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911 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Tatham
b94bdac931 Document Cygwin as a use case for psusan.
I have _no_ idea how I managed to leave this out of the list of
examples when I first wrote this man page. It should have been the
very first one I thought of, since Cygwin was the platform I wrote
cygtermd for, and one of psusan's primary purposes was to be a
productised and improved replacement for cygtermd!

Oh well, better late than never.
2021-12-29 16:38:06 +00:00
Simon Tatham
5eee8ca648 Compatibility with older versions of cmake.
After this change, the cmake setup now works even on Debian stretch
(oldoldstable), which runs cmake 3.7.

In order to support a version that early I had to:

 - write a fallback implementation of 'add_compile_definitions' for
   older cmakes, which is easy, because add_compile_definitions(FOO)
   is basically just add_compile_options(-DFOO)

 - stop using list(TRANSFORM) and string(JOIN), of which I had one
   case each, and they were easily replaced with simple foreach loops

 - stop putting OBJECT libraries in the target_link_libraries command
   for executable targets, in favour of adding $<TARGET_OBJECTS:foo>
   to the main sources list for the same target. That matches what I
   do with library targets, so it's probably more sensible anyway.

I tried going back by another Debian release and getting this cmake
setup to work on jessie, but that runs CMake 3.0.1, and in _that_
version of cmake the target_sources command is missing, and I didn't
find any alternative way to add extra sources to a target after having
first declared it. Reorganising to cope with _that_ omission would be
too much upheaval without a very good reason.
2021-10-29 18:08:18 +01:00
Simon Tatham
b13f3d079b New function-key mode similar to modern xterm.
This is the same as the previous FUNKY_XTERM mode if you don't press
any modifier keys, but now Shift or Ctrl or Alt with function keys
adds an extra bitmap parameter. The bitmaps are the same as the ones
used by the new SHARROW_BITMAP arrow key mode.
2021-10-23 11:31:09 +01:00
Simon Tatham
22911ccdcc New config option for shifted arrow key handling.
This commit introduces a new config option for how to handle shifted
arrow keys.

In the default mode (SHARROW_APPLICATION), we do what we've always
done: Ctrl flips the arrow keys between sending their most usual
escape sequences (ESC [ A ... ESC [ D) and sending the 'application
cursor keys' sequences (ESC O A ... ESC O D). Whichever of those modes
is currently configured, Ctrl+arrow sends the other one.

In the new mode (SHARROW_BITMAP), application cursor key mode is
unaffected by any shift keys, but the default sequences acquire two
numeric arguments. The first argument is 1 (reflecting the fact that a
shifted arrow key still notionally moves just 1 character cell); the
second is the bitmap (1 for Shift) + (2 for Alt) + (4 for Ctrl),
offset by 1. (Except that if _none_ of those modifiers is pressed,
both numeric arguments are simply omitted.)

The new bitmap mode is what current xterm generates, and also what
Windows ConPTY seems to expect. If you start an ordinary Command
Prompt and launch into WSL, those are the sequences it will generate
for shifted arrow keys; conversely, if you run a Command Prompt within
a ConPTY, then these sequences for Ctrl+arrow will have the effect you
expect in cmd.exe command-line editing (going backward or forward a
word). For that reason, I enable this mode unconditionally when
launching Windows pterm.
2021-10-18 20:15:35 +01:00
Simon Tatham
44ee7b9e76 Add -pwfile option, a more secure version of -pw.
Similarly to cmdgen's passphrase options, this replaces the password
on the command line with a filename to read the password out of, which
means it can't show up in 'ps' or the Windows task manager.
2021-09-28 18:04:15 +01:00
Simon Tatham
76688f9a0b Docs: insert missing 'inline' in a code example.
In the section about our ad-hoc trait idioms, I described a code
sample as containing a set of 'static inline' wrapper functions, which
indeed it should have done - but I forgot to put the 'inline' keyword
in the code sample itself.
2021-09-07 13:38:14 +01:00
Simon Tatham
22fab78376 Tidy up formatting of manpage cross-references.
In most Halibut man pages I write, I have a standard convention of
referring to another man page by wrapping the page name in \cw and the
section number in \e, leaving the parentheses un-marked-up. Apparently
I forgot in this particular collection.
2021-08-22 12:23:05 +01:00
Simon Tatham
2cb38da6e9 psusan manpage: suggest setsid in UML example.
When UML terminates, it kills its entire process group. The way PuTTY
invokes proxy processes, they are part of its process group. So if UML
is used directly as the proxy process, it will commit patricide on
termination.

Wrapping it in 'setsid' is overkill (it doesn't need to be part of a
separate _session_, only a separate pgrp), but it's good enough to
work around this problem, and give PuTTY the opportunity to shut down
cleanly when the UML it's talking to vanishes.
2021-08-16 22:26:26 +01:00
Simon Tatham
c62b7229c1 Bug workaround to delay sending our SSH greeting.
Ian Jackson recently tried to use the recipe in the psusan manpage for
talking to UML, and found that the connection was not successfully set
up, because at some point during startup, UML read the SSH greeting
(ok, the bare-ssh-connection greeting) from its input fd and threw it
away. So by the time psusan was run by the guest init process, the
greeting wasn't there to be read.

Ian's report: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=991958

I was also able to reproduce this locally, which makes me wonder why I
_didn't_ notice it when I originally wrote that part of the psusan man
page. It worked for me before, honest! But now it doesn't.

Anyway. The ssh verstring module already has a mode switch to decide
whether we ought to send our greeting before or after waiting for the
other side's greeting (because that decision varies between client and
server, and between SSH-1 and SSH-2). So it's easy to implement an
override that forces it to 'wait for the server greeting first'.

I've added this as yet another bug workaround flag. But unlike all the
others, it can't be autodetected from the server's version string,
because, of course, we have to act on it _before_ seeing the server's
greeting and version string! So it's a manual-only flag.

However, I've mentioned it in the UML section of the psusan man page,
since that's the place where I _know_ people are likely to need to use
this flag.
2021-08-14 11:46:21 +01:00
Simon Tatham
dfb252d161 GPG key rollover.
Following the same pattern as the previous one (commit 6c924ba862),
except that this time, I don't have to _set up_ the pattern in the
front-end code of presenting the current and previous key details -
just change over the actual string literals in putty.h.

But the rest is the same: new keys at the top of pgpkeys.but, old ones
relegated to the historical appendix, key ids in sign.sh switched over.
2021-08-14 08:02:27 +01:00
Simon Tatham
9983ff53d5 psusan manpage: add a PATH to the UML example.
Ian Jackson observes that if PATH is not set in the environment,
current versions of bash will pick a default one that has "." as the
last directory, which is generally considered a terrible idea:

  https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=991959

Work around this by specifying a more sensible default in our example
script, per Ian's suggestion in

  https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=991960
2021-08-07 17:08:19 +01:00
Simon Tatham
84175f4aea Merge tag '0.76' into main 2021-07-17 11:49:44 +01:00
Simon Tatham
1fd7baa734 Update version number for 0.76 release. 2021-07-10 10:39:20 +01:00
Simon Tatham
be66cb7b15 Fix grammar nit.
Ensure 'ensure ensure' doesn't make it into the release documentation
:-)

(cherry picked from commit 640e46a112)
2021-07-10 10:32:04 +01:00
Simon Tatham
640e46a112 Fix grammar nit.
Ensure 'ensure ensure' doesn't make it into the release documentation
:-)
2021-07-10 10:31:07 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
6db3ac4783 Document -no-trivial-auth more thoroughly.
(cherry-picked from commit 413398af85)
2021-07-09 23:55:49 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
413398af85 Document -no-trivial-auth more thoroughly. 2021-07-09 23:55:15 +01:00
Simon Tatham
1dc5659aa6 New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).

This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.

Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.

Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).

This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.

(cherry picked from commit 5f5c710cf3)
2021-06-23 21:01:50 +01:00
Simon Tatham
5f5c710cf3 New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).

This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.

Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.

Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).

This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 21:34:56 +01:00
Simon Tatham
d77ecacc27 Allow standalone cmake in the doc subdirectory.
It's silly to require all the time-consuming cmake configuration for
the source code, if all you want to do is to build the documentation.
My own website update script will like this optimisation, and so will
Buildscr.

In order to make doc/CMakeLists.txt work standalone, I had to add a
'project' header (citing no languages, so that cmake won't even bother
looking for a C compiler); include FindGit, which cmake/setup.cmake
now won't be doing for it; change all references to CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR
to CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR/.. (since now the former will be defined
differently in a nested or standalone doc build); and spot whether
we're nested or not in order to conditionalise things designed to
interoperate with the parent CMakeLists.
2021-05-08 10:37:41 +01:00
Simon Tatham
c931c7f02a gitcommit.cmake: stop needing TOPLEVEL_SOURCE_DIR.
It's always the same as the cwd when the script is invoked, and by
having the script get it _from_ its own cwd, we arrange a bit of
automatic normalisation in situations where you need to invoke it with
some non-canonical path like one ending in "/.." - which I'll do in
the next commit.
2021-05-08 10:25:34 +01:00
Simon Tatham
62283226da Merge tag '0.75' into main 2021-05-08 09:38:15 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e706c04451 Add the man pages to the 'make install' target.
doc/CMakeLists.txt now sets a variable indicating that we either have,
or can build, each individual man page. And when we call our
installed_program() function to mark a program as official enough to
put in 'make install', that function also installs the man page
similarly if it exists, and warns if not.

For the convenience of people building-and-installing from the .tar.gz
we ship, I've arranged that they can still get the man pages installed
without needing Halibut: the previous commit ensured that the prebuilt
man pages are still in the tarball, and this one arranges that if we
don't have Halibut but we do have prebuilt man pages, then we can
'build' them by copying from the prebuilt versions.
2021-05-03 17:01:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
31f496b59c Integrate the 'doc' subdir into the CMake system.
The standalone separate doc/Makefile is gone, replaced by a
CMakeLists.txt that makes 'doc' function as a subdirectory of the main
CMake build system. This auto-detects Halibut, and if it's present,
uses it to build the man pages and the various forms of the main
manual, including the Windows CHM help file in particular.

One awkward thing I had to do was to move just one config directive in
blurb.but into its own file: the one that cites a relative path to the
stylesheet file to put into the CHM. CMake builds often like to be
out-of-tree, so there's no longer a fixed relative path between the
build directory and chm.css. And Halibut has no concept of an include
path to search for files cited by other files, so I can't fix that
with an -I option on the Halibut command line. So I moved that single
config directive into its own file, and had CMake write out a custom
version of that file in the build directory citing the right path.

(Perhaps in the longer term I should fix that omission in Halibut;
out-of-tree friendliness seems like a useful feature. But even if I
do, I still need this build to work now.)
2021-05-03 17:01:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
c72200ff88 Update version number for 0.75 release. 2021-05-02 08:11:24 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f4d99d3f59 Docs updates.
Since the previous commit is causing an RC2 build of 0.75 anyway,
let's take the opportunity to bring in updates to the docs from main,
so that the release will have the most up-to-date version available.

This is a combined cherry-pick of:
  f6142ba29b
  7c1bea59a3
  f5d1d4ce4b
2021-05-02 08:05:43 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
f5d1d4ce4b Docs: typo. 2021-05-01 18:44:08 +01:00
Simon Tatham
aeaea22dd0 Merge psusan manpage update from 'pre-0.75'. 2021-04-23 17:54:54 +01:00
Simon Tatham
1a01728572 Add WSL as another use case for psusan.
I've just spent the afternoon playing with it (rather belatedly - this
is the first time I've tried it out since it was first announced!),
and quickly decided that on the one hand it looks quite useful, but on
the other hand, running it in a Windows console is not for me and I'd
prefer to talk to it via PuTTY and psusan, for nicer copy-paste
controls and the ability to forward Pageant into it.

That turns out to be very easy and (I think) useful, so in it goes as
another psusan use case.
2021-04-23 17:51:41 +01:00
Simon Tatham
70da3463c0 Merge Pageant updates from 'pre-0.75'. 2021-04-22 20:01:32 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f5a962fb34 winpgnt: add a help button to async passphrase prompt.
Suggested by Jacob: if this dialog box is going to pop up
_unexpectedly_ - perhaps when people have momentarily forgotten
they're even running Pageant, or at least forgotten they added a key
encrypted,, or maybe haven't found out yet that their IT installed it
- then it could usefully come with a help button that pops up further
explanation of what the dialog box means, and from which you can find
your way to the rest of the help.
2021-04-22 20:00:46 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e06cf1ec40 Remove the 'compile-once' design principle.
It's no longer a hard requirement, because now we're on cmake rather
than mkfiles.pl, we _can_ compile the same source file multiple times
with different ifdefs.

I still think it's a better idea not to: I'd prefer that most of this
code base remained in the form of libraries reused between
applications, with parametrisation done by choice of what other
objects to link them to rather than by recompiling the library modules
themselves with different settings. But the latter is now a
possibility at need.
2021-04-21 21:55:26 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
2b26ddf261 Merge fixes (mostly docs) from 'pre-0.75' branch. 2021-04-20 16:27:19 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
e144e0099a Docs: correct some control names.
(And remove another reference to connection type 'buttons'.)
2021-04-20 16:25:49 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
8f8593a86e Document PPK format parameters, and --reencrypt. 2021-04-20 15:35:50 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
4c596b31ad Docs: tweak indexing of 'strong' primes. 2021-04-20 15:35:50 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
ab23ebc3ae Docs: SSH key type support is server-dependent. 2021-04-20 15:35:50 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
71c411d076 Fix typos in PuTTYgen docs. 2021-04-20 15:35:39 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
7c1bea59a3 FAQ: fix duplicate keyword. 2021-04-19 17:13:25 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
dd5edf9e3c Merge docs/usage updates from 'pre-0.75' branch. 2021-04-19 17:06:51 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
97137f5cfd PuTTYgen: explicitly use 'Kbyte' in Argon2 naming.
Instead of 'Kb', which could be misread as 'Kbit'.
2021-04-19 17:03:05 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
20d5055a3a Docs: index and cross-reference ssh-connection. 2021-04-19 16:36:23 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
a0a985957f Document -ssh-connection (and -ssh) options. 2021-04-19 16:36:23 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
ef26ecd81c uxpgnt: Briefly document --symlink and --test-sign. 2021-04-19 15:40:35 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f6142ba29b Disavow putty.org in the FAQ.
A user asked recently whether it was our website, and that seemed like
a fair question. It isn't, and we should make that as clear as we can.
2021-04-18 17:03:01 +01:00
Simon Tatham
c19e7215dd Replace mkfiles.pl with a CMake build system.
This brings various concrete advantages over the previous system:

 - consistent support for out-of-tree builds on all platforms

 - more thorough support for Visual Studio IDE project files

 - support for Ninja-based builds, which is particularly useful on
   Windows where the alternative nmake has no parallel option

 - a really simple set of build instructions that work the same way on
   all the major platforms (look how much shorter README is!)

 - better decoupling of the project configuration from the toolchain
   configuration, so that my Windows cross-building doesn't need
   (much) special treatment in CMakeLists.txt

 - configure-time tests on Windows as well as Linux, so that a lot of
   ad-hoc #ifdefs second-guessing a particular feature's presence from
   the compiler version can now be replaced by tests of the feature
   itself

Also some longer-term software-engineering advantages:

 - other people have actually heard of CMake, so they'll be able to
   produce patches to the new build setup more easily

 - unlike the old mkfiles.pl, CMake is not my personal problem to
   maintain

 - most importantly, mkfiles.pl was just a horrible pile of
   unmaintainable cruft, which even I found it painful to make changes
   to or to use, and desperately needed throwing in the bin. I've
   already thrown away all the variants of it I had in other projects
   of mine, and was only delaying this one so we could make the 0.75
   release branch first.

This change comes with a noticeable build-level restructuring. The
previous Recipe worked by compiling every object file exactly once,
and then making each executable by linking a precisely specified
subset of the same object files. But in CMake, that's not the natural
way to work - if you write the obvious command that puts the same
source file into two executable targets, CMake generates a makefile
that compiles it once per target. That can be an advantage, because it
gives you the freedom to compile it differently in each case (e.g.
with a #define telling it which program it's part of). But in a
project that has many executable targets and had carefully contrived
to _never_ need to build any module more than once, all it does is
bloat the build time pointlessly!

To avoid slowing down the build by a large factor, I've put most of
the modules of the code base into a collection of static libraries
organised vaguely thematically (SSH, other backends, crypto, network,
...). That means all those modules can still be compiled just once
each, because once each library is built it's reused unchanged for all
the executable targets.

One upside of this library-based structure is that now I don't have to
manually specify exactly which objects go into which programs any more
- it's enough to specify which libraries are needed, and the linker
will figure out the fine detail automatically. So there's less
maintenance to do in CMakeLists.txt when the source code changes.

But that reorganisation also adds fragility, because of the trad Unix
linker semantics of walking along the library list once each, so that
cyclic references between your libraries will provoke link errors. The
current setup builds successfully, but I suspect it only just manages
it.

(In particular, I've found that MinGW is the most finicky on this
score of the Windows compilers I've tried building with. So I've
included a MinGW test build in the new-look Buildscr, because
otherwise I think there'd be a significant risk of introducing
MinGW-only build failures due to library search order, which wasn't a
risk in the previous library-free build organisation.)

In the longer term I hope to be able to reduce the risk of that, via
gradual reorganisation (in particular, breaking up too-monolithic
modules, to reduce the risk of knock-on references when you included a
module for function A and it also contains function B with an
unsatisfied dependency you didn't really need). Ideally I want to
reach a state in which the libraries all have sensibly described
purposes, a clearly documented (partial) order in which they're
permitted to depend on each other, and a specification of what stubs
you have to put where if you're leaving one of them out (e.g.
nocrypto) and what callbacks you have to define in your non-library
objects to satisfy dependencies from things low in the stack (e.g.
out_of_memory()).

One thing that's gone completely missing in this migration,
unfortunately, is the unfinished MacOS port linked against Quartz GTK.
That's because it turned out that I can't currently build it myself,
on my own Mac: my previous installation of GTK had bit-rotted as a
side effect of an Xcode upgrade, and I haven't yet been able to
persuade jhbuild to make me a new one. So I can't even build the MacOS
port with the _old_ makefiles, and hence, I have no way of checking
that the new ones also work. I hope to bring that port back to life at
some point, but I don't want it to block the rest of this change.
2021-04-17 13:53:02 +01:00
Simon Tatham
af9910962a Separate the functions of licence.pl.
Now you can run it with --header, --copyrightdoc or --licencedoc
depending on which file you want it to generate. mkfiles.pl only runs
the header mode; the other two modes have become rules in
Makefile.doc.
2021-04-17 13:52:27 +01:00
Simon Tatham
a0869fab25 Docs: add some explanation of psusan in the main manual.
If we're publishing the server, then we should say something about the
fact that this option exists to talk to it. Also, if the option exists
on the front page at all in a released version of PuTTY, it behooves
us to document it slightly more usefully than just a handwave at 'this
is specialist and experimental'.
2021-04-17 13:40:44 +01:00
Simon Tatham
ab7bfdda5b Docs: historical (ish) text about Telnet and Rlogin.
SUPDUP came, at my insistence, with a history section in the docs
for people who hadn't heard of it. It seems only fair that the
other obsolete network protocols (or, at least, the ones we *wish*
were obsolete :-) should have the same kind of treatment.
2021-04-17 13:30:40 +01:00
Simon Tatham
026194eab1 Docs: reorder protocol sections in using.but.
Moved the Raw protocol to below Serial, so that the first two
sections are SSH and Serial, matching the (now very emphatic)
priority order in the config UI.

Similarly, reordered the bullet points in \k{config-hostname}.
2021-04-17 13:30:19 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e56fe0be35 Docs: clarify TCP keepalives don't apply to serial. 2021-04-17 13:27:31 +01:00
Simon Tatham
7d7d14d7fb Docs: don't mention the connection "radio buttons".
They're not any more!
2021-04-17 13:27:31 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f14ac18066 Docs: de-emphasise VMS.
Just noticed that intro.but still gives it equal weight with Unix,
which probably wasn't even true in 2001, and certainly isn't true now.
2021-04-17 13:27:26 +01:00
Simon Tatham
a21056acd2 Fill in holes in the documentation.
I've filled in some text about prime generation methods and Ed448,
which were all the things marked as 'review before release'.

While I'm at it, also filled in a reasonable enough DSA key length
recommendation, because the FIXME comment in that section was within
sight of one of the places I was editing. FIPS 186-4 seemed to think
that RSA and DSA had comparable relationships between the key length
and practical security level, so I see no reason not to use the same
recommendation for both key types.
2021-04-11 15:06:44 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
f039e5f453 Man page for psocks. 2021-04-08 01:06:06 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
7d1aae13c7 Some info on integrating psusan with pscp, etc. 2021-04-07 23:50:51 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
af9a66be2a cmdgen: have --dump output private parts of PPKs.
This seems more useful than the previous behaviour of not prompting for
a passphrase and only emitting the public part; if we want that back
I suppose we could invent a "-O text-public".

Also, document the text dump format a bit in the man page.
2021-04-07 22:59:54 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
1069ba6a01 Document a couple of new cmdgen features.
"-O text" (c18e5dc8fb) and ability to read key from stdin (a7599a57a3).
2021-04-06 23:54:57 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
48e89caf13 Document agent protocol extensions. 2021-04-05 18:44:03 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
f79e69592a winpgnt: document --keylist and bulk ops. 2021-04-05 18:40:10 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
8592ab843c Pageant: docs / help for deferred decryption.
Also, ensure -E/--fptype in Unix Pageant is (correctly) documented
everywhere.
2021-04-05 18:39:40 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
2a65c8ef8c docs: rearrange protocols in the config section.
This makes their order match the configuration GUI, as of 18d273fcf1.

(No change to document content in this commit, just rearrangement.)
2021-04-05 14:35:43 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f5df09adb7 winpgnt: add GUI button to re-encrypt an SSH-2 key. 2021-04-04 09:44:00 +01:00
Simon Tatham
9e3d78bddb winpgnt: add context help for 'Add Key (encrypted)' button.
I wrote a docs section, but forgot to link it to the context help.
2021-04-04 09:35:27 +01:00
Simon Tatham
bd5d80b4f6 Pageant: document deferred decryption. 2021-04-02 19:04:19 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
8c38e68e8b doc: document Windows hiding system tray icons. 2021-03-31 23:24:46 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
d3fccaf3db doc: index "notification area" as "system tray" 2021-03-31 23:21:51 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
3549e56194 Document multiple fingerprint formats. 2021-03-27 18:39:16 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
e09ca6ed76 Remove MD5 fingerprints from usage messages. 2021-03-27 18:39:16 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
467ea2b10b Acknowledge ssh-ed448 in Pageant docs. 2021-03-27 18:36:18 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
99c371d5ba Fix formatting errors in Plink docs. 2021-03-27 18:36:18 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
342972ee60 Document new backend command-line options.
(-supdup and -ssh-connection. The latter concept still needs more
documentation.)
2021-02-21 16:44:51 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
557164b043 Tweaks to SUPDUP documentation.
Including noting that it can't be used with Plink, and better indexing.
2021-02-21 16:44:51 +00:00
Simon Tatham
08d17140a0 Introduce PPK file format version 3.
This removes both uses of SHA-1 in the file format: it was used as the
MAC protecting the key file against tamperproofing, and also used in
the key derivation step that converted the user's passphrase to cipher
and MAC keys.

The MAC is simply upgraded from HMAC-SHA-1 to HMAC-SHA-256; it is
otherwise unchanged in how it's applied (in particular, to what data).

The key derivation is totally reworked, to be based on Argon2, which
I've just added to the code base. This should make stolen encrypted
key files more resistant to brute-force attack.

Argon2 has assorted configurable parameters for memory and CPU usage;
the new key format includes all those parameters. So there's no reason
we can't have them under user control, if a user wants to be
particularly vigorous or particularly lightweight with their own key
files. They could even switch to one of the other flavours of Argon2,
if they thought side channels were an especially large or small risk
in their particular environment. In this commit I haven't added any UI
for controlling that kind of thing, but the PPK loading function is
all set up to cope, so that can all be added in a future commit
without having to change the file format.

While I'm at it, I've also switched the CBC encryption to using a
random IV (or rather, one derived from the passphrase along with the
cipher and MAC keys). That's more like normal SSH-2 practice.
2021-02-20 16:57:47 +00:00
Simon Tatham
ce60ca727c Correct documentation of PPK key derivation.
When I transcribed the code into this document, I misread 'put_data'
as 'put_string' in several places, and documented SSH-style string
length headers that do not actually exist in the format.
2021-02-20 10:15:22 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
eda4ca6e65 Typos. 2021-02-16 11:16:09 +00:00
Simon Tatham
147adf4e76 Move PPK format documentation into a manual appendix.
Somebody on comp.security.ssh asked about it recently, and I decided
that storing it in a comment in the key file was not really good
enough. Also, that comment was incomplete (it listed the private key
formats for RSA and DSA but not any of the newer ECC key types, simple
as their private-key formats may be).
2021-02-15 18:48:34 +00:00
Simon Tatham
6fc0eb29ac Clarify wording in the new traits section.
Revisiting it today I realised that I'd written 'implementation
structure' where I meant 'instance structure'.
2021-01-17 09:18:42 +00:00
Simon Tatham
f7adf7bca0 Fix a few 'triple letter in place of double' typos.
A user wrote in to point out the one in winhandl.c, and out of sheer
curiosity, I grepped the whole source base for '([a-zA-Z])\1\1' to see
if there were any others. Of course there are a lot of perfectly
sensible ones, like 'www' or 'Grrr', not to mention any amount of
0xFFFF and the iiii/bbbb emphasis system in Halibut code paragraphs,
but I did spot one more in the recently added udp.but section on
traits, and another in a variable name in uxagentsock.c.
2021-01-17 09:18:42 +00:00
Simon Tatham
79de16732a Document PuTTY's local idiom for OO / traits.
A user mentioned having found this confusing recently, and fair
enough, because it's done in a way that doesn't quite match the
built-in OO system of any language I know about. But after the
rewriting in recent years, I think pretty much everything in PuTTY
that has a system of interchangeable implementations of the same
abstract type is now done basically the same way, so this seems like a
good moment to document the idiom we use and explain all its ins and
outs.
2020-12-26 16:14:13 +00:00
Simon Tatham
1f8b3b5535 Update docs section about use of global variables.
It referred to the global variable 'flags' as an example. But 'flags'
was retired (and good riddance) nearly a year ago, in commit
4ea811a0bf. So we should be using a different example now!
2020-12-26 15:40:04 +00:00
Simon Tatham
e617a5b768 Rename manpage sources in the doc subdirectory.
When I added the psusan man page, I noticed that they've all got
impenetrable names like 'man-pl.but' to fit within 8.3 naming. But
this source base hasn't had to worry about 8.3 naming conventions in a
long time, so I think I can safely rename all those files to ones
whose purpose is more obvious.
2020-12-13 12:36:38 +00:00
Simon Tatham
9ee03e5adb psusan: write a man page.
I've been collecting actual examples of things I've used psusan for,
and now I think I have enough of them to make some kind of case for
why it's a useful tool. So I've written a man page, and dumped all my
collected examples in there.
2020-12-13 12:36:38 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
2ebd4ea36a Document -logoverwrite and -logappend. 2020-11-25 15:12:56 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2762a2025f Merge the 0.74 release branch back to master.
Two minor memory-leak fixes on 0.74 seem not to be needed on master:
the fix in an early exit path of pageant_add_keyfile is done already
on master in a different way, and the missing sfree(fdlist) in
uxsftp.c is in code that's been completely rewritten in the uxcliloop
refactoring.

Other minor conflicts: the rework in commit b52641644905 of
ssh1login.c collided with the change from FLAG_VERBOSE to
seat_verbose(), and master and 0.74 each added an unrelated extra
field to the end of struct SshServerConfig.
2020-06-27 08:11:22 +01:00
Simon Tatham
014d4fb151 Update version number for 0.74 release. 2020-06-21 16:39:47 +01:00
Simon Tatham
08f1e2a506 Add an option to disable the dynamic host key policy.
This mitigates CVE-2020-14002: if you're in the habit of clicking OK
to unknown host keys (the TOFU policy - trust on first use), then an
active attacker looking to exploit that policy to substitute their own
host key in your first connection to a server can use the host key
algorithm order in your KEXINIT to (not wholly reliably) detect
whether you have a key already stored for this host, and if so, abort
their attack to avoid giving themself away.

However, for users who _don't_ use the TOFU policy and instead check
new host keys out of band, the dynamic policy is more useful. So it's
provided as a configurable option.
2020-06-21 16:39:47 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f955300576 Docs: use less personalised example Windows prompts.
The previous prompts were part of transcripts pasted directly from a
particular historical cmd session, but that's no reason to keep them
lying around confusingly, especially since we keep regenerating some
of those transcripts outside that historical context. Replace them all
with nice simple C:\> which shouldn't confuse anyone with extraneous
detail.
2020-06-21 16:39:47 +01:00
Lars Brinkhoff
63e0c66739 Documentation for SUPDUP. 2020-03-10 07:11:32 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
e85b159d87 Minimally document key generation novelties.
Covers Ed448 (and the user interface change to "EdDSA"), and the prime
generation method. (Both of these need better words, really.)
2020-03-02 23:36:09 +00:00
Simon Tatham
22b492c4f6 New protocol: PROT_SSHCONN, bare ssh-connection.
This is the same protocol that PuTTY's connection sharing has been
using for years, to communicate between the downstream and upstream
PuTTYs. I'm now promoting it to be a first-class member of the
protocols list: if you have a server for it, you can select it in the
GUI or on the command line, and write out a saved session that
specifies it.

This would be completely insecure if you used it as an ordinary
network protocol, of course. Not only is it non-cryptographic and wide
open to eavesdropping and hijacking, but it's not even _authenticated_
- it begins after the userauth phase of SSH. So there isn't even the
mild security theatre of entering an easy-to-eavesdrop password, as
there is with, say, Telnet.

However, that's not what I want to use it for. My aim is to use it for
various specialist and niche purposes, all of which involve speaking
it over an 8-bit-clean data channel that is already set up, secured
and authenticated by other methods. There are lots of examples of such
channels:

 - a userv(1) invocation
 - the console of a UML kernel
 - the stdio channels into other kinds of container, such as Docker
 - the 'adb shell' channel (although it seems quite hard to run a
   custom binary at the far end of that)
 - a pair of pipes between PuTTY and a Cygwin helper process
 - and so on.

So this protocol is intended as a convenient way to get a client at
one end of any those to run a shell session at the other end. Unlike
other approaches, it will give you all the SSH-flavoured amenities
you're already used to, like forwarding your SSH agent into the
container, or forwarding selected network ports in or out of it, or
letting it open a window on your X server, or doing SCP/SFTP style
file transfer.

Of course another way to get all those amenities would be to run an
ordinary SSH server over the same channel - but this approach avoids
having to manage a phony password or authentication key, or taking up
your CPU time with pointless crypto.
2020-02-22 18:42:13 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
34e326eb9e Discourage unnecessary use of Secure Contact key. 2019-11-22 09:21:43 +00:00
Simon Tatham
745ed3ad3b Update version number for 0.73 release. 2019-09-22 10:12:29 +01:00
Simon Tatham
5d718ef64b Whitespace rationalisation of entire code base.
The number of people has been steadily increasing who read our source
code with an editor that thinks tab stops are 4 spaces apart, as
opposed to the traditional tty-derived 8 that the PuTTY code expects.

So I've been wondering for ages about just fixing it, and switching to
a spaces-only policy throughout the code. And I recently found out
about 'git blame -w', which should make this change not too disruptive
for the purposes of source-control archaeology; so perhaps now is the
time.

While I'm at it, I've also taken the opportunity to remove all the
trailing spaces from source lines (on the basis that git dislikes
them, and is the only thing that seems to have a strong opinion one
way or the other).
    
Apologies to anyone downstream of this code who has complicated patch
sets to rebase past this change. I don't intend it to be needed again.
2019-09-08 20:29:21 +01:00
Simon Tatham
75cd6c8b27 Update version number for 0.72 release. 2019-07-14 09:51:06 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
45be166be3 Note Pentium 4+ processor requirement.
(At least, that's what the Clang bog brush option -### says it's
building with.)
2019-05-12 22:23:48 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
af01a6f07c UDP: the 'mac' directory no longer exists. 2019-04-19 16:11:23 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
2e50fbcc63 Docs: tweaks in Feedback for the modern world. 2019-04-19 16:11:23 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
05ab6304a2 FAQ: misc tweaks for the modern world. 2019-04-19 16:11:23 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
6e7d14ca9a Docs: list SSH specials before Telnet specials.
No textual change apart from the rearrangement.
2019-04-19 16:02:59 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
ecbf919e77 Docs: tweak PuTTYgen "public keys for pasting".
Use the control name displayed for SSH-2 keys, since that's
overwhelmingly what people will care about these days.
2019-04-19 16:02:59 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
5aacd0d98e Docs: talk about SSH-2 before SSH-1.
Because SSH-1 is a very niche interest these days. Mostly this affects
the public key documentation.

Also, a couple of unrelated concessions to modernity.
2019-04-19 15:49:05 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
461844a5ec Docs: tweak other error messages for truth. 2019-04-19 15:49:05 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
c86a56f49c Docs: correct some error messages.
In some messages, "server" became "remote" in 21a7ce7a07.
2019-04-19 15:49:05 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
8e6b1fd694 Docs: reorder Bugs/More bugs docs to match code.
The panels were rearranged in ab433e8073.
No textual change other than the rearrangement.
2019-04-19 15:49:05 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
6c9b1ffb2b Make docs match code for a couple of settings. 2019-04-19 15:49:05 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
5fd89724d3 Rewrite "Getting started / Logging in".
- Mention public key authentication
 - Define and describe the "terminal window"
 - Mention trust sigils
 - Describe here the lack of feedback in password prompts, as well as in
   the FAQ
2019-04-19 12:08:31 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
464e351c7b Remove most traces of WinHelp support.
Remove the 'winhelp-topic' IDs from the Halibut source, and from the
code. Now we have one fewer name to think of every time we add a
setting.

I've left the HELPCTX system in place, with the vague notion that it
might be a useful layer of indirection for some future help system on a
platform like Mac OS X.

(I've left the putty.hlp target in doc/Makefile, if nothing else because
this is a convenient test case for Halibut's WinHelp support. But the
resulting help file will no longer support context help.)
2019-03-26 00:27:04 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
190761a272 Rework copy/paste documentation a bit.
Try harder to distinguish PuTTY's behaviour when run on Windows and on
Unix.
2019-03-24 13:30:41 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
c7c6bc8f93 Acknowledge Unix pageant. 2019-03-18 23:09:24 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
d7c1f894d6 Acknowledge Windows-on-Arm builds. 2019-03-18 23:08:09 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
c78f59fd9d Document ACL restriction options for Pageant.
These are just cross-references to the existing descriptions in the
"Using PuTTY" section.
2019-03-17 15:17:52 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
6d98399a27 Document Unix puttygen /dev/urandom default.
This changed in 025599ec99 (before 0.71).
2019-03-17 15:08:37 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
627d95e365 Document new Unix Pageant features in 0.71.
Better late than never.
These originated in:
 - e6b06c900f: --gui-prompt, --tty-prompt
 - 4467fa4d2a: --askpass
 - 0603256964: -L
2019-03-17 14:58:55 +00:00
Simon Tatham
abfc751c3e Update version number for 0.71 release. 2019-03-16 12:26:06 +00:00
Simon Tatham
31b4c6ad9c Draft FAQ entries for the spoofing defences. 2019-03-16 12:25:23 +00:00
Simon Tatham
514796b7e4 Add an interactive anti-spoofing prompt in Plink.
At the point when we change over the seat's trust status to untrusted
for the last time, to finish authentication, Plink will now present a
final interactive prompt saying 'Press Return to begin session'. This
is a hint that anything after that that resembles an auth prompt
should be treated with suspicion, because _PuTTY_ thinks it's finished
authenticating.

This is of course an annoying inconvenience for interactive users, so
I've tried to reduce its impact as much as I can. It doesn't happen in
GUI PuTTY at all (because the trust sigil system is used instead); it
doesn't happen if you use plink -batch (because then the user already
knows that they _never_ expect an interactive prompt); and it doesn't
happen if Plink's standard input is being redirected from anywhere
other than the terminal / console (because then it would be pointless
for the server to try to scam passphrases out of the user anyway,
since the user isn't in a position to enter one in response to a spoof
prompt). So it should only happen to people who are using Plink in a
terminal for interactive login purposes, and that's not _really_ what
I ever intended Plink to be used for (which is why it's never had any
out-of-band control UI like OpenSSH's ~ system).

If anyone _still_ doesn't like this new prompt, it can also be turned
off using the new -no-antispoof flag, if the user is willing to
knowingly assume the risk.
2019-03-16 12:25:23 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
a8d3008143 Stop shipping old WinHelp (.HLP) file.
The executables were already ignoring it.

This is a minimal change; PUTTY.HLP can still be built, and there's
still all the context IDs lying around.

Buildscr changes are untested.
2019-03-16 12:25:23 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
adce412122 Rewrite faq-server to acknowledge Uppity. 2019-03-16 00:03:25 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
2795643932 Briefly acknowledge Authenticode on Keys page. 2019-03-15 23:15:07 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
ca90a36bcd Man page documentation of sanitise options.
These were added in commits 91cf47dd0d and 2675f9578d.
2019-02-21 01:00:44 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2675f9578d File transfer tools: sanitise remote filenames and stderr.
This commit adds sanitisation to PSCP and PSFTP in the same style as
I've just put it into Plink. This time, standard error is sanitised
without reference to whether it's redirected (at least unless you give
an override option), on the basis that where Plink is _sometimes_ an
SSH transport for some other protocol, PSCP and PSFTP _always_ are.

But also, the sanitiser is run over any remote filename sent by the
server, substituting ? for any control characters it finds. That
removes another avenue for the server to deliberately confuse the
display.

This commit fixes our bug 'pscp-unsanitised-server-output', aka the
two notional 'vulnerabilities' CVE-2019-6109 and CVE-2019-6110.
(Although we regard those in isolation as only bugs, not serious
vulnerabilities, because their main threat was in hiding the evidence
of a server having exploited other more serious vulns that we never
had.)
2019-02-20 07:27:22 +00:00
Simon Tatham
91cf47dd0d Plink: default to sanitising non-tty console output.
If Plink's standard output and/or standard error points at a Windows
console or a Unix tty device, and if Plink was not configured to
request a remote pty (and hence to send a terminal-type string), then
we apply the new control-character stripping facility.

The idea is to be a mild defence against malicious remote processes
sending confusing escape sequences through the standard error channel
when Plink is being used as a transport for something like git: it's
OK to have actual sensible error messages come back from the server,
but when you run a git command, you didn't really intend to give the
remote server the implicit licence to write _all over_ your local
terminal display. At the same time, in that scenario, the standard
_output_ of Plink is left completely alone, on the grounds that git
will be expecting it to be 8-bit clean. (And Plink can tell that
because it's redirected away from the console.)

For interactive login sessions using Plink, this behaviour is
disabled, on the grounds that once you've sent a terminal-type string
it's assumed that you were _expecting_ the server to use it to know
what escape sequences to send to you.

So it should be transparent for all the use cases I've so far thought
of. But in case it's not, there's a family of new command-line options
like -no-sanitise-stdout and -sanitise-stderr that you can use to
forcibly override the autodetection of whether to do it.

This all applies the same way to both Unix and Windows Plink.
2019-02-20 07:27:22 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2af10ee8d1 Mention 'no VLAs' in the C-standards UDP section.
Now we're enforcing it in the build, it ought to be documented as
well.
2019-01-02 22:14:15 +00:00
Simon Tatham
6de69d001f Update UDP to mention the inttypes.h exception.
Of course this wouldn't have prevented me from making that mistake
myself - it's not as if I carefully re-read the design principles
appendix before writing each code change! - but it might help explain
to _someone_ at some point...
2018-11-22 07:09:06 +00:00
Simon Tatham
d2f79e2544 Update the UDP section about coroutines.
It claimed they were only found in ssh.c, which is no longer true:
after I broke up ssh.c into smaller pieces, they're now found all over
the place.

Also, one of the things I did during that refactoring was to arrange
that each protocol layer's cleanup function (hopefully) reliably frees
everything the coroutine might have allocated and been in the middle
of using, which was something I knew the old code was quite bad at. So
I've mentioned that in the coroutines section too, while I'm here.
2018-11-08 18:40:33 +00:00
Simon Tatham
385b31d9cb Rewrite the UDP section on portability.
I've recently started using several C99 features in PuTTY, after
finally reaching the point where it didn't break my builds to do so,
even on Windows. So it's now outright inaccurate for the documented
design principles to claim that we're sticking to C90.

While I'm here, I've filled in a bit more detail about the assumptions
we do permit.
2018-11-08 18:27:59 +00:00
Jonathan Liu
822d2fd4c3 Add option whether to include header when logging.
It is useful to be able to exclude the header so that the log file
can be used for realtime input to other programs such as Kst for
plotting live data from sensors.
2018-09-26 12:13:01 +01:00
Simon Tatham
6c924ba862 GPG key rollover.
This commit adds the new ids and fingerprints in the keys appendix of
the manual, and moves the old ones down into the historic-keys
section. I've tweaked a few pieces of wording for ongoing use, so that
they don't imply a specific number of past key rollovers.

The -pgpfp option in all the tools now shows the new Master Key
fingerprint and the previous (2015) one. I've adjusted all the uses of
the #defines in putty.h so that future rollovers should only have to
modify the #defines themselves.

Most importantly, sign.sh bakes in the ids of the current release and
snapshot keys, so that snapshots will automatically be signed with the
new snapshot key and the -r option will invoke the new release key.
2018-08-25 14:38:47 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
7d0ade7eac Tweak docs for GSSAPI key exchange. 2018-05-20 13:57:35 +01:00
Simon Tatham
6afa955a2e Option to support VT100 line drawing in UTF-8 mode.
Thanks to Jiri Kaspar for sending this patch (apart from the new docs
section, which is in my own words), which implements a feature we've
had as a wishlist item ('utf8-plus-vt100') for a long time.

I was actually surprised it was possible to implement it in so few
lines of code! I'd forgotten, or possibly never noticed in the first
place, that even in UTF-8 mode PuTTY not only accepts but still
_processes_ all the ISO 2022 control sequences and shift characters,
and keeps running track of all the same state in term->cset and
term->cset_attrs that it tracks in IS0-2022-enabled modes. It's just
that in UTF-8 mode, at the very last minute when a character+attribute
pair is about to be written into the terminal's character buffer, it
deliberately ignores the contents of those variables.

So all that was needed was a new flag checked at that last moment
which causes it not quite to ignore them after all, and bingo,
utf8-plus-vt100 is supported. And it works no matter which ISO 2022
sequences you're using; whether you're using ESC ( 0 to select the
line drawing set directly into GL and ESC ( B to get back when you're
done, or whether you send a preliminary ESC ( B ESC ) 0 to get GL/GR
to be ASCII and line drawing respectively so you can use SI and SO as
one-byte mode switches thereafter, both work just as well.

This implementation strategy has a couple of consequences, which I
don't think matter very much one way or the other but I document them
just in case they turn out to be important later:

 - if an application expecting this mode has already filled your
   terminal window with lqqqqqqqqk, then enabling this mode in Change
   Settings won't retroactively turn them into the line drawing
   characters you wanted, because no memory is preserved in the screen
   buffer of what the ISO 2022 state was when they were printed. So
   the application still has to do a screen refresh.

 - on the other hand, if you already sent the ESC ( 0 or whatever to
   put the terminal _into_ line drawing mode, and then you turn on
   this mode in Change Settings, you _will_ still be in line drawing
   mode, because the system _does_ remember your current ISO 2022
   state at all times, whether it's currently applying it to output
   printing characters or not.
2018-05-12 08:48:20 +01:00
Simon Tatham
223ea4d1e6 Make GSS kex and GSS userauth separately configurable.
The former has advantages in terms of keeping Kerberos credentials up
to date, but it also does something sufficiently weird to the usual
SSH host key system that I think it's worth making sure users have a
means of turning it off separately from the less intrusive GSS
userauth.
2018-04-26 19:15:15 +01:00
Simon Tatham
d944aa4096 Mention SSPI explicitly in the documentation.
This was originally sent in as part of the GSSAPI patch, but I've
extracted into a separate commit because that patch was more than
complicated enough by itself.
2018-04-26 07:21:28 +01:00
Simon Tatham
d515e4f1a3 Support GSS key exchange, for Kerberos 5 only.
This is a heavily edited (by me) version of a patch originally due to
Nico Williams and Viktor Dukhovni. Their comments:

 * Don't delegate credentials when rekeying unless there's a new TGT
   or the old service ticket is nearly expired.

 * Check for the above conditions more frequently (every two minutes
   by default) and rekey when we would delegate credentials.

 * Do not rekey with very short service ticket lifetimes; some GSSAPI
   libraries may lose the race to use an almost expired ticket. Adjust
   the timing of rekey checks to try to avoid this possibility.

My further comments:

The most interesting thing about this patch to me is that the use of
GSS key exchange causes a switch over to a completely different model
of what host keys are for. This comes from RFC 4462 section 2.1: the
basic idea is that when your session is mostly bidirectionally
authenticated by the GSSAPI exchanges happening in initial kex and
every rekey, host keys become more or less vestigial, and their
remaining purpose is to allow a rekey to happen if the requirements of
the SSH protocol demand it at an awkward moment when the GSS
credentials are not currently available (e.g. timed out and haven't
been renewed yet). As such, there's no need for host keys to be
_permanent_ or to be a reliable identifier of a particular host, and
RFC 4462 allows for the possibility that they might be purely
transient and only for this kind of emergency fallback purpose.

Therefore, once PuTTY has done a GSS key exchange, it disconnects
itself completely from the permanent host key cache functions in
storage.h, and instead switches to a _transient_ host key cache stored
in memory with the lifetime of just that SSH session. That cache is
populated with keys received from the server as a side effect of GSS
kex (via the optional SSH2_MSG_KEXGSS_HOSTKEY message), and used if
later in the session we have to fall back to a non-GSS key exchange.
However, in practice servers we've tested against do not send a host
key in that way, so we also have a fallback method of populating the
transient cache by triggering an immediate non-GSS rekey straight
after userauth (reusing the code path we also use to turn on OpenSSH
delayed encryption without the race condition).
2018-04-26 07:21:16 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
c67389e1fb Document 'Permit control characters in pasted text'
And the consequent GUI rearrangements.
2018-03-24 15:35:46 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
36764ffbbe Document Ctrl-Shift-PgUp/PgDn.
This was added in 81345e9a82.
2018-02-04 14:19:31 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
c971c428f3 Update copy and paste documentation.
Rewrite the "Using PuTTY" section for 'clipboard-generality', and also
explain why we default to mouse-based selection, interaction with other
applications via PRIMARY when running PuTTY on Unix, and bracketed-paste
mode. Also add lots of index terms.
2018-02-04 12:27:17 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2a76f8d4a2 Support custom clipboard names under X.
This required me to turn the drop-lists into combo boxes and add an
extra string-typed Conf setting alongside each enumerated value.
2017-12-17 18:49:00 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0e7f0883a9 Add GUI configuration for choice of clipboards.
On all platforms, you can now configure which clipboard the mouse
pastes from, which clipboard Ctrl-Ins and Shift-Ins access, and which
Ctrl-Shift-C and Ctrl-Shift-V access. In each case, the options are:

 - nothing at all
 - a clipboard which is implicitly written by the act of mouse
   selection (the PRIMARY selection on X, CLIP_LOCAL everywhere else)
 - the standard clipboard written by explicit copy/paste UI actions
   (CLIPBOARD on X, the unique system clipboard elsewhere).

Also, you can control whether selecting text with the mouse _also_
writes to the explicitly accessed clipboard.

The wording of the various messages changes between platforms, but the
basic UI shape is the same everywhere.
2017-12-17 17:02:56 +00:00
Simon Tatham
98fa733a96 Move char-class list box out into a new config panel.
This makes space in the Selection panel (at least on Windows; it
wasn't overfull on Unix) to add a new set of config options
controlling the mapping of UI actions to clipboards.

(A possible future advantage of having spare space in this new Words
panel is that there's room to add controls for context-sensitive
special-casing, e.g. I'd quite like ':' to be treated differently when
it appears as part of "http://".)
2017-12-17 16:38:41 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2f9738a282 Make terminal true-colour mode configurable.
I know some users don't like any colour _at all_, and we have a
separate option to turn off xterm-style 256-colour sequences, so it
seems remiss not to have an option to disable true colour as well.
2017-10-05 21:04:23 +01:00
Simon Tatham
ba4837dae8 Add a -restrict-putty-acl option to Windows Pageant.
This causes PuTTY processes spawned from its system-tray menu to run
with the -restrict-acl option (or rather, the synonymous &R prefix
used by my auto-constructed command lines for easier parsing).

The previous behaviour of Pageant was never to pass -restrict-acl to
PuTTY, even when started with -restrict-acl itself; this is not
actually a silly thing to want to do, because Pageant might well have
more need of -restrict-acl than PuTTY (it stores longer-term and more
powerful secrets) and conversely PuTTY might have more need to _not_
restrict its ACL than Pageant (in that among the things enabled by an
unrestricted ACL are various kinds of accessibility software, which is
more useful on the more user-facing PuTTY than on Pageant).

But for those who want to lock everything down with every security
option possible (even though -restrict-acl is only an ad-hoc
precaution and cannot deliver any hard guarantees), this new option
should fill in the UI gap.
2017-09-20 18:24:34 +01:00
Simon Tatham
4ec2791945 Remove Makefile.bor.
After a conversation this week with a user who tried to use it, it's
clear that Borland C can't build the up-to-date PuTTY without having
to make too many compromises of functionality (unsupported API
details, no 'long long' type), even above the issues that could be
worked round with extra porting ifdefs.
2017-09-13 19:26:28 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
25683f0f3d Add a FAQ about servers that don't like IUTF8. 2017-07-12 10:19:23 +01:00
Ion Gaztañaga
309c3dfd95 Add -share -noshare command line option to plink to share SSL connections. 2017-07-08 09:28:20 +01:00
Simon Tatham
3cd10509a5 Update version number for 0.70 release. 2017-07-04 20:29:54 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
05f499e55f Add 'passthrough printing' as an index term. 2017-06-06 09:34:21 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
e5dd1435e2 Remove FAQ about Plink on Win95.
While it's still true, the link to Winsock 2 is dead, our standard
release builds don't run on Win95 any more, and it's certainly not
frequently asked.
2017-05-23 23:45:19 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
22cf2823d1 Remove some ancient cruft from the FAQ.
- I haven't heard of OpenSSH/OpenSSL mismatches being a common problem
   for a long time. Specific advice about OpenSSH 3.1/3.4 seems unlikely
   to be useful these days.
 - "Incorrect MAC received on packet" doesn't seem to be a common
   problem these days, and if anyone encounters it, the words in the
   "Errors" bit of the docs seem adequate without a FAQ entry as well.
2017-05-23 23:13:17 +01:00
Simon Tatham
93931b0a56 Switch to using Halibut's new direct .CHM generation.
This allows me to remove HTML Help Workshop completely from my build
dependencies, and good riddance!
2017-05-13 18:51:10 +01:00