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A long time ago, in commit 4d77b6567, I moved the generation of the arrow-key escape sequences into a function format_arrow_key(). Mostly the reason for that was a special purpose I had in mind at the time which involved auto-generating the same sequences in response to things other than a keypress, but I always thought it would be nice to centralise a lot more of PuTTY's complicated keyboard handling in the same way - at least the handling of the function keys and their numerous static and dynamic config options. In this year's general spirit of tidying up and refactoring, I think it's finally time. So here I introduce three more centralised functions for dealing with the numbered function keys, the small keypad (Ins, Home, PgUp etc) and the numeric keypad. Lots of horrible and duplicated code from the key handling functions in window.c and gtkwin.c is now more sensibly centralised: each platform keyboard handler concerns itself with the local format of a keyboard event and platform-specific enumeration of key codes, and once it's decided what the logical key press actually _is_, it hands off to the new functions in terminal.c to generate the appropriate escape code. Mostly this is intended to be a refactoring without functional change, leaving the keyboard handling how it's always been. But in cases where the Windows and GTK handlers were accidentally inconsistent, I've fixed the inconsistency rather than carefully keeping both sides how they were. Known consistency fixes: - swapping the arrow keys between normal (ESC [ A) and application (ESC O A) is now done by pressing Ctrl with them, and _not_ by pressing Shift. That was how it was always supposed to work, and how it's worked on GTK all along, but on Windows it's been done by Shift as well since 2010, due to a bug at the call site of format_arrow_key() introduced when I originally wrote that function. - in Xterm function key mode plus application keypad mode, the /*- keys on the numeric keypad now send ESC O {o,j,m} in place of ESC O {Q,R,S}. That's how the Windows keyboard handler has worked all along (it was a deliberate behaviour tweak for the Xterm-like function key mode, because in that mode ESC O {Q,R,S} are generated by F2-F4). But the GTK keyboard handler omitted that particular special case and was still sending ESC O {Q,R,S} for those keys in all application keypad modes. - also in Xterm function key mode plus app keypad mode, we only generates the app-keypad escape sequences if Num Lock is on; with Num Lock off, the numeric keypad becomes arrow keys and Home/End/etc, just as it would in non-app-keypad mode. Windows has done this all along, but again, GTK lacked that special case.
This is the README for the source archive of PuTTY, a free Windows and Unix Telnet and SSH client. If you want to rebuild PuTTY from source, we provide a variety of Makefiles and equivalents. (If you have fetched the source from Git, you'll have to generate the Makefiles yourself -- see below.) There are various compile-time directives that you can use to disable or modify certain features; it may be necessary to do this in some environments. They are documented in `Recipe', and in comments in many of the generated Makefiles. For building on Windows: - windows/Makefile.vc is for command-line builds on MS Visual C++ systems. Change into the `windows' subdirectory and type `nmake -f Makefile.vc' to build all the PuTTY binaries. As of 2017, we successfully compile PuTTY with both Visual Studio 7 (2003) and Visual Studio 14 (2015), so our guess is that it will probably build with versions in between those as well. (The binaries from Visual Studio 14 are only compatible with Windows XP and up. Binaries from Visual Studio 7 ought to work with anything from Windows 95 onward.) - Inside the windows/MSVC subdirectory are MS Visual Studio project files for doing GUI-based builds of the various PuTTY utilities. These have been tested on Visual Studio 7 and 10. You should be able to build each PuTTY utility by loading the corresponding .dsp file in Visual Studio. For example, MSVC/putty/putty.dsp builds PuTTY itself, MSVC/plink/plink.dsp builds Plink, and so on. - windows/Makefile.mgw is for MinGW / Cygwin installations. Type `make -f Makefile.mgw' while in the `windows' subdirectory to build all the PuTTY binaries. MinGW and friends can lag behind other toolchains in their support for the Windows API. Compile-time levers are provided to exclude some features; the defaults are set appropriately for the 'mingw-w64' cross-compiler provided with Ubuntu 14.04. If you are using an older toolchain, you may need to exclude more features; alternatively, you may find that upgrading to a recent version of the 'w32api' package helps. - windows/Makefile.lcc is for lcc-win32. Type `make -f Makefile.lcc' while in the `windows' subdirectory. (You will probably need to specify COMPAT=-DNO_MULTIMON.) - Inside the windows/DEVCPP subdirectory are Dev-C++ project files for doing GUI-based builds of the various PuTTY utilities. The PuTTY team actively use Makefile.vc (with VC7/10) and Makefile.mgw (with mingw32), so we'll probably notice problems with those toolchains fairly quickly. Please report any problems with the other toolchains mentioned above. For building on Unix: - unix/configure is for Unix and GTK. If you don't have GTK, you should still be able to build the command-line utilities (PSCP, PSFTP, Plink, PuTTYgen) using this script. To use it, change into the `unix' subdirectory, run `./configure' and then `make'. Or you can do the same in the top-level directory (we provide a little wrapper that invokes configure one level down), which is more like a normal Unix source archive but doesn't do so well at keeping the per-platform stuff in each platform's subdirectory; it's up to you. - unix/Makefile.gtk and unix/Makefile.ux are for non-autoconfigured builds. These makefiles expect you to change into the `unix' subdirectory, then run `make -f Makefile.gtk' or `make -f Makefile.ux' respectively. Makefile.gtk builds all the programs but relies on Gtk, whereas Makefile.ux builds only the command-line utilities and has no Gtk dependence. - For the graphical utilities, any of Gtk+-1.2, Gtk+-2.0, and Gtk+-3.0 should be supported. If you have more than one installed, you can manually specify which one you want by giving the option '--with-gtk=N' to the configure script where N is 1, 2, or 3. (The default is the newest available, of course.) In the absence of any Gtk version, the configure script will automatically construct a Makefile which builds only the command-line utilities; you can manually create this condition by giving configure the option '--without-gtk'. - 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.) By default the makefile will not attempt to add privileges to the pterm executable at 'make install' time, but you can ask it to do so by running configure with the option '--enable-setuid=USER' or '--enable-setgid=GROUP'. - The Unix Makefiles have an `install' target. Note that by default it tries to install `man' pages; if you have fetched the source via Git then you will need to have built these using Halibut first - see below. - It's also possible to build the Windows version of PuTTY to run on Unix by using Winelib. To do this, change to the `windows' directory and run `make -f Makefile.mgw CC=winegcc RC=wrc'. All of the Makefiles are generated automatically from the file `Recipe' by the Perl script `mkfiles.pl' (except for the Unix one, which is generated by the `configure' script; mkfiles.pl only generates the input to automake). Additions and corrections to Recipe, mkfiles.pl and/or configure.ac are much more useful than additions and corrections to the actual Makefiles, Makefile.am or Makefile.in. The Unix `configure' script and its various requirements are generated by the shell script `mkauto.sh', which requires GNU Autoconf, GNU Automake, and Gtk; if you've got the source from Git rather than using one of our source snapshots, you'll need to run this yourself. The input file to Automake is generated by mkfiles.pl along with all the rest of the makefiles, so you will need to run mkfiles.pl and then mkauto.sh. Documentation (in various formats including Windows Help and Unix `man' pages) is built from the Halibut (`.but') files in the `doc' subdirectory using `doc/Makefile'. 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.
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