by me to make the drag list behaviour slightly more intuitive.
WARNING: DO NOT LOOK AT pl_itemfrompt() IF YOU ARE SQUEAMISH.
[originally from svn r1199]
by ceasing to listen on input channels if the corresponding output
channel isn't accepting data. Has had basic check-I-didn't-actually-
break-anything-too-badly testing, but hasn't been genuinely tested
in stress conditions (because concocting stress conditions is non-
trivial).
[originally from svn r1198]
host-key-changed prompt: update-cache-and-connect, connect-without-
updating-cache, and abandon-connection. (Previously the middle one
was missing.)
[originally from svn r1122]
the server. (Not sure _why_ they're sent to the server; scp is
weird.) It may be pointless when sent to the screen, which is why I
removed it, but it's extremely pointful on the wire :-(
[originally from svn r1090]
multiple switchable line disciplines, we now have a single unified
one which changes its behaviour based on option settings. Each
option setting can be suggested by the back end and/or the terminal
handler, and can be forcibly overridden by the configuration. Local
echo and local line editing are separate, independently switchable,
options.
[originally from svn r895]
smalloc() macros and thence to the safemalloc() functions in misc.c.
This should allow me to plug in a debugging allocator and track
memory leaks and segfaults and things.
[originally from svn r818]
advantages:
- protocol modules can call sk_write() without having to worry
about writes blocking, because blocking writes are handled in the
abstraction layer and retried later.
- `Lost connection while sending' is a thing of the past.
- <winsock.h> is no longer needed in most modules, because
"putty.h" doesn't have to declare `SOCKET' variables any more,
only the abstracted `Socket' type.
- select()-equivalent between multiple sockets will now be handled
sensibly, which opens the way for things like SSH port
forwarding.
[originally from svn r744]
thought. As well as the ".." attack in recursive copies, the name
sent by the client was also trusted in a single-file implicit-
destination copy such as "pscp host:foo .". (The result was ./foo,
where foo is what the server claimed the file was rather than what
the user asked for. I think it's not unreasonable that if the user
requests file `foo' from the host, he should get the result in a
file called `foo' no matter what the host thinks.)
[originally from svn r743]
sends filenames of things in the directory being copied. A malicious
server could have sent, for example, "..\..\windows\system\foo.dll"
and overwritten something crucial. The filenames are now vetted to
ensure they don't contain slashes or backslashes.
[originally from svn r742]
use when they have data from the network. Replaces the utterly daft
inbuf / inbuf_head / term_out() interface, which only made sense
when feeding to terminal.c. (terminal.c now implements
from_backend() as a small function that gateways to the old
interface.)
As a side effect, from_backend() also has an `is_stderr' parameter,
so scp can once again separate the server's pronouncements on stderr
from the actual protocol progress on stdout.
[originally from svn r729]
windlg.c into it. Allows plink and pscp to no longer link with
windlg.c, meaning they lose some of the sillier stub functions and
also can provide a console-based form of verify_ssh_host_key().
[originally from svn r683]
functions as calls to the MS Crypto API. Not integrated into the
Makefile yet, but should eventually allow building of an SSH-enabled
PuTTY which contains no native crypto code, so it can be used
everywhere (and anyone who can get the MS encryption pack can still
use the SSH parts).
[originally from svn r425]