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mirror of https://git.tartarus.org/simon/putty.git synced 2025-05-28 23:34:49 -05:00
Simon Tatham ca9cd983e1 Centralise palette setup into terminal.c.
Now terminal.c makes nearly all the decisions about what the colour
palette should actually contain: it does the job of reading the
GUI-configurable colours out of Conf, and also the job of making up
the rest of the xterm-256 palette. The only exception is that TermWin
can provide a method to override some of the default colours, which on
Windows is used to implement the 'Use system colours' config option.

This saves code overall, partly because the front ends don't have to
be able to send palette data back to the Terminal any more (the
Terminal keeps the master copy and can answer palette-query escape
sequences from its own knowledge), and also because now there's only
one copy of the xterm-256 palette setup code (previously gtkwin.c and
window.c each had their own version of it).

In this rewrite, I've also introduced a multi-layered storage system
for the palette data in Terminal. One layer contains the palette
information derived from Conf; the next contains platform overrides
(currently just Windows's 'Use system colours'); the last one contains
overrides set by escape sequences in the middle of the session. The
topmost two layers can each _conditionally_ override the ones below.
As a result, if a server-side application manually resets (say) the
default fg and bg colours in mid-session to something that works well
in a particular application, those changes won't be wiped out by a
change in the Windows system colours or the Conf, which they would
have been before. Instead, changes in Conf or the system colours alter
the lower layers of the structure, but then when palette_rebuild is
called, the upper layer continues to override them, until a palette
reset (ESC]R) or terminal reset (e.g. ESC c) removes those upper-layer
changes. This seems like a more consistent strategy, in that the same
set of configuration settings will produce the same end result
regardless of what order they were applied in.

The palette-related methods in TermWin have had a total rework.
palette_get and palette_reset are both gone; palette_set can now set a
contiguous range of colours in one go; and the new
palette_get_overrides replaces window.c's old systopalette().
2021-02-07 19:59:21 +00:00
2020-08-04 18:56:47 +01:00
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2020-01-29 06:44:18 +00:00
2019-10-14 19:42:37 +01:00
2020-09-13 09:11:31 +01:00
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2020-11-24 20:39:49 +00:00
2020-01-29 06:44:18 +00:00

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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