to do some fiddly transformations that I've been
referring to as 'channel-number NAT' to avoid resource clashes between
the sessions it's managing.
This is quite different from OpenSSH's approach of using the Unix-
domain socket as a means of passing file descriptors around; the main
reason for that is that fd-passing is Unix-specific but this system
has to work on Windows too. However, there are additional advantages,
such as making it easy for each downstream PuTTY to run its own
independent set of port and X11 forwardings (though the method for
making the latter work is quite painful).
Sharing is off by default, but configuration is intended to be very
easy in the normal case - just tick one box in the SSH config panel
and everything else happens automatically.
[originally from svn r10083]
This restores PuTTY's backward compatibility to versions of Windows
too old to have ToUnicodeEx in their system libraries, which was
accidentally broken in 0.63.
[originally from svn r10061]
A couple of users report that my recent reworking of the Windows
top-level message loop has led to messages occasionally being lost,
and MsgWaitForMultipleObjects blocking when it ought to have been
called with a zero timeout. I haven't been able to reproduce this
myself, but according to one reporter, PeekMessage(PM_NOREMOVE) is
effective at checking for a non-empty message queue in a way that
GetQueueStatus is not. Switch to using that instead. Thanks to Eric
Flumerfelt for debugging and testing help.
[originally from svn r10057]
Jochen Erwied points out that once you've used PeekMessage to remove
_one_ message from the message queue, MsgWaitForMultipleObjects will
consider the whole queue to have been 'read', or at least looked at
and deemed uninteresting, and so it will block until a further message
comes in. Hence, my change in r10040 which stops us from looping on
PeekMessage until the queue is empty has the effect of causing the
rest of the message queue not to be acted on until a new message comes
in to unblock it. Fix by checking if the queue is nonempty in advance
of calling MsgWaitForMultipleObjects, and if so, giving it a zero
timeout just as we do if there's a pending toplevel callback.
[originally from svn r10052]
[r10040 == 5c4ce2fadf]
This change attempts to reinstate as a universal property something
which was sporadically true of the ad-hockery that came before
toplevel callbacks: that if there's a _very long_ queue of things to
be done through the callback mechanism, the doing of them will be
interleaved with re-checks of other event sources, which might (e.g.)
cause a flag to be set which makes the next callback decide not to do
anything after all.
[originally from svn r10040]
It was one of those things that went in ages ago on Windows and never
got replicated in the Unix front end. And it needn't be: ldisc.c is a
perfect place to put it, since it knows which of the data it's sending
is based on a keystroke and which is automatically generated, and it
also has access to the terminal context. So now a keypress can
interrupt a runaway paste on all platforms.
[originally from svn r10025]
Again, I've removed the special-purpose ad-hockery from the assorted
front end message loops that dealt with deferred handling of socket
errors, and instead uxnet.c and winnet.c arrange that for themselves
by calling the new general top-level callback mechanism.
[originally from svn r10023]
Instead of setting a must_close_session flag and having special code
in the message loop to check it, we'll schedule the call to
close_session using the new top-level callback system.
[originally from svn r10021]
I've removed the ad-hoc front-end bodgery in the Windows and GTK ports
to arrange for term_paste to be called at the right moments, and
instead, terminal.c itself deals with knowing when to send the next
chunk of pasted data using a combination of timers and the new
top-level callback mechanism.
As a happy side effect, it's now all in one place so I can actually
understand what it's doing! It turns out that what all that confusing
code was up to is: send a line of pasted data, and delay sending the
next line until either a CR or LF is returned from the server
(typically indicating that the pasted text has been received and
echoed) or 450ms elapse, whichever comes first.
[originally from svn r10020]
This is a little like schedule_timer, in that the callback you provide
will be run from the top-level message loop of whatever application
you're in; but unlike the timer mechanism, it will happen
_immediately_.
The aim is to provide a general way to avoid re-entrance of code, in
cases where just _doing_ the thing you want done is liable to trigger
a confusing recursive call to the function in which you came to the
decision to do it; instead, you just request a top-level callback at
the message loop's earliest convenience, and do it then.
[originally from svn r10019]
PuTTY does not trim a colon suffix off the hostname if it contains
_more than one_ colon. This allows IPv6 literals to be entered.
(Really we need to do a much bigger revamp of all uses of hostnames to
arrange that square-bracketed IPv6 literals work consistently, but
this at least removes a regression over 0.62.)
[originally from svn r9983]
[r9214 == a1f3b7a358]
palette_set() to be bogus. Fortunately, this isn't exploitable through
the terminal emulator, because the palette escape sequence parser
contains its own bounds check before even calling palette_set().
While I'm at it, fix the same goof in the OS X version! That port is
more or less abandoned, but that's no excuse for leaving obviously
wrong code lying around.
[originally from svn r9965]
The most interesting one is printer_add_enum, which I've modified to
take a char ** rather than a char * so that it can both realloc its
input buffer _and_ return NULL to indicate error.
[originally from svn r9959]
ToAsciiEx, where possible.
This enables support for keys which generate Unicode characters that
aren't in the system code page, which seems to me like a perverse way
for Windows to have set up the system code page but apparently does
happen, e.g. (I'm told) U+0219 and U+021B on Romanian keyboards.
Patch mostly due to Andrei Damian-Fekete.
[originally from svn r9942]
that the user really ought to know but that are not actually fatal to
continued operation of PuTTY or a single network connection.
[originally from svn r9932]
use 32-bit scrollbar position data instead of being limited to the
16-bit version that comes in scrollbar messages' wParam.
[originally from svn r9720]
mistakenly rearranged the logic in an if statement in window.c, with
the effect that scroll-wheel events are no longer sent via xterm mouse
tracking. Put it back to the way it was.
[originally from svn r9679]
[r9214 == a1f3b7a358]
First, make absolute times unsigned. This means that it's safe to
depend on their overflow behaviour (which is undefined for signed
integers). This requires a little extra care in handling comparisons,
but I think I've correctly adjusted them all.
Second, functions registered with schedule_timer() are guaranteed to be
called with precisely the time that was returned by schedule_timer().
Thus, it's only necessary to check these values for equality rather than
doing risky range checks, so do that.
The timing code still does lots that's undefined, unnecessary, or just
wrong, but this is a good start.
[originally from svn r9667]
sequence: since init_fonts sets up ucsdata based on the available
Windows fonts, we should call it before passing ucsdata to term_init.
[originally from svn r9527]
the offset horizontal line characters in the VT100 line-drawing set
(o,p,r,s), so that no trace of it - and hence no pointless performance
hit - is compiled into the cross-platform modules on non-Windows
platforms.
[originally from svn r9467]
UTF-16 support. High Unicode characters in the terminal are now
converted back into surrogates during copy and draw operations, and
the Windows drawing code takes account of that when splitting up the
UTF-16 string for display. Meanwhile, accidental uses of wchar_t have
been replaced with 32-bit integers in parts of the cross-platform code
which were expecting not to have to deal with UTF-16.
[originally from svn r9409]
so we should ensure we treat it the same way as other WM_SIZEs that
show up during that time: set the width and height in conf, and set
the flag to have that width and height enacted on WM_EXITSIZEMOVE.
Fixes a bug in which dragging a PuTTY window directly from the Win7
snapped-to-half-screen position to the snapped-to-maximised state
would leave the terminal in the pre-snapped size.
[originally from svn r9404]
allocated type.
The main reason for this is to stop it from taking up a fixed large
amount of space in every 'struct value' subunion in conf.c, although
that makes little difference so far because Filename is still doing
the same thing (and is therefore next on my list). However, the
removal of its arbitrary length limit is not to be sneezed at.
[originally from svn r9314]
data channels. Should comprehensively fix 'half-closed', in principle,
though it's a big and complicated change and so there's a good chance
I've made at least one mistake somewhere.
All connections should now be rigorous about propagating end-of-file
(or end-of-data-stream, or socket shutdown, or whatever) independently
in both directions, except in frontends with no mechanism for sending
explicit EOF (e.g. interactive terminal windows) or backends which are
basically always used for interactive sessions so it's unlikely that
an application would be depending on independent EOF (telnet, rlogin).
EOF should now never accidentally be sent while there's still buffered
data to go out before it. (May help fix 'portfwd-corrupt', and also I
noticed recently that the ssh main session channel can accidentally
have MSG_EOF sent before the output bufchain is clear, leading to
embarrassment when it subsequently does send the output).
[originally from svn r9279]
(In an embarrassingly silly way, too. No end of difficult stuff about
Conf serialisation done with great care and working just fine, and
then a trivial goof in using sscanf lets the whole lot down.)
[originally from svn r9237]
'Config' in putty.h, which stores all PuTTY's settings and includes an
arbitrary length limit on every single one of those settings which is
stored in string form. In place of it is 'Conf', an opaque data type
everywhere outside the new file conf.c, which stores a list of (key,
value) pairs in which every key contains an integer identifying a
configuration setting, and for some of those integers the key also
contains extra parts (so that, for instance, CONF_environmt is a
string-to-string mapping). Everywhere that a Config was previously
used, a Conf is now; everywhere there was a Config structure copy,
conf_copy() is called; every lookup, adjustment, load and save
operation on a Config has been rewritten; and there's a mechanism for
serialising a Conf into a binary blob and back for use with Duplicate
Session.
User-visible effects of this change _should_ be minimal, though I
don't doubt I've introduced one or two bugs here and there which will
eventually be found. The _intended_ visible effects of this change are
that all arbitrary limits on configuration strings and lists (e.g.
limit on number of port forwardings) should now disappear; that list
boxes in the configuration will now be displayed in a sorted order
rather than the arbitrary order in which they were added to the list
(since the underlying data structure is now a sorted tree234 rather
than an ad-hoc comma-separated string); and one more specific change,
which is that local and dynamic port forwardings on the same port
number are now mutually exclusive in the configuration (putting 'D' in
the key rather than the value was a mistake in the first place).
One other reorganisation as a result of this is that I've moved all
the dialog.c standard handlers (dlg_stdeditbox_handler and friends)
out into config.c, because I can't really justify calling them generic
any more. When they took a pointer to an arbitrary structure type and
the offset of a field within that structure, they were independent of
whether that structure was a Config or something completely different,
but now they really do expect to talk to a Conf, which can _only_ be
used for PuTTY configuration, so I've renamed them all things like
conf_editbox_handler and moved them out of the nominally independent
dialog-box management module into the PuTTY-specific config.c.
[originally from svn r9214]
that we won't keep calling close_session() again the next time we go
round the message loop. Should fix unclean-close-hang. Thanks to Simon
Coleman for debugging.
[originally from svn r9115]
rectangle into smaller ones: it doesn't work any more, since the new
variable-pitch code can now call general_textout() with a larger
clipping rectangle than the text it's meant to be displaying. Instead,
general_textout() now uses the same semantics as the next loop up in
do_text_internal(): the first piece of text it displays uses the
opacity setting passed in, which blanks the entire clipping rectangle
if necessary, and then subsequent overlays are non-opaque. And the
same clipping rectangle is used throughout.
[originally from svn r9067]
array to ExtTextOut:
- move it inside the new big loop (this should fix a potential bug
whereby the DBCS handling altered some elements of it but the loop
did not actually step along it)
- initialise it more sensibly
- rename it to lpDx rather than IpDx, since as far as I can tell the
latter name was derived from a misreading of the former in the
Windows API docs.
[originally from svn r9066]
pass null lpDx, because general_textout depends on it being filled in.
Instead we null it out in the calls to subroutines _from_
general_textout.
[originally from svn r9064]
Done in much the same way as it is in the GTK front end: the character
cell width is determined using the font's digits (which seems to give
generally not-too-offensive spacing in most cases, at the expense of
Ms and Ws typically overhanging a bit into adjacent cells) and each
character is centred in its cell. Overhangs never leave permanent
droppings on the window, because the existing work done in r5003
handles them just fine even in this stressful scenario.
There's a hacky new checkbox in the Appearance panel to make
variable-pitch fonts appear in the font selector (they still don't by
default, because I still think it's _usually_ not What You Want); the
checkbox state is not actually stored as part of a saved session, but
it should be automatically ticked when reloading a session that's got
a variable pitch font selected.
(I'm half-expecting a potential flurry of requests for this feature in
the wake of http://xkcd.com/840/ , so I thought I'd pre-empt them :-)
[originally from svn r9063]
[r5003 == ba470dec5e]
I'm not sure whether I broke this in the recent revamp or whether it
was always broken, but: transitions in and out of full-screen mode
work by first maximising or restoring the window, which triggers a
WM_SIZE, whose handler then fiddles with the window style to disable
or re-enable all the furniture, which in turn triggers a recursive
WM_SIZE. The trouble is, after returning from the handler for the
inner WM_SIZE, the rest of the outer handler runs, and its client area
size is now out of date.
So I've added a flag which is set when a resize is handled 'properly',
so that after returning from the inner WM_SIZE handler the outer one
knows not to try to redo badly work that's already been done well.
[originally from svn r9056]
icon, even if the program isn't running at the time, to be presented
with an application-defined collection of helpful links). The current
jump list is updated every time a saved session is loaded, and shows
the last few launchable saved sessions (i.e. not those like Default
Settings) that were loaded. Also, if Pageant or PuTTYgen or both is in
the same directory as the PuTTY binary, the jump list will present
links to launch those too.
Based on a patch sent last year by Daniel B. Roy, though it's barely
recognisable any more...
[originally from svn r9046]
maximised state, we must be sure to disable the window offset used to
centre the terminal in cases where the window is non-negotiably the
wrong size (e.g. maximised). Hence we must call reset_window after our
terminal resize.
[originally from svn r9044]
restoring a maximised window.
Failure to do this was noticeable in the following scenario (again
using Aero UI enhancements):
1. resize window using topmost resize handle, and move pointer to top
of screen which 'maximises' the window vertically
2. now maximise the window properly using the maximise button in top
right
3. now restore. Notepad restores to its position before step 1,
because Aero remembers that position for the purpose, but PuTTY
thinks it knows better. Only now it doesn't any more.
[originally from svn r9041]
Firstly, maximise and restore events were expected never to occur
during an interactive resize process (i.e. between WM_ENTERSIZEMOVE
and WM_EXITSIZEMOVE), but in fact Aero now allows this to happen if
you move the pointer to the top of the screen while dragging the
window.
Secondly, plain old WM_SIZE events were expected never to occur
_outside_ interactive resizes, but Aero permits that too (e.g.
Windows-left and Windows-right), and also third-party window
repositioning tools will send these.
[originally from svn r9040]
called load_system32_dll() which constructs a full pathname for the
DLL using GetSystemDirectory.
The only DLL load not covered by this change is the one for
gssapi32.dll, because that one's not in the system32 directory.
[originally from svn r8993]
today reported an SSH2_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED from a Cisco router which
looks as if it was triggered by SSH2_MSG_IGNORE, so I'm
experimentally putting this flag in. Currently must be manually
enabled, though if it turns out to solve the user's problem then
I'll probably add at least one version string...
[Edited commit message: actually, I also committed in error a piece
of experimental code as part of this checkin. Serve me right for not
running 'svn diff' first.]
[originally from svn r8926]
function in terminal.c, and replace the cloned-and-hacked handling
code in all our front ends with calls to that.
This was intended for code cleanliness, but a side effect is to make
the GTK arrow-key handling support disabling of application cursor
key mode in the Features panel. Previously that checkbox was
accidentally ignored, and nobody seems to have noticed before!
[originally from svn r8896]
sessions submenu of the terminal window context menu (as Pageant does), rather
than an empty menu (which often renders poorly).
[originally from svn r8648]
only call it when the _last_ mouse button comes back up. Otherwise,
xterm mouse tracking will lose a button-up event if you press down
two buttons, move the mouse outside the window, then release them
one at a time.
[originally from svn r8425]
case of double-width text (ESC # 3, ESC # 4, ESC # 6), because the
string passed to it was not truncated to the same width as the
clipping rectangle. (In fact, it _can't_ reliably be, in the case
where the window width is odd.) So instead we just assert that we
managed to _at least_ fill the clipping rectangle, not that we
exactly filled it.
The problem is easily reproduced by sending ESC # 8 (fill the screen
with Es) followed by ESC # 3. It doesn't typically happen, though,
if you _manually_ fill the screen with Es, because in that case
PuTTY's terminal buffer ends up being filled with CSET_ACP | 'E' or
similar, which means that general_textout() never gets called
because one of the other branches of do_text_internal() does the
work instead. ESC # 8 will fill the terminal buffer with genuine
_Unicode_ 'E' characters, which exercises the failing code path.
[originally from svn r8403]
subthread, so that it won't deadlock if fetching the content of the
clipboard turns out to depend on a network connection forwarded
through PuTTY.
[originally from svn r8338]
combination Ctrl + \ as the Ctrl-\ character. All of mine have, but
at least one laptop turns out not to. Do so explicitly.
[originally from svn r8182]
Should be no significant change in behaviour.
(Well, entering usernames containing commas on Plink's command line will be
a little harder now.)
[originally from svn r7628]
simply specifying a hostname on the command line -- this would bring up the
config dialog. Use a slightly more sophisticated notion of whether the user
meant to launch a session.
[originally from svn r7321]
[r7265 == 5d76e00dac]
wouldn't care about except for the fact that it's still used to
implement the Saved Sessions menu item in PuTTY and Pageant.
[originally from svn r7291]
[r7265 == 5d76e00dac]
represent a launchable session, unless the user can be construed to
have really meant it. This means:
- starting up PuTTY when the Default Settings are launchable still
brings up the config box, and you have to hit Open to actually
launch that session
- double-clicking on Default Settings from the config box will load
them but not launch them.
On the other hand:
- explicitly loading the Default Settings on the command line using
`-load' _does_ still launch them.
[originally from svn r7265]
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]