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mirror of https://git.tartarus.org/simon/putty.git synced 2025-05-28 23:34:49 -05:00
Simon Tatham 31ab5b8e30 Windows: respect CONF_window_border when maximised.
The code in the 'if (IsZoomed)' statement in reset_window() was
failing to take account of the user-configured gap between the text
and the window edge, so that the requested border was lost. Now it
does take that into account.

In this commit, this change of behaviour applies to both a normally
maximised window (with the window frame still visible round the edge)
and to a full-screen window (nothing visible on the whole monitor
except PuTTY).

I'm not 100% sure whether that's the right behaviour: perhaps the
purpose of this configurable border is to space the text away from the
window furniture, so that there's no need for it if there isn't any
furniture? But on the other hand, one thing _I_ use this border for is
to make space round the edge of a terminal window for the green border
Zoom superimposes when sharing the window. And that's a use case that
would still make sense when the window is full-screened.
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PuTTY source code README
========================

This is the README for the source code of PuTTY, a free Windows and
Unix Telnet and SSH client.

PuTTY is built using CMake <https://cmake.org/>. To compile in the
simplest way (on any of Linux, Windows or Mac), the general method is
to run these commands in the source directory:

  cmake .
  cmake --build .

These commands will expect to find a usable compile toolchain on your
path. So if you're building on Windows with MSVC, you'll need to make
sure that the MSVC compiler (cl.exe) is on your path, by running one
of the 'vcvars32.bat' setup scripts provided with the tools. Then the
cmake commands above should work.

To install in the simplest way on Linux or Mac:

  cmake --build . --target install

On Unix, pterm would like to be setuid or setgid, as appropriate, to
permit it to write records of user logins to /var/run/utmp and
/var/log/wtmp. (Of course it will not use this privilege for
anything else, and in particular it will drop all privileges before
starting up complex subsystems like GTK.) The cmake install step
doesn't attempt to add these privileges, so if you want user login
recording to work, you should manually ch{own,grp} and chmod the
pterm binary yourself after installation. If you don't do this,
pterm will still work, but not update the user login databases.

Documentation (in various formats including Windows Help and Unix
`man' pages) is built from the Halibut (`.but') files in the `doc'
subdirectory. If you aren't using one of our source snapshots,
you'll need to do this yourself. Halibut can be found at
<https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/halibut/>.

The PuTTY home web site is

    https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/

If you want to send bug reports or feature requests, please read the
Feedback section of the web site before doing so. Sending one-line
reports saying `it doesn't work' will waste your time as much as
ours.

See the file LICENCE for the licence conditions.
Description
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Readme 340 MiB
Languages
C 89.7%
Python 8%
Perl 0.9%
CMake 0.8%
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