rather than relying on the user to edit the Makefile. Makefile.gtk
still works as well as it ever did, but now we get a Makefile.in alongside
it. mkunxarc.sh now relies on autoconf and friends to build the configure
script for the Unix source distribution.
[originally from svn r5673]
written a script which would generate the various graphical
components of the PuTTY icon suite at any given resolution and then
used that to generate the OS X icon as well as all the others, but I
can always do that later; this'll do for now.
[originally from svn r5487]
with the Unix port and layering a Cocoa GUI on top. The basics all
work: there's a configuration panel and a terminal window, the
timing interface works and the select interface functions. The same
application can run both SSH (or other network) connections and
local pty sessions, and multiple sessions in the same process are
fully supported.
However, it's horribly unfinished in a wide variety of other ways;
anyone interested is invited to read README.OSX and wince at the
length and content of its `unfinished' list.
[originally from svn r5308]
in which case pterm will be installed setgid that, or to define
UTMP_USER in which case it will be installed setuid that. If you
define neither, it will be installed without any set-id bits as
before.
[originally from svn r5093]
Fixes crashes when time() returns (time_t)-1 on Windows by using the
Win32 GetLocalTime() function. (The Unix implementation still just
uses time() and localtime().)
[originally from svn r5086]
of polishing to bring them to what I think should in principle be
release quality. Unlike the unfix.org patches themselves, this
checkin enables IPv6 by default; if you want to leave it out, you
have to build with COMPAT=-DNO_IPV6.
I have tested that this compiles on Visual C 7 (so the nightlies
_should_ acquire IPv6 support without missing a beat), but since I
don't have IPv6 set up myself I haven't actually tested that it
_works_. It still seems to make correct IPv4 connections, but that's
all I've been able to verify for myself. Further testing is needed.
[originally from svn r5047]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
it's more consistent with PSFTP like this: scp.c/pscp.c is more
similar to psftp.c (the main application framework) than it is to
sftp.c (a set of back-end library routines).
[originally from svn r4987]
timing.c, and hence takes its own responsibility for calling
noise_regular() at regular intervals. Again, this means it will be
called consistently in _all_ the SSH-speaking tools, not just those
in which I remembered to call it!
[originally from svn r4913]
which pretty much any module can call to request a call-back in the
future. So terminal.c can do its own handling of blinking, visual
bells and deferred screen updates, without having to rely on
term_update() being called 50 times a second (fixes: pterm-timer);
and ssh.c and telnet.c both invoke a new module pinger.c which takes
care of sending keepalives, so they get sent uniformly in all front
ends (fixes: plink-keepalives, unix-keepalives).
[originally from svn r4906]
[this svn revision also touched putty-wishlist]
long last to move all the Windows-specific source files down into a
`windows' subdirectory. Only platform-specific files remain at the
top level. With any luck this will act as a hint to anyone still
contemplating sending us a Windows-centric patch...
[originally from svn r4792]
when talking to SOCKS 5 proxies. Configures itself transparently (if
the proxy offers CHAP it will use it, otherwise it falls back to
ordinary cleartext passwords).
[originally from svn r4517]
directives that allow me to move some of the PuTTY-specific Makefile
fragments into Recipe. Not complete yet, but ought to be enough for
me to at least _try_ using mkfiles.pl in another project.
[originally from svn r4136]
on Linux, but the (very few) platform-specific bits are already
abstracted out of the main code, so it should port to other
platforms with a minimum of fuss.
[originally from svn r3762]
attempt to load WS2 and then fall back to WS1 if that fails. This
should allow us to use WS2-specific functionality to find out the
local system's list of IP addresses, thus fixing winnet-if2lo, while
degrading gracefully back to the previous behaviour if that
functionality is unavailable. (I haven't yet actually done this; I've
just laid the groundwork.)
This checkin _may_ cause instability; it seemed fine to me on
initial testing, but it's a bit of an upheaval and I wouldn't like
to make bets on it just yet.
[originally from svn r3502]
platform-independent source file. Haven't yet added the extra
abstraction routines to uxsftp.c to create a Unix PSCP port, but it
shouldn't take long.
Also in this checkin, a change of semantics in platform_default_s():
now strings returned from it are expected to be dynamically allocated.
[originally from svn r3420]
... here's a Unix port of PSFTP. Woo. (Oddly PSCP looks to be
somewhat harder; there's more Windows code interleaved than there
was in PSFTP.)
[originally from svn r3419]
Euro-supporting font with a Euro-enabled X key map will now actually
generate a Euro character rather than shrugging and doing nothing.
[originally from svn r3151]
numbers needed for RSA blinding are now done deterministically by
hashes of the private key, much the same way we do it for DSA.
[originally from svn r3149]
former by simply removing it; the latter by adding an enumeration
function to libcharset.) This has had slight `const' repercussions
on cp_name() and cp_enumerate() which might break the Mac build.
[originally from svn r3064]
This menu is not yet fully populated, but it has an About box (yet
another licence location :-/ ) and supports the new configurable
specials menu (thus making Unix PuTTY do one tiny thing which
OpenSSH-in-a-pterm can't :-).
[originally from svn r3062]
think it's now actually usable as a day-to-day SSH client, even if
things like the Event Log are still missing. So I call that a decent
lunch hour's work :-)
[originally from svn r3034]
practically trivial to put all the pieces together and create a
working prototype of Unix PuTTY! It's missing a lot of things -
notably GUI request boxes for host keys and logfiles and so forth,
the Event Log, mid-session reconfiguration, session loading and
saving, sensible population of the character sets drop-down list and
probably other fiddly little things too - but it will put up a
config box and then create a GUI window containing an SSH connection
to the host you specified, so it's _basically_ there. Woo!
[originally from svn r3020]
being able to be a PuTTY as well as a pterm. In the process I've
also moved icky things like actually reading from the pty fd and
printing the `terminated on signal' messages into pty.c where they
obviously should have been in the first place. Also there's been one
interesting repercussion in the terminal code: terminal.c's
from_backend now calls term_out() directly rather than expecting the
front end to call it afterwards. This has had the entertaining side
effect of fixing a Windows-specific bug whereby activity in a port
forwarding through a PuTTY with a blinking cursor caused the cursor
to blink to ON (!!!!). So, a surprisingly far-reaching checkin as it
turns out...
[originally from svn r3017]
functionality that deal with selectable fds in general. The idea is
that pty.c will stop passing its fd straight to pterm.c and hand it
to this module instead, and pterm.c will start requesting a general
list of fds from this module rather than expecting a single one from
pty.c, with the ultimate aim of pterm.c being able to form the basis
of a Unix PuTTY as well as pterm proper.
[originally from svn r3015]
for the Mac OS. This isn't anywhere near complete, and is wrong in a few
important regards, but I think it's heading in the right direction.
[originally from svn r2953]
to pieces, and put it back together in a new table-driven form.
config.c sets up a data structure describing most of the config box;
wincfg.c adds in the Windows-specific options (so that config.c can
also form the basis for Mac and Unix config boxes). Then winctrls.c
contains a shiny new layout engine which consumes that data
structure, and windlg.c passes all WM_COMMAND and similar messages
to a driver alongside that layout engine. In the process I've sorted
out nicer-looking panel titles and finally fixed the list-boxes-are-
never-the-right-size bug (turned out to be Windows's fault, of
course). I _believe_ it should do everything the old config box did,
including context help. Now everyone has to test it thoroughly...
[originally from svn r2908]
using the List Manager was entirely the wrong decision on my part, so I'll
probably rewrite this to use TextEdit at some point, but it's better than
stderr even so.
[originally from svn r2811]
opaque to all platform-independent modules and only handled within
per-platform code. `Filename' is there because the Mac has a magic
way to store filenames (though currently this checkin doesn't
support it!); `FontSpec' is there so that all the auxiliary stuff
such as font height and charset and so on which is needed under
Windows but not Unix can be kept where it belongs, and so that I can
have a hope in hell of dealing with a font chooser in the forthcoming
cross-platform config box code, and best of all it gets the horrid
font height wart out of settings.c and into the Windows code where
it should be.
The Mac part of this checkin is a bunch of random guesses which will
probably not quite compile, but which look roughly right to me.
Sorry if I screwed it up, Ben :-)
[originally from svn r2765]
we can have runtime switching between MacTCP and OpenTransport, and so
that we can cope if there's no TCP/IP stack available at all (albeit with
very little functionality at present).
[originally from svn r2546]
Windows and Mac backends have acquired auth-finding functions which
do nothing; Unix backend has acquired one which actually works, so
Plink can now do X forwarding believably.
(This checkin stretches into some unlikely parts of the code because
there have been one or two knock-on effects involving `const'. Bah.)
[originally from svn r2536]
and pterm need at least one default setting to be _different_ (pterm
needs the default term type to be `xterm', while plink needs it to
be taken from $TERM). So here's a completely new alternative
mechanism for platform- and app-specific default settings. Ben will
probably want to check the integrity of the Mac port, since I've
fiddled with it without testing that it still compiles.
[originally from svn r2513]
functions are only dummy stubs, but it's still minimally usable. At
least, as long as you don't want to do anything complex like logging out.
[originally from svn r2500]
to Mac OS Roman for display if the Unicode Converter isn't around. Support
for Mac character sets other than Roman (e.g. the variant used by the Apple
VT100 font) is still absent.
[originally from svn r2401]
does UTF-8 copy and paste (falling back to normal strings if
necessary), it understands X font encodings and translates things
accordingly so that if you have a Unicode font you can ask for
virtually any single-byte encoding and get it (Mac-Roman pterm,
anyone?), and so on. There's work left to be done (wide fonts for
CJK spring to mind), but I reckon this is a pretty good start.
[originally from svn r2395]
of compiled resource file, .rsrc, which is built from .r, and adds mechanisms
to the MPW makefile generator to handle this.
[originally from svn r2385]
same behaviour as before (tested a little bit), but should be easier to
expand.
(This is the easy bit -- work still needs to be done to fix
ssh2-keyderive-nonbug, vshell-no-bug-compat, etc -- but should be easier
now.)
[originally from svn r2293]
doesn't yet use the SSH agent, no way to specify arbitrary config
options, no manpage yet, couple of other fiddly things need doing,
but it makes SSH connections and doesn't fall over horribly so I say
it's a good start. Now to run it under valgrind...
[originally from svn r2165]
lpage_send out into the line discipline, making them _clients_ of
the Unicode layer rather than part of it. This means they can access
ldisc->term, which in turn means I've been able to remove the
temporary global variable `term'. We're slowly getting there.
[originally from svn r2143]
The current pty.c backend is temporarily a loopback device for
terminal emulator testing, the display handling is only just enough
to show that terminal.c is functioning, the keyboard handling is
laughable, and most features are absent. Next step: bring output and
input up to a plausibly working state, and put a real pty on the
back to create a vaguely usable prototype. Oh, and a scrollbar would
be nice too.
In _theory_ the Windows builds should still work fine after this...
[originally from svn r2010]
beginning of a Unix port. It's nowhere near done, and currently it
won't even compile on Unix. But this represents the start of the
process of separating out platform-specific code, and also contains
the mkfiles.pl changes required to support a Unix makefile and a
non-flat source tree.
[originally from svn r1993]
now be processed in cmdline.c, which is called from all utilities
(well, not Pageant or PuTTYgen). This should mean we get to
standardise almost all options across almost all tools. Also one
major change: `-load' is now the preferred option for loading a
saved session in PuTTY proper. `@session' still works but is
deprecated.
[originally from svn r1799]
CONNECT, but contains an extensible framework to allow other
proxies. Apparently SOCKS and ad-hoc-telnet-proxy are already
planned (the GUI mentions them already even though they don't work
yet). GUI includes full configurability and allows definition of
exclusion zones. Rock and roll.
[originally from svn r1598]
analysis (for both .c and .rc files). Generates the VC++ makefile as
well as the other two; the authoritative source is now the new file
`Recipe' rather than any particular Makefile. Note that `Makefile'
is still here as a relic of the old way until we stop the nightly
builds using it, but it'll be gone soon.
[originally from svn r1592]