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mirror of https://git.tartarus.org/simon/putty.git synced 2025-01-09 09:27:59 +00:00
putty-source/defs.h
Simon Tatham 1a7e4ec8d4 New centralised version of local line editing.
This takes over from both the implementation in ldisc.c and the one in
term_get_userpass_input, which were imperfectly duplicating each
other's functionality. The new version should be more consistent
between the two already, and also, it means further improvements can
now be made in just one place.

In the course of this, I've restructured the inside of ldisc.c by
moving the input_queue bufchain to the other side of the translation
code in ldisc_send. Previously, ldisc_send received a string, an
optional 'dedicated key' indication (bodgily signalled by a negative
length) and an 'interactive' flag, translated that somehow into a
combination of raw backend output and specials, and saved the latter
in input_queue. Now it saves the original (string, dedicated flag,
interactive flag) data in input_queue, and doesn't do the translation
until the data is pulled back _out_ of the queue. That's because the
new line editing system expects to receive something much closer to
the original data format.

The term_get_userpass_input system is also substantially restructured.
Instead of ldisc.c handing each individual keystroke to terminal.c so
that it can do line editing on it, terminal.c now just gives the Ldisc
a pointer to its instance of the new TermLineEditor object - and then
ldisc.c can put keystrokes straight into that, in the same way it
would put them into its own TermLineEditor, without having to go via
terminal.c at all. So the term_get_userpass_input edifice is only
called back when the line editor actually delivers the answer to a
username or password prompt.

(I considered not _even_ having a separate TermLineEditor for password
prompts, and just letting ldisc.c use its own. But the problem is that
some of the behaviour differences between the two line editors are
deliberate, for example the use of ^D to signal 'abort this prompt',
and the use of Escape as an alternative line-clearing command. So
TermLineEditor has a flags word that allows ldisc and terminal to set
it up differently. Also this lets me give the two TermLineEditors a
different vtable of callback functions, which is a convenient way for
terminal.c to get notified when a prompt has been answered.)

The new line editor still passes all the tests I wrote for the old
one. But it already has a couple of important improvements, both in
the area of UTF-8 handling:

Firstly, when we display a UTF-8 character on the terminal, we check
with the terminal how many character cells it occupied, and then if
the user deletes it again from the editing buffer, we can emit the
right number of backspace-space-backspace sequences. (The old ldisc
line editor incorrectly assumed all Unicode characters had terminal
with 1, partly because its buffer was byte- rather than character-
oriented and so it was more than enough work just finding where the
character _start_ was.)

Secondly, terminal.c's userpass line editor would never emit a byte in
the 80-BF range to the terminal at all, which meant that nontrivial
UTF-8 characters always came out as U+FFFD blobs!
2023-03-04 13:55:50 +00:00

275 lines
8.9 KiB
C

/*
* defs.h: initial definitions for PuTTY.
*
* The rule about this header file is that it can't depend on any
* other header file in this code base. This is where we define
* things, as much as we can, that other headers will want to refer
* to, such as opaque structure types and their associated typedefs,
* or macros that are used by other headers.
*/
#ifndef PUTTY_DEFS_H
#define PUTTY_DEFS_H
#ifdef NDEBUG
/*
* PuTTY is a security project, so assertions are important - if an
* assumption is violated, proceeding anyway may have far worse
* consequences than simple program termination. This check and #error
* should arrange that we don't ever accidentally compile assertions
* out.
*/
#error Do not compile this code base with NDEBUG defined!
#endif
#if HAVE_CMAKE_H
#include "cmake.h"
#endif
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdio.h> /* for __MINGW_PRINTF_FORMAT */
#include <stdbool.h>
#if defined _MSC_VER && _MSC_VER < 1800
/* Work around lack of inttypes.h and strtoumax in older MSVC */
#define PRIx32 "x"
#define PRIu32 "u"
#define PRIu64 "I64u"
#define PRIdMAX "I64d"
#define PRIXMAX "I64X"
#define SCNu64 "I64u"
#define SIZEx "Ix"
#define SIZEu "Iu"
uintmax_t strtoumax(const char *nptr, char **endptr, int base);
/* Also, define a LEGACY_WINDOWS flag to enable other workarounds */
#define LEGACY_WINDOWS
#else
#include <inttypes.h>
/* Because we still support older MSVC libraries which don't recognise the
* standard C "z" modifier for size_t-sized integers, we must use an
* inttypes.h-style macro for those */
#define SIZEx "zx"
#define SIZEu "zu"
#endif
#if defined __GNUC__ || defined __clang__
/*
* On MinGW, the correct compiler format checking for vsnprintf() etc
* can depend on compile-time flags; these control whether you get
* ISO C or Microsoft's non-standard format strings.
* We sometimes use __attribute__ ((format)) for our own printf-like
* functions, which are ultimately interpreted by the toolchain-chosen
* printf, so we need to take that into account to get correct warnings.
*/
#ifdef __MINGW_PRINTF_FORMAT
#define PRINTF_LIKE(fmt_index, ellipsis_index) \
__attribute__ ((format (__MINGW_PRINTF_FORMAT, fmt_index, ellipsis_index)))
#else
#define PRINTF_LIKE(fmt_index, ellipsis_index) \
__attribute__ ((format (printf, fmt_index, ellipsis_index)))
#endif
#else /* __GNUC__ */
#define PRINTF_LIKE(fmt_index, ellipsis_index)
#endif /* __GNUC__ */
typedef struct conf_tag Conf;
typedef struct terminal_tag Terminal;
typedef struct term_utf8_decode term_utf8_decode;
typedef struct Filename Filename;
typedef struct FontSpec FontSpec;
typedef struct bufchain_tag bufchain;
typedef struct strbuf strbuf;
typedef struct LoadedFile LoadedFile;
typedef struct RSAKey RSAKey;
typedef struct BinarySink BinarySink;
typedef struct BinarySource BinarySource;
typedef struct stdio_sink stdio_sink;
typedef struct bufchain_sink bufchain_sink;
typedef struct buffer_sink buffer_sink;
typedef struct handle_sink handle_sink;
typedef struct IdempotentCallback IdempotentCallback;
typedef struct SockAddr SockAddr;
typedef struct Socket Socket;
typedef struct Plug Plug;
typedef struct SocketPeerInfo SocketPeerInfo;
typedef struct DeferredSocketOpener DeferredSocketOpener;
typedef struct DeferredSocketOpenerVtable DeferredSocketOpenerVtable;
typedef struct Backend Backend;
typedef struct BackendVtable BackendVtable;
typedef struct Interactor Interactor;
typedef struct InteractorVtable InteractorVtable;
typedef struct InteractionReadySeat InteractionReadySeat;
typedef struct Ldisc_tag Ldisc;
typedef struct LogContext LogContext;
typedef struct LogPolicy LogPolicy;
typedef struct LogPolicyVtable LogPolicyVtable;
typedef struct TermLineEditor TermLineEditor;
typedef struct TermLineEditorCallbackReceiver TermLineEditorCallbackReceiver;
typedef struct TermLineEditorCallbackReceiverVtable
TermLineEditorCallbackReceiverVtable;
typedef struct Seat Seat;
typedef struct SeatVtable SeatVtable;
typedef struct SeatDialogText SeatDialogText;
typedef struct SeatDialogTextItem SeatDialogTextItem;
typedef struct SeatDialogPromptDescriptions SeatDialogPromptDescriptions;
typedef struct SeatPromptResult SeatPromptResult;
typedef struct cmdline_get_passwd_input_state cmdline_get_passwd_input_state;
typedef struct TermWin TermWin;
typedef struct TermWinVtable TermWinVtable;
typedef struct Ssh Ssh;
typedef struct mp_int mp_int;
typedef struct MontyContext MontyContext;
typedef struct WeierstrassCurve WeierstrassCurve;
typedef struct WeierstrassPoint WeierstrassPoint;
typedef struct MontgomeryCurve MontgomeryCurve;
typedef struct MontgomeryPoint MontgomeryPoint;
typedef struct EdwardsCurve EdwardsCurve;
typedef struct EdwardsPoint EdwardsPoint;
typedef struct SshServerConfig SshServerConfig;
typedef struct SftpServer SftpServer;
typedef struct SftpServerVtable SftpServerVtable;
typedef struct Channel Channel;
typedef struct SshChannel SshChannel;
typedef struct mainchan mainchan;
typedef struct CertExprBuilder CertExprBuilder;
typedef struct ssh_sharing_state ssh_sharing_state;
typedef struct ssh_sharing_connstate ssh_sharing_connstate;
typedef struct share_channel share_channel;
typedef struct PortFwdManager PortFwdManager;
typedef struct PortFwdRecord PortFwdRecord;
typedef struct ConnectionLayer ConnectionLayer;
typedef struct prng prng;
typedef struct ssh_hashalg ssh_hashalg;
typedef struct ssh_hash ssh_hash;
typedef struct ssh_kex ssh_kex;
typedef struct ssh_kexes ssh_kexes;
typedef struct ssh_keyalg ssh_keyalg;
typedef struct ssh_key ssh_key;
typedef struct ssh_compressor ssh_compressor;
typedef struct ssh_decompressor ssh_decompressor;
typedef struct ssh_compression_alg ssh_compression_alg;
typedef struct ssh2_userkey ssh2_userkey;
typedef struct ssh2_macalg ssh2_macalg;
typedef struct ssh2_mac ssh2_mac;
typedef struct ssh_cipheralg ssh_cipheralg;
typedef struct ssh_cipher ssh_cipher;
typedef struct ssh2_ciphers ssh2_ciphers;
typedef struct dh_ctx dh_ctx;
typedef struct ecdh_key ecdh_key;
typedef struct ecdh_keyalg ecdh_keyalg;
typedef struct NTRUKeyPair NTRUKeyPair;
typedef struct NTRUEncodeSchedule NTRUEncodeSchedule;
typedef struct dlgparam dlgparam;
typedef struct dlgcontrol dlgcontrol;
typedef struct settings_w settings_w;
typedef struct settings_r settings_r;
typedef struct settings_e settings_e;
typedef struct ca_options ca_options;
typedef struct host_ca host_ca;
typedef struct host_ca_enum host_ca_enum;
typedef struct SessionSpecial SessionSpecial;
typedef struct StripCtrlChars StripCtrlChars;
typedef struct BidiContext BidiContext;
/*
* A small structure wrapping up a (pointer, length) pair so that it
* can be conveniently passed to or from a function.
*/
typedef struct ptrlen {
const void *ptr;
size_t len;
} ptrlen;
typedef struct logblank_t logblank_t;
typedef struct BinaryPacketProtocol BinaryPacketProtocol;
typedef struct PacketProtocolLayer PacketProtocolLayer;
struct unicode_data;
/* Do a compile-time type-check of 'to_check' (without evaluating it),
* as a side effect of returning the value 'to_return'. Note that
* although this macro double-*expands* to_return, it always
* *evaluates* exactly one copy of it, so it's side-effect safe. */
#define TYPECHECK(to_check, to_return) \
(sizeof(to_check) ? (to_return) : (to_return))
/* Return a pointer to the object of structure type 'type' whose field
* with name 'field' is pointed at by 'object'. */
#define container_of(object, type, field) \
TYPECHECK(object == &((type *)0)->field, \
((type *)(((char *)(object)) - offsetof(type, field))))
#if defined __GNUC__ || defined __clang__
#define NORETURN __attribute__((__noreturn__))
#elif defined _MSC_VER
#define NORETURN __declspec(noreturn)
#else
#define NORETURN
#endif
/*
* Standard macro definitions. STR() behaves like the preprocessor
* stringification # operator, and CAT() behaves like the token paste
* ## operator, except that each one macro-expands its argument(s)
* first, unlike the raw version. E.g.
*
* #__LINE__ -> "__LINE__"
* STR(__LINE__) -> "1234" (or whatever)
*
* and similarly,
*
* foo ## __LINE__ -> foo__LINE__
* CAT(foo, __LINE__) -> foo1234 (or whatever)
*
* The expansion is achieved by having each macro pass its arguments
* to a secondary inner macro, because parameter lists of a macro call
* get expanded before the called macro is invoked. So STR(__LINE__)
* -> STR_INNER(1234) -> #1234 -> "1234", and similarly for CAT.
*/
#define STR_INNER(x) #x
#define STR(x) STR_INNER(x)
#define CAT_INNER(x,y) x ## y
#define CAT(x,y) CAT_INNER(x,y)
/*
* Structure shared between ssh.h and storage.h, giving strictness
* options relating to checking of an OpenSSH certificate. It's a bit
* cheaty to put something so specific in here, but more painful to
* put it in putty.h.
*/
struct ca_options {
bool permit_rsa_sha1, permit_rsa_sha256, permit_rsa_sha512;
};
#endif /* PUTTY_DEFS_H */