negative font sizes (meaning pixels) into positive ones (points) in
winstore.c, since it gets done anyway at the point of font creation;
and removing the code in winstore.c means that the precise font
entered by the user is saved in the config, rather than being
rounded.
[originally from svn r3755]
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]
malloc functions, which automatically cast to the same type they're
allocating the size of. Should prevent any future errors involving
mallocing the size of the wrong structure type, and will also make
life easier if we ever need to turn the PuTTY core code from real C
into C++-friendly C. I haven't touched the Mac frontend in this
checkin because I couldn't compile or test it.
[originally from svn r3014]
time! The load code in settings.c was translating an empty string
into "Default Settings" to pass to {win,ux}store, whereas the save
code was passing the empty string straight down and expecting it to
be dealt with. So, a policy decision: the precise name of the
"Default Settings" special session _at the storage level_ is up to
the individual platform storage code to decide, and all platforms
MUST assume Default Settings is meant if they receive NULL or the
empty string as a session name.
[originally from svn r2974]
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]
holdout static I hadn't noticed; unicode.c had one too; and a large
number of statics that were perfectly OK due to being constants have
been made `const', with assorted `const' repercussions all over the
place. I now declare `remove-statics' to be fixed.
[originally from svn r2594]
`otherbuf' should still be freed even if the RegEnumKey function
that was supposed to fill it with data failed. While I'm at it, also
remove the redundant check for its non-NULL-ness (what's the point
of having a malloc wrapper that dies rather than return NULL if you
then waste effort checking its return value for NULL _anyway_, eh?).
[originally from svn r2217]
were using RegCreateKey instead of RegOpenKey by mistake. This also
required a fix in settings.c to deal gracefully with a NULL return
from enum_settings_start() - since the use of RCK had caused this
never to happen, the code path had never been tested.
[originally from svn r1516]
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]