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39 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jacob Nevins
c8b66101ee Thread-local support for more Windows toolchains.
Use of thread-local storage on Windows (introduced recently in
69e8d471d1) could cause a -Wattributes warning in mingw-w64 builds,
since that toolchain doesn't understand __declspec(thread).

Define a portability macro THREADLOCAL, which should resolve to
something appropriate for at least:
 - MSVC, which understands the Microsoft syntax __declspec(thread);
 - GCC (e.g., mingw-w64) which understands the GNU syntax __thread
   (GCC only implements __declspec() to the extent of understanding the
   arguments 'dllexport' and 'dllimport');
 - Clang, which supports both syntaxes.

(It's possible there's some more obscure Windows toolchain which will
now hit the #error as a result of this change.)

I haven't attempted to try to detect and use the C11 syntax
'thread_local'. And this is all still Windows-only, since that's all we
need for now and it avoids opening the can of worms that is TLS on other
platforms.

(I considered delegating all this to cmake, but as well as being fiddly,
it seems even the latest versions of cmake don't know about thread-local
storage for C, as opposed to C++ (cxx_thread_local).)
2022-09-02 16:11:05 +01:00
Simon Tatham
eec350c38b New facility, platform_start_subprocess.
We already have the ability to start a subprocess and hook it up to a
Socket, for running local proxy commands. Now the same facility is
available as an auxiliary feature, so that a backend can start another
subcommand for a different purpose, and make a separate Socket to
communicate with it.

Just like the local proxy system, this facility captures the
subprocess's stderr, and passes it back to the caller via plug_log. To
make that not look silly, I had to add a system where the "proxy:"
prefix on the usual plug_log messages is reconfigurable, and when you
call platform_start_subprocess(), you get to pass the prefix you want
to use in this case.
2022-09-01 20:43:23 +01:00
Simon Tatham
b66c56f441 Windows PuTTYgen: also display certificate info.
When PuTTYgen is holding a certified key, I don't think there's any
sensible use for pasting around the full public key in authorized_keys
format, because the whole point is that what you put in
authorized_keys is 'please trust this CA' rather than the specific
key. So instead I've reused the space in the dialog box to indicate
that it's a certificate, and provide a 'more info' sub-dialog.
2022-07-30 17:16:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
10f47902e5 windows/controls.c API: add lots of missing 'const'.
Most of the Windows-specific dialog control construction functions
were passing their string parameters as 'char *' even though they were
string literals. Apparently none of our previous giant constification
patches spotted that.
2022-07-30 14:40:59 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f1c8298000 Centralise most details of host-key prompting.
The text of the host key warnings was replicated in three places: the
Windows rc file, the GTK dialog setup function, and the console.c
shared between both platforms' CLI tools. Now it lives in just one
place, namely ssh/common.c where the rest of the centralised host-key
checking is done, so it'll be easier to adjust the wording in future.

This comes with some extra automation. Paragraph wrapping is no longer
done by hand in any version of these prompts. (Previously we let GTK
do the wrapping on GTK, but on Windows the resource file contained a
bunch of pre-wrapped LTEXT lines, and console.c had pre-wrapped
terminal messages.) And the dialog heights in Windows are determined
automatically based on the amount of stuff in the window.

The main idea of all this is that it'll be easier to set up more
elaborate kinds of host key prompt that deal with certificates (if,
e.g., a server sends us a certified host key which we don't trust the
CA for). But there are side benefits of this refactoring too: each
tool now reliably inserts its own appname in the prompts, and also, on
Windows the entire prompt text is copy-pastable.

Details of implementation: there's a new type SeatDialogText which
holds a set of (type, string) pairs describing the contents of a
prompt. Type codes distinguish ordinary text paragraphs, paragraphs to
be displayed prominently (like key fingerprints), the extra-bold scary
title at the top of the 'host key changed' version of the dialog, and
the various information that lives in the subsidiary 'more info' box.
ssh/common.c constructs this, and passes it to the Seat to present the
actual prompt.

In order to deal with the different UI for answering the prompt, I've
added an extra Seat method 'prompt_descriptions' which returns some
snippets of text to interpolate into the messages. ssh/common.c calls
that while it's still constructing the text, and incorporates the
resulting snippets into the SeatDialogText.

For the moment, this refactoring only affects the host key prompts.
The warnings about outmoded crypto are still done the old-fashioned
way; they probably ought to be similarly refactored to use this new
SeatDialogText system, but it's not immediately critical for the
purpose I have right now.
2022-07-07 18:05:32 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e9de549e7e More assorted Winelib warning fixes.
The previous fix on pre-0.77 was non-disruptive and just enough to get
through my Coverity build (which uses winelib); but now that I look at
the rest of the Winelib build output, there are some further warnings
I should fix on main.

Most of them are more long/LONG confusion (specific to Winelib, rather
than real Windows); also, there's a multiple macro definition in
jump-list.c because Winelib defines _PROPVARIANT_INIT_DEFINED_ in
place of _PROPVARIANTINIT_DEFINED_ which we were testing for. (Bah.)
And in windows/window.c I used wcscmp without including <wchar.h>.

In spite of long vs LONG I still had to turn off one or two more
DLL-loading typechecks.
2022-05-08 11:10:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
cd094b28a3 Allow CTRL_TEXT controls to be non-wrapping.
This is for cases where they're presenting information to the user
that wouldn't wrap sensibly anyway (such as an SSH key fingerprint
which is mostly all one word), and in which newlines might be
significant.

On GTK, the implementing widget is still a GtkLabel, but without the
wrap flag set, and wrapped in a GtkScrolledWindow in case the text is
too wide to fit.

On Windows, I've switched to using an edit box instead of a static
text control, making it readonly, and borderless via my existing
MakeDlgItemBorderless helper function. This doesn't get you an actual
scrollbar, but it does mean you can scroll left and right by dragging
with the mouse.
2022-05-07 12:02:23 +01:00
Simon Tatham
77d15c46c3 New typedef 'dlgcontrol' wrapping 'union control'.
I'm about to change my mind about whether its top-level nature is
struct or union, and rather than change the key word 'union' to
'struct' at every point of use, it's nicer to just get rid of the
keyword completely. So it has a shiny new name.
2022-05-01 09:48:38 +01:00
Simon Tatham
cccdab9ba6 Windows: utility function to centre a window.
This was called from config box setup, and is obviously the kind of
thing that ought to be a reusable utility function.
2022-04-25 14:10:16 +01:00
Simon Tatham
69e8d471d1 Move our DialogBox wrapper into windows/utils.
It's self-contained enough not to really need to live in dialog.c as a
set of static functions. Also, moving it means we can isolate the
implementation details - which also makes it easy to change them.

One such change is that I've added the ability to bake a context
pointer into the dialog - unused so far, but it will be shortly.

(Also, while I'm here, renamed the functions so they sound more as if
they're adding features than working around bugs - not to mention not
imputing mental illness to the usual versions.)
2022-04-25 14:10:16 +01:00
Simon Tatham
6143a50ed2 windows/storage.c: factor out low-level Registry access.
All the fiddly business where you have to check that a thing exists,
make sure of its type, find its size, allocate some memory, and then
read it again properly (or, alternatively, loop round dealing with
ERROR_MORE_DATA) just doesn't belong at every call site. It's crying
out to be moved out into some separate utility functions that present
a more ergonomic API, so that the code that decides _which_ Registry
entries to read and what to do with them can concentrate on that.

So I've written a fresh set of registry API wrappers in windows/utils,
and simplified windows/storage.c as a result. The jump-list handling
code in particular is almost legible now!
2022-04-24 08:38:27 +01:00
Simon Tatham
dec7d7fce7 Merge demo screenshot features from 'pre-0.77'. 2022-04-02 16:51:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
bc7e06c494 Windows tools: assorted '-demo' options.
Using a new screenshot-taking module I just added in windows/utils,
these new options allow me to start up one of the tools with
demonstration window contents and automatically save a .BMP screenshot
to disk. This will allow me to keep essentially the same set of demo
images and update them easily to keep pace with the current appearance
of the real tools as PuTTY - and Windows itself - both evolve.
2022-04-02 17:23:34 +01:00
Simon Tatham
a2b376af96 Windows Pageant: turn 'has_security' into a global function.
Now it can be called from places other than Pageant's WinMain(). In
particular, the attempt to make a security descriptor in
lock_interprocess_mutex() is gated on it.

In return, however, I've tightened up the semantics. In normal PuTTY
builds that aren't trying to support pre-NT systems, the function
*unconditionally* returns true, on the grounds that we don't expect to
target any system that doesn't support the security APIs, and if
someone manages to contrive one anyway - or, more likely, if we some
day introduce a bug in our loading of the security API functions -
then this safety catch should make Pageant less likely to accidentally
fall back to 'never mind, just run in insecure mode'.
2022-03-12 21:05:07 +00:00
Simon Tatham
accf9adac2 Merge legacy-Windows fixes (mostly) from 'pre-0.77'. 2022-03-12 20:22:48 +00:00
Simon Tatham
269ea8aaf5 Move predeclaration of struct unicode_data into defs.h.
It's just the sort of thing that ought to be in there, once, so it
doesn't have to be declared in n places.
2022-03-12 18:51:21 +00:00
Simon Tatham
82971a3ebb Handle WM_NETEVENT in Windows Pageant.
Apparently when I made Windows Pageant use the winselgui system, I
added the call that gets WSAAsyncSelect response messages sent to
Pageant's window, but I didn't add the switch case in the window
procedure that actually handles those responses. I suppose I didn't
notice at the time because no actual functionality used it - Pageant
has never yet dealt with any real (i.e. Winsock) sockets, only with
HANDLE-based named pipes, which are called 'sockets' in PuTTY's
abstraction, but not by Windows.
2022-02-04 19:32:47 +00:00
Simon Tatham
018236da29 Support AF_UNIX listening sockets on Windows.
Not all Windows toolchains have this yet, so we have to put the
whole lot under #ifdef.
2022-02-04 19:32:47 +00:00
Simon Tatham
5935c68288 Update source file names in comments and docs.
Correcting a source file name in the docs just now reminded me that
I've seen a lot of outdated source file names elsewhere in the code,
due to all the reorganisation since we moved to cmake. Here's a giant
pass of trying to make them all accurate again.
2022-01-22 15:51:31 +00:00
Simon Tatham
dc183e1649 Windows Pageant and PuTTYgen: spiff up option parsing.
These two tools had ad-hoc command loops with similar options, and I
want to extend both (in particular, in a way that introduces options
with arguments). So I've started by throwing together some common code
to do all the tedious bits like finding option arguments wherever they
might be, throwing errors, handling "--" and so on.

Should be no functional change to the existing command-line syntax,
except that now all long options are recognised in both "-foo" and
"--foo" form.
2022-01-15 18:27:19 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0ad344ca32 Windows Pageant: make atomic client/server decision.
In the previous state of the code, we first tested agent_exists() to
decide whether to be the long-running Pageant server or a short-lived
client; then, during the command-line parsing loop, we prompted for
passphrases to add keys presented on the command line (to ourself or
the server, respectively); *then* we set up the named pipe and
WM_COPYDATA receiver window to actually start functioning as a server,
if we decided that was our role.

A consequence is that if a user started up two Pageants each with an
encrypted key on the command line, there would be a race condition:
each one would decide that it was _going_ to be the server, then
prompt for a passphrase, and then try to set itself up as the server
once the passphrase is entered. So whichever one's passphrase prompt
was answered second would add its key to its own internal data
structures, then fail to set up the server's named pipe, terminate
with an error, and end up not having added its key to the _surviving_
server.

This change reorders the setup steps so that the command-line parsing
loop does not add the keys immediately; instead it merely caches the
key filenames provided. Then we make the decision about whether we're
the server, and set up both the named pipe and WM_COPYDATA window if
we are; and finally, we go back to our list of key filenames and
actually add them, either to ourself (if we're the server) or to some
other Pageant (if we're a client).

Moreover, the decision about whether to be the server is now wrapped
in an interprocess mutex similar to the one used in connection
sharing, which means that even if two or more Pageants are started up
as close to simultaneously as possible, they should avoid a race
condition and successfully manage to agree on exactly one of
themselves to be the server. For example, a user reported that this
could occur if you put shortcuts to multiple private key files in your
Windows Startup folder, so that they were all launched simultaneously
at startup.

One slightly odd behaviour that remains: if the server Pageant has to
prompt for private key passphrases at startup, then it won't actually
start _servicing_ requests from other Pageants until it's finished
dealing with its own prompts. As a result, if you do start up two
Pageants at once each with an encrypted key file on its command line,
the second one won't even manage to present its passphrase prompt
until the first one's prompt is dismissed, because it will block
waiting for the initial check of the key list. But it will get there
in the end, so that's only a cosmetic oddity.

It would be nice to arrange that Pageant GUI operations don't block
unrelated agent requests (e.g. by having the GUI and the agent code
run in separate threads). But that's a bigger problem, not specific to
startup time - the same thing happens if you interactively load a key
via Pageant's file dialog. And it would require a major reorganisation
to fix that fully, because currently the GUI code depends on being
able to call _internal_ Pageant query functions like
pageant_count_ssh2_keys() that don't work by constructing an agent
request at all.
2022-01-03 12:21:39 +00:00
Simon Tatham
a2de0a8b7d Windows: factor out mutex lock/unlock from sharing.c.
This will let me reuse them easily in Pageant setup.
2022-01-03 12:12:05 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2a36f968e9 Centralise definition of AGENT_COPYDATA_ID.
How have I not noticed for years that it was separately defined in the
client and server code?!
2022-01-03 12:12:05 +00:00
Simon Tatham
a2ff884512 Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".

In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.

The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.

We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.

So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.

Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.

(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 18:08:31 +00:00
Simon Tatham
ca70b1285d Allow creating FdSocket/HandleSocket before the fds/handles.
Previously, a setup function returning one of these socket types (such
as platform_new_connection) had to do all its setup synchronously,
because if it was going to call make_fd_socket or make_handle_socket,
it had to have the actual fds or HANDLEs ready-made. If some kind of
asynchronous operation were needed before those fds become available,
there would be no way the function could achieve it, except by
becoming a whole extra permanent Socket wrapper layer.

Now there is, because you can make an FdSocket when you don't yet have
the fds, or a HandleSocket without the HANDLEs. Instead, you provide
an instance of the new trait 'DeferredSocketOpener', which is
responsible for setting in motion whatever asynchronous setup
procedure it needs, and when that finishes, calling back to
setup_fd_socket / setup_handle_socket to provide the missing pieces.

In the meantime, the FdSocket or HandleSocket will sit there inertly,
buffering any data the client might eagerly hand it via sk_write(),
and waiting for its setup to finish. When it does finish, buffered
data will be released.

In FdSocket, this is easy enough, because we were doing our own
buffering anyway - we called the uxsel system to find out when the fds
were readable/writable, and then wrote to them from our own bufchain.
So more or less all I had to do was make the try_send function do
nothing if the setup phase wasn't finished yet.

In HandleSocket, on the other hand, we're passing all our data to the
underlying handle-io.c system, and making _that_ deferrable in the
same way would be much more painful, because that's the place where
the scary threads live. So instead I've arranged it by replacing the
whole vtable, so that a deferred HandleSocket and a normal
HandleSocket are effectively separate trait implementations that can
share their state structure. And in fact that state struct itself now
contains a big anonymous union, containing one branch to go with each
vtable.

Nothing yet uses this system, but the next commit will do so.
2021-12-22 15:45:41 +00:00
Simon Tatham
3260e429a1 Move STR() and CAT() into defs.h.
I'm actually quite surprised there was only _one_ copy of each of
these standard macros in the code base, given my general habit of
casually redefining them anywhere I need them! But each one was in a
silly place. Moved them up to the top level where they're available
globally.
2021-11-26 17:46:06 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0fe41294e6 New API for plug_closing() with a custom type enum.
Passing an operating-system-specific error code to plug_closing(),
such as errno or GetLastError(), was always a bit weird, given that it
generally had to be handled by cross-platform receiving code in
backends. I had the platform.h implementations #define any error
values that the cross-platform code would have to handle specially,
but that's still not a great system, because it also doesn't leave
freedom to invent error representations of my own that don't
correspond to any OS code. (For example, the ones I just removed from
proxy.h.)

So now, the OS error code is gone from the plug_closing API, and in
its place is a custom enumeration of closure types: normal, error, and
the special case BROKEN_PIPE which is the only OS error code we have
so far needed to handle specially. (All others just mean 'abandon the
connection and print the textual message'.)

Having already centralised the handling of OS error codes in the
previous commit, we've now got a convenient place to add any further
type codes for errors needing special handling: each of Unix
plug_closing_errno(), Windows plug_closing_system_error(), and Windows
plug_closing_winsock_error() can easily grow extra special cases if
need be, and each one will only have to live in one place.
2021-11-06 14:48:26 +00:00
Simon Tatham
364e1aa3f3 Convenience wrappers on plug_closing().
Having a single plug_closing() function covering various kinds of
closure is reasonably convenient from the point of view of Plug
implementations, but it's annoying for callers, who all have to fill
in pointless NULL and 0 parameters in the cases where they're not
used.

Added some inline helper functions in network.h alongside the main
plug_closing() dispatch wrappers, so that each kind of connection
closure can present a separate API for the Socket side of the
interface, without complicating the vtable for the Plug side.

Also, added OS-specific extra helpers in the Unix and Windows
directories, which centralise the job of taking an OS error code (of
whatever kind) and translating it into its error message.

In passing, this removes the horrible ad-hoc made-up error codes in
proxy.h, which is OK, because nothing checked for them anyway, and
also I'm about to do an API change to plug_closing proper that removes
the need for them.
2021-11-06 14:48:26 +00:00
Simon Tatham
efa89573ae Reorganise host key checking and confirmation.
Previously, checking the host key against the persistent cache managed
by the storage.h API was done as part of the seat_verify_ssh_host_key
method, i.e. separately by each Seat.

Now that check is done by verify_ssh_host_key(), which is a new
function in ssh/common.c that centralises all the parts of host key
checking that don't need an interactive prompt. It subsumes the
previous verify_ssh_manual_host_key() that checked against the Conf,
and it does the check against the storage API that each Seat was
previously doing separately. If it can't confirm or definitively
reject the host key by itself, _then_ it calls out to the Seat, once
an interactive prompt is definitely needed.

The main point of doing this is so that when SshProxy forwards a Seat
call from the proxy SSH connection to the primary Seat, it won't print
an announcement of which connection is involved unless it's actually
going to do something interactive. (Not that we're printing those
announcements _yet_ anyway, but this is a piece of groundwork that
works towards doing so.)

But while I'm at it, I've also taken the opportunity to clean things
up a bit by renaming functions sensibly. Previously we had three very
similarly named functions verify_ssh_manual_host_key(), SeatVtable's
'verify_ssh_host_key' method, and verify_host_key() in storage.h. Now
the Seat method is called 'confirm' rather than 'verify' (since its
job is now always to print an interactive prompt, so it looks more
like the other confirm_foo methods), and the storage.h function is
called check_stored_host_key(), which goes better with store_host_key
and avoids having too many functions with similar names. And the
'manual' function is subsumed into the new centralised code, so
there's now just *one* host key function with 'verify' in the name.

Several functions are reindented in this commit. Best viewed with
whitespace changes ignored.
2021-10-25 18:12:17 +01:00
Simon Tatham
dde6590040 handle_write_eof: delegate CloseHandle back to the client.
When a writable HANDLE is managed by the handle-io.c system, you ask
to send EOF on the handle by calling handle_write_eof. That waits
until all buffered data has been written, and then sends an EOF event
by simply closing the handle.

That is, of course, the only way to send an EOF signal on a handle at
all. And yet, it's a bug, because the handle_output system does not
take ownership of the handle you give it: the client of handle_output
retains ownership, keeps its own copy of the handle, and will expect
to close it itself.

In most cases, the extra close will harmlessly fail, and return
ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE (which the caller didn't notice anyway). But if
you're unlucky, in conditions of frantic handle opening and closing
(e.g. with a lot of separate named-pipe-style agent forwarding
connections being constantly set up and torn down), the handle value
might have been reused between the two closes, so that the second
CloseHandle closes an unrelated handle belonging to some other part of
the program.

We can't fix this by giving handle_output permanent ownership of the
handle, because it really _is_ necessary for copies of it to survive
elsewhere: in particular, for a bidirectional file such as a serial
port or named pipe, the reading side also needs a copy of the same
handle! And yet, we can't replace the handle_write_eof call in the
client with a direct CloseHandle, because that won't wait until
buffered output has been drained.

The solution is that the client still calls handle_write_eof to
register that it _wants_ an EOF sent; the handle_output system will
wait until it's ready, but then, instead of calling CloseHandle, it
will ask its _client_ to close the handle, by calling the provided
'sentdata' callback with the new 'close' flag set to true. And then
the client can not only close the handle, but do whatever else it
needs to do to record that that has been done.
2021-09-30 19:16:20 +01:00
Simon Tatham
a4b8ff911b FdSocket, HandleSocket: store a notional peer address.
In the case where these socket types are constructed because of a
local proxy command, we do actually have a SockAddr representing the
logical host we were trying to make a connection to. So we might as
well store it in the socket implementation, and then we can include it
in the PLUGLOG_CONNECT_SUCCESS call to make the log message more
informative.
2021-09-13 14:38:44 +01:00
Simon Tatham
17c57e1078 Reorganise Windows HANDLE management.
Before commit 6e69223dc2, Pageant would stop working after a
certain number of PuTTYs were active at the same time. (At most about
60, but maybe fewer - see below.)

This was because of two separate bugs. The easy one, fixed in
6e69223dc2 itself, was that PuTTY left each named-pipe connection
to Pageant open for the rest of its lifetime. So the real problem was
that Pageant had too many active connections at once. (And since a
given PuTTY might make multiple connections during userauth - one to
list keys, and maybe another to actually make a signature - that was
why the number of _PuTTYs_ might vary.)

It was clearly a bug that PuTTY was leaving connections to Pageant
needlessly open. But it was _also_ a bug that Pageant couldn't handle
more than about 60 at once. In this commit, I fix that secondary bug.

The cause of the bug is that the WaitForMultipleObjects function
family in the Windows API have a limit on the number of HANDLE objects
they can select between. The limit is MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS, defined to
be 64. And handle-io.c was using a separate event object for each I/O
subthread to communicate back to the main thread, so as soon as all
those event objects (plus a handful of other HANDLEs) added up to more
than 64, we'd start passing an overlarge handle array to
WaitForMultipleObjects, and it would start not doing what we wanted.

To fix this, I've reorganised handle-io.c so that all its subthreads
share just _one_ event object to signal readiness back to the main
thread. There's now a linked list of 'struct handle' objects that are
ready to be processed, protected by a CRITICAL_SECTION. Each subthread
signals readiness by adding itself to the linked list, and setting the
event object to indicate that the list is now non-empty. When the main
thread receives the event, it iterates over the whole list processing
all the ready handles.

(Each 'struct handle' still has a separate event object for the main
thread to use to communicate _to_ the subthread. That's OK, because no
thread is ever waiting on all those events at once: each subthread
only waits on its own.)

The previous HT_FOREIGN system didn't really fit into this framework.
So I've moved it out into its own system. There's now a handle-wait.c
which deals with the relatively simple job of managing a list of
handles that need to be waited for, each with a callback function;
that's what communicates a list of HANDLEs to event loops, and
receives the notification when the event loop notices that one of them
has done something. And handle-io.c is now just one client of
handle-wait.c, providing a single HANDLE to the event loop, and
dealing internally with everything that needs to be done when that
handle fires.

The new top-level handle-wait.c system *still* can't deal with more
than MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS. At the moment, I'm reasonably convinced it
doesn't need to: the only kind of HANDLE that any of our tools could
previously have needed to wait on more than one of was the one in
handle-io.c that I've just removed. But I've left some assertions and
a TODO comment in there just in case we need to change that in future.
2021-05-24 15:27:38 +01:00
Simon Tatham
a55aac71e4 New application: a Windows version of 'pterm'!
This fulfills our long-standing Mayhem-difficulty wishlist item
'win-command-prompt': this is a Windows pterm in the sense that when
you run it you get a local cmd.exe running inside a PuTTY-style window.

Advantages of this: you get the same free choice of fonts as PuTTY has
(no restriction to a strange subset of the system's available fonts);
you get the same copy-paste gestures as PuTTY (no mental gear-shifting
when you have command prompts and SSH sessions open on the same
desktop); you get scrollback with the PuTTY semantics (scrolling to
the bottom gets you to where the action is, as opposed to the way you
could accidentally find yourself 500 lines past the end of the action
in a real console).

'win-command-prompt' was at Mayhem difficulty ('Probably impossible')
basically on the grounds that with Windows's old APIs for accessing
the contents of consoles, there was no way I could find to get this to
work sensibly. What was needed to make it feasible was a major piece
of re-engineering work inside Windows itself.

But, of course, that's exactly what happened! In 2019, the new ConPTY
API arrived, which lets you create an object that behaves like a
Windows console at one end, and round the back, emits a stream of
VT-style escape sequences as the screen contents evolve, and accepts a
VT-style input stream in return which it will parse function and arrow
keys out of in the usual way.

So now it's actually _easy_ to get this to basically work. The new
backend, in conpty.c, has to do a handful of magic Windows API calls
to set up the pseudo-console and its feeder pipes and start a
subprocess running in it, a further magic call every time the PuTTY
window is resized, and detect the end of the session by watching for
the subprocess terminating. But apart from that, all it has to do is
pass data back and forth unmodified between those pipes and the
backend's associated Seat!

That said, this is new and experimental, and there will undoubtedly be
issues. One that I already know about is that you can't copy and paste
a word that has wrapped between lines without getting an annoying
newline in the middle of it. As far as I can see this is a fundamental
limitation: the ConPTY system sends the _same_ escape sequence stream
for a line that wrapped as it would send for a line that had a logical
\n at what would have been the wrap point. Probably the best we can do
to mitigate this is to adopt a different heuristic for newline elision
that's right more often than it's wrong.

For the moment, that experimental-ness is indicated by the fact that
Buildscr will build, sign and deliver a copy of pterm.exe for each
flavour of Windows, but won't include it in the .zip file or in the
installer. (In fact, that puts it in exactly the same ad-hoc category
as PuTTYtel, although for completely different reasons.)
2021-05-08 17:51:27 +01:00
Simon Tatham
7167c8c771 Move some parts of window.c into putty.c.
This prepares the ground for a second essentially similarly-shaped
program reusing most of window.c but handling its command line and
startup differently. A couple of large parts of WinMain() to do with
backend selection and command-line handling are now subfunctions in a
separate file putty.c.

Also, our custom AppUserModelId is defined in that file, so that it
can vary with the client application.
2021-05-08 17:20:50 +01:00
Simon Tatham
3de2f13b89 Factor out Windows utility function get_system_dir().
The code to find out the location of the c:\windows\system32 directory
was already present, in load_system32_dll(). Now it's moved out into a
function of its own, so it can be called in other contexts.
2021-05-08 17:18:17 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f39c51f9a7 Rename most of the platform source files.
This gets rid of all those annoying 'win', 'ux' and 'gtk' prefixes
which made filenames annoying to type and to tab-complete. Also, as
with my other recent renaming sprees, I've taken the opportunity to
expand and clarify some of the names so that they're not such cryptic
abbreviations.
2021-04-26 18:00:01 +01:00
Simon Tatham
83fa43497f Move the SSH implementation into its own subdirectory.
This clears up another large pile of clutter at the top level, and in
the process, allows me to rename source files to things that don't all
have that annoying 'ssh' prefix at the top.
2021-04-22 18:09:13 +01:00
Simon Tatham
9fe1550980 Make cmake.h available everywhere.
The definition of HAVE_CMAKE_H is now at the very top of the main
CMakeLists.txt, so that it applies to all objects. And the consequent
include of cmake.h is at the very top of defs.h, so that it should be
included first by everything. This way, I don't have to worry any more
that the HAVE_FOO definitions in cmake.h might accidentally have
failed to reach some part of the code.
2021-04-19 18:26:56 +01:00
Simon Tatham
b00e5fb129 Remove the switching system in puttyps.h.
It was there because of a limitation of mkfiles.pl, which had a single
list of include directories that it used on all platforms. CMake does
not. So now there's an easier and more sensible way to have a
different header file included on Windows and Unix: call it the same
name in the two subdirectories, and rely on CMake having put the right
one of those subdirs on the include path.
2021-04-18 08:30:44 +01:00